Richard Chichester Mason (7 May 1793 – 22 July 1869) was an American planter, physician and politician in Fairfax County, Virginia, which he twice represented in the Virginia House of Delegates. Mason also practiced medicine in Alexandria, Virginia (part of the District of Columbia until 1847) and spent the American Civil War in Richmond working for the Confederate States Army.[1]
Richard Chichester Mason | |
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Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Fairfax County | |
In office December 4, 1826 – December 2, 1827 Serving with Nathaniel Tyler | |
Preceded by | John Moore |
Succeeded by | James Sangster |
In office November 29, 1824 – December 4, 1825 Serving with Robert T. Thompson | |
Preceded by | John Moore |
Succeeded by | John Moore |
Personal details | |
Born | Newington, Fairfax County, Virginia | May 7, 1793
Died | July 22, 1869 Rutledge, Fauquier County, Virginia | (aged 76)
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Lucy Bolling Randolph |
Relations | grandson of George Mason IV |
Children | 16, including Beverley, John, and William |
Parent(s) | Thomson Mason Sarah McCarty Chichester |
Alma mater | University of Pennsylvania |
Occupation | physician, planter, politician, justice of the peace, Confederate States Army officer |
Early life and education
editRichard Chichester Mason may have been born at Newington plantation in Fairfax County to the former Sarah McCarty Chichester (1770–1826) on May 7, 1793. Descended from the First Families of Virginia, his father was planter Thomson Mason (1759–1820), who with his father's financial assistance constructed a house known as Hollin Hall on his Fairfax County property shortly after this marriage. The marriage produced four sons and four daughters who survived to adulthood (an elder brother George William Mason was born at Hollin Hall in 1791 and would move to Kentucky where he died in 1855). Thomson Mason would serve in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly during his boy's childhood. The eldest brother, Thomson Francis Mason (1785-1838 would become a judge in Washington DC), and the youngest brother, John Mason (1797–1820) died around the same time as their father. Their paternal grandfather, George Mason, was a prominent patriot in the American Revolutionary War, having served in the House of Burgesses and later the Virginia House of Delegates and drafted the Virginia Declaration of Rights. George Mason also served as one of Virginia's representatives to the federal Constitutional Convention in 1783, where he became known in part for his denunciations of slavery and the slave trade, and later became one of the most noted anti-Federalists at the Virginia Ratification Convention of 1788, though he died months before this boy's birth.[1] His maternal grandfather, Richard Chichester (1736–1796), for whom the boy was named, was also a planter and local government official.
R.C. Mason received a private education appropriate to his class, then traveled to Philadelphia to attend the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He graduated as a Doctor of Medicine in 1816.[2] Mason's doctoral thesis was on menstruation.[3][4]
Career
editShortly before this boy's birth, his father Thomson Mason inherited a portion of the Gunston Hall estate, which his father George Mason and previous generations of the family had farmed using enslaved labor. George Mason had died on October 7, 1792, after training his three eldest sons including Thomson Mason (who shared the name with his lawyer uncle, who died before his brother) to operate using enslaved labor even before they reached reaching legal age to hold property.[5] However, in his final years, the elder Mason trained his two youngest sons, John Mason and Thomas Mason to become merchants, but they too became wealthy planters after the Fairfax County court admitted a 1775 will into probate when this man was a boy.
Around 1817, as R.C. Mason reached legal age, Thomson Mason divided his Fairfax County property into two plantations:[5] Dogue Run farm for this man and Hunting Creek farm for his brother Thomson Francis Mason (1785–1838).[5] Upon returning to Virginia, Dr. Robert C. Mason advertised his new medical practice in Alexandria, with his office on King Street and home on St. Asaph Streets (in what is now known as Old Town Alexandria).[6] By 1819, R.C. Mason and his family also owned property in the southern section of Alexandria known as Round Hill.[7]
During the 1820s, Fairfax County voters twice elected (but failed to re-elect) Dr. R.C. Mason as one of their delegates in the Virginia House of Delegates (a part-time position). He served one term alongside his distant lawyer cousin Robert Townshend Thompson and one term alongside Nathaniel Tyler.[8] While practicing medicine in Alexandria (before retiring at age 45),[1] Mason also served as a justice of the peace in Fairfax County.[9] His brother Thomson F. Mason served on the Alexandria City council in the 1820s and 1830s, and as the town's mayor 1828–1830.[10] In 1824, Hollin Hall burned down and was not immediately rebuilt. During the 1830s R.C. Mason began building a new manor house on his Dogue Run plantation, where he began living by 1834 and called Okeley Manor.[5]
When R.C. Mason retired from his Alexandria medical practice and lived at Okeley Manor, which was in Fairfax County even before Alexandria's retrocession to Virginia in 1847, he operated his plantation using enslaved labor. In the 1850 Federal Census, Mason characterized himself as a "farmer", and lived with wife and their four youngest children.[11] In that year, he owned 17 slaves in Fairfax County, ranging from a 48 year old Black man and his 45 year old mulatto wife to 7 year old black and 6 year old mulatto boys and 6 and 4 year old mulatto girls.[12] A decade later, the census district was renamed for the Orange and Alexandria Railroad which ran through it, and R.C. Mason owned ten slaves, the oldest a 31-year-old woman.[13]
Shortly after Virginia voted to secede from the Union at the beginning of the American Civil War, Union troops occupied Alexandria and commandeered Mason's house because of its proximity to the strategically important railroad which connected the town to the state capitol at Richmond. Dr. Mason moved his family to Richmond, but alternate stories exist as to his wartime activities. His pardon application in 1865 said he was a writer in General Cooper's office.[14] However a record exists of his 1861 enlistment in the Confederate States Army, and on October 1, 1861, Sergeant R.C. Mason was assigned as a medic at Culpeper Court House.[15] Moreover, his sons Beverly Randolph Mason and Thomas Pinckney Mason served as Confederate officers (army and naval respectively) during the conflict.
