Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
d1798
The extreem heat of yesterday & the no less prospet of it this
day, is beyond any thing I ever experienced in my Life the Glasses were at 90 in the
Shade yesterday. tomorrow will be the 4 July, when if possible I must see thousands. I
know not how it will be possible to get through. live here I cannot an other week unless
a Change takes place in the weather you had as good be in an oven the bricks are so Hot.
I can only say to you that yesterday the President Nominated Gen’ll Washington to be commander in chief of the Army to be raised, and as soon as
the Senate pass upen it, the Secretary of war will be sent express to announce it to
him.1 His Country calls. no Man can do
so much for it in that Line. “The knowledge that he lives” is a Bulwark.2 it will unite all Parties in the Country. it
will give weight force and energy to the People—& it will dismay our Enemies— I
cannot think that he will decline the station—
Mr soper from Braintree was here yesterday, & he disclosed my whole secret about my building the President had a hearty laugh & says he is sorry it was not carried clear along. he is affraid it is upon too Small a Scale, so tell the dr we shall not incur any blame
I inclose you the paper of this day.3 you will see how Politicks are. tis so Hot I cannot think or write more than yours / as ever
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); addressed: “Mrs Mary Cranch / Quincy—”; endorsed
by Richard Cranch: “Letter from Mrs / A. Adams July 3 /
1798.”
On 2 July JA nominated George Washington to be
commander in chief “of all the armies raised, or to be raised,” and the Senate
confirmed the nomination unanimously the following day. In his letter to Washington of
7 July, which was carried to Mount Vernon by James McHenry, JA apologized
for taking the step but insisted that he needed Washington’s advice in managing the
nation’s defense (U.S. Senate, Exec. Jour.
, 5th Cong., 2d sess., p. 284; Washington, Papers, Retirement Series
, 2:389).
AA was quoting from JA’s inaugural
address (
Amer. State Papers, Foreign Relations
, 1:39).
Enclosure not found. AA may have sent the
Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, which had the
most extensive political coverage of that day’s Philadelphia newspapers, including the
House of Representatives’ debate on the defense of American shipping against French
depredations and addresses to JA from North Carolina and Vermont.