Andrew Sneddon
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‘Improve everything that is improveable’
The social, economic and cultural improvement of Ireland and the Irish, 1721–39
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Improvement, as an ideology, fitted perfectly with Francis Hutchinson's Latitudinarian-Whig views, which envisaged a stable, commercial, ordered society, guided by a sociable and reasonable national religion. During the 1720s, Hutchinson published a number of economic tracts that suggested ways in which Ireland could escape its economic backwardness by developing its indigenous resource. In the period 1721-1723, Hutchinson's involvement with improvement went beyond the publication of the bank and poor tracts. Hutchinson moved beyond pamphleteering, to embark on a more practical improvement programme, by disseminating a culture of improvement on his newly purchased private estate near Portglenone and by playing a prominent and active role in the newly founded Dublin Society. The Society was regarded by contemporaries as a perfect practical complement to the efforts of Parliament and the Irish gentry to develop Ireland.

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Witchcraft and Whigs

The life of Bishop Francis Hutchinson, 1660–1739

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