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Monson

Monson may refer to:

Monson (surname)

Monson is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Ander Monson, American novelist, poet, and nonfiction writer
  • Dan Monson (born 1961), American college basketball head coach; son of Don Monson
  • David Smith Monson (born 1945), U.S. Representative from Utah 1985–1987
  • Don Monson (born 1933), American college basketball head coach
  • Earl M. Monson (born 1932), general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1998–2002
  • Sir Edmund Monson, 1st Baronet (1834–1909), British diplomat, minister and ambassador
  • Sir Edmund Monson, 3rd Baronet (1883–1969), British diplomat
  • George Henry Monson (1755–1823), English amateur cricketer
  • Sir Henry Monson, 3rd Baronet (1653–1718), English politician
  • Henry Monson (gaoler) (1793–1866), New Zealand settler
  • Jeff Monson (born 1971), American mixed martial arts fighter
  • Sir John Monson, 2nd Baronet (1599–1683), English landowner and politician
  • John Monson (c. 1628 – 1674), English politician
  • John Monson, 11th Baron Monson (1932–2011), British hereditary peer, crossbench member of the House of Lords, civil liberties campaigner
  • Marianne Monson (born 1975), American children's author
  • Martin O. Monson (1885-1969), American politician
  • Robert Monson (by 1532–1583), English politician and judge
  • Shaun Monson, American animal, human and environmental rights activist and film director
  • Sir Thomas Monson, 1st Baronet (1565–1641), English politician
  • Thomas S. Monson (born 1927), current President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church)
  • Walter Monson (1909–1988), Canadian ice hockey player
  • William Monson (disambiguation), several people

Usage examples of "monson".

But, of course, a Monson girl may have been chosen by the inventors to give verisimilitude to the substitution story, simply because the family was friendly with Turner, and the tale of the lewd high jinks with Symon added to make it seem more likely that old Lady Monson would lend herself to such a plot.

He says that the girl whom the jury of matrons declared to be virgo intacta was so heavily veiled as to be unidentifiable through the whole proceedings, and that she was not Lady Essex at all, but the youthful daughter of Sir Thomas Monson.