Thomas Hobson
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Thomas Hobson (1544?–1631), sometimes called "The Cambridge Carrier," is best known as the name behind the expression Hobson's choice.
A carrier from Cambridge, England, Hobson delivered mail between London and Cambridge, operating a livery stable outside the gates of St Catharine's College. When they were not needed to deliver mail, Hobson's horses were rented to students and faculty from the university.
Hobson soon discovered that his best (and fastest) horses were the most popular, and overworked. To prevent further exhaustion of his best horses, Hobson devised a strict rotation system, only allowing customers to rent the next horse in line. His policy, "this one or none," has come to be known as "Hobson's choice," when an apparent choice is in fact no choice at all. The term originated in the mid-seventeenth century. [1]
The poet John Milton popularized both Hobson and the phrase, twice commemorating him in epitaphs, and in issue 509 of Addison and Steele's The Spectator from 1712.
In addition to his contribution to English vernacular, Hobson is also remembered for his involvement in the construction of Hobson's Conduit, a man-made watercourse built in 1614 to provide clean drinking water to the city of Cambridge. Hobson was one of the primary benefactors of the new stream.[2] Hobson's Conduit is alternatively known as Hobson's Brook. Hobson bought Anglesey Priory in 1625 and converted it into a country house, which under the name Anglesey Abbey, now belongs to the National Trust.