General Samuel Hopkins
The services of Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Hopkins as given in Heitman's "Historical Register of Officers in the Continental Army -- 1775 - 1783 are as follows:
On August 27, 1774, The Transylvania Company, sometimes called the
Richard Henderson Company was formed in North Carolina. This was one of
first of many land companies and was composed of a "Company of Gentlemen
Adventurers" -- nine in number and all living in north Carolina. The President
and leader was the brilliant and eloquent Jurist and colonizer, Judge
Richard Henderson. He has been called the "Political Father of Kentucky"
and "one of the greatest of American land speculators and Commonwealth
builders." His talents demanded stirring and brilliant opportunities --
so he turned towwards Kentucky, then a most exciting subject.
Under the leadership of Richard Hendeerson, the Transylvania Company
accomplished great things in Kentucky. It was this Company that laid the
foundation on which Kentucky was built. It was also this Company that negotiated
the Great Treaty with the Indians at Wataugua. And it was after the loss
of the vast lands acquired from the Cherokees in this treaty, that Virginia
"in consideration" of their great loss, gave the Company 200,000 acres
of land situated between the Ohio and Green Rivers. This was known as the
Henderson Grant. But the settling of this Grand was long delayed. It lay
far beyond the frontier and was considered the "Far West" open to Indian
raids and over run by a ruthless band of river pirates. The Indiana village
of Shawneetown was across the river and not far away.
Near the end of the eighteenth century, all of the members of the
Transylvania or Richard Henderson Company had passed away except three,
Judge John Williams, James Hogg and Nathaniel Hart. Their great leader,
Judge Richard Henderson had died, at his home in North Carolina, on January
30, 1785. But there were heirs from the deceased members and Amelia Johnston,
the only child and heir of William Johnston, became the only woman member.
William Johnston had acted as secretary and treasurer of the Company for
over a decade.
Now this group, decided to found a town on the Richard Henderson
Grant along the Ohio river. They had some knowledge of the chosen site,
as it was known to the river men as "Red Banks" from the high red bluffs
that lifted the land far above the highest floods. In later years, the
town was known as the "Floodless City" on the Ohio.
The Company also knew that a few settlers had come down the river
on flatboats and landed at Red banks and had built cabins and a small stockade.
This was at the crossroads of the Shawnee Trail and the Natchez Trace.
These pioneers, fifteen families in all, had settled within the Grant with
neither title or grant to the land, as early as 1791 - 1792.
It was about this time, now that the Revolutionary War was over,
that Samuel Hopkins had left his home in Virginia and gone to Hillsborough,
North Carolina. Here he contracted for the erection of the first building
ever erected upon the Campus of any State University in America the old
East Building, and also the building of the official home of the President
of the University of North Carolina. ecause of his efficient work, Colonel
Richard Burton, secretary of the Board of Trustees, urged the Transylvania
Company to engage Samuel Hopkins as agent to arrange for and direct the
subdivision of the land lying on the Ohio and Green Rivers.
Early in the year 1797, The Company did engage Samuel Hopkins as
agent and attorney and Captain Thomas Allin as surveyor and sent them to
the Henderson Grant to lay out the town.
Hopkins and Allin kept very complete noes of their work and from
these notes we learn ha "Samuel Hopkins set out from his home in Hanover
County, Virginia on february 16, 1797 for Kentucky." After passing the
first mountains the weather became violent, with rain and snow. He reached
Danville, Ky., on March 10, 1797 and was joined by Captain Thomas Allin,
who was to survey the Grant. Three hands were also engaged as chain men
and markers. At Lexington, Mr. Purviance, a land speculator, also joined
the party. On the way Elisha Howard was employed as a guide, hunter and
messenger. The horses and supplies were sent on by land but Hopkins and
his group of men came down the Green river to the Ohio by a parogue. They
reached the site of Red Banks, March 30, 1797. The business of laying out
the town began immediately. The work was greatly retarded by heavy rains
and flooding rivers. It rained for twenty days and both the Ohio and Green
rivers were flooded.
SamuelHopkins did a most intelligent piece of work in laying off
the Town. The original plan of he "Old City" shows that four streets were
two and a quarter miles long and parallel with the Ohio river; three of
them were one hundred feet wide, the fourth street, Water Street, was two
hudnred feet wide. These four streets were intersected by twenty-five cross
streets, also one hundred feet wide. These beautiful wide streets in Henderson
came about because Samuel Hopkins had a haunting fear of fire. Therefore,
he made the streets wide so a fire could not "jump across" and only one
block was likely to burn down at a time. Six blocks cutting through the
exact center of the town were given by the Transylvania Company for a park
and other uses. This was the first municipal park west of the Alleghenies
and was named Transylvania Park in honor of the founding fathers. Later
it was renamed Central Park.
On July 15, 1797, Samuel Hopkins sent his report, together with Captain
Allin's description of the tract to the Transylvania Company in North Carolina.
The report closed with these words"
"As to our work, I hope and believe it will be found as accurate
as a work of this kind can well be -- that there may be imperfections in
it, I have no doubt, but I am morally certain tha it contains as much perfection
as is necessary.--We left the Grant on the 1st of June, when we arrived
in Mercer, it employed the Surveyor twelve days to finish the Platts, certificates,
etc. I left that place 22 June and arrived at my home on 6th, July 1797,
having been out 141 days."
