Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
thJuly 1797
I am honored by your letter of the 8th,
& am much obliged to you for the kind interest you have manifested in my concerns;
& for the communications contained in the letter & documents.1
Whatever may have been the reasons which induced some of the
senators to vote against me, if they were influenced by a due regard 205 to the publick welfare, & their opinions in this instance were even erroneous,
they did no more than their duty; & I shall honor them, for their independent
conduct: but you know, madam, & the first friend of yourself & of this country
knows, that interest, prejudice, envy, & even pique, have often great effect on
great men; & much more, on those who are not blessed with remarkable powers of
discrimination. I dissented to the Constitution, it is true, and seven states were
dissatisfied with it, for the reasons which influenced me. I was then a representative
of this State; saw, or thot I saw a disposition in many of the Convention to have an
indifinite Constitution; brot forward, with several others, motions to make it explicit;
& saw every motion, to this effect, negatived; & under such circumstances, I
could not, consistently with a sense of duty to my country, assent to the constitution,
as it stood, & have therefore been abused ever since. admitting I was in an error,
had I voted for it under such impressions, I should have sunk in my own esteem &
have not risen again: but conscious of the rectitude of my intentions, I have never
repented, a moment, of my vote on that occasion, & have since seen the constitution
amended, as I wished, & the illiberality of those retaliated, who denied me the
right of deliberating freely, & of exercising my judgment, when my country demanded
it.2 but is there not, madam, an
intimate difference, between voting on a bill for a
constitution, & negotiating in behalf & under the instructions of a supreme
executive? Can any candid mind, judging of my whole political conduct, & even of
that part of it, liberally, draw from it such inferences as some gentlemen of the Senate
have on this occasion? perhaps it may, but I flatter myself it will hereafter discover
its error. I am happy however, to find, that these gentlemen who have manifested such an
unfavorable opinion of me, are not of that description, who will “abuse the government,
or calumniate its officers”:3 such
characters I dislike, whether for or against me.
I regret exceedingly the impossibility of my paying my respects to the President, & yourself Madam, before my embarkation for Europe; but have taken a passage in the ship Union of Boston for Rotterdam, which is not yet provided with a captain, & the owner, Capt Fellows, supposes she will sail in ten days from this date.4
My dear Mrs Gerry has shewn great
fortitude, in urging my acceptance: her distress, at the first notice of my appointment,
rendered it impossible for me to accept without her solicitation. having this, & the
promise of her sister to come from New york & reside 206 with her in my absence, my mind is eased in some degree of a heavy burthen.5 may God grant to her & my petits, in my
absence, comfort & happiness.6
If the President or you, my dear madam, have any particular
commands in Europe, I shall depend on the honor of executing them, & remain with the
highest sentiments of esteem & respect, in which Mrs
Gerry requests to join, your most / obedt & very /
huml sert
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mr Gerry July 14 / 1797.”
AA wrote to Gerry on 8 July after learning with “great pleasure” that he had accepted his appointment. She also expressed her disappointment with the Federalists who voted against Gerry’s nomination, and she offered her sympathies to Ann Thompson Gerry on the upcoming separation from her husband (MB:Mss. Acc. 348).
Elbridge Gerry refused to sign the Constitution in Sept. 1787,
believing it gave the central government too much power, undermined the independence
of the states, and threatened personal liberties because it lacked a bill of rights
(
ANB
;
Billias, Elbridge
Gerry
, p. 186).
Here, Gerry quoted AA’s 8 July 1797 letter, for which see note 1.
On 7 Aug. Gerry departed Boston aboard the ship Union, Capt. Ebenezer Nutting, owned by Boston merchants
Nathaniel Fellows and Samuel Brown. He arrived in Rotterdam on 19 Sept., and after
making trips to Amsterdam and The Hague he departed Rotterdam on the 25th and arrived
in Paris on 4 Oct. (Massachusetts Mercury, 8 Aug.;
Boston and Charlestown
Ship Registers
, p. 208; Gerry, Letterbook
, p. 13–14, 17, 18).
Helen Thompson was Ann Thompson Gerry’s youngest sister. Elbridge
Gerry wrote to his wife on 9 Oct. from Paris inquiring if Helen had arrived in
Massachusetts (Annette Townsend, The Walton Family of New
York, 1630–1940, Phila., 1945, p. 52; Gerry, Letterbook
, p. 14).
Elbridge and Ann Thompson Gerry’s surviving children were
Catharine (1787–1850), Eliza (1791–1882), Ann (1791–1883), Elbridge Jr. (1793–1867),
Thomas Russell (1794–1848), and Helen Maria (1796–1864). Another son, James Thompson,
would be born in Oct. 1797 (Billias, Elbridge Gerry
, p. 403–404; Gerry, Letterbook
, p. 30,
32).
rMadam,
th.July. 1797:
Pardon my thus abruptly addressing you. I plead the occasion as my apology—
I am just informed that Mr: Leonard
Jarvis expects soon to quit his Office. The Office is considered as a decent livelihood.
Were I seeking emolument for myself I might be diffident; but when soliciting for the
Interest & happiness of a Parent, I am emboldened, & venture to presume upon
your friendship & goodness on the occasion.— For the discretion, prudence, integrity
& honor of the Candidate you will not require a voucher from so near a friend as
myself—& to the President I hope it will be unnecessary; but allow me to say that
for exactness & correctness in accounts none exceed him— May I request you to
mention my father to the President—at 207 the same time
presenting him my best respects— Tis said some application has already been made: I
would hope how ever mine may not arrive too late—1
With sentiments of esteem & respect, I am, Madm: / Yr: much obliged friend /
& humle: servt:
s:Storer:2
RC (Adams
Papers); internal address: “Mrs: Adams.”
Leonard Jarvis (1742–1813) was a Boston merchant whom George
Washington had appointed an inspector of the excise for Massachusetts in 1792. Reports
of Jarvis’ “delinquency” surfaced in June 1797, and on the recommendation of Oliver
Wolcott Jr. JA dismissed Jarvis. Prior to his departure from
Philadelphia, JA appointed Ebenezer Storer to fill the position because
of Storer’s “established Character for Integrity and his well known Accuracy in
Accounts.” Once Congress reconvened, JA formalized the nomination on 24
Nov., and the Senate gave its consent the following day (
Doc. Hist. Supreme Court
,
5:569; Washington, Papers, Presidential Series
, 3:412; Timothy Pickering, James McHenry,
and Charles Lee to JA, 18 Dec., Adams Papers; JA to Wolcott, 4, 15 Sept., CtHi:Oliver Wolcott Jr. Papers; U.S. Senate, Exec. Jour.
, 5th
Cong., 2d sess., p. 251).
In a reply to Charles Storer of 23 July, AA reported her compliance with his request and praised Ebenezer Storer’s “honour, integrity, and probity,” without which “the President would not knowingly appoint to office any Man, however nearly connected, or otherways bound to him” (MHi:Norcross Autograph Coll.).