Papers of John Adams, volume 21
y:8
th:1792
As I had the Honour of knowing you personally during your short Residence here, & had seen many Proofs of your generous & disinterested Conduct, I use the Freedom to make a direct Application to yourself in the important Character & Relation in which you stand to the united & independant States of N: America.1
It is more than probable, Honle: sir, that Mr: Dumas the present
Agent or chargé d’affaires from the Honle:
Congress at the Hague, by some disadvantageous Circumstances in his domestic
affairs, will be found, according to general Report, incapable of acting any
longer in that Character by their High Mights:
and consequently that that Post may become vacant. I hope therefore you will
not take it amiss that I sollicit your interest in favour of my Son, who
after taking his Degree in Law in this University, has now been settled for
some years in the Hague. As he has married a Lady of fashion and fortune,
his present genteel & independant Situation would enable him to do
Honour to whatever Character might be conferr’d on him. It would ill suit
me, sir, to say much in favour of my own Child. As he is universally known
and respected by People of the first distinction the, and has the Honour to
be particularly in the good Graces of his S: Hs:
the Prince of Orange, both his Ambition & Capacity would excite &
enable him to discharge the duties of such an Employment with propriety
& Reputation. He is now in his 28th: year,
in the prime & Vigour of Life, & would esteem the honour of such a
Character more highly than the Profits or Emoluments resulting from it. His
moral principles & Conduct, I can assure you, are irreproachable. As, I
dare say, you still remember the very worthy & learned Dr: Maclean, with whom he is connected as member
of his Church Council there, you may, if anyways consistant with your other
Views, freely apply to him or any one else of your 100 Acquaintance, for farther
Information. A letter or Sollicitation from my Son will accompany this, both
which, your known Candour, I hope, will excuse & favourably receive.
After assurances of the profoundest Respect, I have the Honour, very Honle: sir, to sign myself / Your most obedient
humble Servant
m:Mitchell
RC and enclosure (Adams Papers); addressed: “To / The Honle: John Adams / Vice President of the
American / Congress at Philadelphia / now at Braintree near Boston /
North America”; endorsed: “Mr Mitchel. Feb 8
/ 1792.”
William Mitchell (1727–1807), of Aberdeen, Scotland,
had been pastor of the Church of Scotland parish in Leyden since 1752.
Writing to JQA in 1780 (Adams Papers), JA advised him
to attend Mitchell’s services and treat him with the “greatest Respect.”
Mitchell enclosed an 8 Feb. 1792 letter from his son Alexander, who
unsuccessfully solicited C. W. F. Dumas’ post (William Steven, The History of the Scottish Church, Rotterdam .
. . and a Brief View of the Dutch Ecclesiastical Establishment,
Edinburgh, Scotland, 1833, p. 313, 314, 349;
AFC
, 4:48).