Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- THE LIFE OF MRS. LUCY HUTCHINSON
- MRS. HUTCHINSON TO HER CHILDREN CONCERNING THEIR FATHER
- THE LIFE OF JOHN HUTCHINSON, OF OWTHORPE, IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, ESQUIRE: Pages 19-235
- THE LIFE OF JOHN HUTCHINSON, OF OWTHORPE, IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, ESQUIRE: Pages 236-442
- Inscriptions on the Monument of Colonel Hutchinson, at Owthorpe, in Nottinghamshire
- VERSES WRITTEN BY MRS. HUTCHINSON
- Plate section
THE LIFE OF JOHN HUTCHINSON, OF OWTHORPE, IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, ESQUIRE: Pages 19-235
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2013
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- THE LIFE OF MRS. LUCY HUTCHINSON
- MRS. HUTCHINSON TO HER CHILDREN CONCERNING THEIR FATHER
- THE LIFE OF JOHN HUTCHINSON, OF OWTHORPE, IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, ESQUIRE: Pages 19-235
- THE LIFE OF JOHN HUTCHINSON, OF OWTHORPE, IN THE COUNTY OF NOTTINGHAM, ESQUIRE: Pages 236-442
- Inscriptions on the Monument of Colonel Hutchinson, at Owthorpe, in Nottinghamshire
- VERSES WRITTEN BY MRS. HUTCHINSON
- Plate section
Summary
He was the eldest surviving sonne of Sr. Thomas Hutchinson, and the lady Margarett, his first wife, one of the daughters of Sr. John Biron, of Newsted, in the same county, two persons so eminently vertuous and pious in their generations, that to descend from them was to sett up in the world upon a good stock of honor, which oblieg'd their posterity to improove it, as much as it was their privelledge to inheritt their parents glories. Sr. Thomas was he that remoov'd his dwelling to Owthorpe; his father, though he was possessor of that lordship, having dwelt at Cropwell, another towne, within two miles wherein he had an inheritance, which if I mistake not was the place where those of the family that begun to settle the name in this county first fixt their habitation. The famely for many generations past have bene of good repute in Yorkshire, and there is yett a gentleman in that county, descendant of the elder house, that possesses a faire estate and reputation in his father's auncient inheritance. They have bene in Nottinghamshire for generations; wherein I observe that as if there had bene an Agrarian law in the famely, assoon as they arrived to any considerable fortune beyond his who was first transplanted hither, they began other houses, of which one is soone decayed and worne out in an unwoorthy branch (he of Basford) another begins to flourish, and long may it prosper.
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- Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson , pp. 37 - 252Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1806