James Biddle (born Feb. 18, 1783, Philadelphia—died Oct. 1, 1848, Philadelphia) was a career U.S. naval officer who negotiated the first treaty between the United States and China.
Biddle attended the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, before entering the navy as a midshipman in 1800. Retained despite a severe cutback in naval manpower, Biddle served in the war against the Barbary pirates. During that conflict he was captured (Oct. 31, 1803) and imprisoned for more than a year and a half in Tripoli.
Upon his release, Biddle was given command of a gunboat and assigned to protect the South Atlantic coast from pirates. He took a leave of absence in 1807 to serve as first officer on a merchant ship to China. On his return he helped to enforce Pres. Thomas Jefferson’s embargo on American trade, and in the years immediately preceding the War of 1812, he served on a number of naval vessels.
During the war, Biddle was first lieutenant on the “Wasp” when it captured the British ship “Frolic.” He was later taken by the British and imprisoned in Bermuda. He was released before the end of the war and was promoted to master commandant. Biddle took command of the “Hornet,” and his ship conquered the “Penguin,” then made a heroic escape from a much larger British vessel in the final naval engagement of the war.
In 1817 Biddle was sent to the Columbia River to claim the Oregon Territory for the United States. He subsequently served in the West Indies, off the coast of South America, and in the Mediterranean. He was serving as commodore of the East India Squadron when he became responsible for negotiating the first treaty between the United States and China (1846), for which he is perhaps best remembered. His last command took him to the Pacific Coast during the Mexican War.