Background
John Mason was born in Pembrokeshire, west Wales, on 9 June 1920.
John Mason was born in Pembrokeshire, west Wales, on 9 June 1920.
He studied at Bridgnorth Grammar School in Shropshire, and then at Jesus College, Oxford, where he was a scholar.
During the war, he served with the Manchester Regiment and then in the Indian Army, reaching the rank of Major and working in the Mechanical Transport Training Centre as well as interpreting Urdu. In 1950, he began his association with Christ Church, Oxford, at which he would spend the remainder of his academic career. His first appointment was as a research lecturer, to deal with the papers of Robert Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury.
Salisbury, who was Prime Minister from 1886 to 1892 and 1895 to 1902, studied at Christ Church between 1847 and 1849, and his papers were at that time held by the college.
He became a "Student" (the term used by Christ Church for Fellows of the college) in 1957, retiring in 1987, and was also college librarian (succeeding Nowell Myres) from 1962 until his retirement. He also wrote a history of Bridgnorth and co-authored "Christ Church and Reform 1850–1867", looking at the changes in Oxford during the 19th century.
Overall, though, he published comparatively little, but was highly regarded as a tutor at the college.