Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Hutchinson, Thomas


Related Topics

In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  Thomas Hutchinson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Hutchinson (September 9, 1711 – June 3, 1780) was the American colonial governor of Massachusetts from 1771 to 1774 and a prominent Loyalist in the years before the American Revolutionary War.
Hutchinson was born in Boston, where his father, the great-grandson of Anne Hutchinson, was a wealthy merchant and shipowner.
He continued his advocacy of a sound currency, and when the British Parliament reimbursed Massachusetts in 1749 for the expenses incurred in the Louisburg expedition, he proposed the abolition of the bills of credit, and the utilisation of the parliamentary repayment as the basis for a new Colonial currency.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thomas_Hutchinson   (988 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson - LoveToKnow 1911
THOMAS HUTCHINSON (1711-1780), the last royal governor of the province of Massachusetts, son of a wealthy merchant of Boston, Mass., was born there on the 9th of September 1711.
Hutchinson went to England in 1740 as the representative of Massachusetts in a boundary dispute with New Hampshire.
He was a member of the Massachusetts Council from 1749 to 1756, was appointed judge of probate in 1752 and was chief justice of the superior court of the province from 1761 to 1769, was lieutenant-governor from 1758 to 1771, acting as governor in the latter two years, and from 1771 to 1774 was governor.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Thomas_Hutchinson   (472 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson of Massachusetts (1771-1774)
Thomas Hutchinson, (1711–1780), American governor of colonial Massachusetts, was the symbol of loyalty to Britain in pre-Revolutionary Boston.
Hutchinson spent most of his life from 1737 either as Boston's representative in the Massachusetts assembly (he was speaker from 1746 to 1749) or as a councillor in the upper house.
Hutchinson was originally in harmony with his colleagues, even attending the Albany Congress of 1754, which projected a plan of union among the colonies.
www.americanrevwar.homestead.com /files/HUTCH.HTM   (1438 words)

  
 Hutchinson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Hutchinson from South Dakota, and the namesake of Hutchinson County, South Dakota.
John Hutchinson, an author and professor of industrial relations at the University of California, Los Angeles.
William Hutchinson (1772-1846), Australian convict and superintendent of Norfolk Island.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hutchinson   (251 words)

  
 Hutchinson Arms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In 1634 during the Visitation of Lincolnshire, Thomas Hutchinson [grandson of William Hutchinson, who was the brother of John, Lord Mayor of Lincoln Hutchinson], presented his pedigree to the heralds and claimed the arms of the Hutchinsons of Yorkshire, but failed to establish his right to their use.
As this Thomas Hutchinson was born before the death of Edward Hutchinson of Wykeham Abbey, to whom the arms had been of right confirmed in 1581, there could have been no difficulty in establishing a connection, if any had existed.
Crest - On a mural coronet or, a cockatrice argent, combed and wattled gules gorged with a wreath of laurel or.
www.hutchinsongenealogy.net /arms.htm   (1626 words)

  
 BookRags: Thomas Hutchinson Biography
Thomas Hutchinson (1711-1780), American governor of colonial Massachusetts and a staunch defender of English colonial policy, was also a jurist and historian.
Thomas Hutchinson was born in Boston on Sept. 9, 1711.
By 1763 Hutchinson was one of the most influential men in Massachusetts politics, but he had earned the enmity of fiery prerevolutionary patriots Samuel Adams and James Otis by his opposition to the Land Bank and his support of the issuance of general writs by proper authority.
www.bookrags.com /biography/thomas-hutchinson   (719 words)

  
 Hutchinson's Comments
Thomas Pownall (1772-1805) enjoyed a long and successful career as an administrator in the Colonies for England, serving as lieutenant governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony, governor of South Carolina, secretary to the governor of New York and lieutenant governor of New Jersey.
Thomas advocated making concessions to the colonists in hopes of avoiding bloodshed, but eventually turned and joined with Lord North's ministry, which was largely responsible for precipitating the Revolution by snubbing conciliation.
The other Pownall, John, was Thomas' elder brother who held the position of secretary of the board of trade and plantations, and later served as undersecretary of state for the American colonies and as commissioner of excise and customs.
gaspee.org /Hutchinson.htm   (935 words)

