Esek Hopkins

United States naval officer
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Quick Facts
Born:
April 26, 1718, Providence, Rhode Island
Died:
February 26, 1802, Providence, Rhode Island, United States

Esek Hopkins (born April 26, 1718, Providence, Rhode Island—died February 26, 1802, Providence, Rhode Island, United States) was the first commodore of the United States Navy in the period of the American Revolution (1775–83).

Hopkins, who went to sea at the age of 20, proving his ability as a seaman and trader, and a marriage into wealth put him at the head of a large merchant fleet prior to the French and Indian War (1754–63). By privateering during that war, he added to his fortune and won a considerable naval reputation. Rhode Island named him a brigadier general of its land forces at the outbreak of the Revolution, but a call from the Continental Congress, where his brother was chairman of the naval committee, induced him to forsake the army and accept the command (December 22, 1775) of the first Continental fleet then outfitting at Philadelphia. He reportedly outfitted his fleet with a flag displaying a rattlesnake and the motto “Don’t Tread on Me,” a design similar to the Gadsden flag.

Instructed to attack the British fleet under John Murray, 4th earl of Dunmore, in Chesapeake Bay, Hopkins considered his orders discretionary and the enemy too strong. He therefore sailed his fleet of eight armed vessels to the Bahamas, captured considerable war matériel at New Providence Island, and upon his return fought an inconclusive action with the British ship “Glasgow” (April 1776).

Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga, by Percy Moran, circa 1911. Saratoga Campaign, American Revolution, Revolutionary War.
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Dissatisfaction with the achievements of the fleet and its subsequent inactivity in Rhode Island led to an investigation by Congress. Censured for disobedience of orders, Hopkins returned to the fleet, but his continued inactivity and quarrels with his officers induced Congress to suspend him from his command in March 1777. He was dismissed from the navy in 1778 and thereafter played a prominent part in Rhode Island politics.

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