Signed Richard Hopkins
A meeting of the Transylvania or Richard Henderson Company washeld
at Williamsborough, North Carolina on Monday, 31st of July, 1797. Samuel
Hopkins met with them and reported his proceedings in the said busines
siwth a Plat and description of the survey, -- all of which was unanimously
approved of. It was also approved that the new town was to be called Henderson
in honor of Colonel Richard Henderson, who had been the guiding influence
of the Company until his death in 1785. But the old name "Red Banks" still
clung to the town for many years.
Samuel Hopkins was given his preference of the ten acre lots laid
out around the town of Henderson and the htanks of the Company for the
faithful and complete manner in which her performed his duties of his appointment.
The Hopkins family was one of the first to return and settle on the
newly opened Grant. Samuel Hopkins became a promoter, conceiving and starting
many good things for the new town and county of Henderson. He wrote glowing
reports to his friends in Virginia and North Carolina and soon many of
the heirs of the members of the Transylvania Company came and settled on
their land in the Grant. Others came and built their homes on plantations
or in the town. In 1817, John James Audubon and his family came from Louisville,
Ky., to the new Henderson. Land outside the Grant was given by Virginia
to Officers and soldiers of the Revolutionary War.
Samuel Hopkins began the practice of law and became the first judge of the first Court held in Henderson. The following story is recorded in one of the Old Court books: "Being made angry, he uttered an oath by saying "By God." The law at that time was that whosoever uttered an oath should pay a fine to be determined by the Court. So, Hopkins was presented before the Commissioners and upon being examined, he confessed his crime and paid a fine of five shillings to the Court. He then took his seat and presided as Judge on the first day of the first Court.
By the year 1799, Henderson did not have representation in the Kentucky
Assembly. Hopkins commented on this state of affairs in a letter written
to Colonel Thomas Hart of Lexington, Ketncuky: - "I hear your town and
neighborhood are depply engaged in politics - the subject of the approaching
election will cause the explosion off much wind and shedding of much ink.
Not so here. I do not think one-half hour has been consumed with us on
the subject. The Assembly in their law arranging the places of holding
the elections and appointing the Representatives did us such manifest injustice
that we care very little for the present. Besides in a few years you know,
there will be another convention conjured up by some restless Spirits and
then perhaps we shall be thought entitled to an equal representation."
In the years 1800-1801-1803-1806, SamuelHopkins represented his district
in the House of Representatives. He procured the passage of a law "Enabling
aliens residing in the State of Kentucky to hold lands in fee." This was
a privilege not extended to that class in any other State. Hopkins also
served as a member of the Kentucky State Senate from 1809 to 1813. In 1809
he was one of Kentucky's Presidential Electors, casting his vote for Madison.
With the outbreak of the second war with Great Britian, Samuel Hopkins
again answered the call of his Country. In this War of 1812, he was commissioned
Major General by President Madison. After that he was always referred to
as "General". he was put in charge of 2,000 men and in October, 1812, Governor
Isaac Shelby gave him permission to take these mounted volunteers against
the Kickapoo Indians on the Illinois river. This party was misled by guides
and after wandering several days about the prarie, the men began to desert
against the wishes and commands of the officers. There was a lack of provisions
as their beef had been lost on the trail. Other provisions had not been
delivered. In November, 1812, General Hopkins collected another band of
infantry and marched up the Wabash as far as Prophets Town, destroying
several Indian Villages, but lost part of the force by ambush. The Indians
refused to combat and later sued for peace. Samuel Goode Hopkins, son of
th General served as Captain in the United States Army in the War of 1812.
Again General Samuel Hopkins returned to his home in Henderson, but
he was elected Representative to the 13th United States Congress from Kentucky,
and took his seat -- June 26, 1813. After one term, he returned to his
plantation and his family and friends.
General Hopkins had married Elizabeth (Betty) Branch Bugg, the daughter
of Jacob Bugg. Their marriage license was dated Janaury 10, 1783 in Mecklenburg
County, Virginia. To this union was born, in Virginia, eight children.
They were:
General Hopkins was quite a rich man in his time and "Spring Garden"
his beautiful plantation, located about two miles east of Henderson, on
the Zion road, was among his landed possessions. The appraisement of his
estate in 1820 was listed as $20,474.00, a fortune at that time.
At the age of sicty-six, the "Old General" died - September 16, 1819
at his home. His remains were inerred in the family burying ground at "Spring
Garden." A simple marble shaft was placed on his last resting place. The
inscription on this monument reads thus:
"Sacred to the Memory of General Samuel Hopkins
Firm with Temperance, Benevolent with Sincerity and Liberal without
Ostentaion. He Closed in the Bosom of his Family, a Long Life of Exemplary
Usefulness in Military and Civil Employment, Characterized by Ardent Devotion
to his Country and the Best Interests of Man.
The health of the settlers seemed to be excellent. Samuel Hopkins
recorded in his notes on July 15, 1800 - "There is not at this time ten
sick persons of all disorders in Henderson County." In 1802, he wrote:
- "Through this year the people in all our settlement have been extremely
healthy. I have not heard of anyone sick enough to take physic or had died."
General Samuel Hopkins was certainly an extraordinary man. He was the
first person of the Episcopalion faith in Henderson and often read services
in the Union Church, located on a hill in Transylvania ( now Centra) Park.
He was a self made man and rose to such a position of popularity that he
was considered, all over the Stae of Kentucky, as one of her most talented
sons. Hopkins County, Kentucky and Hopkinsville, Kentucky., were named
in his honor. such was the character of General Samuel Hopkins, that without
doubt, he did more for the good and prosperity of the early settlement
of Red Banks, later named Henderson, than any other man. He can truly be
called the "Father of Henderson and Henderson County, Kentucky."
Who was born 9th. Apr. 1753 and Died Sept. 16th 1819.