According to his daughter-in-law, Lucy Hutchinson, this Member was descended from the Hutchinson family of Yorkshire. If so, then he was a distant relative of Stephen Hutchinson*. Hutchinson’s great-grandfather bought Owthorpe, in south-east Nottinghamshire, in early Tudor times. Well-connected to the leading Nottinghamshire gentry, the family was described by Lucy Hutchinson as ‘unambitious’, and indeed none of Hutchinson’s ancestors had been elected to Parliament.
Hutchinson inherited his estate when he was still a minor. His father begged the four trustees appointed in his will ‘to do the utmost to get the wardship of my son Thomas’, but though they purchased the wardship for £109 the arrangement proved unsatisfactory, and culminated in what Chamberlain described as ‘an odd affray’. Hutchinson’s guardian, Sir German Pole, ambushed him February 1613 while he was disembarking at the Temple Stairs, and cut off two or three of his fingers. Aided by a waterman, Hutchinson grappled with his antagonist, ‘bit off a good part of his nose, and carried it away in his pocket’. According to his daughter-in-law, ‘his honourable carriage ... procured him a great deal of glory’.
Lucy Hutchinson claimed that Hutchinson was ‘the most popular and the most beloved man in the country, even to the envy of those prouder great ones that despised the common interest’.
Hutchinson became the first of his family to enter Parliament when he was returned for the county in 1626. His only committee appointment was for a Derbyshire estate bill on 1 March.
Hutchinson continued active in local affairs, though he was in trouble for residing in London over Christmas 1632, while Owthorpe was being rebuilt, and for depopulation in 1637.
