Hopkins was born in Providence, Rhode Island, the only son of William and Ruth (Wilkinson) Hopkins. He grew up on a farm in Scituate, Rhode Island and attended a public school. He moved back to Providence in 1742 and worked as a foundryman, merchant, ship owner, and surveyor.
Hopkins helped to found a subscription library in 1754, and was a member of the Philosophical Society of Newport. Although largely self educated, Hopkins served as chancellor of Rhode Island College (now Brown University) from 1764 to 1785. In 1764 he published a pamphlet "The Rights of the Colonies Examined" whose broad distribution and criticism of taxation and Parliament built his reputation as a revolutionary leader. Hopkins had Cerebral Palsy, and was noted to have said, as he signed the Declaration of Independence, "My hand trembles, my heart does not."
While serving in the Rhode Island Assembly in 1774 he introduced the bill that outlawed the import of slaves to the colony. This became one of the first anti-slavery laws in the United States.
Stephen died at his home in Providence on July 13, 1785, and is interred in the North Burial Ground there. The town of Hopkinton, Rhode Island was later named after him. The SS Stephen Hopkins, a liberty ship named in his honor, was the first U.S. ship to sink a German surface warship in World War II.
1707 births | 1785 deaths | Continental Congressmen | Signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence | Brown University alumni | Foundrymen
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"Stephen Hopkins (politician)".
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