Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
a.Jan. 28. 99
In my solitude in Markett street, I find nothing so sociable as
your Letters— those of 18 & 20th. are this moment
recdd.—
1
Your health & Spirits are a great Improvement of mine.
I have avoided the Epithets perfidious and unprincipled as much as I could, but neither they nor any that could be borrowed from the Hebrew & the Greek would be too strong, for the House of Mass to Use.—
My Religion you know is not, exactly conformable to that of the greatest Part of the Christian World. It excludes superstition. But with all the superstition that attends it, I think the Christian the best that is or has been. I would join with those who wish ecclesiastical Tyranny abolished, and the frauds of the Priesthood detected: But in this Country We have little of this. If my feeble Testimony has done any good, I rejoice & have my reward.
The V. P was a poor Correspondent and the P. is a worse, but I cannot help it.
The salt Marsh you may buy but it is too dear. The Ceedar swamp too is vastly too dear. My Gout for Land is much abated.— They hold it at such a Price that it tastes too Silverish.—
I will be no part of Taxes of any kind, nor of Blacksmith’s Bills,—I will have a Rent clear of all deductions. It may be let for 3 years. But I must have the salt Marsh at the farms and Quincys Meadow & Belchers Place.— The Rent must be the less.
I am glad the 20 foot Posts are to be sent for.— I have made Turrell Tufts a Consul at surinam.
Thomas, to my sorrow, but for your Joy will sett out this Week for Quincy. He will stop [at] N. York sometime. He dont relish the Idea of settling at Quincy.
RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs A”;
endorsed: “J A Janry / 25th / 1799.”
In her letter to JA of 18 Jan., AA wrote that she was still awaiting word of TBA’s safe arrival. She also complained that JA did not write as “freely” to her as he had when he was vice president, and she noted that the answer of the Mass. house of representatives to the governor’s address included a compliment to JA (Adams Papers).
In her brief reply of 8 Feb., AA noted her disapproval of TBA’s settling in Philadelphia: “I shall try to prevail with him to relinquish it. it will take him time here, but I do not doubt but he may get into Buisness with patience & perseverence”(Adams Papers).
I received your favor of Novr: 13th: with an enclosure for J Hall, yesterday, by the New York
mail. It came by a vessel, which left Hamburg only one day later than myself and was
enclosed by Mr: Pitcairn in hopes it might reach me before I
got out of the River.1
I will begin by acquainting you and Mrs: A— with the health of all
your friends. Our good mother, from whom I have not yet heard directly writes to my
father & Mr: Shaw almost every post and apparently in good spirits. I expect to set
out on the 28th: currt: to make
her a visit. I have a letter of congratulation upon my safe return from Mr: & Mrs:
Johnson, which informs me of the health of all their family, and discovers much anxiety
to learn the state of Mrs: A——s health, which they observe
is not mentioned by herself in the letters they received. I wrote to them myself on my
first arrival at New York, but my letter had not at the date of theirs been received. In
my answer to their letters I have entered somewhat largely into those particulars, which
the Princess Ferdinand used so inexorably to extort from me respecting Mrs: A.2 Thus
much for the bill of health.
I am collecting gradually, that kind of information, for which we
used to thirst so much, and shall endeavor to communicate it to you as regularly as
opportunities will allow. I have already written you at some length by Mr: McHenry, who sailed about the
21st: instt:.3 I understand that a file of Newspapers for six
months back, has just been made up for you at the Secy of
S——s Office. At the close of the Session you will receive the laws and journals.
I wrote you perhaps rather hastily in my last, an opinion, which I promised to correct if I saw cause. I will not revoke any part of it even now, but least you should think more implied than was intended in what I wrote, it may be useful to observe, that no greater circumspection is required in your communications, than for the last twelvemonth has been observed. As to asking your recall, I think you may do it with propriety in the course of this year and indeed when 379 you have accomplished or failed in the object of your present mission. I am not likely to advance your private affairs, more than those, who were first entrusted with them, but at least they shall not grow worse. Money can be employed at a legal interest of 8 per cent, with the National Government as security, (possibly a hazardous one) but the course of Exchange has never been less favorable for drafts upon Europe than at this moment.
