Lemuel Mason
Colonel Lemuel Mason was an early Virginia planter, politician, justice of the peace, and militia colonel, who represented Norfolk County, Virginia|Lower Norfolk County] in the House of Burgesses intermittently over three decades.
Early and family life
Mason was born around 1628 in then-vast Surry County to ancient planter Francis Mason and his second wife Alice. By the mid-1620s, his father was a planter in Elizabeth City County. There has long been disagreement as to whether his father Francis Mason or another man of the same name emigrated to the Virginia colony with his first wife Mary and daughter Anne in 1613 and settled in Surry County. His mother had emigrated to the Virginia Colony in 1622, months after Native Americans had killed many settlers. This man had half brothers named Francis and James, and sisters named Anne, Elizabeth and Alice. In the 1624 muster for Elizabeth City, Francis Mason was living with his younger wife Alice, Virginia-born son Francis and five indentured servants. In 1626, shortly before this boy's birth, either his father Francis Mason or elder half brother Francis Jr. returned to England with William Ganey. By 1635 this man's father patented land in what became Lower Norfolk County. Although the underlying document for that transaction is lost, in 1642 Francis Mason claimed 1250 acres of land for transporting 83 people to the colony. Before his death circa 1648, this man's father Francis Mason became a local magistrate, church vestryman, lieutenant of the county militia, tobacco inspector and even sheriff. His widow and this young Lemuel Mason were appointed administrators of his estate in 1648.Career
In the year of his father's death, Lemuel Mason and his mother contracted with James Thelaball to buy land and timber from Hogg Island. Thelaball would marry this man's sister Elizabeth, who bore sons named Francis and James, and in 1677 she divided 600 acres on Hogg Penn Neck that this Lemuel Mason had given her between those sons. Meanwhile, this Lemuel Mason farmed at least in part using enslaved labor, for in 1673 he deeded three named young Negro boys to his wife and two daughters.By 1649, Lemuel Mason had become a justice of the peace in Lower Norfolk County, and a churchwarden in his own right. He became the county sheriff in 1664 and again 1668. Colonel Mason commanded the local militia in 1680, a year in which he also became presiding justice of the county court.
In 1654, Lemuel Mason and Willoughby bought land on the Pasquotank River in what became the Carolina colony, after Francis Yeardley's trade expedition. By 1659 Virginians had begun moving into the western bank of Albemarle Sound. In 1680, Lemuel Mason deeded land in Currituck, North Carolina to George Crafford and his wife Abigail.
Lower Norfolk voters elected Lemuel Mason to represent them in the House of Burgesses in 1654 and re-elected him in 1657 through 1660. He appears not to have served in the legislature through the entire Long Assembly, but had a gap in service before winning election in 1662, and then again in 1671-1673. During Bacon's Rebellion, Arthur Moreley and Richard Church represented Lower Norfolk County, which did not again send a representative to the legislature until 1680, when either this man or his son of the same name served and was re-elected in 1684 and 1685. Other men won election and served in the 1688 and 1691-1692 sessions. In the two separately elected 1693 sessions, either this man or his son of the same name represented Norfolk County.
Meanwhile, in the immediate aftermath of Bacon's Rebellion, in January 1676, Mason wrote Governor Berkeley seeking recompense from the estate of the executed William Carver for the local militia's need to resupply weapons taken by Carver, as well as crop losses incurred by 60 loyal Lower Norfolk men who traveled to James City to assist the governor. Although records survive of Lemuel Taylor and Robert Bray being appointed commissioners for Carver's estate, their bond is illegible.
Personal life
Lemuel Mason married to Anne Seawald/Seawell, daughter of Henry Seawald/Seawell of Sewell's Point. Together they had children:- Elizabeth Mason, who married William Major, and Captain Thomas Cocke
- Lemuel Mason, living in 1705
- George Mason, who married Phillis. They had children Thomas Mason, who married Mary Newton; George Mason Jr.; Abigail Mason; and Frances Mason
- Thomas Mason, who became a Burgess in October 1696. He married Elizabeth. They had children Lemuel Mason ; Ann Mason, who married Captain Thomas Willoughby; Mary Mason, who married William Ellison; and Margaret Mason
- Frances Mason, who married George Newton, and Mr. Sayer
- Alice Mason, who married Robert Hodge, and Samuel Boush
- Mary Mason, who married Mr. Walton, and Mr. Cocke
- Dinah Mason, who married Mr. Thoroughgood
- Margaret Mason
- Anne Mason, who married William Kendall II, son of William Kendall