Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
No. 3.
th:July 1799.
I address you again after a short interval from the date of my last, having little more to say than that hitherto we are all in health, which I doubt not you will be glad to learn.1 We have had several attempts to conjure up the yellow fever among us, and I have no doubt that cases of it have already occurred, for towards the close of the last & beginning of the current month the weather was excessively hot and I never knew a very warm spell in this City that did not cause many sudden deaths from billious diseases. The weather has again become moderate and our apprehensions have in great degree subsided, though I am fearful the respite will be short. The fever of which perhaps ten or a dozen people died within a fortnight, past, was not contagious, though a month or six weeks later it is conjectured that it would have proved so. Many families have left the City, but they had engaged houses in the Country before the approach of Summer & since they must pay for them they are unwilling to lose the benefit of dwelling in them, but though the town is thin of inhabitants it is not quite deserted. I am about passing a few weeks in the Country, from choice, not from necessity, for I never knew Philadelphia more healthy than it seems to be at this moment. The approach of Autumn must necessarily increase the number of disorders and yellow fever most probably will be in the train. The Cities of Baltimore & New York are as yet healthy and God grant they may continue so throughout the season.
I have to request you would be so obliging as to purchase either
ready made or give directions for the making of three large
coverlits of down, such as they make at Hamburg for the
use of Ships, but large enough to cover a common size American bed for two people. The
material used for stuffing these bed quilts is I think called—— down, (I forget the
first name) however you will know what I mean I presume, from the above; The Callico in
which the down is stuffed is generally very rotten unless particular orders are given to
make use of a better quality; you will be good enough to pay attention to 512 this circumstance if you should not find such a business too much out of your way.
The application to me is from my Mother, whom I am sure you will oblige with
cheerfulness, and if the order can be completed so that the articles can be made to
reach Boston Newyork or Philadelphia before the winter, it will be a great
accommodation. At the same time you may send me out a clever winter great coat, in exchange for that I left behind me, & which I shrewdly
suspect has been appropriated to Consular purposes. The
expence & charges of the first order you will please to pass to my account.
The renewal of intercourse between us & certain ports of St: Domingo is the only occurrence worthy of notice of a recent
date. At the same instant, that the Presidents proclamation appeared, authorizing this
renewal, a report was circulated that Toussaint was dead; we have every reason to
believe it was a fabrication.2
The waves of the Mediterranean, must sink beneath the burthen of Ships & Cannon, which we hear have recently passed the streights of Gibraltar.3 What a mighty conflict may we not anticipate from the encounter of such numerous & powerful fleets. Their thunder will make old Ocean tremble for his domain. We are gaping for the sound of victory as if we were within battle.
Our friends in different parts of the Country are generally well.
The season is promising beyond example in this State— Trade florishes & increases
rapidly in spite of all vexations & discouragements from external causes, and
political tranquility was never more predominant. Point to the spot on the map of Europe
or turn the globe as you will, can any place be found of the same latitude in point of
prosperity with the United States? I bequeath the problem to your solution, and
subscribe with great esteem & consideration / Your friend & ob: Servt:
RC (OCHP:Joseph Pitcairn Letters); addressed: “Joseph Pitcairn Esqr: / Consul of the United States of America / Hamburg”;
internal address: “Joseph Pitcairn Esqr:”; endorsed:
“Thos. Adams / 13 July 1799 / 18 Sep Ansd”; notation: “Pr the Dorethea.”
TBA’s previous extant letter to Pitcairn is that of 2 March, above.
On 26 June JA issued a proclamation permitting U.S.
vessels to enter Cap-Francais and Port-au-Prince after 1 Aug., thereby resuming trade
between the United States and St. Domingue. The Philadelphia Gazette, 3 July, printed
JA’s proclamation and also refuted the rumors of Gen. Toussaint
Louverture’s death, which had reached Philadelphia from New York (
Amer. State
Papers, Foreign Relations
, 2:240–241; New York Commercial Advertiser, 2 July).
On 14 March the French Directory appointed Adm. Eustache Bruix
commander of the navy’s Brest fleet. By May the fleet’s 24 ships of the line and seven
supply vessels had passed through the Strait of Gibraltar into the 513 Mediterranean with orders to mobilize Spanish
forces, travel to Egypt, and transport the Army of the East to Italy. The fleet was
pursued by the British Mediterranean Fleet from April to August, but the two never
met. Bruix did not achieve his objectives, and on 16 July his combined Franco-Spanish
fleet returned to the Atlantic (Ross, Quest for Victory
, p. 247–248; Jason R.
Musteen, Nelson’s Refuge: Gibraltar in the Age of
Napoleon, Annapolis, Md., 2011, p. 25–26, 157; Hoefer, Nouv. biog.
générale
).