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Topic: William Hutcheson


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In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  William Hutcheson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Hutcheson (February 6, 1874 - October 20, 1953) was the leader of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America from 1915 until 1952.
Hutcheson did not allow for opposition to his administration: he revoked the charters of locals that did not follow his directions or that he believed to be "communistic".
Hutcheson's outspoken politics may have played a role in the Roosevelt administration's attempt to convict Hutcheson and other union leaders for criminal violations of the Sherman Act in 1940.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_Hutcheson   (596 words)

  
 Francis Hutcheson (philosopher) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hutcheson not only maintains that benevolence is the sole and direct source of many of our actions, but, by a not unnatural recoil, that it is the only source of those actions of which, on reflection, we approve.
To a study of the writings of Shaftesbury and Hutcheson we might, probably, in large measure, attribute the unequivocal adoption of the utilitarian standard by Hume, and, if this be the case, the name of Hutcheson connects itself, through Hume, with the names of Priestley, Paley and Bentham.
Hutcheson may further be regarded as one of the earliest modern writers on aesthetics.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Francis_Hutcheson_(philosopher)   (2880 words)

  
 Geometry.Net - Philosophers: Hutcheson Francis   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Francis Hutcheson, 16941746 Francis (or Frances) Hutcheson was a professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow, one of the leaders of the Scottish Enlightenment and an early utilitarian thinker.
Extractions: Francis (or Frances) Hutcheson was a professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow, one of the leaders of the Scottish Enlightenment and an early utilitarian thinker.
Francis Hutcheson's philosophy is the startingpoint of modern aesthetics as a distinct philosophical discipline.
www.889.com /philosophers/hutcheson_francis.php   (1970 words)

  
 Bill Hutcheson's Convention
Hutcheson repeatedly heads the labor committee of the Republican National Committee; he opposes social legislation--including the demand for a thirty-hour week; he kept the executive council of the A. of L. from carrying out the command of the 1935 convention to work for a constitutional amendment.
Hutcheson suddenly decided that their per capita dues belonged to him, and they were duly turned over by the executive council.
Hutcheson was planning to invite in such craft unions as the teamsters, the machinists, and others in order to dismember the Northwest locals.
newdeal.feri.org /nation/na37144p011.htm   (1166 words)

  
 William Drennan
William Drennan (May 23, 1754-February 5, 1820), a physician, poet, educationalist and political radical, was one of the chief architects of the Society of United Irishmen.
Born in Belfast in 1754, William was the son of the Revd Thomas Drennan (1696-1768), minister of Belfast's First Presbyterian Church, under whose ministry, according to Alexander Gordon his nineteenth century successor, the doctrine of the Trinity first ceased to be preached in that church.
Although his 'Wake of William Orr', written after the hanging of a county Antrim farmer for administering the oath of the United Irishmen in 1797, had encouraged the rebels, he withdrew his support and played no part in the doomed uprising of 1798.
www.uua.org /uuhs/duub/articles/williamdrennan.html   (1300 words)

  
 owner's home   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
William Amis was born in 1813 and was Banning’s second owner.
William Amis died in 1888, at the age of 75 and was buried in Newnan, Georgia.
The house is still in good condition and is occupied by members of the Hanson family.
www.westga.edu /~history/Banningmill/ownershome.htm   (124 words)

  
 Cpl William John Turner Hutcheson - Company E
William John Turner Hutcheson was born December 18, 1839 to Curtis C. and Verlina Deadmon Hutcheson.
One of the wounded was Cpl Hutcheson, whose left thigh was badly lacerated by a shell fragment.
Sgt Hutcheson must have been one of these as he is shown as being AWOL as of December 4th, 1863 on a roll dated January 14th, 1864.
www.angelfire.com /tx/RandysTexas/hutchenson.html   (929 words)

  
 Adam Smith - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
At the age of fourteen, Smith proceeded to the University of Glasgow, studying moral philosophy under "the never-to-be-forgotten" (as Smith called him) Francis Hutcheson.
In 1740 he entered Balliol College, Oxford, but as William Robert Scott has said, "the Oxford of his time gave little if any help towards what was to be his lifework," and he left the university in 1746.
He bases his explanation, not as the third Lord Shaftesbury and Hutcheson had done, on a special "moral sense", nor (as Hume did) on utility, but on sympathy.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Adam_Smith   (2619 words)

