Harrison Gray Otis (born October 8, 1765, Boston, Massachusetts [U.S.]—died October 28, 1848, Boston) was a Federalist political leader who championed the Hartford Convention in its opposition to mercantilist policies and the War of 1812.
He was a nephew of James Otis and the son of Samuel Allyne Otis (1740–1814), who was a member of the Confederation Congress in 1787–88 and secretary of the U.S. Senate from its first session in 1789 until his death. Young Otis graduated from Harvard College in 1783, was admitted to the bar in 1786, and soon became prominent as a Federalist in politics. An outstanding example of Boston’s mercantile aristocracy, he served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1796–97 and 1802–05, in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1797–1801, as a member of the Massachusetts Senate in 1805–13 and 1814–17, as a member of the U.S. Senate in 1817–1822, and as mayor of Boston in 1829–32. Otis was strongly opposed to the War of 1812 and was a leader in the states’ rights Hartford Convention, which he defended in a series of open letters published in 1824 and in his inaugural address as mayor of Boston.