Historian Eve LaPlante on Anne Hutchinson

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 7

  • @jackmcgonegal8728
    @jackmcgonegal8728 Год назад

    I just came across this and thoroughly enjoyed your episode about my 10th-great grandmother.

  • @Glen.Danielsen
    @Glen.Danielsen 4 года назад

    This is so incisive and insightful. Thanks for posting! 💛🙏🏼

  • @markburnside8989
    @markburnside8989 9 лет назад +3

    Thank you for this video. I am descended from Anne Hutchinson as well as John Cotton

    • @CerealGrrrl
      @CerealGrrrl 4 года назад

      Hi, cousin! Anne's my many-times-great-grandmother too

    • @Glen.Danielsen
      @Glen.Danielsen 4 года назад

      @@CerealGrrrl You both come from great stock! She was, I think, far ahead of her time, not a rebel, but an advocate of a person’s sacred right to hear God’s whisper. Only a short few decades later and back across the sea, the marvelous French Roman Catholic Archbishop would channel Anne’s deepest heart’s pining when he said, “How rare it is to find a soul quiet enough to hear God speak.” That was her dearest hope, her longing, and her key qualm with the Boston league of male voters. Personal revelation was the pinnacle issue that got her banished and vanished. And later slaughtered by indigenous hatchet men.

  • @bigcyhutch
    @bigcyhutch 7 лет назад +1

    I just discovered Anne Hutchinson today by fluke. My dad's family originated from that area and he was also descended from Lenape Native Americans, ironically. He didn't know much about his family history - he was an only child, so I don't have many resources to research him, I hope that somehow my sisters and I connected to this woman.

  • @Glen.Danielsen
    @Glen.Danielsen 4 года назад +1

    This is so incisive and insightful. Thanks for posting! 💛🙏🏼