James M. Mason


James Murray Mason was an American lawyer and politician who became a Confederate diplomat. He served as U.S. Senator from Virginia for fourteen years, having previously represented Virginia's 15th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, and Frederick County in the Virginia House of Delegates.
A grandson of George Mason, Mason strongly supported slavery as well as Virginia's secession as the American Civil War began. As chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations from 1851 until his expulsion in 1861 for supporting the Confederate States of America, Mason took great interest in protecting American cotton exporters. As the Confederacy's leading diplomat, he traveled to Europe seeking support, but proved unable to get the United Kingdom to recognize the Confederacy as a country. As Mason sailed to England in November 1861, the U.S. Navy captured the British ship he was sailing on and detained him, in what became known as the Trent Affair. Released after two months, Mason continued his voyage, and assisted Confederate purchases from Britain and Europe but failed to achieve their diplomatic involvement. As the war ended, Mason went into exile in Canada, but later returned to Alexandria, Virginia, where he died in 1871.

Early life

Mason was born on Analostan Island, now Theodore Roosevelt Island, in the District of Columbia. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, then studied law in Williamsburg, Virginia, and earned a law degree from the College of William & Mary's Law School.

Political career

Following admission to the Virginia bar, Mason practiced law in Virginia, and also operated a plantation in Frederick County. A partially illegible census record shows that he may have owned five slaves in 1830. In the 1850 federal census, Mason owned ten enslaved people, half of them children under ten years of age. In that year, he also owned a 25-year-old Black woman and her four children in nearby Rappahannock County. In the 1860 census, Mason owned a 49-year-old Black man, a 35-year-old Black woman, and children aged 14, 13, 12, 10 and 3 years old. and he or another James M. Mason owned seven enslaved children in southern Culpeper County.
Mason soon began his political career, well before his father's death, winning election several times as one of Frederick County's representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates. His first term began on December 4, 1826, alongside one-term veteran James Ship, but only Ship won re-election the following year. In 1828, Ship failed to win re-election and Mason won the election to represent the gateway to the Shenandoah Valley together with William Castleman, Jr., and both won re-election the following year. After veteran legislator Hierome L. Opie, one of the four joint delegates of Frederick and neighboring Jefferson County to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-1830, resigned, Mason took his place alongside John R. Cooke, congressman Alfred H. Powell and fellow delegate Thomas Griggs Jr.
Although some had hoped that convention would limit slaveholder power, the resulting constitution only gave additional votes to western Virginians, so Mason and Castleman were re-elected and joined by William Wood for the 1830–1831 legislative session.
In 1836, Congressman Edward Lucas of Shepherdstown announced his retirement. Voters in Virginia's 15th congressional district elected Mason as his successor in the Twenty-fifth United States Congress. The Jackson Democrat only served a single term, and was succeeded by Lucas' brother William Lucas.
In 1847, Virginia legislators elected Mason to the Senate after incumbent Isaac S. Pennybacker died in office, and Mason won re-election in 1850 and 1856. Mason famously read aloud the dying Senator John C. Calhoun's final speech to the Senate, on March 4, 1850, which warned of the likely breakup of the country if the North did not permanently accept the existence of slavery in the South, as well as its expansion into the Western territories. Mason also complained of Northern personal liberty laws, intended to help fugitive slaves: "Although the loss of property is felt, the loss of honor is felt still more."
Mason was President pro tempore of the Senate for two months in early 1857.

Champion of slavery

Mason "championed the Southern political platform", "and slavery, another of the three themes that most affected his life, lay at the core of that political ideology."
Mason was not only a white supremacist, he believed that negroes were "the great curse of the country". Giving Blacks the vote particularly offended him; it was, he thought, the rule of the mob and the "end of the republic".
He so believed in the beneficence of slavery that, unlike many others in Frederick County, Mason refused to support the colonization project that led to the founding of Liberia. Mason's solution to the "problem" of free blacks was returning them to slavery, stating they were better off enslaved in the United States than they could possibly be in Africa. Mason believed that slavery did not need to be established or require a law to make it legal; it had already been established by God, as recorded in the Bible. It already existed in Africa: "The negro is as much property in Africa as the bullock or the ox". His position was that Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery anywhere, and certainly not in Kansas. Slavery was a condition, not an institution, by which he meant that Americans were not enslaving Africans, they were merely purchasing them from other Africans that had already enslaved them.
Mason wrote the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, arguably the most hated and openly-evaded Federal legislation in U.S. history. The whole idea of using "popular sovereignty" as a means to expand slavery into the Western territories, starting with Kansas, leading to the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the violence of the Bleeding Kansas period, was hatched in Mason's Washington boarding house. Mason a
was also the chair of the ad-hoc Senate committee that investigated John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, and wrote its report, informally known as the Mason Report.

