George Mason II | |
Birth Name: | George Mason |
Office: | Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses representing Stafford County |
Term Start1: | 1688 |
Term End1: | 1691 |
Predecessor1: | Martin Scarlet |
Successor1: | John Withers |
Alongside1: | George Brent, Martin Scarlet |
Term Start2: | 1693 |
Term End2: | 1703 |
Predecessor2: | Martin Scarlet |
Successor2: | Rice Hooe |
Alongside2: | William Fitzhugh, Thomas Ousley, Martin Scarlet, John Withers, Rice Hooe, John Waugh |
Term Start3: | 1705 |
Term End3: | 1685 |
Predecessor3: | Rice Hooe |
Successor3: | Henry Fitzhugh |
Alongside3: | William Fitzhugh, John Waugh |
Birth Date: | 1660 |
Birth Place: | Accokeek, Stafford County, Colony of Virginia |
Death Place: | Port Tobacco, Charles County, Province of Maryland |
Resting Place: | Accokeek, Stafford County, Virginia |
Nationality: | American |
Occupation: | planter, officer, legislator |
Spouse: | Mary Fowke Elizabeth Waugh Sarah Taliaferro |
Children: | 12, including George Mason III |
Parents: | George Mason I Mary French |
Relations: | grandfather of George Mason IV |
George Mason II (1660–1716)[1] [2] [3] was an early American planter and officeholder who, although his father's only child, had many children and thus can be said to have established the Mason family as one of the First Families of Virginia. His grandson George Mason IV became the most distinguished member of the family, a Founding Father of the United States.[1]
Mason was born in 1660 at his father's Accokeek plantation in Stafford County, Virginia.[1] [3] He was the only son of George Mason I and his first wife Mary French.[1] [3] He was the first of Virginia's Mason family to be born in British America.
Like his father, Mason led the Stafford County militia, with the rank of colonel. After his father's death, he won election many times as one of Stafford County's two part-time delegates in the House of Burgesses (then the only house of the Virginia General Assembly).[4] This George Mason also served as the county's sheriff and justice of the peace between 1699 and 1700.[2] [5] During this tenure Mason secured funds from the county to build what was probably Stafford's first jail in 1690.[2] Also between 1699 and 1700, Mason was county lieutenant of Stafford County, under General Nicholson, and defended white settlers of the Potomac region against Native Americans.[5]
In 1691, the town of Marlborough was laid out on the same neck of land in the Potomac River that included Accokeek plantation.[2] Mason received multiple lots in Marlborough and may have built a tavern there.[2]
Mason sold Accokeek after his father's death and relocated to a plantation on Chopawamsic Creek which he named Chopawamsic.[2] At Chopawamsic, Mason planted an orchard, grew tobacco, and raised sheep and cattle.[2]
Mason married his cousin Mary Fowke, daughter of Gerard Fowke and Ann Thorogood, in 1688.[1] [3] The couple had the following children:[1]
Mason married secondly to Elizabeth Waugh in Stafford County, Virginia in 1706.[1] [3] George and Elizabeth had one daughter:[1]
Mason married for a third time to Sarah Taliaferro, daughter of Francis Taliaferro and Elizabeth Catlett, in 1710.[1] [3] George and Sarah had four children:[1]
Mason died in 1716 in Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland.[1] [2] [3] He was interred on a hillside with his father near the site of the old Accokeek estate near Accokeek Creek in Stafford County, Virginia.[2]