He was an unsuccessful candidate in 1864 for reelection to the Thirty-ninth Congress and again in 1880 to the Forty-seventh Congress.
Wells Fargo | H. G. Wells | Junior Wells | Indian Wells | Sadler's Wells | Mary Wells | Bishop of Bath and Wells | Wells, Somerset | Wells Fargo Center | Spencer Wells | Sadler's Wells Theatre | Will Hutchins | Wells | Kitty Wells | Jonathan Wells | Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia) | Wells Cathedral | Jonathan Wells (intelligent design advocate) | John Wells | Henry Wells | David Wells | Frank Wells | Zeb Wells | Wells River, Vermont | Three Bridges to Tunbridge Wells Central Line | Steven Wells | Jocelin of Wells | Jay Wells | Ida B. Wells | Willie Wells |
Jonathan F. Barrett was the company's first president, and the company included some of the leading men of the state: General Sherman himself, Hugh McLeod, John G. Tod, John Angier, William Rice, Ebenezer A. Allen, William A. van Alstyne, James H. Stevens, Benjamin A. Shepherd, and William J. Hutchins.
James W. Hutchins (1929–1984), American murderer, executed in North Carolina
Hutchins served variously as a director, owner, and president of the Houston and Texas Central Railway.