Secession advocate

Continuing the tradition of his mentor John C. Calhoun, whose last speech Mason read to the Senate when Calhoun was too sick to do so himself, Mason strongly believed states had the right to secede. Furthermore, the North's intolerance of their "peculiar institution", their "property rights", left them no other choice than secession. He said he didn't need reasons to leave the Union, he needed a reason to stay in the Union.
Mason strongly favored the South's "immediate, absolute, and eternal separation" if anti-slavery, Republican candidate John C. Frémont were elected president in 1856.
In 1861 Mason worked behind the scenes to enable Virginia's secession, remaining in the Senate because he could get information useful for the seceding states, a type of spy behind enemy lines. He and Virginia's other Senator, Robert Hunter, told the commissioners of the new Confederate states that Virginia would join the secession if Jefferson Davis was elected president of a Southern confederacy, but not if it was radical Alabama "fire-rater" William L. Yancey, seen in Virginia as too extreme. Davis was chosen as president three days later.
Mason disappears from Senate activities in March 1861. He and other Southern senators were expelled from the Senate on July 11 by a vote of 32 to 10, because "they were engaged in a conspiracy for the destruction of the Union and Government, or, with full knowledge of said conspiracy, had failed to advise the Government of its progress or aid in its suppression."

Confederate diplomat

Mason became one of Virginia's representatives to the Provisional Confederate Congress from February 1861 through February 1862. However, his legislative duties were interrupted by a diplomatic assignment. While Mason sailed toward England as a Confederate envoy to Britain on the British mail steamer RMS Trent, the ship was stopped by the USS San Jacinto on November 8, 1861. Mason and fellow Confederate diplomat John Slidell were taken off the ship and confined in Fort Warren in Boston Harbor.
The Trent Affair threatened to bring Britain into open war with the United States, despite triumphant rhetoric in the north. Even the cool-headed Lincoln was swept along in the celebratory spirit, but enthusiasm waned when he and his cabinet studied the likely consequences of a war with Britain. After careful diplomatic exchanges, they admitted that the capture was contrary to maritime law and that private citizens could not be classified as "enemy despatches". Slidell and Mason were released, and war was averted. The two diplomats set sail for England again, via the British colony of St. Thomas, on January 1, 1862.
Mason represented the Confederacy in England, attempting to convince the British that the Union's blockade of the South was just a "paper blockade", too ineffective to qualify for recognition under the terms of the 1856 Declaration of Paris, but his primary mission was to seek British diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy. After Britain issued its refusal in 1863, he moved to Paris, continuing his search for a nation that would recognize or assist the Confederacy, but the French were unwilling to do so alone, without the support of the British. He remained in France until April 1865.

Later life

In 1862, when the Union army occupied Winchester, Virginia, where Mason made his home, his house, "Selma", was requisitioned for regimental offices. The lower officers probably did not know who Mason was, but the commanding officer, General Nathaniel P. Banks, formerly a Congressman and then Governor of Massachusetts, certainly must have.
Learning of Mason's pro-slavery activism and his authorship of the hated Fugitive Slave Act, the soldiers, on their own initiative, set about destroying the house. The roof came off first. Sometime later the walls were pulled down and everything burnable was chopped into firewood. They were so thorough that "from turret to foundation stone, not one stone remains upon another; the negro houses, the out-buildings , the fences are all gone, and even the trees are many of them girdled". According to Mason, the house was "obliterated". He never lived in Winchester again.
From 1865 until 1868 Mason was in exile in Canada. After sanctions on Confederate officials were lifted, he returned to the United States, and bought the Clarens Estate, on, today in Alexandria, Virginia. He brought white servants from Canada, and went to some trouble to find others, as he did not want to hire any blacks; he believed free blacks to be "worse than worthless". He died at Clarens in 1871, and was interred in the churchyard of Christ Church in Alexandria. His death was not noted by anyone outside his family.