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・ John G. Goldsmith
・ John G. Good
・ John G. Griffith
・ John G. Hanna
・ John G. Haskell
・ John G. Heimann
・ John G. Hemry
・ John G. Henderson
・ John G. Heyburn II
・ John G. Horgan
・ John G. Hughes
・ John G. Hutchinson
・ John G. Inglis
・ John G. Innis
・ John G. Jackson
John G. Jackson (politician)
・ John G. Jackson (writer)
・ John G. Johnson
・ John G. K. Ayers
・ John G. Kelton
・ John G. Kemeny
・ John G. Kerr
・ John G. Kincaid & Company
・ John G. King
・ John G. King (politician)
・ John G. Koeltl
・ John G. Lake
・ John G. Lenic
・ John G. Levi
・ John G. Linvill


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John G. Jackson (politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
John G. Jackson (politician)

John George Jackson (September 22, 1777 – March 28, 1825) was a U.S. Representative and federal judge from Virginia, the son of George Jackson, brother of Edward B. Jackson, and grandfather of William Thomas Bland, Jacob Beeson Jackson, James Monroe Jackson, and John Jay Jackson, Jr.
==Early life, education, and career==
Born in Buckhannon, Virginia (now West Virginia), Jackson moved with his parents to Clarksburg in 1784. He received an English training and became a civil engineer. In 1793, he was appointed surveyor of public lands west of the Ohio River, in what is now the State of Ohio, conducting that office from 1796 to 1798. He served as member of the Virginia General Assembly from 1798 to 1801, during which time he supported resolutions against the Alien and Sedition Acts. Jackson read law to enter the bar in 1801. Besides his law practice, Jackson began a number of successful businesses.
Prior to marriage, Jackson had a son, who became General John J. Jackson, the father of John Jay Jackson, Jr. Jackson's first wife Mary "Polly" Payne was the youngest sister of Dolley Madison - they were married in 1800. She died in 1808 of tuberculosis. Jackson continued to correspond with Dolley Madison after the death of his wife and her sister. On June 11, 1810, shortly before he married Mary Sophia Meigs, the daughter of Return J. Meigs, Jr. he wrote Dolley that his new wife "is about the size of our dear Mary, () much such a person."〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Untitled )
Writing under the pseudonym, "A Mountaineer," Jackson protested in the Richmond Examiner against what he perceived were the two main inequities of the Virginia Constitution - voting rights tied to land ownership, and representation in the legislature based on counties rather than population.

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