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Last Updated:July 04, 2026, 22:38 IST
The connection was so vivid that in 1782, a celebrated Pennsylvania privateer vessel was commissioned as the Hyder Ally

Haider Ali meeting with Western military commanders. Image/X
As citizens across the United States gather today to celebrate Independence Day, marking another anniversary of their definitive break from the British Crown, they invoke a history deeply rooted in global anti-colonial solidarity. While modern Fourth of July reflections typically centre on the domestic triumphs of the American Revolution, the early citizens of the infant republic possessed a remarkably international worldview. Following the formal conclusion of the Revolutionary War via the Treaty of Paris in 1783, the American public did not retreat into isolation. Instead, they maintained a profound, decades-long fascination with a parallel resistance unfolding on the Indian subcontinent, where the Kingdom of Mysore stood as a formidable bulwark against British imperial expansion. The rulers of Mysore, Haider Ali and his son and successor, Tipu Sultan, became household names, serving as frequent fixtures in early American newspapers, poetry, and everyday vernacular.
Kindred Spirits Against the Empire
This deep-seated admiration began during the darkest days of the American struggle, when news of Haider Ali’s stunning cavalry manoeuvres during the Second Anglo-Mysore War crossed the Atlantic. To colonial Americans, the Mysorean state was fighting the exact same battle against fiscal tyranny and military subjugation that they were. The connection was so vivid that in 1782, a celebrated Pennsylvania privateer vessel was commissioned as the Hyder Ally. When this ship famously captured the British warship General Monk in the Delaware Bay, it was hailed as a magnificent victory for the republican cause, cementing the Mysorean monarch’s name into early American naval folklore and patriotic ballads.
The arrival of peace in 1783 did not dilute this fascination. Under the reign of Tipu Sultan—the legendary Tiger of Mysore—the cultural alignment grew even more pronounced. Throughout the 1780s and 1790s, American gazettes tracked Tipu’s battles, technological innovations in rocketry, and diplomatic engagements with an intensity usually reserved for European allies. During early Fourth of July banquets, festive civic gatherings would routinely feature extensive lists of political toasts. Alongside honours raised for George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, early American patriots regularly lifted their glasses to the health of Tipu Sultan, wishing success to the Eastern sovereign who boldly contested British dominance.
The Tiger of Mysore in the American Imagination
In everyday American life, the rulers of Mysore became literary and conversational shorthand. Prominent poets of the era wove references to Mysorean resilience into their verses, using the subcontinental conflict to illustrate the universal inevitability of liberty over despotism. Even in casual language, a remarkably stubborn adversary or a fierce political competitor in New England was colloquially branded a “Tipu" or a “Tiger".
When Seringapatam finally fell in 1799 and Tipu Sultan died defending his capital, the news was received in America with widespread solemnity. His death was reported not as the defeat of a distant potentate, but as the tragic fall of a monumental champion of independence. Today, as the United States reflects on its own historical journey, the enduring legacy of Mysore serves as a poignant reminder that the spirit of the revolution was once celebrated as a shared, global flame.
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About the Author
Pathikrit Sen Gupta is a Senior Associate Editor with News18.com and likes to cut a long story short. He writes sporadically on Politics, Sports, Global Affairs, Space, Entertainment, And Food. He tra...Read More
News world Hidden History Of Fourth Of July: How Haider Ali & Tipu Sultan Became America's 'Independence Day Icons'
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