In 1725
George Mason was born to George and Ann Thomson Mason. When the boy was 10 years
old his father died, and young George's upbringing was left in the care of his
uncle, John Mercer. The future jurist's education was profoundly shaped by the
contents of his uncle's 1500-volume library, one-third of which concerned the
law.
Mason established himself as an important figure in his community. As owner
of Gunston Hall he was one of the richest planters in Virginia. In 1750 he
married Anne Eilbeck, and in 23 years of marriage they had five sons and four
daughters. In 1752 he acquired an interest in the Ohio Company, an organization
that speculated in western lands. When the crown revoked the company's rights in
1773, Mason, the company's treasurer, wrote his first major state paper,
Extracts from the Virginia Charters, with Some Remarks upon Them.
During these years Mason also pursued his political interests. He was a
justice of the Fairfax County court, and between 1754 and 1779 Mason was a
trustee of the city of Alexandria. In 1759 he was elected to the Virginia House
of Burgesses. When the Stamp Act of 1765 aroused outrage in the colonies, George
Mason wrote an open letter explaining the colonists' position to a committee of
London merchants to enlist their support.
In 1774 Mason again was in the forefront of political events when he assisted
in drawing up the Fairfax Resolves, a document that outlined the colonists'
constitutional grounds for their objections to the Boston Port Act. Virginia's
Declaration of Rights, framed by Mason in 1776, was widely copied in other
colonies, served as a model for Jefferson in the first part of the Declaration
of Independence, and was the basis for the federal Constitution's Bill of
Rights.
The years between 1776 and 1780 were filled with great legislative activity.
The establishment of a government independent of Great Britain required the
abilities of persons such as George Mason. He supported the disestablishment of
the church and was active in the organization of military affairs, especially in
the West. The influence of his early work, Extracts from the Virginia Charters,
is seen in the 1783 peace treaty with Great Britain, which fixed the
Anglo-American boundary at the Great Lakes instead of the Ohio River. After
independence, Mason drew up the plan for Virginia's cession of its western lands
to the United States.
By the early 1780s, however, Mason grew disgusted with the conduct of public
affairs and retired. He married his second wife, Sarah Brent, in 1780. In 1785
he attended the Mount Vernon meeting that was a prelude to the Annapolis
convention of 1786, but, though appointed, he did not go to Annapolis.
At Philadelphia in 1787 Mason was one of the five most frequent speakers at
the Constitutional Convention. He exerted great influence, but during the last 2
weeks of the convention he decided not to sign the document.
Mason's refusal prompts some surprise, especially since his name is so
closely linked with constitutionalism. He explained his reasons at length,
citing the absence of a declaration of rights as his primary concern. He then
discussed the provisions of the Constitution point by point, beginning with the
House of Representatives. The House he criticized as not truly representative of
the nation, the Senate as too powerful. He also claimed that the power of the
federal judiciary would destroy the state judiciaries, render justice
unattainable, and enable the rich to oppress and ruin the poor. These fears led
Mason to conclude that the new government was destined to either become a
monarchy or fall into the hands of a corrupt, oppressive aristocracy.
Two of Mason's greatest concerns were incorporated into the Constitution. The
Bill of Rights answered his primary objection, and the 11th amendment addressed
his call for strictures on the judiciary.
Throughout his career Mason was guided by his belief in the rule of reason
and in the centrality of the natural rights of man. He approached problems
coolly, rationally, and impersonally. In recognition of his accomplishments and
dedication to the principles of the Age of Reason, Mason has been called the
American manifestation of the Enlightenment. Mason died on October 7, 1792, and
was buried on the grounds of Gunston Hall.
Image: Courtesy of National Archives, Records of
Exposition, Anniversary, and Memorial Commissions
(148-CP-121)