Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. John Mason, c.1600–1672, was an American colonial military commander, born in England. He was an army officer before emigrating (c.1630) to Massachusetts and then (1635) to Windsor, Conn. When the Pequot threatened to wipe out the new colonies on the Connecticut River, he and John Underhill led an expedition (1637) against them with the aid ...

  2. Mar 9, 2022 · John Mason, as part of the Puritan Migration in the 1630s, was a recognized, accepted member of that Elect group and, therefore, deemed a Visible Saint himself. This was in a world where Puritans ...

  3. edit data. John Mason is a national best-selling author, noted speaker, and executive author coach. He is the founder and president of Insight International and Insight Publishing Group. He has authored twenty-five books including "An Enemy Called Average," "You’re Born an Original Don’t Die a Copy," and "Know Your Limits—Then Ignore Them ...

  4. Food and Drink Businesses (Ownership and Control) 1. John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP): "To ask the Scottish Government what assessment it has made of any impact on the food and drink sector of reports that many food and drink businesses are owned and controlled from outwith Scotland. (S6O-03484)" Chamber meeting date: 29 May 2024.

  5. Apr 15, 2017 · The John Mason statue located on Windsor’s historic Palisado Green has been controversial from its very beginning. Unveiled in 1889, it was sited in Groton on the ruins of what had once been a fortified village occupied by the Pequot, the dominant Native group in what is now Connecticut. In 1631, Native sachems in the Connecticut River Valley ...

  6. May 20, 2023 · Mason, John (c. 1600-Jan. 30, 1672), colonial soldier and magistrate, was born in England and saw service in the Low Countries. Soon after coming to Dorchester, Massachusetts he was assigned military duties. Later he was colonial Connecticut's first, and during his life, chief military figure.

  7. Over four decades, John Mason has created a body of ceramic art noted for its increasingly conceptual and geometric nature. In the mid-1950s, as a student of Peter Voulkos in Los Angeles, he was an active participant in the aesthetic revolution that reshaped the field of American ceramics, transforming tradition-bound studio potters into avant-garde clay sculptors.

  1. People also search for