  
 World War I
Hutcheson was commended by both US Labor Secretary W.B. Wilson and by President Woodrow Wilson for his part in working out the plan.
And, as Hutcheson had urged from the beginning, the US Department of Labor was made the official worker-mobilizing agency, and instructed to work through the trade unions in recruiting.
William Hutcheson not only rejected the Justice lawyers’ overtures, but denounced them to their faces.
www.realapprenticeship.com /mcat/mainweb/hist2.htm   (5954 words)

  
 Selected Families/Individuals - pafg40 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
William Thurman HUTCHESON was born in 1896 in Coleraine, Victoria, Australia.
Sydney McDonald HUTCHESON was born on 05 Oct 1897 in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia.
William Frederick THURMAN [Parents] was born in 1855 in England.
members.shaw.ca /claydonpsn/pafg40.htm   (459 words)

  
 David HUTCHESON abt 1790-abt 1830 & Isabella TAYLOR 1794-1876, Scotland, Tasmania & Sandford, Victoria, Australia
David HUTCHESON died in Scotland before 1833, the year in which Isabella and some of her children emigrated to Van Diemens Land.
Mrs HUTCHESON was the grandmother of the late Alexander MURRAY of 'Oaklands' Carapook and his daughter Jean Hutcheson MURRAY is writing up this history of Carapook and District as told to her by her Father and Mother, Mr.
HUTCHESON Bros. (John, George and David):-Gr., 1842-8; Runnymede, Mar. 1846 to Nov. 1863; Mt. Struan, May 1848 to Nov. 1863; JOHN:-Mt. Struan, Nov. 1863 to Nov. 1866.
www.ballaratgenealogy.org.au /sandford/hutcheson.htm   (528 words)

  
 12/11/2004 - Hutchesons Were Early Settlers At Sale Creek - Memories - Chattanoogan.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
William Hutcheson was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1632.
William LaFayette, Alfred Leonidas and James Caswell Hutcheson, with their families, migrated to Springtown, Parker County, Texas, from Birchwood in 1881 after the three men purchased land during the summer of 1881.
William Franklin Hutcheson died in 1933 at the age of 82.
www.chattanoogan.com /articles/article_59768.asp   (1234 words)

  
 [No title]
William Clennondon, of Mason County, taken first Tuesday of October, at house of John Vanhever, in town of Point Pleasant, before Justice John Boush and John Henderson...
William () Ledgewood and Rebecca () to Moses Williams, L27, 300 acres in Beverley Manor on Buchanan's Mill Creek; John Begam's line; corner John Buchanan's land; Elijah McClenachan's land, formerly James McCorkle's; corner John Henderson; Nathan Gillilan's land, formerly John Lyon's.
William Hutcheson and Anne () to John Graham, L140, 196 acres on Christian's (Christee's) Creek between lands of John Hutcheson and John Henderson, 172 acres of which were formerly conveyed by said Hutcheson to said John Graham and Robert Graham; corner Jno.
lib-operations.sonoma.edu /fin/aaa-0413.html   (2640 words)

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: Francis Hutcheson   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Francis Hutcheson was the first in a line of Scottish philosophers that would eventually include David Hume (1711-76), Adam Smith (1723-90) and Thomas Reid (1730-96).
Hutcheson was born near Armagh, Ireland, on 8 August 1694, the grandson of a Scottish Presbyterian minister who had settled in Ulster.
Hutcheson assumed the position in the autumn of 1730 and held it until his death in 1746.
www.litencyc.com /php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=2275   (613 words)

  
 Johnson-Hutcheson
At present, it seems certain that William JOHNSON, who married Elizabeth HUTCHESON, was the son of Daniel JOHNSON and his wife Agnes.
William JOHNSON was named as son-in-law in the will of Matthew HUTCHESON, dated Mar. 13, 1749.
Therefore, she is probably the mother of all the children of William JOHNSON.
www.kinnexions.com /smlawson/johnsond.htm   (2716 words)

