| George Mason I | |
|---|---|
| Born | George Mason June 5, 1629 Pershore, Worcestershire, England |
| Died | 1686 (aged 56–57) Stafford County, Colony of Virginia |
| Resting place | Accokeek, Stafford County, Virginia |
| Residence | Accokeek, Stafford County, Virginia |
| Nationality | English |
| Ethnicity | English American |
| Citizenship | Kingdom of England |
| Occupation | Cavalier, Parliament of England member, House of Burgesses member, Stafford County sheriff, Stafford County county lieutenant, justice of the peace, Stafford County militia colonel, planter, businessperson |
| Religious beliefs | Anglican |
| Spouse(s) | Mary French Frances Norgrave |
| Children | George Mason II |
| Parents | Thomas Mason Ann French |
| Relatives | great-grandfather of George Mason IV |
George Mason I (5 June 1629–1686)[1][2][3] was the progenitor of the prominent American landholding and political Mason family.[3] Mason was the great-grandfather of George Mason IV, a Founding Father of the United States.[1]
Contents |
Mason was born in Pershore, Worcestershire, England on 5 June 1629.[1][3][4] He was the third of seven children of yeoman farmer Thomas Mason and his wife Ann French.[1][2][3] Mason was christened at Pershore Abbey, Holy Cross Church, Pershore, Worcestershire, on 10 June 1629.[1][2][3]
Mason was a Cavalier member of the Parliament of England during the reign of Charles I of England.[3] Mason was against Charles I's execution in 1649.[3] He became a captain, commanding a troop in Charles II's army.[3] When the Royalist forces were defeated at the Battle of Worcester by Oliver Cromwell in 1651, Mason hurriedly left England.[3]
Mason probably arrived at Norfolk, Virginia on the ship Assurance in 1652.[2][3][4] Mason was accompanied by his cousins and neighbors from England, Thomas and Gerard Fowke of Staffordshire.[2][3][4] He settled in Westmoreland County, Virginia in the early 1650s and was associated with the naming of Stafford County when it was formed from Westmoreland County in 1664.[4] Mason eventually settled permanently near an Indian village along Accokeek Creek on a hill between present-day State Routes 608 (Brooke Road) and 621 (Marlborough Point Road) in Stafford County.[3][4] He named his residence Accokeek, later rechristened Rose Hill.[3][4] The property was named for the now extinct Accokeek Native American tribe which inhabited present-day Prince George's County, Maryland.[5] Accokeek plantation began as 650 acres and gradually increased to 1,150 acres in size.[4]
Mason represented Stafford County in the House of Burgesses and in 1670, he served as the county's second sheriff.[3][4] Mason served as Stafford County's county lieutenant in 1675.[3] Mason also served as a Justice of the Peace and vestryman.[4] Mason also served as a colonel in Stafford County's militia.[4] In the Acts of the Assembly for 1675, 1679, and 1684, Colonel Mason was actively engaged in defending his frontier county against the Indians.[3]
Mason married Mary French in 1658.[1][2][3] He and Mary had one son:[1][3]
Mason married secondly to Frances Norgrave in 1664 in Stafford County, Virginia.[1][2][3]
Mason died in 1686.[1][3] His body was interred in 1686 on a hillside at Accokeek in Stafford County, Virginia.[1][3][4] His gravesite is currently unmarked.[4]
George Mason University, named in honor of Mason's great-grandson, re-established its Naming Committee to research and select names for its campus facilities and infrastructure.[6] The committee agreed upon the name "Masonvale" for its faculty and staff housing community in the northeast section of George Mason University's Fairfax Campus.[6] The appendage of “vale” was derived from George Mason I's birthplace, Pershore, which lies in an agricultural region known as the Vale of Evesham in Worcestershire, England.[6] To unify the naming theme within Masonvale, the names “Pershore” and “Evesham” were then used as street names for the community.[6] Other street names used are “Bredon Hill,” “Cotswolds Hill,” and “Staffordshire.”[6] All are regions of Old Worcestershire where many of Mason’s ancestors once resided.[6]
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|