Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
th1798
I received last night your favor of the 19th The letters from Mr Desdoity & Mr R B Forbes I shall inclose to the
Secretary of State, the first to be determined according to law and usage and the last
to be considered in its season.1
The scene of which you have been witness in the city must have been very solemn. I never could bear a city life in the summer, in the best seasons. Such an one as you have lived through would have finished me. I could not advise you to repeat another time so hazardous an experriment.
I am suspicious that the great intercourse with the West Indies has had a share in producing this calamity in so many of our cities. Relaxations of police & accumulations of putrefaction with the increase of population may account for much but I guess not all. Have not large quantities of cottons and other things been imported which are capable of conveying this plague. We are all well but your Mother, who we hope is better, but still very feeble. Yours I rejoice to hear are all well.
I am Your affectionate
LbC in William Smith Shaw’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “Charles Adams Esqr”; APM Reel 119.
Neither CA’s letter to JA of 19 Oct. nor the letters
enclosed therein have been found. John B. Desdoity (ca. 1760–1811), a New York
merchant who had emigrated from France in 1793, sought permission to designate the
brig Fox, Capt. Benjamin Ward, as a parlementaire, or vessel permitted to carry goods while
engaged in official business. JA forwarded Desdoity’s letter to Timothy
Pickering on 28 Oct. 1798, and on 9 Nov. Pickering declined the request. In December
the Fox was commissioned a privateer and in Jan. 1799
sailed to the West Indies.
The second letter enclosed by CA appears to have
been a patronage request from Ralph Bennet Forbes (1773–1824), a New York merchant in
business with his brother, John Murray Forbes. John M. Forbes would be nominated by
JA on 18 Feb. 1801 as U.S. commercial agent at Le Havre, but although
the Senate confirmed the appointment on 24 Feb., the commission was not issued by
President Thomas Jefferson. However, after a written endorsement from Ralph B. Forbes
on 20 March, Jefferson appointed John to succeed Joseph Pitcairn as U.S. consul at
Hamburg in Feb. 1802 (New York Commercial Advertiser, 2
Feb. 1811; Jefferson, Papers
, 26:591, 33:411–413; JA to Pickering, 28
Oct. 1798, LbC, APM
Reel 119; Pickering to Desdoity, 9 Nov., MHi:Pickering Papers; DNA:RG 36, Records of the U.S. Customs Service, Bonds for
Letters of Marque Which Were Used in the Settlement of French Spoliation Claims,
1798–1801; Baltimore Telegraphe and Daily Advertiser, 28
Jan. 1799;
DAB
, entry on John Murray Forbes).
I have received your’s of the 26th:
enclosing one for Mr: Welsh—1 I now forward those Letters for America, with
which I threatened you in my last.—2 Of
all the news which you believed or expected to believe, the only parts likely to be
confirmed, are the capture of the Leander, with Captain Berry, on board, and of the two
french frigates by the Colossus.—3 The
burning of the transports in the Nile, has no further voucher, and is not even mentioned
in Letters from the English Minister at Constantinople of 25. September.—4 If the other account, from the Irish Coast were
true, it would be one more very capital stroke; but it surpasses even the faith of a
Jew, to believe it.
À propos, speaking of Jews, your lottery ticket still remains in
the bosom of the wheel, and shall be renewed in due time, for the last and decisive
class.5 Your horse is yet unsold, and
affords pleasant relaxation to Mr: Whitcomb, from his toils—
Mr: Cornet Brown, (who returned yesterday, with his
father, and who regrets very much not having seen you at Hamburg) has him this day upon
trial, and if he does not take him, it is not improbable, that I may keep him for my own
use6
The English Prince Augustus is here; but much out of health, with
the Asthma.— I have not seen him— He has two very agreeable 267 & clever gentlemen with him—Mr: Livingston & Mr: Arbuthnot—the latter is much
like Pitcairn.7
The Turkish Ambassador died yesterday.— He has passed his time here in writing a romance, which he was just about to publish.8
Adieu9
RC (private owner, 2007); internal address: “Mr T. B. Adams.” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 133.
Not found.
On 3 Oct. JQA recorded in his Diary that he was “busy in writing to send by my brother” (D/JQA/24, APM Reel 27), and in a letter to TBA of 22 Oct. he wrote, “I shall send you some more letters before you go; at present I have none prepared” (LbC, APM Reel 133).
The London Times, 19 Oct., carried a
report that the British ship Colossus had captured the
French frigates Diane and Justice, a report that would be reprinted in the Salem
Gazette, 29 December. For the taking of the Diane
and Justice in 1800 and 1801, see TBA to JA, 27 Oct. 1798, and note 2, above.
John Spencer Smith (1769–1845) had served as Great Britain’s
chargé d’affaires in Constantinople since 1795 (R. G. Thorne, ed., The House of Commons, 1790–1820, 5 vols., London,
1986).
Lotteries based on the Genoa lotto system were instituted in many
European nations in the eighteenth century. Prussia ran a lottery in Berlin from 1763
to 1810. Ticket buyers chose five numbers and were awarded prizes for matching one or
more numbers drawn. A feature of the lottery was consolation prizes given to
participants who did not win after five draws (D. R. Bellhouse, “Euler and Lotteries,”
in Robert E. Bradley and C. Edward Sandifer, eds., Leonhard
Euler: Life, Work and Legacy [Studies in the History and Philosophy of
Mathematics, vol. 5], Boston, 2007, p. 385–393).
JQA reported to TBA on 9 July 1799 that he had sold his horse for the equivalent of $85. Food and care had cost $94, he said, but leasing the horse had brought in $62, leaving TBA with a credit of $53 (Adams Papers).
For Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, and Robert
Arbuthnot, see LCA, D&A
, 1:93–94, 135. Edward Livingston was a Scot
who specialized in escorting young British aristocrats on grand tours of the
Continent. King George III appointed Livingston to accompany the prince and monitor
his activities and finances. He was described by LCA as “a fine old
Gentleman, a bonnie Scot, attached to the suite of the Prince” (same, 1:93; Mollie
Gillen, Royal Duke: Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex
(1773–1843), London, 1976, p. 97–98).
Ali Aziz Efendi (ca. 1749–1798) was a tax official and public
property manager who served as the Ottoman ambassador to Prussia from June 1797 until
his death on 29 Oct. 1798. Efendi’s story collection Muhayyelat-i ledun-i ilahi (Fantasies of divine consciousness) was published
in Turkish in 1852. A portion of the work first appeared in English as Ali Aziz
Efendi, The Story of Jewād: A Romance, transl. E. J. W.
Gibb, Glasgow, 1884 (
Repertorium
, 3:459; Marc Gaborieau and others,
eds., Encyclopaedia of Islam, 3d edn., Boston, 2007– ,
www.brillonline.com).
JQA wrote again to TBA on 5 Nov. 1798 discussing the state of the French Navy following recent defeats in Egypt and in the Battle of Donegal, believing, “Ireland may be now considered as out of danger.— Whether the conquest of Egypt will indemnify France for all this, Time must discover” (private owner, 2007).