The Sacred Cod - individuals


picture John Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Cir 1683 - Plymouth, Plymouth Colony
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Francis Hutchinson (1630-1702)
         Mother: Mary Cushman (Cir 1658-Bef 1690)


picture
John Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 18 May 1595 - Alford, Lincolnshire
          Death: 
         Burial: 20 Jun 1644 - Alford, Lincolnshire
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Notes
General:
Only Hutchinson's son John had no established or suspected relationship with New England.[10] John was a woollen draper in Alford, and likely did not marry Elizabeth Woodthorpe, as stated in several accounts. He is certainly the John Hutchinson who married on 5 October 1626 Bridget, the daughter of William Bury.[8] He died before his 50th birthday, leaving a detailed will, and his wife lived as his widow for nearly 45 years thereafter.[8] The couple had ten children, all baptised at Alford.[46] 1

picture Leroy C Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Nov 1890 - New Hampshire
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Eva L Morrow (1904 -       )
       Marriage: 21 Aug 1931 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 2
         Status: 

Notes
General:
1900 of Hanover NH
1910 of Colebrook, NH

1931 of Wellfleet

picture Mary Hutchinson

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 22 Dec 1605 - Alford, Lincolnshire 1
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Spouses and Children
1. *Rev John Wheelwright (Cir 1592 - 15 Nov 1679)
       Marriage: Cir 1630 - Lincolnshire, England
         Status: 


picture
Richard Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 3 Jan 1598 - Alford, Lincolnshire
          Death: Cir 1670 - London, England
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 

Events
• Probate, , London, England in London, England


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)


picture
Samuel Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 1 Nov 1590 - Alford, Lincolnshire 1
          Death: Cir May 1667 - Boston, Massachusetts Bay
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 

Events
• Will, , Boston, Massachusetts Bay in Boston, Massachusetts Bay


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Notes
General:
Samuel, baptised in Alford on 1 November 1590,[8] had religious leanings, was educated, and like his younger brother Edward, published theological treatises that displayed a command of Latin.[20] Perhaps because of his religious desires, he departed England in the late spring of 1637, arriving in Boston on 12 July with a group of others from Lincolnshire.[21] The Antinomian Controversy was about at its peak when he arrived, and as a result a law had been passed requiring new immigrants to disavow the doctrine of the free-grace advocates (Anne Hutchinson, John Wheelwright, and their allies). This they would not do, and were therefore limited to four months in the colony.[22] When the court met again in November, Samuel was allowed to remain in the colony until after the winter.[23]
Samuel went to Exeter in the spring of 1638, and was a grantee in one of the Indian deeds in April of that year.[24] In September 1641, after Wheelwright was forced to leave Exeter, Samuel Hutchinson and Nicholas Needham and some others negotiated with Thomas Gorges for land at Wells, Maine where most of the settlers soon proceeded.[24] Samuel received a grant of land in Rhode Island where his brother William had gone, but if he went there, did not stay long.[24] In 1644 he was bequeathed a small legacy by the will of his brother John, who remained in England.[8]
At some point Samuel returned to Boston, and in 1667 published a small treatise defending the concept of the Millennium (the creation of a "glorious church" before the Second Coming of Christ),[25] but it gives no hint of his attitude toward the theology of his in-laws Anne Hutchinson and John Wheelwright.[26] On 7 April 1667 he wrote his will, calling himself of Boston. He mentioned no wife or children, but made bequests to a large number of relatives, including "couzen" Susanna Cole (actually his niece) and "couzen" Peleg Sanford (actually his grand-nephew), to whom he left an orchard in Portsmouth, Rhode Island.[27] Witnesses to his will signed a deposition on 16 July 1667, suggesting that he had died by that date.[27] 1

picture Susanna Hutchinson

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 25 Nov 1599 - Alford, Lincolnshire
          Death: 
         Burial: 5 Aug 1601 - Alford, Lincolnshire
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)


picture
Susanna Hutchinson

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 9 Aug 1601 - Alford, Lincolnshire
          Death: Cir May 1651 - Boston, Massachusetts Bay
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Spouses and Children
1. *Augustine Storre (Est 1600 - After 1640)
       Marriage: 21 Nov 1623 - Alford, Lincolnshire
         Status: 

