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・ Hugh Charles Boyle
・ Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital, (former)
・ Hugh Childers
・ Hugh Chisholm
・ Hugh Cholmeley
・ Hugh Cholmondeley
・ Hugh Cholmondeley (soldier)
・ Hugh Cholmondeley, 1st Earl of Cholmondeley
・ Hugh Cholmondeley, 2nd Baron Delamere
・ Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere
・ Hugh Cholmondeley, 5th Baron Delamere
・ Hugh Cholmondeley, 6th Marquess of Cholmondeley
・ Hugh Christian Watkins
・ Hugh Christie
・ Hugh Christie Technology College
Hugh Christopher Thomson
・ Hugh Clapperton
・ Hugh Clark
・ Hugh Clark (actor)
・ Hugh Clark (British Army officer)
・ Hugh Clark (politician)
・ Hugh Claughton
・ Hugh Claye
・ Hugh Clegg
・ Hugh Clegg (doctor)
・ Hugh Clegg (industrial relations)
・ Hugh Cleghorn
・ Hugh Cleghorn (colonial administrator)
・ Hugh Cleghorn (forester)
・ Hugh Clifford


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Hugh Christopher Thomson : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh Christopher Thomson

Hugh Christopher Thomson (1791 – April 23, 1834) was a businessman, newspaper publisher and political figure in Upper Canada.
He was born in Kingston in Upper Canada in 1791, the son of a Scottish immigrant who served with Joseph Brant during the American Revolution. The family moved from Kingston to Newark (Niagara-on-the-Lake) and then York (Toronto), where Thomson began work as a clerk in a general store. In 1810, he was transferred to Kingston. Although a member of the local militia, he did not serve in the War of 1812 due to poor health. In 1815, his employer returned to France and Thomson purchased the Kingston store. In 1819, he became editor and owner of the ''Upper Canada Herald'', a weekly newspaper, which soon had the largest circulation of any newspaper in Upper Canada. He also printed pamphlets, books and reports, including ''The statutes of the province of Upper Canada'' in 1831.
In 1824, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada as a moderate reformer; he was reelected in 1828 and 1830. He supported the freedom of the press, opposed the control of the clergy reserves by the Church of England and supported granting the same rights as British subjects to American-born settlers in Upper Canada. With the replacement of Sir Peregrine Maitland by Sir John Colborne as lieutenant governor, Thomson began to support the government's positions in the legislative assembly. He also withdrew his support from William Lyon Mackenzie as Mackenzie adopted more radical views. In 1831, he seconded James Hunter Samson's motion to expel Mackenzie from the house. He helped establish the provincial penitentiary at Kingston, later the Kingston Penitentiary.
He died in Kingston in 1834, after suffering several occurrences of bleeding in his lungs.
His second wife, Elizabeth Ruttan, who had taken over the operation of the newspaper in 1824 while Samson was in York, continue to run it until 1837, thus becoming the first woman to publish a newspaper in the province.
His brother Edward William Thomson was also a member of the legislative assembly of the province.
==External links==

*(Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'' )


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