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The Founding Fathers: Virginia
| John Blair, Virginia |
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Scion of
a prominent Virginia family, Blair was born at Williamsburg in 1732. He was the
son of John Blair, a colonial official and nephew of James Blair, founder and
first president of the College of William and Mary. Signer Blair graduated from
that institution and studied law at London's Middle Temple. Thereafter, he
practiced at Williamsburg. In the years 1766-70 he sat in the Virginia House of
Burgesses as the representative of William and Mary. From 1770 to 1775 he held
the position of clerk of the colony's council.

| James Madison, Virginia |
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The
oldest of 10 children and a scion of the planter aristocracy, Madison was born
in 1751 at Port Conway, King George County, VA, while his mother was visiting
her parents. In a few weeks she journeyed back with her newborn son to
Montpelier estate, in Orange County, which became his lifelong home. He received
his early education from his mother, from tutors, and at a private school. An
excellent scholar though frail and sickly in his youth, in 1771 he graduated
from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton), where he demonstrated special
interest in government and the law. But, considering the ministry for a career,
he stayed on for a year of postgraduate study in theology.

| George Mason, Virginia |
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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.

| James McClurg, Virginia |
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James McClurg was born near Hampton, VA, in 1746. He attended the College of
William and Mary and graduated in 1762. McClurg then studied medicine at the
University of Edinburgh and received his degree in 1770. He pursued postgraduate
medical studies in Paris and London and published Experiments upon the Human
Bile and Reflections on the Biliary Secretions (1772) in London. His work and
writings were well-received and respected by the medical community, and his
article was translated into several languages. In 1773 McClurg returned to
Virginia and served as a surgeon in the state militia during the Revolution.

| Edmund Randolph, Virginia |
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On
August 10, 1753, Edmund Randolph was born in Tazewell Hall, Williamsburg, VA.
His parents were Ariana Jenings and John Randolph. Edmund attended the College
of William and Mary and continued his education by studying the law under his
father's tutelage.

| George Washington, Virginia |
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The
eldest of six children from his father's second marriage, George Washington was
born into the landed gentry in 1732 at Wakefield Plantation, VA. Until reaching
16 years of age, he lived there and at other plantations along the Potomac and
Rappahannock Rivers, including the one that later became known as Mount Vernon.
His education was rudimentary, probably being obtained from tutors but possibly
also from private schools, and he learned surveying. After he lost his father
when he was 11 years old, his half-brother Lawrence, who had served in the Royal
Navy, acted as his mentor. As a result, the youth acquired an interest in
pursuing a naval career, but his mother discouraged him from doing so.

| George Wythe, Virginia |
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George
Wythe, the second of Thomas and Margaret Wythe's three children, was born in
1726 on his family's plantation on the Back River in Elizabeth City County, VA.
Both parents died when Wythe was young, and he grew up under the guardianship of
his older brother, Thomas. Though Wythe was to become an eminent jurist and
teacher, he received very little formal education. He learned Latin and Greek
from his well-educated mother, and he probably attended for a time a grammar
school operated by the College of William and Mary.
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