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WILLIAMS, John Mason, jurist, born in New Bedford, Massachusetts 24 June, 1780; died there, 28 December, 1868. He was graduated at Brown in 1801, studied law, and, on his admission to the bar in 1803, rose rapidly in his profession, he became associate justice of the court of common pleas in 1821, and its chief justice in 1839-'44. In 1844-'56 he was commissioner of insolvency. Among Judge Williams's published addresses are " Remarks on Animal Magnetism " (New York, 1837), and orations on the lives of Samuel Howe (Worcester, Massachusetts, 1828) and Peter O. Thacher (Boston, 1843). He was also author of a pamphlet entitled "Nullification and Compromise " (New York, 1863).
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