When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: anne hutchinson

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Anne Hutchinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Hutchinson

    Anne Hutchinson was born Anne Marbury to parents Francis Marbury and Bridget Dryden in Alford, Lincolnshire, England, and baptised there on 20 July 1591. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Her father was an Anglican cleric in London with strong Puritan leanings, who felt strongly that a clergy should be well educated and clashed with his superiors on this issue. [ 4 ]

  3. Statue of Anne Hutchinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Anne_Hutchinson

    Anne Hutchinson was a controversial figure in Massachusetts history, and the statue itself became the object of heated controversy in 1922. "Unable to decide whether the bronze sculpture by Cyrus E. Dallin was 'an appropriate addition to the State House ,' the legislators argued for weeks while the art work lay on the State House porch."

  4. Antinomian Controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antinomian_Controversy

    Thomas Hutchinson was a descendant of Anne Hutchinson and loyalist governor of Massachusetts, and he published the History of the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1767 which includes the most complete extant transcript of Hutchinson's trial. This transcript is found in the compilations of both Adams and Hall.

  5. Susanna Cole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_Cole

    Susanna Cole (née Hutchinson; 1636 – before 14 December 1713) was the lone survivor of a Native American attack in which many of her siblings were killed, as well as her famed mother Anne Hutchinson. She was taken captive following the attack and held for several years before her release.

  6. Portsmouth Compact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portsmouth_Compact

    Among this group was Anne Hutchinson, who had been banished from Massachusetts Bay following the Antinomian Controversy there. The purpose of the Portsmouth Compact was to set up a new, independent colony that was Christian in character but non-sectarian in governance. It has been called "the first instrument for governing as a true democracy."

  7. Wampage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wampage

    The Siwanoys, under the leadership of Wampage I, massacred the family of Anne Hutchinson in August 1643. It has been written that Wampage himself was the murderer of Hutchinson and that he adopted the name of Anhōōke due to a Mahican custom of taking the name of a notable person personally killed.

  8. Francis Marbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Marbury

    Francis Marbury (sometimes spelled Merbury) (1555–1611) was a Cambridge-educated English cleric, schoolmaster and playwright. He is best known for being the father of Anne Hutchinson, considered the most famous English woman in colonial America, and Katherine Marbury Scott, the first known woman to convert to Quakerism in the United States.

  9. Siwanoy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siwanoy

    A group of Siwanoy, led by Wampage I, killed Anne Hutchinson, six of her children, and nine others in August 1643, [13] near Split Rock, an ancient landmark. The only survivor was Hutchinson's nine-year-old daughter, Susanna - possibly spared because of her red hair - who "became the wife of an Indian Chief, residing in a settlement near the ...