Papers of John Adams, volume 21
r.13. 1791
Last night I received your favour of the 4th, and am much obliged by your Account of
affairs in this as well as in the Letter you wrote the Week before which I
have also received.
Mrs Adams joins me in
friendly regards to Mrs Knox and yourself. We
are very Sorry for any unpleasant Circumstances you have found 61 at Bush Hill: and very happy that it
happened to be in our Power to accommodate your family for the Summer.
We are also under great Obligations to you for the Trouble you have taken to procure Us, an house in the City. The Rent is higher than I ever gave in Paris, London, Amsterdam or the Hague for Houses and Accommodations much Superiour. I have not a doubt however that you and Mr Coxe have obtained as good an House at as cheap a rate for me as you could have done for yourselves, and probably better than I could have obtained for myself if I had been there.
At any rate I was determined to live in the City, for I
had well nigh ruined the health of all my family as well as my own. I dont
impute this misfortune to the Situation so much as to the necessity We were
under of going to Town every day in all Airs and Weathers. Bush Hill is too
Aristocratical a Situation for me.
I wish the President and Mr
Jefferson pleasant Journeys and a happy return. I hope to embrace you by the
middle of october.1
Mean time I am with Sincere Esteem / your Friend and servant
RC (MHi:George E. Nitzsche Unitariana Coll.);
addressed: “General Knox / Philadelphia”; endorsed: “The Vice
President of / The US— / 13 Septr 1791”; docketed: “Vice President / John Adams / Sept 13— 1791.”
The Adamses departed Braintree before 9 Oct.,
stopping briefly to visit AA2 in New York, and reached
Philadelphia by 30 Oct. (
AFC
, 9:237,
238, 509).