Thomas Joseph Hutchinson (1820–1885) was an Anglo-Irish explorer and writer. Born in January 1820 at Stonyford County Kilkenny, Ireland,[1] he reportedly studied medicine in Germany.[2] After a trip to West Africa in 1851, he became chief surgeon on the Niger expedition (1854–1855). After two years as English Consul at the Bight of Biafra and Fernando Po, he became governor of the latter place (1857) and in 1861 was transferred to the consulate at Rosario in Argentina, where he took part in the Salado expedition of 1862. In 1870 he was appointed Consul at Callao and three years later retired to his Irish home. He later travelled through Europe during the 1870s, and publisher several books.[2] He died in Florence, Italy in March 1885.[2]
Works
Hutchinson wrote the following:
- Narrative of the Niger Tshadda Binuë Exploration (1855)
- Impressions of Western Africa (1858)
- Ten Years' Wandering among the Ethiopians (1861)
- Buenos Ayres and Argentine Gleanings (1865)
- Parana and South American Recollections (1868)
- Two Years in Peru (1873)
- Summer Rambles in Brittany (1876)
References
- ↑ Murray, Edmundo (October 2006). "Sr. Hutchinson, otra vez, no dice V. nonsenses, no tonterrias: A Bigoted Response to Thomas J. Hutchinson's 'Two Years in Peru' (1873)". Irish Migration Studies in Latin America. 4:4.
- 1 2 3 Murray, Edmundo (October 2007). "Hutchinson, Thomas Joseph (c.1802-1885), diplomat, physician and travel writer". Irish Migration Studies in Latin America. 4:4.