Edward Hutchinson (captain)
Edward Hutchinson (1613–1675) was the oldest child of Massachusetts and Rhode Island magistrate William Hutchinson and his wife, the dissident minister Anne Hutchinson. He is noted for making peace with the authorities following his mother's banishment from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, returning to Boston, and ultimately dying in the service of the colony that had treated his family so harshly.
Portsmouth Compact where Hutchinson's name appears ninth on the list
The Nipmucs attacked the fortified house in Brookfield for several days, until Hutchinson's party escaped to Marlborough.
Grave marker for Captain Edward Hutchinson, Springhill Cemetery, Marlborough, Massachusetts
The loyalist Massachusetts governor, Thomas Hutchinson was Edward's great grandson.
William Hutchinson (Rhode Island judge)
William Hutchinson (1586–1641) was a judge at Portsmouth in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. He sailed from England to New England in 1634 with his large family. He became a merchant in Boston and served as both Deputy to the General Court and selectman. His wife was Anne Hutchinson who became embroiled in a theological controversy with the Puritan leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony which resulted in her banishment in 1638. The Hutchinsons and 18 others departed to form the new settlement of Pocasset on the Narragansett Bay, which was renamed Portsmouth and became one of the original towns in the Rhode Island colony.
Historical highway marker for William and Anne Hutchinson property at Mount Wollaston, later in Quincy, Massachusetts
"Anne Hutchinson on Trial" by Edwin Austin Abbey
Portsmouth Compact with William Hutchinson's signature third on the list