Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
I thank you for your Letter from worcester since that I have
heard by the papers you have arriv’d in new-york.1 I hope Safe. you must have had bad weather
some part of the way if Such as we had reach’d you. last Sunday evening we had a
terrible Tempest of thunder Lightning & wind & rain the Lightning struck the
house of capn. Jo. Baxter
& every person in it reciev’d a Shock there were many young People collected there
Boilstone Adams & I believe Sukey mr Adams was very much affected for several
hours & many were obliged to be rub’d with vinagar for a long time it came down
262 by the side of the chimney & went thro the
house into the cellar.2 that no one
should be kill’d was a great preservation. it Struck a house in milton also. I never
Say Such Lightning. it was like columns of Fire & fell to the Ground. the wind was
violent mr & mrs Norton were on the top of Pens hill when it took them. they were
oblig’d to run into a house for shelter they look out their house & the chaise was
blown half way down the hill. they were on their way to Atkinson. they return’d
yesterday found & left all well. the little Boys were finely & contented.
cousen Betsy Stay’d with mrs Nortons children in her absence3
I Saw mrs Porter to day they are both well I spoke to her about the clothes lines. She will take care of them. mr Foster & Eliza Bond were here last Sunday— She has got her health & looks finely but neither She nor I can make Cousen Betsy own that there is any connection design’d to be form’d between mr F & her notwithstanding all the appearences She does fib. I know She does. they were Several hours alone together in our east Parlour4 she has recover’d her spirits much better than I fear’d She would. had She been with her Brother She would have felt very differently from what She now does I believe it would have kill’d her in her feeble State. Sister Peabody did not forget that the day he was buried was the 29th of September it render’d the Scene doublely Solemn
your Neice mrs Hubbart & Salomy came the last week to make you a visit they did not know you were gone. they spent an affternoon with me5 Doctor Tufts came to do business with you about half an hour after you left us. he wishes for many directions which he expected to receive—
mr Cranchs coat I supposed you must have taken by mistake. we have not receiv’d it yet nor heard of it only by your Letter. but think it will come along Tis one he wants much this time of the year his Devonshire is too thick & heavey
I am impatient to hear from you again & to know how you found mrs Smith & your other children my Love to them all— I want to know also where congress will be call’d. do not go to an unhealthy Spot— Stay with your children untill you can go into your own house I Shall be distress’d about you if you do— I have been from home but once since you left me your house looks So gloomy I cant bear it— I wish it was occupy’d in your absence by some Sensible neighbour— George Apthorp is come with his wife & her mother mrs Perkins, a Sister of mrs Aptho[rp] mrs A is a pretty innocent Sensible coun[try] Girl just 19 years old— they are come to Settle 263 here.— our neighbour mrs Apthorp has been very ill for above three weeks in violent pain in her back & one side it has at last Show’d itself to be the Shingles to a dreadfull degree. She continues very ill6
mrs Norton Sends a thousand thanks for your kind present. had it made. & it looks very handsome—
pray give my Love to the President & Louissa / & believe me at all times your truly / affectionate Sister
mrs Porter Says she has found […] Buckets
Doctor Tufts wishes to know what is to be done with the cheese butter &C7
RC (Adams
Papers); addressed by Richard Cranch: “To Mrs.
Abigail Adams / the President’s Lady. / New York.”; endorsed: “Mrs Cranch / october 15
1797”; notation by Richard Cranch: “Quincy, Octr. 16th. 97. Free.” Some loss of text where the seal was
removed.
AA wrote to Mary Smith Cranch on 5 Oct. to give a
progress report of her journey thus far. She also noted that they had accidentally
packed Richard Cranch’s coat and she was sending it back (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters). A notice of the Adamses’ arrival
in New York was published in the Boston Columbian
Centinel, 14 October.
Vinegar was thought to be a restorative for victims of lightning
strikes (James Thacher, The American Modern Practice; or, A
Simple Method of Prevention and Cure of Diseases, Boston, 1817, p. 665).
Jacob and Elizabeth Cranch Norton had four sons at this time:
Richard Cranch, William Smith, Jacob Porter, and Edward, who had been born 24 Oct.
1795 (vol. 9:3, 243, 479;
History of Weymouth
,
4:445).
James Hiller Foster, for whom see CFA, Diary
, 3:13, married
Elizabeth (Betsy) Smith on 15 Nov. 1798. Thomazine Elizabeth (Eliza) Fielder Bond was
the daughter of William and Hannah Cranch Bond and the great-niece of Richard Cranch
(Edward S. Holden, Memorials of William Cranch Bond … and of
His Son George Phillips Bond, San Francisco, 1897, p. 3).
That is, Susanna Adams Hobart, for whom see vol. 1:331, and her half-sister,
Salome Hobart. Salome (b. 1784) was the daughter of Col. Aaron and Thankful White
Adams Hobart and thus also a half-sister to Susanna’s husband Aaron Hobart Jr., the
son of Col. Aaron and his first wife, Elizabeth Pilsbury Hobart (Representative Men and Old Families of Southeastern
Massachusetts, 3 vols., Chicago, 1912, 1:6).
George Henry Apthorp (1770–1825) married his cousin Anna Perkins
(1778–1825) on 22 July 1797 in London. Anna’s mother was Elizabeth Wentworth Gould
Rogers Perkins (1737–1802), whose sister, Sarah Wentworth Apthorp (1735–1820), was
George Henry’s mother and Mary Smith Cranch’s neighbor in Quincy (vols. 6:376, 7:174; John Wentworth, The Wentworth Genealogy: English and American, 3 vols., Boston, 1878, 1:317,
525, 526, 527).
The second postscript was written vertically in the margin.