2. Atherton Hough (Cir 1580 - 11 Sep 1650)
       Marriage: Cir 1645
         Status: 

Notes
General:
Baptised in Alford on 9 August 1601, Susanna was married there on 21 November 1623 to Augustine Storre.[10] Her husband was the son of Thomas Storre, the vicar of Bilsby, Lincolnshire, after whose death John Wheelwright became the vicar. Wheelwright's first wife, Mary, was the sister of Augustine, and when she died, Wheelwright then married Susanna's younger sister, Mary Hutchinson.[28] The Storres likely arrived in Boston in July 1637, on the same ship with Susanna's brother Samuel Hutchinson.[29] They were still in Boston in 1638 when on 3 April Augustine was named in a deed of land from an Indian sagamore to a group of settlers preparing to establish Exeter in the Province of New Hampshire.[30] By 1639 Storre was in Exeter, and his name appears second on the list of signatories, after Wheelwright's, of the combination, dated 4 July 1639, forming the government there.[31] On 18 January 1640 Storre was selected as an assistant "Ruler" of the new settlement, a position similar to that of selectman.[32] When Wheelwright was forced to leave Exeter, the Storres went with him to Wells, Maine, but there are no records of Augustine there, suggesting that he soon died.[29]
In 1644, Susanna was named in the will of John Hutchinson, one of her brothers still living in England, being called "sister Stor."[10] The following year Susanna was back in Boston as the wife of another Lincolnshire emigrant, Atherton Hough ("Huff"). On 4 April 1646, Mrs. Susanna Hough "upon letters of dismission from the church at Wells," was admitted to the Boston church.[33] Her second husband died just a few years later, on 11 September 1650, and she was dead the following May when the inventory of her estate was taken.[33] She had no known children, but a "list of debts & legacies" from her estate includes the names of several relatives, including her "sister Whelwright" and "her brother Sam Hutchinson."[33] 1

picture Susanna Hutchinson

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 15 Nov 1633 - Alford, Lincolnshire
        Baptism: 
          Death: Sep 1713 - Kingstown, Rhode Island
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: William Hutchinson (1586-Cir 1641) 1
         Mother: Anne Marbury (1591-1643)

Spouses and Children
1. *John Cole (1625 - 1707)
       Marriage: 
         Status: 


picture
Theophilus Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 8 Sep 1588 - Alford, Lincolnshire 1
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Notes
General:
probably died young

picture Thomas Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Cir 1681 - Plymouth, Plymouth Colony
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Francis Hutchinson (1630-1702)
         Mother: Mary Cushman (Cir 1658-Bef 1690)


picture
Governor Thomas Hutchinson



      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 9 Sep 1711 - Boston, Massachusetts
        Baptism: 
          Death: 3 Jun 1780 - Brompton, England
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Thomas Hutchinson (1675-1739)
         Mother: 

Spouses and Children
1. *Margaret Sanford (Est 1714 -       )
       Marriage: 16 May 1734
         Status: 

Notes
General:
http://www.mass.gov/statehouse/massgovs/thutchinson.htm
Governors of Massachusetts

Thomas Hutchinson (1711-1780)

Acting Royal Governor of Massachusetts (June through August 1760)
Acting Royal Governor of Massachusetts (August 1769-November 1770)
Royal Governor of Massachusetts (1770-1774)

Thomas Hutchinson was Governor during the difficult years leading to the American Revolution. He was very much "of Boston," but of an English Boston, to which he was earnestly loyal throughout his life.

Hutchinson had deep American roots. He was a descendent of Anne Hutchinson, who was expelled from Boston for her religious beliefs in the 1630s. He was born in Boston, attended Harvard earning a Master of Arts before entering business. He was a member of Boston's Board of Selectmen (1737) and was popularly elected to the Legislature where he served almost continuously until 1749. He served as a member of the state council, was Chief Justice of the Superior Court, and eventually Lieutenant Governor.

He resisted Boston's gradual drift away from England and perceived the revolution was stoked by hotheads, seizing on miniscule issues, which they used to inflame sentiments. Hutchinson was unflinchingly rational and held an enmity for the revolutionary radicals. They returned this feeling, when in 1765, as a mob they attacked and looted his personal residence.

After this attack, Hutchinson began to secretly advise England to move to forcefully restrain the Colony. As the town filled with English troops, he entreated them to take the greatest care, as the slightest tragedy would spread like flames through the province and perhaps beyond. Exactly that happened on March 5, 1770, when a group of unarmed men threatened English soldiers. The soldiers shot and killed five of them. Acting Governor Hutchinson, already hated by revolutionaries faced as serious a crisis as any Massachusetts Governor has ever seen.

The morning after what would later be called the Boston Massacre, Boston's selectmen demanded that Hutchinson order the English troops from Boston or see more "blood and carnage." He claimed as acting Governor he held no authority over the King's troops. Further, he matched their threat, ordering that anyone caught advising or provoking an attack on the troops would face charges of high treason, which he would enforce personally. 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. Having shown where his loyalty lay, Hutchinson was finally made Royal Governor in his own right in November 1770.