  
 Interactive State House
Thomas Hutchinson was Governor during the difficult years leading to the American Revolution.
Hutchinson was unflinchingly rational and held an enmity for the revolutionary radicals.
Hutchinson's aggressive response, along with a quiet withdrawal of the involved regiment kept the peace, but it drew a final line between himself and his revolutionary countrymen.
www.mass.gov /statehouse/massgovs/thutchinson.htm   (489 words)

  
 §24. Thomas Hutchinson. II. The Historians, 1607–1783. Vol. 15. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early ...
Anne Hutchinson, who was exiled from Massachusetts in 1638 because she defied the Puritan hierarchy, and he was quite free from religious narrowness.
Hutchinson loved Massachusetts, but he was intellectually a conservative, and he did not accept the theory on which the colonists rested their resistance to the king and Parliament.
It was in 1764, while Hume and Robertson were at the height of their freshly won fame, that Hutchinson published the first volume of his History of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay.
www.bartleby.com /225/0224.html   (796 words)

  
 Hutchinson, Thomas. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
A descendant of Anne Hutchinson, he was a man of wealth and prominence, of learning, and of notable integrity.
The plan, which was ultimately successful in stimulating trade, caused Hutchinson to lose the election in 1749 and aligned him with the conservatives.
When he was appointed royal governor in 1771, Hutchinson was perhaps the most powerful man in the colony, but he had bitter political enemies among the radicals, notably Samuel Adams.
www.bartleby.com /65/hu/HutchinsoT.html   (324 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson
Thomas Hutchinson of Beverley, Thomas Pearson of Bonwick, Joseph Helmsley of Great Kelke, George Hutcheson of Sheffield and Mahlon Stacy of Hansworth Parish, all in the County of Yorke, to George Nicholson of Burton Stather, County of Lincolne, yeoman, for 1/24 of a share in the First Tenth of West Jersey.
Thomas Lambert lived where is now the large brick house on the Lalor farm, and the distance between, by a path along the bluff overlooking the lowlands, would be about that farm.
Thomas Hutchinson was described as "a tanner" of Beverley, Yorkshire, in West New Jersey deeds, from 1678 to as late as 1679, which shows conclusively that he did not come to America in the ship Kent late in the fall of 1677.
www.richardshutchinson.com /ThomasHutchinson.htm   (11197 words)

  
 Hutchinson Family - pafg01 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Thomas Emerson TARN [Parents] was born Abt 1880 in Intack, Forest.
Selina HUTCHINSON [Parents] was born Abt 1888 in Dale, Forest and Frith, Durham.
Thomas HUTCHINSON was christened 27 Feb 1762 in St. Marys, Middleton in Teesdale, Durham, England.
members.cox.net /andrewhutchinson/hutch/pafg01.htm   (438 words)

  
 Project Focus Points   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Thomas Hutchinson, the "Proprietor," from New Jersey and
Thomas Hutchinson, b 1640, Beverly, County of Yorkshire, England, a Quaker.
Thomas Hutchinson became known as Thomas Hutchinson, the "Proprietor" and was always identified as same in New Jersey land records.
home.comcast.net /~rhutchinson/index_files/Page281.htm   (668 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson: Boston's Leading Citizen -- Part One
The lieutenant governor and chief justice of the colony, Thomas Hutchinson, was dining with his family the evening of August 15, when fists began pounding on the door, demanding that he come out.
Thomas Hutchinson was born in 1711 to a well-connected and prosperous family in Boston.
In fact, the Hutchinson family played a major role in founding the Massachusetts Bay colony, and had seen their fortunes rise along with those of Massachusetts in general.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/us_founding_era/77231   (545 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson-information for fifth grade students   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Thomas Hutchinson was born in Boston in 1711 and was the son of a merchant.
Thomas Hutchinson was the last governor of colonial Massachusetts and was serving in that post at the time of the Boston Massacre in March of 1770.
Hutchinson knew tensions were rising in Boston and expressed concern and fear in his writings.
home.comcast.net /~cpulkow/amerrev/thutchinson.html   (277 words)

