Hawkesworth, John, 1715?-1773 (Library of Congress Name Authority)—

A schoolmaster, poet, dramatist, novelist, and periodical editor, Hawkesworth had almost no formal education. His literary career began first with poetry, some of which was published in the Gentleman’s Magazine, where he later worked as editor. His stage productions include: Amphitryon; or, The Two Sosias: A Comedy, adapted from John Dryden (1756); Oroonoko: A Tragedy, adapted from Thomas Southerne, (1759); Zimri: An Oratorio (music by Thomas Stanley) (1760); Edgar and Emmeline: A Fairy Tale (1761); and The Fall of Egypt: An Oratorio (music by Thomas Stanley) (1774).

Hastings, William Hastings, Lord, 1430?-1483 (Library of Congress Name Authority)—

The 1st Baron of Hastings, William Hastings was an English diplomat and soldier, as well as the Master of Mint and Lord Chamberlain of the royal household of King Edward IV. Hastings raised troops for Edward during the Earl of Warwick's Rebellion, supporting the House of York during the Wars of the Roses. Following Edward's death, Hastings took Edward's royal mistress, Jane Shore, as his concubine. Shore encouraged Hastings to oppose the ascension of the Yorkist Duke of Gloucester, later Richard III, to the throne. Upon seizing the throne, Richard had Hastings executed for treason.

Hartley, David, 1705-1757 (Library of Congress Name Authority)—

In his Observations on Man, his Frame, his Duty, and his Expectations (1749), physician David Hartley expounded a physiological theory of "vibrations" to explain his conviction that the moral sense was not inborn, but rather a consequence of the association of ideas. Particularly after his work was popularized by Joseph Priestley in his abridgment Hartley's Theory of the Human Mind on the Principle of the Association of Ideas (1775), Hartley's ideas exerted broad influence on literature, philosophy, medicine, psychology, and issues such as education and reform.