1. William Vans Murray (1760–1803), a young Marylander studying at the Middle Temple. He had formed a close friendship with JQA, was liked by all the Adamses, and became a valued political disciple of JA. A Federalist member of Congress, 1791–1797, he was appointed by Washington successor to JQA as minister at The Hague, and it was largely through his efforts, concluding in the Franco-American Convention of Mortefontaine, Sept.-Oct. 1800, that JA as President was able to end the quasi-war with France. See
DAB
; JQA's anonymous obituary of Murray in the
Port Folio, 1st ser., 4:5–6 (7 Jan. 1804); articles by Alexander DeConde on Murray's diplomacy,
Md. Hist. Mag., 48: 1–26 (March 1953), and on his
Political Sketches, London, 1787 (a work dedicated to JA),
MVHR
, 41:623–640 (March 1955); and “Letters of William Vans Murray,” ed. W. C. Ford, Amer. Hist. Assoc.,
Ann. Rpt. for 1912, p. 341–715 (mainly letters to JQA, from the
Adams Papers).