  
 LIBERTY! . Thomas Hutchinson | PBS
After Benedict Arnold, Thomas Hutchinson was probably the most vilified figure of the Revolutionary era.
During the Stamp Act riots, Hutchinson's house was destroyed by a mob, which mistakingly assumed that he had supported the measure.
Hutchinson's was only the most notable version of a familiar story during the American Revolution.
www.pbs.org /ktca/liberty/popup_hutchinson.html   (286 words)

  
 The E Pluribus Unum Project: A Debate on Natural Rights
Thomas Hutchinson, who served as the royal governor of Massachusetts through much of the most critical period leading up to the revolution (1771-4), was despised by the American patriots of his day but is today recognized as a sincere loyalist caught in a difficult situation.
Born in Boston, Hutchinson graduated from Harvard before serving first in his father's counting house and then in a series of governmental positions including a stint as Chief Justice of Massachusetts between 1761 and 1769.
The story of the burning of Hutchinson's home is told in "The Hutchinson Mob," Chapter III of section three of Grandfather's Chair, Nathaniel Hawthorne's history stories for children.
www.assumption.edu /ahc/1770s/phutchinson.html   (1735 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson
Thomas Hutchinson was a talented royal official who, over the course of his career, descended from life as a pillar of the community to one of Massachusetts’ most hated villains.
Hutchinson also began to accumulate offices during this time and secured several lesser judgeships in the 1750s; he was not a trained lawyer and was criticized for his apparent greed.
Hutchinson spent his final years in England, serving unhappily as an advisor on North American matters to the king, and yearning to return to his homeland.
www.u-s-history.com /pages/h1222.html   (724 words)

  
 Divorce Professional - Thomas Hutchinson, Attorney, Mediator
Hutchinson has earned an outstanding reputation for a high degree of professionalism, thorough preparation, and competent representation of his clients.
Hutchinson had over fifteen years of experience in the business world encompassing the areas of construction, manufacturing, sales, marketing, management, and finance.
Hutchinson is a parent who has first-hand experience with the emotional and financial issues of child custody, support, and property division.
www.split-up.com /db/id8150.htm   (154 words)

  
 Hutchinson, Thomas - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
HUTCHINSON, THOMAS [Hutchinson, Thomas] 1711-80, colonial governor of Massachusetts (1771-74) and historian, b.
When the cost of the Louisburg campaign was repaid to Massachusetts, he proposed (1748) that the money be used to redeem the colony's depreciated currency.
Strained tenderness: Wordsworth, Joanna Hutchinson, and the anxiety of sisterly resistance in "To Joanna".(William Wordsworth)(Critical Essay)
www.encyclopedia.com /html/h/hutchinsot1.asp   (431 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Hutchinson, Thomas   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Hutchinson, Thomas HUTCHINSON, THOMAS [Hutchinson, Thomas] 1711-80, colonial governor of Massachusetts (1771-74) and historian, b.
Thomas, Edward Donnall THOMAS, EDWARD DONNALL [Thomas, Edward Donnall] 1920-, American physician, b.
A surgeon at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Wash., Thomas performed (1970) the first successful bone marrow transplant between people who were not twins.
www.encyclopedia.com /articles/06178.html   (645 words)

  
 Thomas Chair for Leukemia Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Building on Dr. Thomas' work, Hutchinson Center Scientists have recently developed a modified form of bone-marrow transplant, known as a mini-transplant, that extends the lifesaving benefits of the procedure to older patients or those considered medically unfit to withstand a conventional transplant.
In honor of Dr. Thomas and his life-long commitment to eliminating cancer, the Hutchinson Center seeks support to establish an endowed chair in his name as a lasting tribute.
Individual faculty members shape our research programs and the Thomas Chair will help the center foster the necessary intellectual environment by enabling the center to offer the competitive salaries and pilot study funding that are critical to recruiting and retaining the brightest scientific talent.
www.fhcrc.org /donating/support/thomaschair.html   (310 words)

  
 NormanDowler.com | Attorneys | Thomas J. Hutchinson
THOMAS J. After having established a five-year law practice in Westlake Village, Mr.
Hutchinson became associated with the firm, emphasizing his expertise as a family law practitioner.
Hutchinson had a successful career in business, encompassing sales, marketing, finance, management and manufacturing.
www.normandowler.com /html/attorneys/thomashutchinson.html   (263 words)

