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Thomas Hitchcock

Law/Financial Journalist

Centurion, 1859–1910

Born 1 December 1831 in New York (Manhattan), New York

Died 20 June 1910 in New York (Manhattan), New York

Buried Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York

Proposed by Henry R. Winthrop

Elected 4 June 1859 at age twenty-seven

Archivist’s Note: Published under the pseudonym “Mathew Marshall”

Century Memorial

Thomas Hitchcock had a place of his own in The Century adding to its zest and interest. He found his chief amusement here, and belonged to a group which formed our famous Sunday School. He was well read in the literatures of Germany and France as well as of England and America, and besides, he had a great and discriminatingly intelligent love of music. A nervous temperament, he was never physically robust, encouraged a somewhat controversial disposition and led him occasionally to the formation of judgments on insufficient evidence; but he was ready to accept correction when he found himself or his facts at fault. Sometimes he seemed cynical in his utterances, and yet those who knew him best characterize him as more ready to recognize the good in others than to indulge in critical fault-finding and as endeavoring to be absolutely just.

Mr. Hitchcock after studying in New York University and the Harvard Law School practised law until 1868 when he became associated with Mr. Charles Dana in the New York Sun. His financial articles attracted wide attention and were authoritative. He wrote also on the doings of society. He wrote one book, The Unhappy Loves of Men of Genius.

Mr. Hitchcock in his early youth felt himself aggrieved by the extremely puritanical educational methods to which he was subjected. As a young man freed from these he turned to the Swedenborgian Church for which he always retained sincere sympathy. Later he found satisfaction in the philosophy of Spinoza, Kant, Hegel, Schopenhauer, and most of all Hartmann, whose Philosophy of the Unconscious he translated. A personal visit to Hartmann when travelling in Germany resulted in friendly personal relations and correspondence.

Mr. Hitchcock had many noble qualities endearing his memory to his large group of friends.

George William Knox
1911 Century Association Yearbook