Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
br1
st1800
I have not written You a line my dear son Since I returnd
to this place, now three Months; I felt almost discouraged from writing, by
not having received a line from You, for a very long period of time. Yours
of Febry 18th at
last reachd me in the month of july, and two days Since I received your
favour of May 25th, for which accept my fervent
thanks. the 17 of the present Month will compleat six years Since You left
Your native Country. as I then advised You to go, I now advise you to return
Six years is a period full long enough for a Man at Your years age to remain seperated from all
those with whom he is hereafter to take a part, whether in private, or
public Life. it is too long to be parted from those who have but a short
leise of Life remaining to them, and to whom you are very Dear. Services
renderd to a Country in a Diplomatic line can be known only to a few; if
they are important and become conspicious they rather excite envy than
gratitude, but at present it is My opinion that You May Serve Your country
to more advantage at home than abroad You have tallents which cannot fail of
being brought into action let who will hold the Helm; I have no great
allurements to hold up to you. if You serve Your Country, You must do it
from motives as disinterested, as Your Father has done before You; and very
like, meet with as much abuse and calumny. You must endure envy, Jealousy
and Mortifications of various kind’s. You will find those who have grown
rich and prosperous under a wise and just administration of Government,
rising up to over throw that system of political wisdom which has raised
them to their present oppulence— I still request You to return to the Bosom
of your parents and Make Some establishment for Yourself: it is high time
that you were Setled—and in some regular course of buisness— tho a return to
the Bar May be urksome to you after a lapse of years, I certainly would
adopt the resolution; and come back to my profession with resolutions of
moderation and occonomy So gratefull to your Countrymen, tho very little
practised by them— to think of again seeing You, a wise and virtuous Man is
a cordial to my Heart and mitigates in some measure the pressure of sorrow
which weighs it down from an other source— by one from 393 which I have not a hope of change,
habits are so rooted, the temper so Soured the whole Man so changed that
ruin and destruction have swallowd him up, and his affairs are become
desperate. Sally and her Infant daughter are gone to her Mother. susan I
brought home with Me— all is lost— poor poor unhappy Wretched Man. all
remonstrances have been lost upon him— God knows what is to become of him.
His Father has renounced him— but I will not my dear Child afflict You. I
bless God that I have Dear and Worthy Children, who serve to comfort and
support Me under So trying a calamity— Your sister and her little Girl have
past the Summer with me; the two Boys are at Atkinson in an accadamy where
they behave well. the col has been appointed supervisor and inspector of the
Port of Nyork, since the disbandment of the Army.1 as he has sufferd in the school of
adversity, I hope he will consider; and Make a proper estimate of Life. Your
sister will return to NYork this Winter.
Thomas is still in Philadelphia the City has as yet escaped the fever, and as the season is so far advanced I hope it will not be again visited with it— he will write to you as he frequently does— he is getting into buisness, and if his Life and Health Should be continued, I trust he will be Successfull. he possesses honor virtue and integrity upon Principles which are well founded
Your Father made a visit to the city of Washington before he returnd to Quincy. he was received with politeness and respectfull attention throughout his journey. he returnd the begining of July; much pleasd with his Tour.
The approaching Election occasions some fermentation; it
is very difficult for Me to give you a clue to the present political
agitation, without bringing before your View Characters which We have
considered as the most respectable in this state, so changed in their
Sentiments, and in their conduct as to create astonishment. the Mission to
France has never met with there approbation. the late secretary of state
took, whilst in office every possible occasion to excite the public
sentiment against it— the removal of him became absolutely necessary; the
Disbandment of the Army tho an act of Congress, and really a popular
Measure, destroyed the hopes of a certain Little General possessd of as much
ambition, as talents. no hopes of becomeing commander in chief, but by
intrigueing and bringing in at the approaching Election a person who should
hold the Reins, whilst he conducted the vehicle. to effect this purpose
certain federilists in every state must be trained to the purpose, and
deciplined. the removal of the late Secretary, who tho naturally sour 394 could not be supposed to be sweetned
by So decisive a disapprobation of him, gave a good opportunity to seize
upon him, to excite a clamour against the administration. the Essex junto
were proper persons to carry into effect their measures and being much
devoted to H n he came on early in the Spring to concert his measures with
them— previous to the rising of Congress a caucus was held by some
influential Members who agreed to put up Gen’ll
Pinckny as Vice President.2
Hamiltons language, here was, that the President had made himself So
unpopular by the mission to France, that there was no chance of his being
reelected, and therefore tho he ought to be Voted for, mr Pinckny was the
Man who ought to be Elected. Jefferson must be Sacrificed at all events— to
some the Party have represented the President as superanuated; true he was
to be respected for former Services, but now he was grown old, and incapable
of conducting the Government: lies and falshoods of all kinds have been
raised and circulated, one that a coalition had taken place between the
President and Vice President—and they had mutually engaged to support each
other Writers in the public Papers have arrayed against each other. a series
of papers under the signature of Dicius call’d
the Jeffersoniad to prove him an Atheist, and every thing bad, have been
publishd in Boston republishd in Philadelphia: young Lowell said to be the
writer— Character of Hamilton in three numbers, in which he is extolled to
the utmost pitch, as the first Character now upon the stage—asscribed to
George Cabbot—signd no jealous Rival—3 the Characters leagued together
are Cabbot Ames Lowell Higginson and the chief Justice. your old Master is
also said to be in the same Box, tho he Does not go all lengths with them.
