Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-07-30
I have been honored with your Letter of the 20th Instant, on a Matter of the highest Concern to the Continent, as well as to our mutual Friend, who represents it in Europe.
Previous to the Receipt of the Letter I saw a Copy of one from Dr.
F
I think it no difficult Task to trace the Vestiges of an undue Influence, which dared to approach our publick Councils as early as the period of the first Instructions, and which appears to me, for political purposes foreign to the Interest of America, to have produced a deep layed Plan for removing a Gentleman from office, upon whom alone many of the States could rely for obtaining a safe and honorable Peace.
If I have a right Idea of the last Powers, there can be no great Honor in executing them,
either seperately or jointly; and the only object worth contending for in
C
We shall however, Madam, be better able to judge understandingly, on the Return of Mr.
L
Franklin's controversial letter to Huntington, 9 Aug. 1780, criticizing JA's conduct toward Vergennes; see above, Lovell to AA, 13 July, and note 7 there. Gerry's allusion makes clear that copies of Franklin's letter were sent to Boston at this time through more than one channel.
In a letter of the present date to Lovell (Dft, heavily corrected, on verso of Lovell to Gerry, 17 June 1781, MHi: Gerry-Knight Coll.), Gerry wrote:
“I have seen a Copy of the Letter from
Doctor Franklin to
Congress respecting Mr. J. Adams
and
fear that his Zeal for his Country has far exceeded his
usual Caution. Be that as it may I feel a deep Concern
for our worthy Friend, and apprehend that
the
ungrateful and
ungenerous Treatment he
has received will be productive of Disgrace and irreparable
Injury to his Country. Gerard You well remember was ever against our saving the Fishery, and as he received his Instructions from the Court of France, is it not
probable they have layed a plan to oust Mr.
Adams
in order to carry their Measures into Effect.”
Whether the names stricken by Gerry in his Dft, and which appear here as cancellations, were replaced in RC with identifying initials, were written in cipher in keeping with Lovell's usage in his letter on recto, or were left blank to be supplied by Lovell, cannot be known.
In Dft, Gerry at this point wrote and then cancelled: “I would chearfully make a Tour to the southard.”