  
 From Tennessee To Texas in 1881
In August 1881, William Newton Hutcheson and William Henry Casey, a friend, came to Texas to complete the deal for the purchase of the land bought by William Lafayette Hutcheson.
Besides the responsibility of paying for the land, they also had the task of securing farm equipment, teams, feed, household furnishings, and other supplies for the families which were to arrive before the end of the year.
Hutcheson as a "shanty town" with wooden sidewalks.
www.mindspring.com /~r-cfn/tentx.html   (1058 words)

  
 Guide to the John William Hutcheson papers, 1852-1903 (bulk dates 1852-1862)
John W. Hutcheson was born in Virginia in 1829; he moved to Anderson, Texas (in Grimes County) in 1853, where he practiced law.
He was a member of the Texas state convention that passed the secession ordiance, fought with the 4th Texas Regiment in Virginia, and was killed during the Seven Days' Battle on June 27, 1862.
Permission to publish from the John William Hutcheson papers, MS 037, must be obtained from the Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University.
www.lib.utexas.edu /taro/ricewrc/00104/rice-00104.html   (471 words)

  
 Lowcountry NOW: Obituaries - Obituaries for Feb 7, 2002 02/07/02
Williams lived most of her life in Savannah.
Survivors: wife of 54 years, Mary Joyce Hutcheson; son and daughter-in-law, Linda Blocker of Mt. Shasta, CA, Betty Hutcheson of Bellville and Mary and Barry Brierton of Reidsville; brother, Harley Hutcheson of Baxley; seven grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Dennis Taylor of Waynesboro; brothers, William Dennis (Trey) Taylor, III, and William Stuart Taylor both of Dublin, Patrick Michael Scherz and Tyler Andrew Scherz of Greenville, SC; sister, Carly Ann Scherz of Greenville, SC.
www.lowcountrynow.com /stories/020702/OBITSindex.shtml   (3772 words)

  
 Hutchinsons in Scotland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
William Hutchison of Sanguhar, Ayrshire, Scotland There is conflicting information in the records for this man, one source saying Ayrshire, another Dumfriesshire, and there are two possible death dates.
HUTCHESON, William, joiner, in Toronto, heir to cousin Ann Ogilvie, in Scouringburn, Dundee, Angus, d.
HUTCHESON, Alexander, clergyman, educated at Glasgow Univ., sailed in 1722, settled in Bohemia Manor, Cecil Co., MD, 1723, d.
www.hutchinsongenealogy.net /scots.htm   (1037 words)

  
 The Nature Conservancy in New Jersey - William L. Hutcheson Memorial Forest
This natural oasis is considered the birthplace of The Nature Conservancy in New Jersey and stands as the organization’s first conservation project in the state.
Hutcheson is home to a variety of wildlife.
Then-owner Thomas Mettlar decided to sell his wooded tract of the Hutcheson site, a parcel where trees had never been felled since Dutch settlers claimed the land in 1701.
www.nature.org /wherewework/northamerica/states/newjersey/work/art16400.html   (362 words)

  
 William Hutcheson + Alexander Hutcheson & Son
The Hutcheson family were based in Colinton, South of Edinburgh, now within the Edinburgh boundary.
This card by A Hutcheson was published by JR Russell, Edinburgh and has a post mark dated 1905.
Was Alex J Hutcheson of Colinton related to the earlier Edinburgh photographer, RC Hutcheson who had a studio at 4 West Maitland Street, close to the West End of Princes Street, in 1891?
www.edinphoto.org.uk /PP_D/pp_hutcheson.htm   (187 words)

  
 Long Family - pafn14 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
William Buchanan, of Tyrone was born circa 1677 in Co. Tyrone, Ireland.
William and Jean are the ancestors of the Buchanans of Meadville, PA, and early settlers in Cumberland, Crawford, York, and Adams Counties in PA, some of whom went into NY, OH, and as far south as MO. Their descendants will be the subject of a future article.
WILLIAM ATKINSON was born in 1690 in Virginiia.
www.chrisanddavid.com /LongGenealogy/longfamil/pafn14.htm   (8786 words)

  
 EH.Net Encyclopedia: Labor Unions in the United States
free from the interference, restraint, or coercion of employers." AFL-leader William Green pronounced this a "charter of industrial freedom" and workers rushed into unions in a wave unmatched since the Knights of Labor in 1886.
Led by John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers, eight national unions launched a campaign for industrial organization as the Committee for Industrial Organization.
After Lewis punched Carpenter's Union leader William L Hutcheson on the floor of the AFL convention in 1935, the Committee became an independent Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO).
www.eh.net /encyclopedia/article/friedman.unions.us   (9817 words)

