Andrew Sneddon
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‘A well affected man’
Hutchinson and party politics, 1700–20
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Francis Hutchinson had aligned politically with the Whig party, an allegiance shared by members of his immediate family and which proved an invaluable asset during his slow ascent up the clerical ladder. From 1689 to 1714, Tory and Whig was the standing political division in Parliament and in the political identities assumed by most MPs. Hutchinson's overtly political sermons, along with his voting behaviour, gives us a relatively rare insight into the political views of a parish minister in the reign of Queen Anne. Hutchinson used these sermons to voice support for the Whig party's stance on some of the great issues of the day: the 1707 Union with Scotland, the conduct of the War of the Spanish Succession and the toleration of Protestant Dissent. Unlike the majority of Church of England lower clergy, Hutchinson voted consistently for the Whig party in parliamentary elections.

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Witchcraft and Whigs

The life of Bishop Francis Hutchinson, 1660–1739

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