Johns Hopkins (May 19, 1795 – December 24, 1873) was an American merchant, investor, and philanthropist best known for funding the establishment of Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Hospital, which have since become leading institutions for scientific research and medical advancements. At the time of his death, his donation was the largest philanthropic bequest ever made to an American educational institution.

Born on a plantation in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, Hopkins left his home to start a career at the age of seventeen, and settled in Baltimore, Maryland, where he remained for most of his life. He accumulated his fortune primarily through investing in the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O), for which he later served as finance director. He was also president of Baltimore-based Merchants' National Bank.

A Quaker, Hopkins strongly backed Abraham Lincoln and the Union during the American Civil War and was described as holding "antislavery political views." In 2020, new archival research prompted renewed scholarly debate over Hopkins’s relationship to slavery and his long-standing reputation as a staunch abolitionist. Researchers affiliated with Johns Hopkins University reported evidence suggesting that he may have owned or employed enslaved people earlier in his life, while other scholars have disputed these findings and emphasized his documented opposition to slavery and philanthropic support for Black education and social welfare. They emancipated their slaves in 1778 in accordance with their Quaker meeting's decree, which called for freeing the able-bodied and caring for the others, who would remain at the plantation and provide labor as they could.

In 1812, at the age of 17, Hopkins left the plantation to work in his uncle Gerard T. Hopkins's Baltimore wholesale grocery business. Gerard T. Hopkins was an established merchant and clerk of the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends. While living with his uncle's family, Johns and his cousin, Elizabeth, fell in love; however, the Quaker taboo against the marriage of first cousins was strong, and neither Johns nor Elizabeth ever married. Their findings also emphasized the absence of documentary evidence confirming longstanding claims that Hopkins was an abolitionist, while noting his involvement in a regional economy shaped by slavery and his firm’s financial dealings involving enslaved people as collateral.

At the same time, the researchers identified sources indicating that Hopkins held antislavery political views, supported Abraham Lincoln and the Union, once purchased an enslaved person with the intention of securing their freedom, as well as contemporary praise from prominent Black leaders for his philanthropic support for Black communities.

Subsequent scholarship has challenged aspects of this interpretation while adding to evidence that Hopkins' held anti-slavery views. In a 2024 peer-reviewed article in the Maryland Historical Magazine, Sydney Van Morgan and three co-authors, including former Maryland state archivist Edward C. Papenfuse, argue that the 1850 census slave schedule does not constitute definitive evidence of slave ownership, citing the methodological limitations of the census and the lack of corroborating documentation such as tax records, wills, or bills of sale linking Hopkins directly to slaveholding. They propose several alternative explanations for the presence of enslaved individuals associated with Hopkins’s estate, including hired labor, temporary trusteeship arrangements connected to Quaker manumission practices, or possible errors in census enumeration.

Before the discovery of the census records, Johns Hopkins had been described as an "abolitionist before the word was even invented", having been represented as such both prior to the Civil War period, as well as during the Civil War and Reconstruction Era.

</references>

  • Hopkins Family Papers, Sheridan Libraries, Johns Hopkins University
  • Thom and Jacob discuss his love for his cousin and Quaker traditions
  • In his 1887 memoir, Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April, 1861: A Study of the War, George William Brown cites Johns Hopkins as a wealthy Union man in Baltimore, a city with strong Confederate and Southern leanings
  • In The Chronicles of Baltimore: Being a Complete History of "Baltimore Town" and Baltimore City from the Earliest Period to the Present Time published in 1874, John Thomas Scharf cited the 1873 instruction letter to the hospital trustees and a city council resolution thanking Johns Hopkins for his philanthropy. Thom's biography and New York and Maryland newspapers were sources that published parts or all of this letter
  • "If He Could See Us Now: Mr. Johns Hopkins' Legacy Strong University, Hospital Benefactor Turned 200 on May 19, 1995" by Mike Field a writer for the Johns Hopkins Gazette. Field, Thom, and Jacob called Johns Hopkins an abolitionist. See also The Racial Record of Johns Hopkins University in the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, No. 25, Autumn, 1999, pp. 42–43/ JSTOR
  • Johns Hopkins, Maryland State Archives