As Governor, he went on to support a popularly hated, though seemingly harmless Tea Tax in 1773. However, protest turned to assault when protestors dressed as "savages" threw crates of tea into the Boston harbor, rather than pay the tax. After the "Boston Tea Party," thousands of English soldiers flooded the city to enforce the rule of law. Hutchinson was now widely hated in his homeland, which ceased being the British Boston of his birth. Within six months he boarded a ship to England, where he would finish his life in exile and write the seminal History of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay.
---------------------------------------------------------
Thomas Hutchinson
From Wikipedia

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 ship owner. He was a highly intelligent man who graduated from Harvard in 1727 before his sixteenth birthday. He entered his father's counting room, early showed remarkable aptitude for business, and by the time he was 24 had accumulated considerable property in trading ventures on his own account. He married Margaret Sanford in 1734-a granddaughter of Rhode Island Governor Peleg Sandford and a great granddaughter of both Rhode Island Governor William Coddington and of Anne Hutchinson.

As his career advanced he became involved in the civil leadership of the colony, first as a selectman in Boston in 1737. Later in the same year he was chosen a representative to the General Court of the Colony and at once took a strong stand in opposition to the views of the majority with regard to a proper currency. His unpopular opinions led to his retirement in 1740. In that year he went to England as a commissioner to represent Massachusetts in a boundary dispute with New Hampshire. In 1742 he was re-elected to the General Court, and was chosen annually to the General Court until 1749, serving as the Speaker from 1746 to 1749. 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. The proposal was finally adopted by the Assembly, and its good effect on the trade of the Colony at once established Hutchinson's reputation as a financier.

On leaving the General Court in 1749 he was appointed at once to the Governor's Council. In 1750 he was chairman of a commission to arrange a treaty with the Indians in the District of Maine, and he served on boundary commissions to settle disputes with Connecticut and Rhode Island. In 1752 he was appointed judge of probate and a justice of the Common Pleas. In 1754, as a delegate from Massachusetts to the Albany Convention, he took a leading part in the discussions and favored Franklin's plan for Colonial union.

In 1758 he was appointed Lieutenant Governor, and in 1760 Chief Justice, of the Province. In the following year, by issuing writs of assistance, he brought upon himself a storm of protest and criticism. His distrust of popular government as exemplified in the New England town meeting increased. Although he opposed the principle of the Stamp Act, considered it impolitic, and later advised its repeal, he accepted its legality, and, as a result of his stand, his city house was sacked by a mob in August, 1765, and his valuable collection of books and manuscripts destroyed.

In 1769, upon the resignation of Governor Francis Bernard, he became acting Governor, serving in that capacity at the time of the Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770, when popular clamor compelled him to order the removal of the troops from the city.

In March, 1771, he received his commission as Governor, and was the last civilian governor of the Massachusetts colony. His administration, controlled completely by the British ministry, increased the friction with the patriots. The publication, in 1773, of some letters on Colonial affairs written by Hutchinson, and obtained by Franklin in England, still further aroused public indignation, and led the ministry to see the necessity for stronger measures. The temporary suspension of the civil government followed, and General Gage was appointed military governor in April, 1774. Driven from the country by threats in the following May and broken in health and spirit, Hutchinson spent the rest of his life an exile in England.

Hutchinson had built a country estate in Milton, Massachusetts. Although the house is now gone, the original "ha-ha" of the estate remains today beside Governor Hutchinson's Field, maintained by the Trustees of Reservations.

In England, still nominally Governor, he was consulted by Lord North in regard to American affairs; but his advice that a moderate policy be adopted, and his opposition to the Boston Port Bill, and the suspension of the Massachusetts constitution, were not heeded.

His American estates were confiscated, and he was compelled to refuse a baronetcy on account of lack of means. He died at Brompton, now a part of London, aged 68.

He wrote a History of Massachusetts Bay (volume i, 1764; volume ii, 1767; volume iii, 1828) a work of great historical value, calm, and judicious in the main, but entirely unphilosophical and lacking in style. His Diary and Letters was published in 1884–86. This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.

Literature
Bernard Bailyn, The Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson (Cambridge, 1974)
J. K. Hosmer, Life of Thomas Hutchinson (Boston, 1896)
Vernon Parrington, Main Currents in American Thought (1927)

picture Thomas Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 30 Jan 1675 - Boston, Massachusetts Bay
        Baptism: 
          Death: 3 Dec 1739 - (Boston, Massachusetts)
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Elisha Hutchinson (1641-1717)
         Mother: Hannah Hawkins (Est 1643-      )

Spouses and Children
       Children:
                1. Governor Thomas Hutchinson (1711-1780)


picture
William Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 
        Baptism: 14 Aug 1586 - Alford, Lincolnshire
          Death: Cir Jun 1641 - Portsmouth, Rhode Island
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Edward Hutchinson (Cir 1564-1632)
         Mother: Susanna (Est 1566-Between 1642/1647)

