The Hutchinson Family Singers as reformers
The Hutchinsons' commercial success and legacy
The Civil War and the postbellum problem of antislavery
1893: the legacy of the Hutchinson Family Singers and of antislavery reform
The 1840s: music and antislavery, the Hutchinson Family Singers as public abolitionists
Origins of the Hutchinson family, 1800-1830
The Hutchinson children and some initial musical influences
Milford, the Hutchinson family, religion, and culture
Changes in a northern land: religion, politics, and culture, 1820-1840
Music (the Hutchinsons' first concert)
A music career and the hunt for an identity, 1841
Music (music publishing and the Hutchinsons' 1843 hits)
Leisure and politics in 1844
Money for nothing? : the Hutchinson family singers as communitarians
Hutchinson Family Singers fans and the weight of sympathy
American antislavery abroad, racially mixed audiences at home
Antiwar culture and political antislavery, 1845-1848
The end of the Hutchinson Family Singers
John and Fred, the 1893 Danvers Meeting, the 1893 World Expo, and the trajectory of Black and White antebellum reform
Lyrics to select Hutchinson Family Singers songs.