  
 Princeton University Senior Theses brief display
Atkinson, Helen Winthrop (1985): Thomas Merton: The Belly of a Paradox.
Harshman, Thomas Ringwood (1985): The Hamlets of Shakespeare and Ambroise Thomas.
Neilson, Frederic William Gebhard (1955): The Province of the Poet: A Study of the Concept of the Role of the Poet as Expressed in the Prose and Poetry of Thomas Stearns Eliot and William Butler Yeats.
libweb5.princeton.edu /theses/thesesvw.asp?Lname=&Fname=&Submit=Search&Title1=thomas&department=&Class=&Adviser=   (4832 words)

  
 [No title]
Hutchinson's diary, begun in 1912 and ending in 1971, provides a daily chronicle of the activities of an energetic scholar and a view of the institution at which he worked.
Hutchinson's heavy teaching and administrative load during the 1940's and 1950's slowed the pace of his research on Frank O. Lowden.
Hutchinson was a member of the College History Review Committee from 1947 to 1949, and served from 1950 to 1954 on the Inter-Faculty Committee on Curricular Articulation in the College.
www.lib.uchicago.edu /ead/rlg/ICU.SPCL.HUTCHINSON.xml   (2484 words)

  
 The Ensemble Sospeso - Thomas Hutchinson
Thomas Hutchinson was born in Toms River, New Jersey, beginning trombone studies with his father at age seven.
He attended Juilliard Pre-College as a student of Metropolitan Opera trombonists David Langlitz and Steve Norrell, and continued his studies at the Manhattan School of Music with NY City Ballet trombonist John Swallow.
Hutchinson has been a member of Ensemble Sospeso since 2000.
www.sospeso.com /contents/musicians/hutchinson.html   (248 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson in TutorGig Encyclopedia
Hutchinson was born in Boston, where his father, the great-grandson of Anne Hutchinson, was a wealthy merchant and shipowner.
He continued his advocacy of a sound currency, and when the British Parliament reimbursed Massachusetts in 1749 for the expenses incurred in the Louisburg expedition, he proposed the abolition of the bills of credit, and the utilization of the parliamentary repayment as the basis for a new Colonial currency.
Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas
www.tutorgig.com /ed/Thomas_Hutchinson   (924 words)

  
 Thomas Hutchinson: Boston's Leading Citizen -- Part Two
Thomas Hutchinson had a new platform to champion fiscally conservative policies as well as the colony's territorial concerns.
It is possible that the rift between Hutchinson and the Adams family may have opened at this juncture of Hutchinson's career.
Furthermore, Hutchinson's support for hard money policies may not have endeared him to the Adams family in light of their misfortune in the painful Land Bank fiasco.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/5640/79108   (484 words)

  
 Hutchinson Genealogy
In 1850, Amos Hutchinson said he was born in Ohio and Anne said she was born in New York; this couple was in Lancaster Twp.
According to it, Amos Hutchinson was born in Ohio and Ann Brown Hutchinson was born in Indiana.
The Said Amos T. Hutchinson and Ann Hutchinson for themselves their Heirs executors and administrators do hereby covenant with the said William T. Friedly and Mary J. Friedly their heirs and assigns that the title so conveyed is clear free and unencumbered and do Affirm Warrant and Defend the same against all persons whatsoever.
members.aol.com /masontree/hutch.htm   (6381 words)

  
 Welcome to the Web site of Richard S. Hutchinson
When I saw the name, I had a "hunch" he was related to this Hutchinson line because of his first name being "Smith." I suspected he was the grandson of Smith Hutchinson, of Trenton area, New Jersey; and after further research in his Pension Records, I can prove that he was descended from him.
Research of Charles Robbins Hutchinson (1838-1927), of Mercer and Monmouth County, New Jersey, on George Hutcheson/Hutchinson [New Jersey Proprietor], Robert Hutcheson/Hutchinson, Joseph Hutchinson, John Hutchinson and Thomas Hutchinson.
John Hutchinson, who married Joyce Venables, was the son of Thomas Hutchinson, "The Proprietor," of Hutchinson Manor, in what was then Hopewell Township, Burlington County, New Jersey, and is NOT the John Hutchinson, of Falls Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, who married Phebe Kirkbride, the daughter of Joseph and Phebe (Blackshaw) Kirkbride.
www.richardshutchinson.com   (1584 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.