Spouses and Children
1. *Anne Marbury (17 Jul 1591 - 20 Aug 1643)
       Marriage: 9 Aug 1612 - Saint Mary Woolnoth, London
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Edward Hutchinson (1613-1675)
                2. Susanna Hutchinson (1633-1713)

Notes
General:
William, baptised 14 August 1586, grew up in Alford and became a merchant in the cloth trade, moving to London as a young man. Here he became close to an old acquaintance from Alford, Anne Marbury, the daughter of Francis Marbury and Bridget Dryden, and the couple was married on 9 August 1612 at the Church of Saint Mary Woolnoth on Lombard Street in London.[2][12] He and his wife raised a large family in Alford, as he prospered in his business. The couple had 14 children in England, one of whom died in infancy, and two of whom died from the plague. In 1633 the Hutchinsons sent their oldest son, 20-year old Edward (called Edward, Jr.) to New England with William's youngest brother, Edward (called Edward, Sr.), who was 25 at the time, and his wife.[2] A year later William and his remaining family made the trip to New England aboard the ship Griffin.[14] William became a Boston merchant, became a member of the Boston church in 1634, and took the freeman's oath in 1635.[15] He was also a Deputy to the General Court and a selectman.[16] 1
Marriage Notes (Anne Marbury)
On 7 March 1638, before leaving Boston, William Hutchinson and other supporters of his wife signed an instrument, sometimes called the Portsmouth Compact, agreeing to form a non-sectarian government that was Christian in character.[18] The group of signers considered going to New Netherland, but Roger Williams suggested they purchase some land on the Narragansett Bay from the Indians, which they did. They settled on the island of Aquidneck (an island called Rhode Island, whose name was later given to the entire colony and state), and formed the settlement of Pocasset, renamed Portsmouth in 1639. Hutchinson became the judge (governor) of the Portsmouth settlement from 1639 until 12 March 1640, when Portsmouth united with Newport to become the Colony of Rhode Island, with William Coddington elected as governor of the two-town colony, and Hutchinson becoming one of his assistants.[19] William Hutchinson died in Portsmouth shortly after June 1641, after which his widow left Rhode Island to live in the part of New Netherland that later became Bronx in New York City. Here, as the result of tensions between the Dutch and the Indians, she, six of her children, a son-in-law, and as many as seven others (likely servants) were massacred by Indians in late summer 1643.[12][19] 1

picture William L Hutchinson

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 1848 - Bangor, Maine
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Abbie H Harding (1849 -       )
       Marriage: 3 Nov 1868 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Georgia Lue Hutchinson (1870-      ) 3

Notes
General:
s/o Daniel & Rebecca
1870 mariner, Wellfleet

picture James Hutton

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1743
        Baptism: 
          Death: Bef Nov 1790
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Elisabeth Atwood (1746 - 23 May 1802)
       Marriage: 26 Apr 1774 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 4
         Status: 


picture
William Hutton

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 23 Feb 1776 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 5
        Baptism: 
          Death: 8 Apr 1797 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 5
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: William Hutton (Est 1750-      )
         Mother: Elisabeth (Est 1755-      )


picture
William Hutton

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1750
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Elisabeth (Est 1755 -       )
       Marriage: 
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. William Hutton (1776-1797) 5


picture
Hepsibah Huxford

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: Cir 1688
        Baptism: 
          Death: 1764 - Edgartown, Massachusetts 6
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *John Marchant (Cir 1679 - 9 Feb 1767)
       Marriage: 
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Elizabeth Marchant (1708-1781)
                2. Naomi Marchant (Cir 1715-1785)
                3. Thankful Marchant (Cir 1717-1762)

Notes
General:
Father: Samuel Huxford b: 1660 in Long Bredy, , Dorset, England
Mother: Esther Norton b: 1662 in Edgartown

picture Joseph Huxford

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1785 - Martha's Vineyard
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Priscilla Brown (Est 1790 -       )
       Marriage: 
         Status: 

Sources


1. Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Hutchinson_(mercer).

2. Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1931.

3. Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts. Births 1858-1910 (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 15.

4. Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:528. Marriages.

5. Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:23. son of William Hutton and Elisabeth his wife.

6. New England Historical and Genealogical Register (New England Historic Genealogical Society. Boston), 53:230-231 (1898).

picture

Sources


1 Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Hutchinson_(mercer).

2 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1931.

3 Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts. Births 1858-1910 (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 15.

4 Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:528. Marriages.

5 Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:23. son of William Hutton and Elisabeth his wife.

6 New England Historical and Genealogical Register (New England Historic Genealogical Society. Boston), 53:230-231 (1898).


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