the animosity of the judge, may be traced to the nomination of Gerry, and
the mortification of finding Gerry stand So high as a candidate for Govenour
of the state— every method and art is practised to bring the other NEngland
Stats over to their System, but Many are aware of their views. they see that
these people are driving the Country into an unhappy division, and that
confusion and Anarchy must ensue— in what it will terminate time alone will
disclose. the Jacobins are so gratified to see the federilist Split to
peices, that they enjoy in silence the game, in this quarter whilst in the
Southern states, they combine to bring mr Jefferson in as President— So much
for Elective Governments— if we pass the ordeal this time, I am satisfied
from what I have Seen and heard, that it is the last.
God save the United States of America—
395I do not know by what conveyance this Letter will go. I
do not send you any papers now, but should you get B Russels centinal, I
would notify You that, that paper is devoted to the
party. J Russels is the only paper of repute in Boston— I Mean it
is less of a party paper—and has never given into any abuse upon the
government. the English party have quite overuled the French party—but true
Americans will not be duped by either— I hope You will Send us the Poem You
have been engaged in translating;4 Your observations upon the Letters
of the Northumberland Philosopher have been considerd as very accurate and
just, a Wrestless Spirit; Cooper is still in prison writing Jacobinism for
Duane paper—5
The late successes of Buonaparte in Itally give him a
reputation as a Warriour, and his usurpation, as a Sovereign—6 I believe other powers will be led
to treat, beside America that our differences will be so speedily and so
readily accommodated as some Imagined. I am far from believing, yet tho we
fail we certainly have not lost any thing—and we have gained time— we have
not any official communications from our Envoys since May. Rumour says that
the negotiation is broken of— if it is not, I believe it will be contracted protracted from the hope that
a new President May grant them greater favours—
I shall endeavour to be more punctual in My correspondence, and give You our State of parties from time to time. I however see but little difference between French Jacobins and federal Jacobins as they are call’d one are for Democracy and the other would be for Monarchy if they dare openly avow it—
Your Father enjoys good Health, and bears all this bustle with that calm Philosophy which conscious integrity imparts; he will not voluntaryly quit his station at this critical time. if he is releasd, the concequences to the public will not lie at his Door— adieu
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “My
Mother. 1. Septr: 1800. / 30. Septr: 1801. recd:
at Boston.”
On 24 June JA made a recess appointment of WSS as surveyor and inspector of the port of New York. On the return of Congress, he submitted the nomination for consideration on 8 Dec., for which see AA to JQA, 29 Jan. 1801, and note 6, below (WSS to JA, 18 July 1800, Adams Papers; JA to WSS, 22 July, LbC, APM Reel 120).
Federalist members of Congress caucused informally in
May to select presidential candidates and devise election strategy.
James McHenry reported in a 20 May letter that the consensus of the
meeting was that “each member in his State, would use his best
endeavours to have Mr. Adams and Major General Charles Cotesworth
Pinckney run for President, without giving one a preference to the
other.” Reports of the meeting later appeared in the press (William G.
Morgan, “The Origin and Development of the Congressional Nominating
Caucus,” Amer. Philos. Soc.,
Procs.
, 113:184–186 [17 396 April 1969]; George Gibbs, ed.,
Memoirs of the Administrations of Washington
and John Adams, Edited from the Papers of Oliver Wolcott, Secretary
of the Treasury 2 vols., N.Y., 1846, 2:346–347; New York American Citizen, 22 May). For a similar 11
May nominating caucus of the Democratic-Republicans, see
AA to
JQA, 15 May, note 4, above.
“No Jealous Rival” published a three-part series
defending Alexander Hamilton in the Boston Russell’s Gazette, 14, 21, 28 Aug., alleging that few people
had received “more mean obloquy, more rival jealousy, more hatred and mare cowardly
fear” than Hamilton, outlining Hamilton’s contributions to the founding
of the United States, and claiming he “placed second to no man in point
of talents.”
For JQA’s translation of Juvenal’s thirteenth satire, see JQA to JA, 19 June, and note 1, above.
For TBA’s comments on essays by “A Constitutionalist,” which he attributed to Dr. Thomas Cooper, see TBA to William Smith Shaw, 23 Sept., and note 1, below.
Reports of the French Army’s victory at the Battle of
Marengo, for which see
JQA to TBA, 10 July, and note
11, above, and its operations in Germany and Italy were recently
reported in the Boston press (Massachusetts
Mercury, 22 Aug.; Columbian
Centinel, 23 Aug.; Russell’s
Gazette, 25 Aug., 1 Sept.).