Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-04-17
By your Letter of the 3d.1 received this day I find that I have lost the Pleasure of having what you and Mr. Cranch wrote some Time ago respecting your little Invoices. Tho' I make little Progress in forwarding your Property yet my past Notifications will show that I am constantly attentive to the Business. I suspect that Mr. Cranch may have mentioned some Waggons which came to this City with Mr. Dugan's Goods: But I found it dangerous to send small Boxes in those Waggons; and I could not obtain Room for your strong one. The Waggoners would have been glad to get Freight but they were both honest enough to tell me that the uncouth manner in which they had been obliged to place their first Charge would expose all after-loading to be crushed. Each had one Hogshead and one Pipe of Tobacco in his Waggon.

There was one other Opportunity but I was advised not to trust to the Character of the Owner of the Waggon.
I may not have the Chance of seeing Capt. Jones before this Letter goes off, but I will
endeavor to obtain all the Information he can 103give
respecting the Invoice. I have so closely packed the Goods, after lessening the Case, that I
am unwilling to open it again without I receive some particular Request, from you or some
other of the concerned, for some Part of the Contents, when a
known Conveyance offers.
Mr. G
I am very sorry that the Packages delivered to Doctor Winship have not reached you. My
Charges to him and his Promises of Care are my only Warrants for sending your Things unboxed.
Tho' they are well secured against Friction by the Wrappers, they will be ruined if Rain gets
to them. If you had mentioned who has the particular Charge of them at Fishkill, I could have
taken Measures by this Post to recommend them strongly to the Attention of a Friend. I will
write at Random to Col. Hughes.
I will, at more Leisure use Cyphers to answer some of your Questions. I shall only now add assurances of respectful Affection and my best Wishes for your Happiness.
Not found.
1781-04-23
You will wonder I suppose to what part of the world all the Letters you have written since
the 25 of Sepbr. are gone, that not a line of a later date has reachd me, even up to this 23
day of April. My Heart sickens at the recollection, and I most sensibly feel the sacrifice of
my happiness from the Malignant Union of Mars with Belona. My two dear Boys cannot immagine
how ardently I long to fold them to my Bosom, or the still dearer parent conceive the flood of
tenderness which Breaks the prescribed Bounds and overflows the Heart, when reflection upon
the past, and anticipation upon the future unite in the mind of Portia. Unaccustomed to tread
the stage of dissipation, I cannot shake of my anxiety for my Country and my dearest
connextions, in the Beau Mond, whilst the one is Bleading, and
the others seperated far, far from me, but in a frugal and republican stile; I pass the lonely
Hour, with few enviers and fewer Imitators.1
Your predictions with regard to peace and war are verified and the united Provinces are at last obliged to declare themselves. Happy for them if they had sooner attended to the voice of their Friends, they would then I dare venture to affirm been sooner upon their gaurd against the Hostile depredations of Britain, but if the old Batavian Spirit still exists among them, Britain will Rue the Day that in Breach of the Laws of Nations, she fell upon their defenceless dominions, and drew upon her, as it is thought she must, the combined force of all the Neutral powers. If these people do not possess an ambition for conquest, yet they have heretofore exhibited a spirit superior to domination, that Spirit which prompted them to repel the Tyranny of Philip administerd by the cruel Alva, will excite them under superior advantages to Retaliate the Hostilities of the British Alva, that Spirit which prompted from Prince William that Heroick reply, “that he would die in the last Ditch, e'er he would see his Countrys ruin,” will cement an indissoluble bond of union between the united States of America and the united Provinces who from a similarity of circumstances have each arrived at Independance disdaining the Bondage and oppression of a Philip and a Gorge.2
Our own American affairs wear a more pleasing aspect. Maryland has acceeded to the confederation at the very time when Britain is deludeing herself with the Idea that we are crumbling to peices. New York has given up her claims to Vermont, and a 14tenth State will soon lift her Head under the auspices of Congress.3 Our Leavies are generally raised for 3 years and on their March to join the main Army. The Spring is advanceing and our Soldiers will have less occasion for cloathing—patience, perseverance and intrepidity have been their Armour and their cloathing through an inclemnant Winter. Who is answerable for the shamefull conduct which deprived them of their outward cloathing which they had reason to expect and justice demanded. I presume not to say, but if the omission has arisen from fraud, negligence or cabal, may the inhumane wretches be exposed to view and meet the infamy they justly merrit.
