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  1. Mason was born near Leesburg in Loudoun County, Virginia, into a politically powerful family. [1] [2] His great-grandfather, Thomson Mason (1733–1785), was chief justice of the Virginia Supreme Court and younger brother of George Mason (1725–1792), who took part in the Constitutional Convention.

  2. Nov 25, 2019 · This portrait depicts Stevens T. Mason, Michigan’s first elected governor, in all his glory. Mason made an indelible mark on Michigan, where one county and one town still bear his name. Yet, Mason lived his final days in New York and was buried there.

  3. Learn about the life and achievements of Stevens Thomson Mason, who served as the first governor of Michigan from 1837 to 1840. Find out his biography, political career, and legacy on the National Governors Association website.

  4. Jan 16, 2013 · However, a new biography, “The Boy Governor: Stevens T. Mason and the Birth of Michigan Politics,” by Ann Arborite Don Faber, goes a long way toward telling the story of man who made an indelible mark during the state’s early years.

  5. Stevens T. Mason then traveled to Williamsburg, Virginia for higher education at the College of William & Mary, concentrating in legal studies. Officer, lawyer and planter. Admitted to the Virginia bar, Mason began a private legal practice in Dumfries, Virginia in Prince William County.

  6. …first chief executive, “Boy Governor” Stevens T. Mason, who acquired his nickname by being elected at age 23. The company flag was blue with the new state seal on the obverse, a popular design among U.S. military units at the time.

  7. On March 5, Don Faber, biographer of Michigan’s first elected governor and the author of, The Boy Governor: Stevens T. Mason and the Birth of Michigan Politics, shared the history of a remarkable individual who was extraordinarily successful as a young man.