History is for Everyone

1707–1785

Stephen Hopkins

Governor of Rhode IslandContinental Congress DelegateDeclaration Signer

Biography

Stephen Hopkins was born in Providence in 1707 and became one of the dominant figures of eighteenth-century Rhode Island politics, serving as governor ten times between 1755 and 1768 and shaping nearly every major political decision the colony made in the decades before the Revolution. He was a largely self-educated man whose intellectual curiosity matched his political energy, and he brought both to the constitutional debates that began to intensify in the 1760s. His 1764 pamphlet The Rights of Colonies Examined was one of the earliest and most cogent colonial arguments against parliamentary taxation, predating many of the better-known patriot writings by years.

Hopkins served as a Rhode Island delegate to the Continental Congress beginning in 1774 and was among the oldest men in that body, his long career in colonial politics giving him a perspective on British governance that younger delegates lacked. He sat on the naval committee that established the Continental Navy in 1775 and helped secure the appointment of his brother Esek Hopkins as commander-in-chief of the fleet. When the Congress took the momentous step of declaring independence in July 1776, Hopkins was among the signers — reportedly steadying his trembling hand, afflicted by palsy, against the table as he wrote, and noting that though his hand trembled, his heart did not. The remark captured something essential about his character: a tenacity that physical infirmity could not diminish.

Hopkins retired from Congress after signing the Declaration, his health declining, but he continued to serve Rhode Island in various capacities until near the end of his life. He died in Providence in 1785, having outlived the independence he helped bring about by nearly a decade. His career spanned the full arc of colonial development into revolutionary action, and his early and sustained advocacy for colonial rights placed him among the most important pre-Revolutionary constitutional thinkers in New England.

In Providence

  1. Feb

    1776

    Continental Navy's First Fleet Sails Under Esek Hopkins

    Role: Governor of Rhode Island

    **The Continental Navy's First Fleet Sails Under Esek Hopkins** In the early months of the American Revolution, the rebellious colonies faced a daunting reality: Great Britain possessed the most powerful navy in the world, and the Americans had virtually nothing to challenge it on the open sea. The Continental Congress, recognizing that independence could not be won on land alone, took its first tentative steps toward building a naval force in the fall of 1775. Among the most vocal advocates for an American navy was Stephen Hopkins, the influential Governor of Rhode Island, who understood from his colony's deep maritime traditions that control of coastal waters and supply lines would be essential to the revolutionary cause. Rhode Island, with its bustling port of Providence and its long history of seafaring commerce, shipbuilding, and even smuggling, was uniquely positioned to contribute to this new endeavor. It was no coincidence, then, that when the Continental Congress sought a commander-in-chief for its fledgling naval force, the appointment went to a Rhode Islander: Esek Hopkins, Stephen Hopkins's brother and a seasoned mariner with decades of experience on the seas. Esek Hopkins was a practical and ambitious choice. A former privateer during the French and Indian War and a prosperous merchant captain, he knew the Atlantic waters well and commanded respect among New England sailors. In late 1775, Congress placed him at the head of a small squadron of eight vessels, a modest fleet that represented the entirety of American naval power. The ships were a motley collection — converted merchantmen and small warships, including the flagship Alfred, the Columbus, the Andrew Doria, and the Cabot — crewed by inexperienced sailors and Marines eager to strike a blow against the British Empire. Among the officers serving under Hopkins were several men who would go on to distinguished naval careers, most notably John Paul Jones, who served as a lieutenant aboard the Alfred and would later become the most celebrated naval hero of the Revolution. In February 1776, Hopkins sailed his squadron out of Philadelphia with orders from Congress to patrol the Chesapeake Bay and disrupt British naval operations along the southern coast. However, Hopkins made a fateful decision that would define his legacy in contradictory ways. Rather than following these instructions, he chose to lead his fleet southward to Nassau in the Bahamas, where British forces maintained a garrison and stores of military supplies. Hopkins calculated that a surprise raid on Nassau would yield desperately needed gunpowder, cannons, and other war materials for the Continental Army, which was chronically short of such provisions. In March 1776, his squadron descended upon Nassau and carried out what became the Continental Navy's first amphibious operation. Marines and sailors went ashore, overwhelmed the small British garrison, and seized significant quantities of military stores, including cannons and ammunition, though much of the gunpowder had been spirited away before they arrived. The raid on Nassau was tactically successful and demonstrated that American naval forces could project power beyond the coastline. Yet the victory carried a steep political cost. Congress had given Hopkins explicit orders, and he had disregarded them. Upon his return, Hopkins faced sharp criticism from delegates who viewed his independent action as insubordination. Congress formally censured him for disobeying orders, and his command was further undermined by complaints from subordinate officers about his leadership and by a series of unsuccessful engagements during the return voyage, including an inconclusive encounter with the British frigate HMS Glasgow, which managed to escape his entire squadron. These failures compounded his political difficulties, and in 1778, Congress dismissed Hopkins from command entirely. Despite his controversial and ultimately brief tenure, Esek Hopkins's command marked a pivotal moment in American history. His fleet's voyage represented the birth of American naval operations, the first time a unified American squadron sailed under a common command to strike at British interests. Providence's maritime culture — its experienced sailors, skilled shipbuilders, and daring merchant-captains — was central to making this possible. The lessons learned from Hopkins's expedition, both its successes and its failures, informed the development of American naval strategy throughout the remainder of the war and planted the seeds for what would eventually become the United States Navy, an institution whose origins trace back to those eight small ships sailing out of Philadelphia in the winter of 1776.

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