Hutchinson Family Singers Web Site
John W. [Hutchinson] seems at all times and in all places to accord to Jesse a higher degree of genius than that possessed by other members of the family.
George A. Ramsdell, |
Jesse Hutchinson, Jr., may not have been totally suited by temperament for farm work. So around 1830, he left home for Amherst, New Hampshire, to become an apprentice at the Farmers' Cabinet, a local newspaper. Many years later, one of his fellow apprentices said that "Amherst was then alive with young men" who gathered together to learn through reading, writing, discussions, and public lectures. One of these experiences was of particular importance to Jesse's life and to his influence on his brothers and sister. He heard English abolitionist George Thompson speak.
Jesse remained at the Cabinet for five or six years. Perhaps even then he was driven to express himself in writing, for we have a set of song lyrics he composed circa 1835. One verse suggests that he may have already taken up the temperance reform - half a decade or more before his brothers first took the pledge.
In Amherst, Jesse became involved in the love of his life; and on Wednesday, June 8, 1836, he married Susan W. Hartshorn (1815-1851). That same year, they moved to Lynn, Massachusetts, where Jesse became the proprietor of a tin and hardware store and where he manufactured and sold air-tight stoves. Jesse led the choir at Lynn's First Universalist Church.
Jesse and Susan read antislavery newspapers; and they became good friends with Nathaniel Peabody Rogers,** the editor of New Hampshire's Herald of Freedom.
Jesse and Joshua Hutchinson promoted the first Hutchinson Family concert in 1840. Then on Saturday, February 13, 1841, at the old Sagamore Hall in Lynn, a respectable audience was "assembled to see what Jesse's brothers could do as singers." This concert was an important trial of how well the Hutchinson brothers could do at entertaining an audience. Early in 1842, Jesse accompanied his brothers and sister on a fledgling tour from Massachusetts into Maine; and evidently during that trip, he acted as the group's business manager.
Brother John tells us that Jesse was writing antislavery song lyrics by this time; and we know that, in meetings, members of the family were singing this material early in 1843. It is entirely possible - even likely - that Jesse was singing his songs at antislavery conventions even earlier. Then by 1844, he and N.P. Rogers urged members of the Hutchinson Family quartet to start adding songs of universal freedom to their paid concerts. Jesse encountered some reluctance, though Brother Asa is the only person who we actually know opposed the idea. Jesse won the argument, not so much through his debate skills; rather, he made the alternative nearly impossible. Jesse wrote and published a controversial antislavery song, "Get Off the Track!" And many Hutchinson Family fans wanted to hear the quartet sing it. It's hard to resist popular demand.
City newspaper editors took the Hutchinsons to task for introducing controversial material into paid entertainments. Proslavery members of their audience hissed the Hutchinsons' emancipation songs. Of course, the singers were cheered from other quarters. This cacophony of opposite reactions gave Hutchinson Family concerts a unique edge. And while many complaints were heard, night after night the group filled the largest concert rooms; hundreds and sometimes thousands of music fans without tickets - and more than a few with tickets - were turned away for lack of space.
Back in the spring of 1843, Jesse wrote a curious family theme-song, "The Old Granite State," which he then presented to his brothers and sisters. They generally thought it was an egotistical bit of fluff, but he got them to promise that they would give it a try in concert. The singers quickly learned that audiences loved "The Old Granite State." The singers used it to introduce themselves to a crowd, to give a brief sketch of their background, and to proclaim their mission to the world.
When the Hutchinson Family quartet traveled to Europe in 1845 for a tour of the United Kingdom, Jesse went with them. He served as their business agent and continued in that capacity through the period of the group's greatest popularity.
Stone Cottage on High Rock
Lynn, Massachusetts
In 1845, shortly before sailing to Liverpool, Jesse began purchasing parcels of land on Lynn's High Rock. It was a very different place in those days. Jesse saw nothing but beauty in the wild and unsettled landscape and in the view from the hill's summit. In 1846, he built Stone Cottage on High Rock. The Hutchinsons would be intimately connected with that mound into the twentieth century.
In 1848, the first American woman's rights local convention met in Seneca Falls, New York. Many friends of the Hutchinsons were involved. This got a movement under way that would have a profound effect on the singers and their careers. By 1849, Jesse had a song in which he wrote,
In 1850, family matters led Jesse to Worcester. The first national woman's rights convention was taking place in the city then; and it is hard to imagine that he failed to look in, from time to time, on these historic meetings. The following year at Akron, Ohio, Jesse was a part of the first Hutchinson Family group to sing at a woman's suffrage convention. Their song on that occasion was his "Right Over Wrong," with new lines appropriate to the occasion. "Right Over Wrong" was arguably the Hutchinsons' best and most durable reform anthem.
