the convention of 1860, affixing his name to the ordinance of secession. He was elected colonel of the 17th South Carolina regiment, and was killed in the second battle of Bull Run, 28 Aug., 1862.
MEARES, John, English navigator, b. in
England in 1750; d. in London, England, in 1809.
He became a sailor, and, after maiving many voy-
ages to Newfoundland, Labrador, and Greenland,
he entered the navy in 1771, served against the
French in the West Indies, and became captain in
the merchant service after the peace of 1788. He
then went to India, where he formed the North-
west America company for opening trade with
Russian America, and sailed from Calcutta on 12
March, 1786, in the " Nootka," a vessel of two hun-
dred tons, with which he explored part of the
coast of Alaska. Meeting with little success in
trade with the Russians, he returned to China by
way of the Sandwich islands. He then fitted out a
new expedition of two vessels with which he sailed
from Typa on 22 Jan., 1788, explored Nootka
sound, which he entered in May, 1789, and recon-
noitred the neighboring coasts, of which he took
possession in the name of the crown. He reached
Macao on 5 Dec, 1789. Capt. Meares's discoveries
form the chief basis upon which the British title to
Oregon and British Columbia was based. He pub-
lished "Voyages in the Years 1788-'9 from China
to the Northwest Coast of America " (London, 1790).
MEARS, John William, clergvman, b. in
Reading, Pa.. 10 Aug., 1825 ; d. in Clinton, N. Y.,
10 Nov., 1881. He was graduated at Delaware
college, Newark, Del., in 1844, and at the Yale
divinity-school in 1851, and held pastorates in
Camden, N. J., Elkton, Md., and Milford, Del.
He became assistant editor in 1860, and afterward
editor and proprietor, of the " American Presby-
terian," a weekly paper published in Philadelphia
in the interest of the new-school branch of the
Presbyterian church. In 1870 this was merged
into the "New York Evangelist," and he was called
to the chair of ethics and metaphysics in Hamilton
college, which he held until his death. In 1878
he was chosen president of the New York state
teachers' association, and was chairman of the uni-
versity convocation at Albany. In 1881 he arranged
for a meeting of metaphysicians in Saratoga for
the centennial celebration of the appearance
of Kant's " Critique of Pure Reason," at which he
read a paper that he afterward repeated at the
Concord school of philosophy. He was a leader in
the cause of temperance, and was nominated as
candidate for congress in 1878, and for governor
of New York in 1879 by the Prohibition party.
For many years he labored to overthrow the Onei-
da community which had been formed in 1848 by
John H. Noyes {q. v.), and he was finally successful
in his efforts. He received the degree of D. D. in
1870. He was the author of "The Bible in the
Workshop " (New York, 1857) ; " The Martyrs of
France" (Philadelphia, 1860); "The Beggars of
Holland" (1867); "The Storv of Madagascar"
(1873); "The Heroes of Bohemia" (1879); and
" From Exile to Overthrow " (Philadelphia, 1881).
MEASE, James, physician, b. in Philadelphia,
Pa., in 1771 ; d. there, 15 May, 1846. He was grad-
uated in medicine at the University of Pennsyl-
vania in 1792, reading a thesis on " Hydrophobia,"
which he afterward published (1792). He was the
first vice-president of the Philadelphia athenaeum
and an active member of the Philosophical society.
His publications are " Geological Account of the
United States" (Philadelphia, 1807): "Picture of
Philadelphia" (1811); "On William Penn's Treaty
with the Indians " (1836) ; " Utility of Public-Loan
Offices " (1836) ; " Description of Some of the Medals
struck in the National Academy " (1821) ; and a
" Letter on the Rearing of Silk-Worms" (1828).
MEASE, John, soldier, b. in Strabane, Ireland,
in 1746 ; d. in Philadelphia, Pa., in 1826. He came
to this country in 1754 and became a shipping-
merchant in Philadelphia. He was an original
member of the first troop of city cavalry, and was
one of the twenty-four of that corps who crossed
the Delaware under Gen. Washington on 25 Dec,
. Mease was one of the five that were detailed
to keep alive the fires along the line of American
encampment at Trenton to deceive the enemy
while the army marched to attack the rear-guard
at Princeton. He served during the entire war,
suffering great loss of property in his dwelling and
warehouses. He subscribed £4,000 for the army in
. For the last thirty years of his life he was
one of the admiralty surveyors of the port of Phila-
delphia. Mr. Mease continued in his later days to
wear the old three-cornered hat of the Revolution,
and was frequently called " The Last of the Cocked
Hats." — His nephew, Matthew, b. in Strabane,
Ireland; d. in Philadelphia in 1787, emigrated at
an early age to this country and settled in Phila-
delphia. Although educated for a merchant, he
entered the navy and became purser of the " Bon
Homme Richard." In the encounter between this
vessel and the " Serapis " he commanded the quar-
ter-deck guns until he was wounded.
MEBANE, Alexander, statesman, b. in Orange
county, N. C, 26 Nov., 1744; d. there, 5 July, 1795.
His father, of the same name, came from the north
of Ireland to Pennsylvania, but removed to Orange
county, N. C, before the Revolution. The eldest
sons, William and Robert, were officers in the Con-
tinental army. Alexander was a member of the
Provincial congress at Halifax in 1776, of the con-
vention that refused to ratify the National consti-
tution in 1787, and of the legislature in 1783-'93.
In the latter year he took his seat in congress, and
he was re-elected, but died before entering on his
second term. — His son, James, was many times a
member of the legislature between 1808 and 1828,
and speaker of the house in 1821.
MEDARY, Samuel, editor, b. in Montgomery
Square, Montgomery co.. Pa., 25 Feb., 1801 ; d.
in Columbus, Ohio, 7 Nov., 1864. The family
name was originally spelled Madeira, and is stilL
so pronounced. He
was reared in the
Quaker faith, his
mother's ancestors
having emigrated to
this country with
William Penn. He
was sent to the Nor-
ristown academy,
and at sixteen years
of age became a con-
tributor to the " Nor-
ristown Herald,"
both in prose and
poetry. He then
taught and contin-
ued his studies in
the higher branches.
In 1820 his family
went to Montgomery county, Md., and
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two or three years later to Georgetown, D. C. In 1825 he went to Ohio, and settled in Batavia, Clermont CO. When he was twenty-six years old he was made county surveyor and school trustee, and later he became auditor of the county. In