Papers of John Adams, volume 21
y25
th1793
I transmit you a copy of a Political Rarity—which a very few men were degenerate enough to send for
a day dedicated to the celebration of the progress of Liberty.
You who are a Lawyer & Statesman, will make those
comments in your own thoughts, which may perhaps awake a care for the
liberty of the press—the honor of law, and safety of the citizen. As it came
from a party, at first, I intended to have requested you to have laid it
on the table of the Senate, among, any periodical papers, which may amuse
the leisure moment of its members.—
“The Managers of the Civic Feast, present their
compliments to Mr ———, Ask the favor of his
company to dine, on thursday next at the Assembly room—2 O-clock, Also any
friend of his, (Except) the writer of a piece in a late paper, on the
situation of Ecclesiastical affairs in a Neighbouring State, which Author
cannot be permited to Associate with the Citizens of ———.”1
This unmerited insult, met with general reprobation— The person to whom it was sent was not so degenerate, as to forfeit his liberty, honor & virtue for a dinner—but referred the writers to Paine on the rights of man—and the law writers on the liberty of the press.— The Star Chamber and Inquisition court, could not dictate a bolder assault on law & patriotism.
I do not send it, to draw an opinion or correspondence, but, wish to lay the progress of the plunderers & enemies, of The Church in this quarter, from time to time, before the leading Lay men of this Generation— Trusting that Providence will incline the heart of some one to step forth, and examine whether there exists any just cause for complaint—and point out a mode for redress— Such an one Religion, morality & America will bless forever.
I am Sir / with unalterable esteem / Your devoted servant
RC (Adams Papers).
Rev. John Cosens Ogden (1751–1800), Princeton 1770,
was a political propagandist and rector of St. John’s Episcopal Church
in Portsmouth, N.H., from 1786 to 1793. He was excluded from the town’s
24 Jan. civic feast celebrating the “success of the patriotic cause in
France.” To Ogden, this action signaled a downturn in popularity
following his high-profile theological dispute with Rev. Samuel
MacClintock (1732–1804), originally from Medford, Mass., Princeton 1751,
who was pastor of the First Congregational Church in nearby Greenland,
N.H. The feud was published as An Epistolary
Correspondence
165
between the Rev. John C. Ogden, Rector of St.
Johns Church, at Portsmouth, New-Hampshire; and the Rev. Samuel
MacClintock, Minister of the Congregational Society in Greenland on
. . . the High Powers and Prerogatives Claimed by Diocesan Bishops
as Successors of the Apostles, Portsmouth, N.H., 1791, Evans, No. 23519.
MacClintock’s local influence on public opinion led to Ogden’s ouster
from his pulpit in 1793 (
ANB
; New
Hampshire Gazette, 23 Jan.;
Princetonians
,
1:38, 39; 2:94).