Since writing the above I have had a conversation with Mr: Pickering respecting two or three objects upon which you
wished information. I understand that as it respects your Salary, he has written you an
authority to draw for it upon England, if that will accommodate you better than the
former arrangement, and he informs me that he has thought it but just and equitable,
that you should be indemnified for the loss you sustained in consequence of the course
of Exchange, between Holland & England at the time you left the former. I am pretty
sure he told me, that he had written to you on the subject.4 The draft which you gave me upon the Bankers at
Amsterdam, for f1125, or 450 Dls: I have received at par from the Secy State, giving him a receipt upon the
back of the order, which will enable him to charge the amount to your account with the
Department and which will leave that sum for other purposes in the Bankers hands. It did
not occur to me at the time I was negotiating this business to enquire whether I could
receive your salary here, for which I am authorised to draw upon Holland; but I will
take an early opportunity of conversing with him on the subject and acquaint you with
the result.
I find your reputation, very high here for punctuality accuracy and
frequency of communication, and the utility of your mission seems to be viewed in its
just light by such as know the reasons, which properly led to it. If no pacific
settlement should take place on the Continent during this season and hostilities should
be renewed between France and the Emperor, it may be judged expedient to continue you
there, some time longer, but I think you are not destined
very shortly to another remove. Observe however, that I write upon my own authority and
observation merely, respecting this subject; but your opinion has been so warmly seconded in the Aurora
& elsewhere, that I can perceive it has produced an effect.5
You must not expect me to transmit public documents, but I will mention two or three of a recent date, worthy your notice. If the newspapers reach you, which have lately been sent, you will find them there.
380Mr: Marshall since his return, was
applied to by a Gentleman in Virginia, for his opinion upon the Alien & sedition
laws, (as they are stiled) and his answer, which was pointedly opposed to these laws on
Constitutional grounds, contained a devellopment of principles & sentiments on
public affairs, that has caused much astonishment and surprise among the friends of
government, who thought well before of his talents & his honesty. I have not myself
got sight of these papers, and therefore only mention, that the evident effect they have
produced, is alienation & disgust towards the writer. I can say nothing like an
opinion of my own on the subject. The letter was written for electioneering purposes and
surely not intended for the public eye. In Virginia a friend of the National Government
must do violence to his conscience, before he can secure an election. Marshall wanted to
come as a Representative and I have no doubt strained his principles in this answer;
with the public however, this is an aggravation rather than an alleviation of his
offence, but in Virginia it may gain him an election.
Mr: Gerry returned in safety and
brought with him another budget of Dispatches & correspondence, which have just been
published, with a Report of the Secretary of State upon them. You will probably get them
by this occasion.— The Jacobins dont like them. Mr: G— has
not been so violently abused in the public prints as it was expected he would be. There
seems to be an uncertainty which party ought to claim him—6
A letter has recently appeared in our papers, from Joel Barloe in
France to Mr: Baldwin one of the Representatives from Georgia, who is a brother in law
of the writer. It was communicated to S. T. Mason of the
Senate in great confidence. He lent it to M Lyon, who
published or procured its publication in the state of Vermont, where he was soon after
indicted for it under the sedition law, found guilty in the federal Circuit Court &
sentenced by Judge Patterson to five months imprisonment and a fine of 1000 Dls, which sentence he is now fulfilling, and as the term of
imprisonment will expire before the rising of Congress—he is expected to arrive here in
season to take his seat, claim his mileage and then go home again.7
The letter will speak for itself, as I enclose it to you; the
writer, one would think, would never dare to set his foot on American ground again; but
should he return and hereafter be called to the first employments & the highest
honors in the Country, who would dare to be surprized? Would public decency be more
outraged, by such an event, than by the re-election of Matthew Lyon as a Representative
381 in Congress of Dr:
Logan as a Representative in the Legislature of this State, or of William Blount as
Governor of Tennesee? This last has not yet taken place, though little doubt is
entertained but it will.8 Even Mr: Monroe is a candidate for the vacancy in the Senate of the
U. S. occasioned by the sudden death of Mr: Tazewell.9
Explain, if you can, these facts and reconcile them with that
public spirit & that attachment to the National Government, which the addresses have
almost universally breathed. Nevertheless we hear that the Legislature and Governors of
Vermont of New York & the Governor of Virginia, with a majority of his Council
chosen by the Legislature, are federal. Of Vermont and New
York it is true, perhaps of Virginia, but the legislature of that state is strongly
Anti—10 North & South Carolina
& Massachusetts have ameliorated the character of their Representation, and the
federalists count on a considerably stronger majority for the next, than the present
Congress.11 The opposition are very
bitter & rancorous. I believe them nearly desperate, but not yet prepared for a
trial of strength with the Government in any overt acts. Virginia is in a ferment, but
she will have few associates, so far as I can judge—
Respecting my own prospects, I have only to inform you, that I have made up my mind to open an Office in this City, as soon as I can make a visit to Massachusetts & return. The discouragements of this resolution are such as time may remove. None of them seem so formidable to me as the pestilential disorder, which annually afflicts this City; it is hoped that even this will yield to time & severe precaution.