By this time, Jesse had come to have faith in modern spiritualism; and like many converts, he had suffered recent personal losses. Five of the six children of Jesse and Susan Hutchinson had died. Susan's health had long been frail; and she, too, died in 1851. This was followed quickly by the loss of Jesse's only remaining daughter.
Not much later, John and Asa severed their business ties with Jesse; and he became the agent for a rival group, the Alleghanians.* Probably John and Asa feared that Jesse's spiritualism threatened Judson's mental balance. They were so focused on Judson that they seem to have missed the devastating affect that the death of Susan and their children had on Jesse.
Jesse led the Alleghanians on a successful California tour in 1852, the peak year of that state's Gold Rush. During his Pacific Coast trip, Jesse wrote news correspondence for his friend Horace Greeley's newspaper, the New York Daily Tribune. Very late in his stay in San Francisco, Jesse's writings took on an uncharacteristically dark tone. He was still mourning the loss of his family. But Jesse had not lost his old enthusiasms. Evidently it was around the time the Alleghanians quartet was starting to unravel - no doubt because of the engagement and then marriage of star vocalist Miriam Goodenow to T.P. Robb and her subsequent retirement from concert tours - that Jesse briefly became the proprietor, along with James Duhig, of the Graham Flour Depot, a whole-grain market.
Our number is over the door, One hundred and fifty-four, On Sansome Street, where corn and wheat, And Graham flour, are warranted sweet. |
By the time Jesse decided to return home, his spirits seem to have lifted. One of his verses could be taken to suggest that a reconciliation with his brothers was in the works. But on his way across the Isthmus, Jesse fell victim to Panama fever; and he died near Cincinnati on Sunday, May 15, 1853.
So many of those things that first come to mind when we think of the Hutchinson Family - controversial concert programs, temperance, "The Old Granite State," spiritualism, Old High Rock, "Get Off the Track!", woman's rights, and the family's strong public antislavery stance - originated with Jesse. There was a certain sort of genius to him, which takes us right back to John's view, presented at the top of this article.
Brother Jesse was the Hutchinson Family's most successful lyricist. In fact, he was their only successful lyricist. His topical verses - in marked contrast to the stereotypical protest songs of our own times - were generally both affirmative and buoyantly optimistic. The forces of right had their banners flying in the breeze and there was not even the slightest doubt that they would prevail. Jesse's lyrics proclaimed the "Good Time Coming," a future America of justice and freedom.
Alan Lewis, November 18, 2000; revised October 17, 2002 |
* The classic lineup of the Alleghanians (1846-1852) included
I'm currently (January through who-knows-when 2004) tracking these musicians using census reports and other information to learn what became of group members after the 1852 West Coast tour. James Boulard is fairly easy, since he seems to have continued with the Alleghanians through various lineup changes; and he seems to have done quite well, financially. I'm less far along with Richard Dunning; but he, too, is evidently relatively easy to track. I just found William Oakley for the first time ever, so it's much too early to know where this will lead. Prior to the group's departure for California in 1852, Miriam Goodenow was being reviewed in East Coast newspapers as the greatest American female popular vocalist of the day. So I was astonished at the lack of any information about her after her marriage. Now I know she lived only a handful of years after her marriage to T.P. Robb.
A little information has arisen about several later members of the Alleghanians. One, Frank Benjamin, was already known to us, because he sang for a while in one of John Hutchinson's concert companies.
Do you have information about any of the Alleghanians? If you do, please get in touch.
Alan Lewis, February 2, 2004
An under-construction page about Nathaniel P. Rogers is well under way at this site. So one piece at a time, I'm removing biographical information about Rogers from this page and I'm also removing data from this page's embedded index. If a search of the Internet brought you here, you'll probably want to link to
www.oocities.org/unclesamsfarm/rogers.htm
** A special note about Nathaniel Peabody Rogers (1794-1846). He was a leader among the abolitionists of New Hampshire, a state that was remarkably strong in its opposition to slavery. Rogers was arguably the best writer among the abolitionists, nation-wide, though the eloquence of Frederick Douglass must also be considered. Rogers was particularly important to the Hutchinson Family, because he was a
In the fall of 2004, The Revels, an acclaimed Boston musical and theatrical organization (best known for its annual Christmas Revels), started giving public performances of its latest and quite wonderful production, There's a Meeting Here Tonight!, which is based on the lives and careers of the Hutchinson Family singers. Follow this link for a review of the second-ever public staging of There's a Meeting Here Tonight! which took place right here in Brattleboro, Vermont:
www.oocities.org/unclesamsfarm/revels.htmThe program I attended depicts a fictional though mostly plausible Hutchinson family reunion at the Milford homestead sometime in the years after the United States Civil War. I say mostly plausible because the plot strays from historical accuracy occasionally. For instance, two of the characters in There's a Meeting Here Tonight! - Jesse and Judson - were deceased by this time. It doesn't matter. Jesse and Judson were at the creative heart of the Hutchinson Family quartet, and it would have been a big mistake not to find a way to represent them in this show. Anyway, this could create an interesting situation for the next staging, which is tentatively set for Lynn Classical High School at Lynn, Massachusetts in March 2005. Lynn, of course, is where Brother Jesse settled and where some of the others followed nearly two decades later. So, the connection between Jesse and Lynn is the strongest, even though John actually lived there the longest.
