1. The “Extracts” (of which JA enclosed a copy in his own hand, now in
MHi:Cranch Papers, under date of 1781) were originally furnished by Edmund Jenings in his letter to JA from Brussels,
17 Sept. (
Adams Papers). Jenings' letter devoted three of its six folio pages to two quotations from [Francis Blackburne,]
Memoirs of Thomas Hollis, Esq., London, 1780, a work in two large and elegant quarto volumes containing numerous engravings. (On JA and Hollis see index to
JA's Diary and Autobiography
.) The first quoted passage from the
Memoirs, 1:400–401, relates to the publication and authorship and extols the substance of JA's anonymous essays, originally published in the
Boston Gazette in 1765 and reprinted in London by Hollis in 1768 under the title
Dissertation on the Canon and the Feudal Law. It concludes with the text of a brief letter Hollis addressed to the Empress Catherine of Russia in 1768, transmitting a passage from the
Dissertation in praise of the New England plan of education at public expense. The second passage from the
Memoirs, 1:416–417, quoted in Jenings' letter is from a letter written by Hollis to the Boston clergyman Andrew Eliot Sr., 10 May 1769, and deals chiefly with the qualifications of a colonial agent, mentioning JA as a person well qualified.