Papers of John Adams, volume 6
1778-07-14
I received a Letter from Mr. Livingston of the 8th. Instant wherein he informs me that their is a possibility of an Exchange of Prisoners, a list of what I have on board I send your Honours inclosed with a List of the Men,1 I suppose must have been Recaptured in one of my Prizes, the other two arrived Eight or ten days past.2 I am only wating on your Honours how to proceed, in hopes to joyn Capt. Whipple.
I received a Line from Capt. Whipple wherein he tells me he shall be ready by the 20th to sail, expecting me to wait at the Rivers Mouth for him. As I wrote your Honours in my last of the 12th. Instant concerning my treatment from the Frenchmen, your Honours may be pleased to Judge from the Inclosed Instruement3 wrote by one of the Marines and five of the same seigned, the Treatment they received from me and Officiers; this I mention Gentlemen to your Honours, because General Latuch
PS. I've opened this to acquaint your Honours that the Britania is this minute arrived and that I am happy that none of my People are Prizoners.
Not found.
See the postscript below for the arrival of the third prize, Britannia, which, according to Tucker's log (MH-H), came into port on the evening of the 15th.
Not found.
Capt. John Lee of Newburyport and Andrew Slyfield of Marblehead, taken on the privateer brigantine Fancy, both escaped, the former on 14 Oct. and the latter on an unspecified date. John Diamond was pardoned for exchange on 20 Dec. (Marion and Jack Kaminkow, comps., Mariners of the American Revolution, Baltimore, 1967, p. 114, 174, 55; Allen, Mass. Privateers
, p. 126–127).