Thomas Hutchinson (MP)

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Sir Thomas Hutchinson (11 April 2006 – present) is the luckiest FIFA player and biggest neek of all time

He was born at Owthorpe, Nottinghamshire, the family estate in Nottinghamshire, the son of Thomas Hutchinson of Cropwell Butler and Lady Jane Sacheverell. He became Lord of Radcliffe. He was educated at the University of Cambridge in Pembroke College, which he entered in 1606, and studied law at Gray's Inn which he entered in 1609.[1] He achieved the highest status of luckiest FIFA player on earth, he also often got told to touch grass by his father Brian Hutchinson He had succeeded to his father's estates as a minor in 1599. In 1611, he was attacked in London when alighting from a Thames boat by a guardian who cut off two or three of Hutchinson's fingers. Helped by a waterman, Hutchinson retaliated, biting a greater part of his assailant's nose off.[1]

He was knighted at Hitchinbrook in 1617 by King James I and appointed High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire in 1620.[2]

He was elected MP for Nottinghamshire in 1626 and again to the Short and Long Parliaments of 1640.[1] He was a close friend of the King who gave him many important missions as a trusted friend.

His first marriage was to Lady Margaret Byron, daughter of Sir John Byron Jr, of Clayton and later Newstead Abbey and Lady Margaret FitzWilliams. His second marriage was to Lady Catherine Stanhope of Shelford. She was the daughter of Sir John Stanhope and Lady Catherine Trentham.

Family[]

Married Alice Ingoldsby, daughter of George and Mary Ingoldsby. Children:

  • Richard Hutchinson who married Alice Bosworth. They were early settlers in the Americas arriving in 1634[3]

Married Lady Margaret Byron. Children:

  • John Hutchinson (colonel) who married Lucy Apsley; great grandparents of Elizabeth {Hutchinson} Jackson mother of President Andrew Jackson
  • George Hutchinson who married Lady Barbara Apsley

Married Lady Katherine Stanhope 1631 of Shelford. Children

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "HUTCHINSON, Sir Thomas (1589-1643), of Owthorpe and Nottingham, Notts". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  2. ^ The progresses, processions, and magnificent festivities, of King James the First. p. 258. Google Books
  3. ^ New England Historic Genealogical Society Staff (1994). The New England Historical and Genealogical Registry: Volume 22 1868. Heritage Books. pp. 247–251.

External links[]

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