Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1782-07-05
I have received your kind Letter of the 28 June, and thank you for your Congratulations.
British Politicks, it is true, are in a Labyrinth. There is never the less, one clue, and but one, which is to acknowledge American Independence, by an express Act of Parliament. This, once done, they would not find it difficult to make Peace.
Those who lend Money to the United States of America in this Country, receive their Interest, in Europe, and will ever receive it here, and much more certainly I suspect, than British Creditors will receive theirs, after some time.
I should certainly have answered your former Letter, if I had known of your Friends return, but I never knew till now, by whom the Letter came.
I am sorry they have put you in a List of Refugees because I have long known your Sentiments to be favourable to your native Country, as well as to Liberty in General.1
If you should cross the Channell I should be glad to see you here. Pray have you any News of our Relation your Name Sake. Ask him, if he has given all his fortune to Harvard Colledge, as he promised me he would. Tell him I am afraid he will forget to make his Will— if he will come over here I will make it for him, without a Fee.2
I am extreamly happy to hear, that the present Ministry have the Magnanimity and Wisdom to send home my Country men the Prisoners, and to treat them kindly. This is not only the Way to do themselves Honour, but to do real Service to their Country. If Great Britain ever excites a Sentiment in her favour, either in Europe or America, it must be, by such Measures as these.
342But nothing will ever compleatly answer the End, but a frank Acknowledgment of American Independence. The United States will Support their Sovereignty, with Dignity, and their Alliances with Honour and good Faith, without ever being diverted from either, by Severity or by Flattery. The Man who now flatters the British King or Nation, with a Hope of the Contrary, is a worse Ennemy to both, than was a North or a Grenville, fifteen or 20 years ago. Delusions now will be fatal. Mistakes now will have worse Fruits than bad Intentions could have in the Beginning.
I wish for Peace, as ardently as you, or any Man. But in my opinion, our Country is less
interested in it, than any Power, at war. The more is embroiled, and the longer it is
embroiled the better it will be in the End for America, which is a Country so circumstanced
and situated as to turn every Thing That happens to her own Advantage. People on your Side the
Water,
I am &c.
On John Boylston's “Sentiments,” see Boylston to JA, 31 Aug. 1781, above.
JA is almost certainly alluding to Boylston's cousin, Diary and Autobiography
, 1:295; CFA, Diary
, 3:5, 13, 146; Oliver, Portraits of JA and AA
, p. 35, 38;
Oliver, Portraits of
JQA and His Wife
, p. 122–129; Adams Genealogy. But Ward Nicholas
Boylston had left Boston in 1773 when still a young man, had resided in London from 1775, a
loyalist, at the time was an officer in the British militia, and seems not to have been known
to JA before May 1783. Though he was much later to become a benefactor of
Harvard as his late uncle Loyalists of Mass.
, p. 48–50; Thomas Boylston to JA, 20 April;
JA to Thomas Boylston, 12 June 1783, both in Adams Papers, the second LbC).
Thomas Boylston, Ward Nicholas' uncle and sometime patron and employer, was at the moment a
man of great wealth; he never married, had long been notoriously of a disposition to seize an
opportunity to have legal or other work done where there was no fee, and though there is
elsewhere no record of an interest in making Harvard College his heir, he did nurse
philanthropic notions toward Boston, both during the time he had a fortune and after he was
stripped of it in 1793 by the failure of the London firm of Lane, Son, & Frazer.
Boylston, already wealthy by his own efforts and as principal heir of his even wealthier
brother Nicholas, and already with a reputation for stinginess, had left Boston for London by
1779, taking a purported £100,000 with him. His emigration seems to have been dictated more
by economic than political considerations, and there is little to connect him with loyalism
in London. He renewed relations with JA as soon as 343there was a likelihood of the resumption of commerce between the
United States and Great Britain, and between 1783 and 1785 developed several schemes for the
import of whale oil from America and the export of sugar, processed in his refinery, to the
United States. JA, bent on the encouragement of trade, lent his help to the
project and recommended Boylston in letters to Jefferson as “one of the clearest and most
solid Capitalists, that ever raised himself by private Commerce in North America” (25 Sept.
1785) and to Lafayette, 13 Dec. 1785: “You may depend upon it, he will do nothing but what is
profitable. No man understands more intuitively, everything relating to these subjects, and
no man is more attached to his interest.” JQA and TBA have provided
admirable sketches of Thomas Boylston as he was just after he served his term in bankrupts'
prison, though their accounts of him, like those of others, seem heavily colored by the many
unpleasant anecdotes of him given currency by Ward Nicholas after he became aware that he was
not to be Thomas' heir. See JA, Diary and Autobiography
, 1:280–281, 290–295; 2:85;
Adams Family Correspondence
, 2:295–296, 305–306; Jefferson, Papers, ed.
Boyd, 8:550; 9:41–42, 45–46, 88–89; Jones,
Loyalists of Mass.
, p. 49; H. E. Scudder, ed., Recollections of Samuel Breck, Phila., 1877, p. 159–160; [Ward
Nicholas Boylston,] The Will of Thomas Boylston, Esq. [Boston,
1816]. In the Adams Papers: JQA,
Diary, 25 Oct. 1794; TBA, Diary, 16, 25 Oct. 1794 (M/TBA/1 and 2, Microfilm Reel
Nos. 281, 282); Thomas Boylston to JA, 23 Dec. 1782; JA to Isaac
Smith Sr., 2 Sept. 1785; to James Bowdoin, 24 March 1786 (both LbC's). See also
Adams Genealogy.