John E. Massey

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_E._Massey an entity of type: Thing

John Edward „Parson“ Massey (* 2. April 1819 im Spotsylvania County, Virginia; † 24. April 1901 in Charlottesville, Virginia) war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker. Zwischen 1886 und 1890 war er Vizegouverneur des Bundesstaates Virginia. rdf:langString
John Edward "Parson" Massey (April 2, 1819 – April 24, 1901) served as the 15th Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from January 1, 1886, until January 1, 1890. He was from Albemarle County, Virginia and a member of the Democratic Party. Upon Massey's death, he was buried in Charlottesville's Oakhill cemetery. His autobiography appeared posthumously in 1909, edited by Elizabeth H. Hancock. rdf:langString
rdf:langString John E. Massey
rdf:langString John E. Massey
rdf:langString John E. Massey
rdf:langString John E. Massey
xsd:date 1901-04-24
rdf:langString Spotsylvania County, Virginia, U.S.
xsd:date 1819-04-02
xsd:integer 33679718
xsd:integer 1048774072
xsd:date 1819-04-02
xsd:date 1901-04-24
rdf:langString Lieutenant Governor of Virginia
xsd:integer 15
rdf:langString Attorney, Preacher
xsd:date 1890-01-01
xsd:date 1886-01-01
xsd:integer 1886
rdf:langString Religion
rdf:langString John Edward „Parson“ Massey (* 2. April 1819 im Spotsylvania County, Virginia; † 24. April 1901 in Charlottesville, Virginia) war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker. Zwischen 1886 und 1890 war er Vizegouverneur des Bundesstaates Virginia.
rdf:langString John Edward "Parson" Massey (April 2, 1819 – April 24, 1901) served as the 15th Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from January 1, 1886, until January 1, 1890. He was from Albemarle County, Virginia and a member of the Democratic Party. A Baptist preacher, Massey considered himself the founder of the short-lived Readjusters. However, when the "Big Four" revolted to buck Confederate-general-turned-Republican-boss William Mahone, Massey supposedly supported the revolt. The "Big Four" were Andrew M. Lybrook of Patrick County, Peyton G. Hale of Grayson County, Samuel H. Newberry of Bland County, and B.F. Williams of Nottoway County. Upon Massey's death, he was buried in Charlottesville's Oakhill cemetery. His autobiography appeared posthumously in 1909, edited by Elizabeth H. Hancock.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3332

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