My inducements for fixing here are, that I studied law in this place, and am in some degree prepared to renew the practice without a long apprenticeship. That whatever weight or reputation the name of my old Master transfers to such as were his pupils is in a great degree local; that from having been once established here, or rather made a beginning in the profession, I shall not be looked upon as an intruder, when I resume my station at the Bar; and lastly, that there seems to be business and encouragement enough for the industrious & persevering members of the Profession.— I might have settled in Massachusetts under prospects more immediately flattering in some respects and more perhaps to the satisfaction of our family, but I apprehend not eventually so much to my own benefit.
I am so frequently interrupted in my letter, that you will remark
an incoherence and want of connection in many parts of it. The great secret, why we are generally so negligent correspondents after 382 our return to our own Country is, that scenes of
pleasure long unfelt and untasted crowd upon us in such quick succession, that they
banish Europe & all it contains from our recollection; but while you and your family
are among the contents, be assured they will ever live in the fondest remembrance of /
Your’s.
PS. I beg to be particularly remembered to Dr: Brown & his family; to Mr: Richard & to Count Brühl’s family.12 I have seen Mr:
Liston and answered his queries respecting all his old Berlin friends. Tell Mr: Garlike that I have been once into Peter Porcupine’s book
store, but have not yet made the acquaintance of the ci-devant Serjeant.13 He still goes on with his paper, but his stock
of wit & fun seem to be somewhat diminished. Like the Porpoise, his activity is greatest in a storm.14
I send you an Almanack, or “a little book in which you may see your father’s face,” likewise one for my sister, to whom I also send much love.15 Tell her or pray her to write to me often.
Miss Epps & Mr: Whitcomb will
perhaps be glad to see their names in my letter as a token of remembrance.
Mr: Shaw & self present our best
regards to Mr: Welsh, who though last, is not least in our
remembrance. His family & friends are well. I set out for New York tomorrow—16
RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “J Q Adams Esqr:”
JQA’s letter to TBA of 13 Nov. 1798, above, was likely
enclosed in Joseph Pitcairn’s 15 Nov. letter to TBA, not found. The
letters were carried on the ship Franklin, Capt. Bunce,
which arrived in New York on 23 Jan. 1799 after a passage of 56 days (TBA to Pitcairn, 2 March, below;
New-York Gazette, 23 Jan.).
TBA’s letters to and from the Johnsons have not been found.
TBA’s letter to JQA of 7 Jan. has also not been
found. It was carried by John McHenry Jr. (d. 1856), the nephew of James McHenry, who
was going to The Hague to replace Bartholomew Dandridge Jr. as William Vans Murray’s
secretary (JQA to TBA, 29 April, FC-Pr, APM Reel 131; Dawn F. Thomas and Robert William
Barnes, The Green Spring Valley: Its History and
Heritage, 2 vols., Baltimore, 1978, 2:62; Washington, Papers, Retirement
Series
, 2:538).
Timothy Pickering in a letter of 24 Sept. 1798 authorized JQA to draw his salary from the London firm of Bird, Savage & Bird (Adams Papers).
TBA was possibly referring to the Philadelphia Aurora General Advertiser, 21 Dec., which reported that
letters from JQA to JA “complain
bitterly” that Abbe Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès had been well received by Frederick
William III.
