Anne HUchinson

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    Anne huchinson

  • annes date of birth

    annes date of birth
  • Anne marries William Hutchinson

    On August 9, 1612, Anne married William Hutchinson, a London merchant, with whom she eventually had 15 children.
  • Anne reches Boston/America

    Anne reches Boston/America
    Anne and William Hutchinson and their 15 children were among the 200 passengers who arrived in Boston aboard the Griffen in the fall of 1634. Her and her husband moved from England.
  • Massachussetts bay colony was formed

    Massachussetts bay colony was formed
    The massachusetts bay colony started by Anne hutchinson in 1634. Anne and Puritan leader john cotton led people and started the massachusets bay colony.
  • How Anne got her meeting ideas

    In 1634 a difficult situation occurred when the pastor of the church, John Wilson, who sailed to new englad. Anne exposed to his teaching for the first time, Hutchinson immediately saw a big difference between her own belifs and his. She found his emphasis on morality, and his teachings and belifs to be disagreeable. This led Anne to start her private meetings, and led to the Antomaniam Controversy.
  • Anne starts her meeting groups

    Hutchinson started doing private meeting groups for people who wantd to talk and learn about Cotton's sermons, and hear her explanations and elaborations. As the meetings continued, Hutchinson began offering her own religious views, stressing that only "an intuition of the Spirit" would lead to one's election by God, and not good works.[
  • Antinomian Controversy starts

    In 1636, when they started speaking out against the way Puritans leaders were being trained, which sparking the Antinomian Controversy, a religious and political conflict that lasted until 1638.
  • First meeting of Antomaniam Controversy

    On 25 October 1636, seven ministers gathered at the home of Cotton to confront the developing discord; they held a "private conference" which included Hutchinson and other lay leaders from the Boston church. Some of the ministers had heard that Hutchinson had, during her conventicles, criticised them for preaching fale information from the bible. Hutchinson responded to this only when prompted, and only to one or two ministers at a time.
  • Annes first trial

    Annes first trial
    Since religion was a big deal back in the beginning of the US and Anne was going against the church rules she was the greatest threat that Massachusetts had ever known to many of the people in the court room, Annes trial was about the source of her power, was the series of weekly public meetings she held at her house to discuss Scripture and theology. Annes trial lasted 2 days and she was put on house arrerst as a punishment.
  • Annes second trial

    Annes second trial
    After Annes "detention" was over her second trial began. The ministers overwhelmingly concluded that Hutchinson's beliefs outweighed all the good she had done, and that she endangered the spiritual welfare of the community. So there for Anne was bannished from the Massachusetts bay Colony and bannished from the church forever, she was given 3 months to leave the colony.
  • Portsmouth Compact

    Portsmouth Compact
    23 men signed the Portsmouth Compact, forming themselves into a group and electing Coddington as their governor. Of the people that signed the compact, 19 of them initially planned to move to New Jersey or whats known as today long island.
  • Controversy ends

    The Antinomian controversy came to an end because of Annes departure from the colony brought the controversy to a close. The events of 1636 to 1638 are regarded as crucial to an understanding of religion, society, and gender
  • Annes husband appointed Governor

    Annes husband appointed Governor
    dozens of men ejected Coddington from power, the former governor. While Hutchinson may not have supported this rebellion, her husband was chosen as the new governor. Two days later, over 30 men signed a document forming a new "civil body politic".
  • Annes husband dies

    Sometime after June 1641, Hutchinson's husband, Will, died at the age of 55, the same age at which Anne's father had died. He was buried in Portsmouth. No record of his death exists, because there was no established church.
  • Annes death

    Anne gets murdered by native americans