William J. Mason was a representative to the Alabama Legislature in 1832 from Limestone County, Alabama. Ix
“Member Of Athens Lodge No. 16, Limestone County, Alabama and was a large landowner He died in 1834.” X [1834 Pro] *Current research indicates that William Mason may have been the son of William Mason and Mary Gilliam of Limestone County, Alabama. He was born about 1775 and died Dec. 24, 1835 in Limestone County, Alabama. He married (1) Tabitha Wynne Tuell May 16, 1799; married (2) Rebecca Richardson August 14, 1800 in Greensville, VA.
“Thomas Bivin Creagh, farmer, was born at Donerail, County Cork, Ireland, son of John and Sarah O. (Moore) Creagh, of Donerail, County Cork, Ireland. He died Feb., 1842 at Boiling Springs, Wilcox County, Alabama. The founder of the name was a son of King O’Neil, of Ulster, who commanded a body of troops in the Castle of Limerick at the time the Danes invaded Ireland. He defeated the Danes with great slaughter, and when he returned to the castle, the population turned out to greet him, placing laurel in the horses’ bridles. Laurel in Irish is known as “creagh,” and he was known from that time on as Creagh O’Neil, until O’Neil was dropped and Creagh alone used. The street in Ireland leading from that castle to the river is known as Creagh Lane to this day.
Mr. Creagh came to America as an English officer with Gen. Braddock before the Revolution. He was an educated man who later held office under the British government, but he did not return to Europe. There is a tradition that it was to Capt. Creagh that George Washington spoke, when he said that Braddock could not fight the Indians by the method he was then pursuing. He settled in Lynchburg, Va., after retiring from the army, and was married there. He moved to North Carolina for a short time, then located in South Carolina, near the Georgia line. He was a farmer and a large slave owner. He lived in Abbeville, S.C. until after his wife died, then broke up his home and followed his son, George Creagh, to Alabama, settling near Suggsville. His home was made of lumber sawed with a whip saw by hand before there was a mill. He was a Master Mason, and was high priest of his chapter and a Democrat.
He married (1) at Lynchburg, Va., Rebecca Walthall, daughter of Gerard Walthall and Eliza Ann (Davis} Walthall, who lived on a plantation at Lynchburg, Va., a descendant of the Davis family of Salisbury, N.C., of Scotch-Irish ancestry, who emigrated to America, settling first at Salisbury and later moving to Lower Peach Tree; (2) Winifred Davis, of Clarke County. Children from the first marriage; (1) John G. Creagh. b. 1787, in South Carolina, was educated in Dr. Waddell’s academy, was an early settler in Alabama, a lawyer and farmer, who was elected to the State legislature five times from Clarke County, and served one term as probate judge, d. in 1830, married Clara Howze who later married Judge A. B. Cooper, had one child, Clara who died in childhood;(2) Richard P. Creagh, attorney general of Mississippi, who was killed in a rencontre in 1823 while occupying that position; (3) Gerard Walthall Creagh (q.v.); (4) Edward A. Creagh., who came from South Carolina to Alabama, d. unmarried; (5) Lorenzo Creagh; (6) Memorable Walker Creagh (q.v.); (7) Milton Alexander Creagh, m. (1) Ann Howze, deceased, child John Wesley Creagh, m. Lizzie Simmons, of North Carolina. (2) Willie H,. Glover, daughter of Ben Glover, who lived near Dayton, children, Clara Creagh, Hughes Creagh, Sallie Creagh and Willie Creagh. Thomas Bivin Creagh’s last residence was Boiling Springs, Wilcox County, Alabama.”