While the Philadelphia Aurora General
Advertiser, 23, 28 Jan. 1799, defended Elbridge Gerry and used his dispatches
to argue that the defensive measures undertaken by Congress were unnecessary,
Federalist newspapers in Philadelphia had little to say about Gerry’s conduct. The
Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 26 Jan.,
questioned only Gerry’s judgment in believing that the French desire for peace was
sincere while Americans wished for war.
Matthew Lyon took his seat in the House of Representatives on 20
February. Congressmen were entitled to six dollars for every twenty miles traveled
from their homes to residences used during congressional sessions (U.S. House, Jour.
, 5th Cong., 3d sess., 383 p. 482;
U.S. Statutes
at Large
, 1:448–449). For Lyon’s imprisonment under the Sedition Act,
see William Smith Shaw to AA, 30 Dec.
1798, and note 4, above.
William Blount was chosen speaker of the Tenn. senate on 3
December. The Philadelphia Gazette, 5 Jan. 1799, reported
the news, claiming Blount would be “supported for GOVERNOR of that state at the next election” (William H. Masterson, William Blount, Baton Rouge, La., 1954, p. 338, 339).
Henry Tazewell died in Philadelphia on 24 January. While James
Monroe was rumored to have been chosen as his successor, the Va. General Assembly
elected Wilson Cary Nicholas to replace Tazewell but not until Dec. 1799 (Jefferson, Papers
, 30:641–642; Massachusetts
Mercury, 1 March; Philadelphia Gazette of the United
States, 12 Dec.).
Isaac Tichenor, a Vermont Federalist who had been serving as a
U.S. senator, was elected governor in 1797 and reelected the following year by a large
majority. The Vergennes Gazette, 11 Oct. 1798, reported
Tichenor’s reelection along with a change in the composition of the governor’s
council, claiming that the result would “fully evince to the world, the Federalism of
Vermont.” For the election of the Federalist James Wood as governor of Virginia, see
vol. 12:344, 345. Wood’s executive council
included at least two Federalists, but Democratic-Republicans were the majority party
in the legislature (
Biog. Dir. Cong.
; Washington, Papers, Retirement
Series
, 2:314; Marshall, Papers
, 12:512, 515). For the
reelection of John Jay in New York, see AA to TBA, 1 May, and note 10, above.
While North Carolina added three Federalists to its congressional
representation, and South Carolina, two, overall, for the 6th Congress Federalists
picked up three seats in the House but the Senate maintained the same party
representation (
Biog. Dir. Cong.
).
Mr. Richards, a banker, was a close friend of Dr. Charles Brown.
He became a member of the Adamses’ social circle in Berlin (E. H. Adamson, “Sir
Charles Brown,” Archaeologia Aeliana, 19:139 [1898];
LCA, D&A, 1:125; D/JQA/24, 27 July 1798,
10, 15, 22, 24, 27, 29 Sept., 2, 12, 22, Oct., 17 Dec., 23 Jan. 1799, 1 April, 12
Oct., APM Reel 27).
Benjamin Garlike (1758–1815) was the secretary to the British
legation in Berlin from 1796 until 1801 and had been friends with William Cobbett
since the 1780s. Cobbett’s store was located at 25 North Second Street in Philadelphia
(Gentleman’s Magazine, 85:564–565 [June 1815], 91:588
[Jan.–June 1821]; Lewis Saul Benjamin, The Life and Letters of
William Cobbett in England & America, 2 vols., London, 1913, 1:45, 48;
Philadelphia
Directory
, p. 35 Evans No. 36353).
Charles Churchill, “Independence,” lines 180–181.
It is unknown which almanac TBA sent to
JQA and LCA. However, TBA was quoting from a
poem written by John Rogers to his children shortly before his execution by Queen Mary
I in 1555. The poem was printed in many editions of The
American Primer, including that of 1799, which featured a portrait of
JA on the frontispiece (
DNB
; The American Primer, Medford, Mass., 1799, p. 32, Evans, No. 35107).
TBA arrived in New York on 30 January. After visiting with CA, SSA, AA2, and WSS, he proceeded northeast, arriving in Boston on 11 Feb. and in Quincy the following afternoon (TBA to JA, 1, 14 Feb., CA to JA, 31 Jan., all below; TBA, Diary, 1798–1799, 11 Feb.).