Career
John Hope was born in 1739, the son of Charles Hope and Catherine Weir and grandson of Charles Hope, 1st Earl of Hopetoun. He was educated at Enfield Grammar School, Middlesex until he was 13, when he was sent to Amsterdam to learn the merchant trade from a Dutch branch of the family. Hope returned to in 1759 and operated as a London merchant, although with indifferent success.
These sons later became Charles Hope, Lord Granton, a noted judge, John Hope, a general under Wellington in the Peninsular War and William Johnstone Hope, a politician and admiral.
Within two years however Hope had been replaced by James Dundas following his support of John Wilkes against his sponsor"s wishes. Having been removed from Parliament, Hope returned to merchant trade, becoming a noted writer in periodicals of the time some of which was later published in 1780 under the title of "Thoughts in Prose and Verse Started in his Walks".
Hope died in 1785 of a bowel infection at Newcastle upon Tyne.