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  1. John Wheelwright (c. 1592–1679) was a Puritan clergyman in England and America, noted for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter, New Hampshire.

  2. John Wheelwright. 18971940. Poet John Wheelwright was born into a Boston Brahmin family—his ancestors included clergyman John Wheelwright and Massachusetts governor John Brooks. Wheelwright’s father was the celebrated Boston architect Edmund March Wheelwright, and his suicide, when John was in prep school, affected the young man profoundly.

  3. Another major player who sided with the Antinomians was Hutchinson's brother-in-law John Wheelwright, who had just arrived in New England in May 1636 as the controversy was beginning. Wheelwright was characterized as having a contentious disposition, and he had been the pastor of a church within walking distance of Hutchinson's home town of ...

  4. Biography: John Wheelwright was an English clergyman and colonist in North America, best known for his role in the Antinomian Controversy that shook the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the early 1630s.

  5. Feb 3, 2021 · The dissident Roger Williams (l. 1603-1683 CE) had been banished in 1636 CE, and the preacher John Wheelwright (l. c. 1592-1679 CE, Hutchinson's brother-in-law) was expelled in 1637 CE for a sermon he gave advocating the primacy of God's Grace over humanity's works in attaining salvation (the central argument of the Antinomian Controversy).

  6. John Wheelwright (c. 1592 – 1679) was a Puritan clergyman in England and America, noted for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter, New Hampshire.

  7. John Wheelwright, c.1592–1679, American Puritan clergyman, founder of Exeter, N.H., b. Lincolnshire, England. He studied at Cambridge and was vicar (1623–33) of Bilsby. Suspended by Archbishop Laud on a charge of nonconformity, he emigrated to New England in 1636.

  8. John Wheelwright is recognized for being one of the best American socialist poet of the 1930s, a rebel Boston Brahmin and heretical Christian who combined his experimental poetry with Marxist political activities.

  9. John Wheelwright. (1897—1940) Quick Reference. (1897–1940), American poet, born in Boston, educated at Harvard and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he trained for his career as an architect. In 1923 he travelled to ... From: Wheelwright, John in The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Literature in English »

  10. John Wheelwright. Born to a Boston Brahmin family, John Wheelright's father was an architect who designed a number of the city's well-known buildings. After his father's suicide in 1912, Wheelwright underwent a religious conversion, abandoning his family's historic Unitarianism and becoming an Anglican.

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