
Raymond A. “Chip” Mason ’59, L.H.D. ’98, a pioneering financier who founded Legg Mason and helped define Baltimore as a national financial center, died on August 22, 2025, in Naples, Florida. He was 88.
Best known for building one of the nation’s largest and most respected investment firms, Mason was also a deeply proud and loyal alumnus of William & Mary. In 2005, W&M renamed its business school the Raymond A. Mason School of Business — a lasting tribute to a leader whose philanthropic investment, personal mentorship and strategic vision propelled the school into the 21st century.
Mason graduated from William & Mary in 1959. As a student, he was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and served as an interpreter on a tour boat for historic Jamestown.
At age 25, after a brief tenure in his family’s brokerage business in Lynchburg, he struck out on his own to found Mason & Co. in 1962 in Newport News, Virginia — his firm later merged to become Legg Mason, a firm he led for over four decades based in Baltimore. When he stepped down in 2008, Legg Mason had grown into a global enterprise managing $830 billion in assets.
He attributed much of his professional success to the foundation built at William & Mary.
The full tribute can be read here
Source: Raymond A. Mason School of Business