Following the conflict, R.C. Mason returned home at age 72 to find the mansion at Okeley had been used during the war as a hospital (particularly for infectious smallpox patients), then burned to the ground.[5] A negro and an Irishman seemed to possess the property.[5] On September 20, 1865, Mason having signed the required oath of loyalty to the United States, President Andrew Johnson pardoned Mason for his activities on behalf of the confederacy.[16]
Death and legacy
editR.C. Mason died on 22 July 1869 at "Rutledge" in Fauquier County, Virginia at age 76.[17] By 1880, Mason's son Beverley Mason had recovered the Dogue Run property and lived at a house he built on the hill.[5] The property is now a Fairfax County park and nature preserve known as Huntley Meadows Park.
Marriage, children and descendants
editMason married Lucy Bolling Randolph, also of the First Families of Virginia through her father Colonel Robert Randolph,[18] on 14 May 1816 at "Eastern View" plantation in Fauquier County, Virginia.[17] Lucy would bear sixteen children[1] including:[17]
- Robert Thomson Mason (12 May 1818–1890)[17]
- William Fitzhugh Mason (4 April 1821–12 July 1822)[17]
- Randolph Fitzhugh Mason (1 March 1823–9 August 1862)[17]
- Lucius Meade Mason (24 May 1824–6 January 1845)[17]
- Eliza Carter Mason (24 May 1824–12 December 1832)[17]
- Baynton Turner Mason (8 January 1826–27 June 1857)[17]
- Richard Randolph Mason (19 April 1827–18 March 1886)[17]
- Lucy Bolling Mason (8 September 1831–15 December 1832)[17]
- Eliza Lucy Mason (13 December 1832–8 July 1862)[17]
- Beverley Randolph Mason (1 September 1834–22 April 1910)[17]
- Eva Mary Anna Mason Heth (17 January 1836–19 November 1915)[17]
- John Stevens Mason (18 August 1839–3 April 1918)[17]
- Landon Randolph Mason (31 December 1841–21 June 1923)[17]
- William Pinckney Mason (10 January 1843–16 December 1923)[17]
Richard Chichester Mason was a grandson of George Mason (1725–1792);[17][19] nephew of George Mason V (1753–1796);[17][19] grandnephew of Thomson Mason (1733–1785);[17][19] son of Thomson Mason (1759–1820) and Sarah McCarty Chichester Mason;[17][19] first cousin once removed of Stevens Thomson Mason (1760–1803) and John Thomson Mason (1765–1824);[17][19] second cousin of Armistead Thomson Mason (1787–1819), John Thomson Mason (1787–1850), and John Thomson Mason, Jr. (1815–1873);[17][19] first cousin of George Mason VI (1786–1834), Richard Barnes Mason (1797–1850), and James Murray Mason (1798–1871);[17][19] second cousin once removed of Stevens Thomson Mason (1811–1843);[17][19] and first cousin thrice removed of Charles O'Conor Goolrick.[17][19]
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References
edit- ^ a b c d Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915), vol. 4 p. 24 available at https://archive.org/details/encyclopediavir07unkngoog
- ^ Maxwell, W. J.; University of Pennsylvania General Alumni Society (1922). General Alumni Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania, 1922. University of Pennsylvania: Alumni Association, 1922.
- ^ Richard Chichester Mason. ... Menstruation. OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. OCLC 13596472.
- ^ Richard Chichester Mason. "... Menstruation". Franklin: Penn Libraries Catalog. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
- ^ a b c d e f g Shirley Scalley. "Huntley Meadows Park". Huntley Meadows Park. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2009-03-08.
- ^ T. Michael Miller, Artisans and Merchants of Alexandria, Virginia 1780-1820 (heritage Books, Inc.1992), vol. 1 p. 326
- ^ T. Michael Miller, Artisans and Merchants of Alexandria, Virginia 1780-1820 (heritage Books, Inc.1992), vol. 2 p. 90
- ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 323, 333
- ^ "TREATMENT OF SUSPECTED AND DISLOYAL PERSONS NORTH AND SOUTH". Simmons Games. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12. Retrieved 2022-06-13.
- ^ T. Michael Miller, Alexandria (Virginia) City Officialdom 1749-1992 (Heritage Books, Inc.1992), pp. 16-20
- ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census for Fairfax County, Virginia, family no. 124, p.16 of 177 on ancestry.com
- ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fairfax County, Virginia, p.5 of 39
- ^ 1860 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for Orange and Alexandria Railroad District, Fairfax County, Virginia, p.9 of 11
- ^ U.S. Confederate Applications for Presidential Pardons 1865-1867, p. 206 of 739 on ancestry.com
- ^ U.S. Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol. II p. , also Fold 3 search performed by reference librarian.
- ^ U.S. Pardons under Amnesty Proclamations, 1865-1869 p. 82 of 732
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "Richard Chichester Mason". Gunston Hall. Archived from the original on 2009-07-23. Retrieved 2009-03-10.
- ^ Kennedy, Mary Selden (1911). Seldens of Virginia and Allied Families. Frank Allaben Genealogical Company.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Mason family of Virginia". The Political Graveyard. June 16, 2008. Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-10.