Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
m:
r:27
th1799
Mr: Cranch has taken the
liberty to address a short letter to the President containing a desire to be
tho’t of in the various appointments now making in the line of his business—
as he did not chuse to trouble the President with any details—embolden’d by
your known condescention I have taken the pen to observe that since Mr Cranch’s letter to my Uncle—relative to the
Armory at Harpers Ferry (Potomack) we have made enquiry and have reason to
think all the vacancys are fill’d up— Mr William
Cranch writes thus,—“one Jacob Perkins is master workman—he is an old man,
and seems infirm, and not active enough for the place”—1
I mention this circumstance Madm: that in case Mr Perkins should
decline the business—it might be an opening for us— we presume not to chuse—
we only wish for a decent living.—
Permit me Madm: to
congratulate you on your recover’d health— long may you enjoy this and every
earthly blessing— I have the honor to be with Perfect / respect your most
obedt: servt:
RC (Adams Papers).
Joseph Cranch wrote to JA on 27 Dec.
(Adams Papers), asking
that he be considered for appointments at U.S. military arsenals.
Cranch, for whom see vol. 8:148, had until recently served as
superintendent of the U.S. armory at West Point, N.Y., and sought to
succeed Thomas Anneley as master armorer at Harpers Ferry. James McHenry
assured Cranch that he would be appointed to the post, but in a 16 May
1800 letter to Samuel Hodgdon, superintendent of military stores, Cranch
withdrew himself from consideration because of ill health. Joseph Perkin
(d. 1806) was superintendent of the arsenal at Harpers Ferry from 6 Aug.
1798 until his death (Merritt Roe Smith, Harpers
Ferry Armory and the New Technology: The Challenge of Change,
Ithaca, N.Y., 1977, p. 37, 54, 56, 60; Joseph Cranch to Samuel Hodgdon,
16 May 1800, DNA:RG 94, Papers of the War Dept.; Washington, Papers, Presidential Series
,
15:561).
AA replied to Elizabeth Cranch, but the reply has not been found. In a similar request for patronage, Watertown, Mass., justice of the peace William Hunt wrote to AA on 6 Feb. (DLC:Shaw Family Papers) requesting assistance in securing a U.S. Army position for his son, Charles. The elder Hunt wrote, “A Parents Anxiety for a Sons hapiness will I hope be an Apology for my writing you“ (vol. 10:86; AA to Mary Smith Cranch, 7 Jan., below).