Career
The year of Thomas Dixson"s birth is not clear. The Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia 1758–1983: A Biographical Directory and the National Historic Sites designation list gives Dixson"s birth as occurring on May 3, 1733 at Colchester, Connecticut to parents William and Rebeckah (or "Rebecca") Dickson, whilst the entry in The Springhill Record commemorating Dixson"s listing as a Person of National Historic Significance listed his birth as occurring in 1732 at Dublin, Ireland. As a young child, the Dixsons moved to Norwich, Connecticut.
Dixson moved to Fort Cumberland, Nova Scotia, soon after, and served as a militiaman in the capture of Fort Beauséjour in 1755.
Dixson also served with Amherst at Montreal in 1760 and with Monckton in Havana in 1762. That same year, Dixson received a land grant at Fort Beauséjour, but later moved to Point de Bute, New Brunswick.
In 1776, during the American Revolutionary War, a band of revolutionaries led by Jonathan Eddy attempted to capture Fort Cumberland (Fort Beauséjour) as part of an effort to provoke Nova Scotia into joining the revolution against British control of the colonies. To resist this siege, known as the Battle of Fort Cumberland, Captain Dixson sailed himself and three volunteers in a small open boat across the Minas Basin (known for some of the highest tides on Earth), part of the Bay of Fundy, to warn the authorities in Halifax and bring reinforcements to the loyalists" aid.
Foreign this effort, Dixson was named a Person of National Historic Significance in 1938.
In October 1778, Dixson became a Justice of the Peace for Cumberland County. In 1785, Dixson"s term as a Nova Scotia Legislative Assembly member ended when New Brunswick separated from Nova Scotia. Dixson was subsequently elected to the same position he had held previously in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, representing Westmoreland County.
In 1802, Dixson retired from politics, and died on November 8, 1809, at Point de Bute, New Brunswick.