Our readers are probably aware that Jesse Hutchinson, jr. has lately purchased the celebrated "High Rock," and the land immediately in front of the same, where he is now having built a neat and substantial Stone House. The house is situated at the base of the highest rock, yet it is sufficiently elevated to command a fine view of our great and growing "City," Nahant, the beach, the ocean, and in the distance can be seen the little town of Boston. In fact we think there is not a place in the State which affords a more extended or finer prospect, than does High Rock. We hope our friend Jesse will realize his fondest anticipations in regard to this, his rock-bound home.
He has prepared a box in which he will be happy to deposit such papers, &c. as his friends may feel disposed to send. The box will be enclosed in the walls of the house, for safe keeping for some future generation. The Forum must certainly have a place there.
Articles designed to be deposited as above, can be left at
-- Lynn (MA) Forum, n.d., Hutchinson Family Scrapbook
-- Alan Lewis, October 21, 2002
* I really wish I knew Vicky's last name or had a current e-mail address for her. I'm afraid, though, we've fallen out of contact. Please let me know if you can help.
-- Alan Lewis, October 24, 2002
As in grandeur they roll on their train;
Swift, like a wing'd spirit, yet the thunder, oh, hear it,
As they rattle o'er mountain and plain.
There are eight verses in all, each with a meter quite similar to this one. There is no known chorus. Do you have any thoughts about what the melody might be? Generally, Jesse wrote lyrics to pre-existing tunes (though sometimes, later on, his lyrics were set to new music). It is very likely this piece was written with an air in mind that would have been current during the 1840s or possibly as late as the early 1850s. I've never been able to think of a corresponding tune, though, except for some that came later, such as the A-part of "Home on the Range." At the same time, I've never found a song that this one might parody. If you have an idea about the melody, please drop me an e-mail.
Alan Lewis, October 28, 2002
Jesse Hutchinson, Jr., presents some special research problems. Though the Hutchinson Family seems exhaustively documented, Jesse died young - before an age when it might have appealed to him to write a memoir. Also, at the time of Jesse's death, many American city newspapers were growing larger and their reporting was becoming both deeper and wider. This was particularly true after Jesse died. So he mostly missed out on the extensive news coverage that John, for instance, received. This, though, is not to say that we don't have a lot of information about Jesse. It's only to say that we wish we had lots more.
Since writing this profile, a good deal of information about Jesse Hutchinson, Jr.'s family and associates, such as members of The Alleghanians, has come to light from census records as well as from a variety of other sources. My own research has concentrated mostly on members of the famous Hutchinson vocal group and their descendants, the singers' brothers and sisters and their descendants, and a number of the singers' friends, social reform colleagues, and even neighbors. It's doubtful, though, that I'll be posting my research findings on these pages anytime soon. It would be a huge undertaking, time is tight, and anyway I'm not sure just yet how I want to go about it.
What I've done so far includes adding the names of many people and places to the index that corresponds to individual Web pages. If your Internet search brought you to this Web site but you haven't found information you want, that could be why. Chances are excellent, though, that I'm interested in your topic and have at least some information about it but just haven't yet posted what I do have. I'm in contact with numerous other researchers, and some of them could be following the same lines of inquiry as you. Also, many Hutchinson family descendants have been in touch lately. So, if you've got questions or are interested in swapping information back and forth, please drop me a note by way of the Web page at
www.oocities.org/unclesamsfarm/taty.htm
Alan Lewis
Alan Lewis, July 21, 2004
It appears that a set of verses Brother Jesse wrote in 1852 was intended to be sung to the tune, "The Good Old Days of Yore." One stanza seems to fit that song particularly well. So, we have posted "The Good Old Days of Yore" with an additional verse written by Jesse Hutchinson.
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