View Full Version : John Hanson ... mass confusion
Bullfrog
30th June 2010, 08:05 AM
I was gonna post this neat little fact about our first president being John Hanson and not George Washington as is taught. But then I started finding all kinds of conflicting info floating around and I can't.
But all the different stories floating around are interesting, and I figured someone here has probably looked into this already and can add what they know.
So here is a summary of what I ran into...
John Hanson is either a swede or a moor.
He was either the 1st president under the Articles of Confederation or the 3rd.
There is a daguerreotype depicting him as a black man, but this technology wasn't created until after he died.
There is supposedly a picture of him on the back of a two dollar bill.
Interesting, no?
Carbon
30th June 2010, 08:22 AM
More about "the black man" on the two dollar bill, which concludes it is not John Hanson at all, but Robert Morris.
http://gtomessiah.com/gtomessiah_site/2dollarbill.html
And pointing out the obvious, John Hanson did not sign the Declaration of Independence, so isn't likely to be included in the painting that the reverse of the two dollar bill was based on. Hanson signed the Articles of Confederation.
http://www.eadshome.com/Namesofthesigners.htm
http://www.adherents.com/people/ph/John_Hanson.html
Additional info on topic at link:
http://www.funtrivia.com/askft/Question31581.html
Bigjon
30th June 2010, 08:38 AM
The tradition of taking your fathers name and tacking son on the end is a Nordik tradition. Women use their fathers name and tack on dottir.
From Joo'o'pedia
Early life
John Hanson, Jr.[1] was born at "Mulberry Grove" in Port Tobacco Parish in Charles County in the British Province of Maryland. The American National Biography lists Hanson's birth date as April 3, 1721,[1] which in the modern calendar system is equivalent to April 14, although the older Dictionary of American Biography gives the date as April 13, 1721.[2] Some older sources list a birth year of 1715. Hanson's parents were Samuel and Elizabeth (Story) Hanson.[1] Samuel Hanson was a planter who owned more than 1,000 acres (4.0 km2), [1] and held a variety of political offices, including serving two terms in the Maryland General Assembly.[2]
John Hanson was of English ancestry; his grandfather, also named John, came to Charles County, Maryland, as an indentured servant around 1661.[3] In 1876, a writer named George Hanson placed John Hanson in his family tree of Swedish Americans descended from four Swedish brothers who emigrated to New Sweden in 1642.[3][4] This story was often repeated over the next century, but scholarly research in the late 20th century suggested that John Hanson was of English heritage and not related to these Swedish American Hansons.[5][6]
Hanson had no extended formal education while growing up in Maryland, but he read broadly in both English and Latin. He followed the family tradition as a planter, extending and improving his holdings. About 1744 he married Jane Contee, with whom he would have eight children.[1] Their son Alexander Contee Hanson, Sr. (1749–1806) was a notable essayist.[7] Alexander Hanson is sometimes confused with his son, Alexander Contee Hanson, Jr., who became a newspaper editor and US Senator.
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