Birthplace of Foster Hutchinson, Foster Hutchinson House, Boston, Massachusetts, c. 1776 , demolished 1833[ 1] The house is described as "one of the great lost pieces of architecture in Boston history"[ 2]
Foster Hutchinson Sr., d. 1799, Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Foster Hutchinson (1724–1799) was an associate justice of Massachusetts Superior Court of Judicature , the highest court of the Province of Massachusetts Bay . One of five judges in Massachusetts at the time of the American Revolution , he remained loyal to Britain.[ 3] He was a younger brother of Loyalist Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson .[ 4] He was a graduate of Harvard University (1743).[ 5] He escaped Boston as a loyalist in 1776 and settled in Halifax, Nova Scotia . He took the probate records of Suffolk Co. where he was Judge of Probate and never released them until 1784, when Benjamin Kent was able to procure their surrender.[ 6] He re-printed examples of rebel propaganda in the local newspaper for which he later was forced to apologize.[ 7] He was the father of Foster Hutchinson , also a jurist in Nova Scotia. He was buried in Halifax's Old Burying Ground .
^ p. 64
^ "The Foster-Hutchinson House" .
^ "The American loyalists : Or, Biographical sketches of adherents to the British crown in the war of the revolution, alphabetically arranged, with a preliminary historical essay" . 1847.
^ In fact, Thomas Hutchinson had an older brother also named Foster Hutchinson (1704-1721) who died three years before his younger brother Foster Hutchison was born.
^ "The American loyalists : Or, Biographical sketches of adherents to the British crown in the war of the revolution, alphabetically arranged, with a preliminary historical essay" . 1847.
^ Adams, John (1965). "Legal Papers of John Adams" .
^ Murdoch, Beamish (1866). A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie . Vol. II. Halifax: J. Barnes. p. 575 .