Richard Hutson was an American lawyer, judge, and politician.
Background
Hutson was born in 1748, the son of Rev. William and Mary (Woodward) Hutson, the widow of Isaac Chardon. His father, an English law student turned actor, was converted by Whitefield, and served from 1743 to 1757 as the minister of the Independent Church at Stoney Creek, in what was later Beaufort District, S. C. In the latter year he was called to the Independent Congregational Church in Charleston.
Education
Richard was graduated from Princeton in 1765, and for a time was uncertain what to do with himself. When he studied law is not known.
Career
At the outset of the Revolution he was on his plantation on Stono River, St. Andrew's Parish. He had rejoiced in the resistance to the Stamp Act, and remained throughout the war one of the uncompromising Revolutionists. He served in the militia during the British attack on Charleston in 1776. In the same year he was elected to the Assembly, and by that body in turn to the legislative council. True to his upbringing, he took an active part in the disestablishment of the Anglican Church.
From January 1778 to February 1779 he was delegate to the Continental Congress, though not actually present until April 13, and signed the Articles of Confederation. Returned to the lower house of the Assembly in the election of December 1779, he was made a member of the privy council. After the fall of Charleston, he was one of the political leaders arrested and was imprisoned at St. Augustine from September 1780 to July 1781. While there he is said to have added Spanish to the list of languages in which he was proficient.
He was elected to the Assembly which met in January 1782 at Jacksonborough, and in that month became lieutenant-governor. The next year he was chosen as the first intendant of the city of Charleston. On the organization of the chancery or equity court in 1784 he, John Rutledge, and John Mathews were elected the first chancellors. He became senior judge of this court in 1791, and resigned in 1793. He sat as a member for St. Andrew's in the state convention which ratified the United States Constitution in 1787, and in the House of Representatives in 1789. In both his votes were with the conservative dominant class of the low country.
Family tradition claims that he was ruined by his patriotism in voluntarily taking paper money at the close of the Revolution; but he continued to live on his plantation and in 1790 had seventeen slaves. He died in Charleston.
Personality
His will and his few extant letters indicate that he was quiet, religious, much interested in charity, and strongly attached to his family.