Stephen T. Hopkins Explained

Stephen Tyng Hopkins
State1:New York
District1:17th
Term Start1:March 4, 1887
Term End1:March 3, 1889
Predecessor1:James G. Lindsley
Successor1:Charles J. Knapp
Assembly2:New York State
Constituency Am2:Greene County
Term Start2:1885
Term End2:1886
Predecessor2:Bradley S. McCabe
Successor2:Francis G. Walters
Birth Date:25 March 1849
Birth Place:New York City, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Pleasantville, New Jersey, U.S.
Death Cause:Suicide by poisoning/overdose
Resting Place:Green-Wood Cemetery
Party:Republican

Stephen Tyng Hopkins (March 25, 1849 – March 3, 1892) was a U.S. Representative from New York.

Early life and career

Born in New York City, Hopkins attended the Anthon Grammar School and became an iron merchant and broker.

He later moved to Catskill, and was connected with several coal and iron syndicates in West Virginia and Tennessee.

Hopkins served in the New York Militia, and was Adjutant of New York's 86th Infantry Regiment.[1]

In 1871, Hopkins married Mary Warner Munn, (died January 28, 1887).[2] [3] [4] Their children included Louis Davis Hopkins (born January 24, 1874), a New York City businessman.[5]

A Republican, he was a member of the New York State Assembly (Greene County) in 1885 and 1886. As an Assemblyman he was identified with the Stalwart Republicans, and was accused of using some of his children's inheritance to buy legislators' votes for Levi P. Morton during the 1887 election to succeed Warner Miller.[6]

Hopkins was elected to the Fiftieth Congress (March 4, 1887 – March 3, 1889). During his congressional term, there were reports that he was behaving erratically, and observers presumed that he was mentally ill or drinking excessively in response to the death of his wife.[7]

After leaving Congress, he was a Watchman in the New York Custom House from April to August 1890.

Death and burial

He was found dead by a train crew alongside the railroad tracks near Pleasantville, adjacent to Atlantic City, New Jersey on March 3, 1892. He had apparently traveled to Atlantic City following medical treatment for alcoholism at a facility in White Plains, New York.[8] The circumstances of his death were unclear, although observers indicated that based on the condition of his body when it was found, he did not appear to have fallen or been thrown from a train.[9] Because he had not been robbed and there were no signs that he had been murdered, Hopkins was presumed to have committed suicide by poison or drug overdose because of business reverses and alcoholism.[10]

He was interred in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.

External links

Notes and References

  1. New York Adjutant General, Annual Report, 1868, page 256
  2. New York Evening Telegram, Fashionable Gossip: Wedding notice, Stephen T. Hopkins and Mary W. Munn, November 16, 1871
  3. The Churchman, Death notice, Mary Warner Munn Hopkins, February 12, 1887
  4. New York Times, Death notice, Mary Warner Munn Hopkins, January 30, 1887
  5. Who's Who Publications, Inc., Who's Who in New York (City and State), Issue 7, 1918, page 536
  6. The Olean Democrat, A Political Debt, August 14, 1890
  7. New York Times, Stephen T. Hopkins' Record, March 7, 1892
  8. The Highland Democrat, Hopkins' Sad Ending: An Ex-Congressman Found Dead After Trying the Keeley Cure, March 5, 1892
  9. New York Times, Mr. S. T. Hopkins Found Dead, March 4, 1892
  10. Philadelphia Times, The Body of a Man Discovered Near Pleasantville, N.J. A Probable Suicide, March 4, 1892