Benjamin Homans | |
Office: | Chief Clerk of the US Navy Department |
Term Start: | March 9, 1813 |
Term End: | December 1, 1823 |
Predecessor: | Charles W. Goldsborough |
Successor: | Charles Hay |
Appointed: | James Monroe |
Office2: | 4th Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts |
Term Start2: | 1810 |
Term End2: | 1812 |
Successor2: | Alden Bradford |
Children: | I. Smith Homans |
Benjamin Homans was an American merchant captain, and politician who served as the 4th Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth and who served from as the Chief Clerk of the Navy Department, which was at the time the second highest civilian position in the US Navy.
Homans had been a merchant captain during the 1780s and 1790s. During the Quasi war with France, because of the Sedition Act and because he was an ardent Jeffersonian, Homans went into exile in Bordeaux.
Prior to the 1814 British attack, and Burning of Washington during the War of 1812, it was Homans, along with Dolley Madison who removed two wagon loads of the Navy Department's archives; including saving Charles Willson Peale's classic portrait of George Washington.