His maternal grandparents were Capt. Jonathan Parsons and Hannah (née Giles) Parsons.[1] After the death of Capt. Parsons, his grandmother married Stephen Cross, Esq.[2]
Career
Jackson was described as: "A man of brilliant parts, and of great promise; of highly cultivated mind, of refined taste, and remarkable for a pleasing and easy address, and graceful manners"[2]
He practiced law in Philadelphia and collected "minerals, coins, statuary" and "his natural taste for these pursuits was cultivated and strengthened by a residence of two years in Europe, and a pedestrian tour of Switzerland." Jackson was appointed U.S. Chargé d'Affaires to Denmark on May 20, 1841, by President William Henry Harrison, who was his personal friend.[2] He presented his credentials on October 12, 1841.[3]
Harriet Carroll Jackson (1835–1877), who married Leonard Douglas Hay Currie of the British Army in 1862.[5][7]
Charles Carroll Jackson (1836–1900),[8] a merchant who married Minnie Coster and, after her death, Mary Van Nest, daughter of Abraham Van Nest, in 1882;[9] he died of peritonitis aboard the S.S. Columbia.[10]
Oswald Chew Jackson (1838–1891), a merchant who married Ella Moore Willing, a daughter of Caroline Willing and Dr. Edward Peace of Philadelphia;[5][11] he drowned at sea.[9]
Mary Ellen Jackson (1841–1909), who married Capt. Nalbro Frazier, son of Nalbo Frazier and uncle to Charles W. Ogden, in 1867.[12]