You will see by the paper inclosed that the Seat of war is chiefly in the Southern States, and there our Enemies by victories and defeats are wasteing daily, whilst they are training to Arms, and inureing to dicipline and hardships those states as they have before our Northern ones, to persue them to Inevitable distruction, and to prove to all Europe the falsity of their assertions, when not a single State submits to their haughty userpations, in all their Boasted conquered dominions.
Our Finnances have been upon a much more respectable footing for some time. Goods of all kinds fell in their prices, and exchange 105kept at 75 for one for five months. The Capture of Eustatia and the War between Holland and england has raised Goods again Tea in a particular manner to double what it ever has been before, it was down to a hard dollor per pound or 75 it is now at 15 Shillings.
I have thought that a small chest of about one hundred weight of Bohea Tea, would turn to as good an account as any thing you could send me. This Letter is to go by a vessel of Mr. Tracys. If you think it expedient you may order it by her, as it will come freight free if consigned to him, as the other articles were from Bilboa.
The best Green Tea I have ever had was that sent by Davis. If you send again, let it be
Suchong, it is not so dear and answers better here. The Bandano hankerchiefs from Holland were
the best article for sale I have ever received. The chints you were so kind as to order me by
Sampson arrived—safe I cannot say. They were put up with some things which came to Mr. Austins
Brother and were so unfortunate as to be wet, and half of them damaged, mildewed and in a
manner spoilt. I parted with them in the best manner I could, the damaged for rather more than
the sterling cost and the others very well. They were all good as well as handsome which
renderd it more unfortunate to have them wet, but the cargo was so in general.—As to my long
expected trunk, it has at last arrived in Philadelphia.4 I am 10th to discribe the state of it, because I am loth to make you
angry, yet you ought to know it, least the person who put them up should again be imployed by
you. I have neither Letter or invoice, which is the first time an omission of this kind has
taken place. I cannot determine the price of a single article or know what were really put up,
or what omitted. From your Letters alone in which you have repeated that all was orderd which
was requested, and the loss of all Dr. Tufts things; leads me to think that the many others
which are missing were stolen out. My Muslin hankerchiefs, Aprons, Nabbys plumes, Mr. Tufts
Buckles, Brothers velvet, the linings and trimmings for the Gentlemens cloaths are among the
missing articles. According to Mr. LHonour to stand. We gave 300 hard Dollors for 3 years, and a third
part fell to my share, a third part is paid in hand, the remainder annually. The Town was
divided into classes, and in about a months time the men were all raised. 38 fell to the share
of this Town.5
Poor Mrs. D
I have written very often to you by way of Spain and Bilboa, which places I wish you would
try. If you sent me any thing by the Fame, let me know. She is lost or taken—and Mr. Guile we
fear in her. Adieu my dear Friend my Love must suffice my dear
Lads now. I have not time to write to them or Mr. T
Sentence thus punctuated in MS.
Sentence thus punctuated in MS except for closing quotation mark, editorially supplied.
See Isaac Smith Sr. to JA, 27 Feb., above.
See Lovell to AA, 27 Feb., above, and notes and references there.
The following paper, evidently documenting this transaction by which a Braintree man was enlisted and paid for Continental service on a pay-as-you-go basis to avoid further inflation, is in the Adams Papers:
“Braintree April 9th. 1781. “Recd, of Mrs. Abigail Adams four hundred and thirty Pounds and ten Shillings old
Currency, equal to £5–15–10 1/2 hard Money, towards raising a Man for Class No. 7, I say
Received in behalf of said Class pr. Richard Cranch.”
For the “classing” of inhabitants for tax purposes in towns deficient in their troop
quotas, see Mass., Acts
and Laws
, Resolves of Jan. 1780 sess., ch. 161 (Resolve of 26 Feb.); also
Braintree Town
Records
, p. 521.
Sentence thus punctuated in MS. It is possible that AA intended to place a full stop after “opportunity.”
In 1782 AA acted on her desire, which she had continued to cherish, to purchase wild land as a speculation in Vermont, buying 1,620 acres in Salem township, Orleans co. See AA to JA, 25 April 1782, below, and references cited in note 4 there.