  
 Hutcheson Memorial Forest   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
The Hutcheson Memorial Forest (HMF) is a unique area consisting of one of the last uncut forests in the Mid-Atlantic states, along with the surrounding lands devoted to protection of the old forest and research into ecological interactions necessary to understand the forest.
The Hutcheson Memorial Forest has enjoyed the interest and active support of many people and organizations in preserving the primeval oak forest.
Thus, the Hutcheson Memorial Forest, named for William L. Hutcheson, a past President of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, is a prime example of cooperation and partnership in conservation.
www.rci.rutgers.edu /~deenr/HMF.html   (739 words)

  
 Copeland Family History and Genealogy - Person Page 776
Christening*: Thomas Hutcheson was christened on Wednesday, 21 June 1747 in Litlington, CAM.
Christening*: William Hutcheson was christened on Friday, 20 August 1751 in Litlington, CAM.
Christening*: Amos Hutcheson was christened on Thursday, 3 May 1753 in Litlington, CAM.
www.btinternet.com /~robert_copeland/all-p/p776.htm   (377 words)

  
 HUME AND HIS CRITICS
Arguably, Hutcheson's two most important works are his An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue and his An Essay on the Nature and Conduct of the Passions and Affections, with Illustrations on the Moral Sense.
Hutcheson is such an important figure that I don't know why I have not done more with his work.
Hutcheson, Francis, An Essay on the Nature and Cinduct of the Passions and Affections with Illustrations on the Moral Sense, Third edition, 1742, with an Introduction by Paul McReynolds (Gainesville, Florida: Scholars' Facsimiles and Reprints, 1969).
www3.baylor.edu /~Elmer_Duncan/basic.html   (8293 words)

  
 Sir William Hutcheson Poë, 1st Bt. - Biography
In 1868 Poë married Mary Adelaide, daughter of Sir William Compton Domville, 3rd Bt.
A retired Lieutenant-Colonel, Poë was wounded in the Egyptian Expedition in 1884, and lost a leg in the Nile Expedition of 1884-85.
He was a Governor of the National Gallery of Ireland and was a member of the Irish Land Conference in Dublin (1902), and of the Vice-Regal Commission on Irish Railways (1906-10).
www.bonus.com /contour/national_gallery/http@@/www.nga.gov/cgi-bin/pbio?550469   (121 words)

  
 Notre Dame Bay - Little Bay Island
William BURTON, age 25 to Clara SHARPE, age 19, Ward's Harbour by Rev. Joseph Lister, Nov. 10, 1883.
William BURTON, widower, age 59 from Ward's Harbour to Ann ROBERTS, Widow, age 57 from Little Bay Islands by Rev. James Pincock on Feb 25, 1885.
William RAINES from Pelley's Island to Naomi SMITH from Pelley's Island by Rev. Elwin Moore.
www.homestead.com /verashort/files/NDBmarriages.htm   (2987 words)

  
 4/19/2004 - Hutchesons Became Successful In Business - Memories - Chattanoogan.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Charles Hutcheson, believed to be a descendant of William, was in Amelia County in 1743 when he bought 200 acres on the lower side of West Creek from John Osburn for 16 pounds.
However, William died in 1839 at the age of 49.
Children of William and Margaret Sigler Hutcheson were Phillip Sigler who married Sarah Brown, Matilda N. who married John Cathey, Charles who married Margaret Coulter, George Washington “Wash” who married Emily S. Templeton, James LaFayette who married Ruth Coulter, Oliver Perry who married Emily M. Plemmons and Mrs.
www.chattanoogan.com /articles/article_49474.asp   (1219 words)

  
 [No title]
HUTCHESON Nesting, Shetland, Scotland So: 919491 HUTCHESON (M).........................
HUTCHESON Nesting, Shetland, Scotland So: 919491 Christian HUTCHESON (F)...............
HUTCHESON Nesting, Shetland, Scotland So: 919491 Pr: 6901933 Grace HUTCHISON (F)...................
www.cursiter.com /txt-exe-files/Hutch.txt   (8035 words)

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