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Mason was born on April 4, 1766, at Mattawoman plantation, the estate of his maternal grandparents William Eilbeck and Sarah Edgar Eilbeck. [2] [4] He was eighth child and fifth-eldest son of George Mason IV and his wife Ann Eilbeck. [1] [4] Like his brothers, Mason was tutored at his father's estate, Gunston Hall, in Fairfax County, Virginia. [2]
George Mason IV spent his early adolescence and began his early education at Chopawamsic and resided there until the age of 24 when he moved to present-day Fairfax County. [1] Stevens Thomson Mason, son of Thomson Mason, who was first Attorney of the Bar in Dumfries, was born at Chopawamsic in 1760. [4]
William Stuart Mason, eldest son of George Mason IV's son William Mason acquired Lexington plantation circa 1824 and actually lived at Lexington until his death in 1857, but he also experienced financial troubles, so not only did much fall into disrepair, in 1851 a court required land to be sold to his younger brother (yet another) George Mason ...
George Mason III's son and George Mason IV's younger brother, Thomson Mason (1733–1785), [13] was a patriot, statesman, and delegate from Virginia to the U.S. ...
George Mason's coat of arms. Mason was born in present-day Fairfax County, in the Colony of Virginia, in British America, on December 11, 1725. [1] [2] [3] Mason's parents owned property in Mason Neck, Virginia and a second property across the Potomac River in Maryland, which had been inherited by his mother.
The 38-year-old son of billionaire Democratic kingmaker George Soros posted a string of photos of himself and the Minnesota governor set against the lower Manhattan skyline.
The teen towered over his mother while grocery shopping.
John Mason (planter) (1766–1849), American banker and planter, son of George Mason; John Mason (businessman) (1773–1839), American banker; John Charles Mason (1798–1881), British East India Company secretary and diplomat; John Landis Mason (1832–1902), American tinsmith; patented glass-threaded mason jars for food preservation