Adams Family Correspondence, volume 8
I wrote you from Providence some account of my polite reception there & closed my Letter just as I had accepted an invitation to dine with mr Brown & Lady. the forenoon was pass't in receiving visits from all the principal gentlemen and Ladies of the Town, who seemed to vie with each other, to convince me that tho they were inhabitants of an Antifederal state. they were themselves totally against the measures persued by it, and that they entertaind the highest Regard and Respect for the Character with which I was so intimately connected, altho to their great mortification they had been prevented the Honour of having any share in placing him in his respected station1
Mr Brown sent his Carriage & Son to conduct me his House which is one of the
Grandest I have seen in this Country. every thing in and about it, wore the marks of
magnificence & taste.2 mrs Brown met
me at the door & with the most obliging Smile accosted me with—[“]Friend I am glad
to see the here” the simplicity of her manners & dress with the openness of her
countanance & the friendlyness of her behaviour charmed me beyond all the studied
politeness of European manners— they had colleted between 22 persons to dine with me tho
the notice was so short, & gave an Elegant 378entertainment upon a
service of Plate. towards Evening I made a Tour round the Town, & drank Tea &
spent the Evening with mr & Mrs Francis whom I mentiond to you before. here the
company was much enlarged, & many persons introduced to me who had no opportunity
before of visiting me, amongst those Ladies, with whom I was most pleased was the Lady
& two sisters of Governour Bowen.3
about Eleven I returnd To my lodgings and the next morning went on Board the Handcock
packet we had contrary wind all Day, by which means we did not reach Newport untill
Seven oclock. I had been only a few moments arrived when mr Merchant came on Board and
insisted that I with my whole Family should go on shore & Lodge at his House. he
would take no refusal. he sent his daughter down to receive & accompany my Neice,
& came himself in a few moments with a carriage to attend me. at his House I was
kindly & Hospitably Treated by his Lady & daughters.4 we slept there & the next morning were early
summond on Board the packet. Captain Brown had very civily taken his wife to attend upon
me, & accomodate me during my passage5 I found her a very well Bred Geenteel woman, but neither civility attention or
politeness could remedy the sea sickness or give me a fair wind or dispell the Thunder
Gusts which attended us both night & day. in short I resolved upon what I have
frequently before, that I would never again embark upon the water, but this resolution I
presume will be kept as my former ones have been. we were five days upon the water. Heat
want of rest, sea sickness & terror for I had my share of that, all contributed to
fatigue me and I felt upon my arrival quite tame & spiritless Louissa was very sick,
but behaved like a Heroine Matilda had her share but when she was a little recoverd she
was the life of us all Polly was half dead all the Passage & sufferd more from sea
sickness than any of us. Charls eat & slept without any inconvenience. when we came
to the wharff, I desired the Captain to go to our Friend mr MacCormick and inform him of
my arrival, if he was not to be found to go to the Senate Chamber & inform mr A. who
from the hour of the day I knew must be there. mr otis the secretary came to me with a
Carriage & I reach'd Richmond Hill on Thursday one oclock to my no small joy I found
mr Adams in better Health than I feard mr & mrs Smith quite well & every thing
so well arranged that Beds & a few other articles seem only necessary towards
keeping House with comfort, and I begin to think, that my furniture will be troublesome
to me, some part of it I mean whilst mrs Smith remains with me. master John was grown
out of my knowledge, 379william is still at Jamaica. our House has been a
mere Levee ever since I arrived morning & Evening. I took the earliest opportunity
(the morning after my arrival) to go & pay my respects to mrs Washington mrs Smith
accompanied me. She received me with great ease & politeness, she is plain in her
dress, but that plainness is the best of every article. she is in mourning, her Hair is
white, her Teeth Beautifull, her person rather short than otherways, hardly so large as
my Ladyship, and if I was to speak sincerly, I think she is a much better figure, her
manners are modest and unassuming, dignified and femenine, not the Tincture of ha'ture
about her.6
his majesty was ill & confined to his Room.7 I had not the pleasure of a presentation to him,
but the satisfaction of hearing that he regreeted it equally with myself. col Humphries
who had paid his compliments to me in the morning & Breakfasted with me, attended
mrs washington & mr Lear the Private Secretary, was the introducter—8 thus you have an account of my first appearence—
the Principal Ladies who have visited me are the Lady & daughter of the Governour
Lady Temple the Countess de Brehim, Mrs Knox & 25 other Ladies many of the Senators,
all their Ladies all the Foreign ministers & some of the Reps.
We are most delightfully situated, the prospect all around is Beautifull in the highest degree, it is a mixture of the sublime & Beautifull— amidst it all I sigh for many of my dear Friends and connections. I can make no domestick arrangment till Brisler arrives— remember me affectionatly to all my Friends particularly my aged parent, to my children to whom I cannot write as yet to my dear Lucy & worthy dr Tufts in short to all whom I love yours most tenderly
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); addressed: “To / Mrs Mary Cranch / Braintree.”
The state of Rhode Island had
declined to send delegates to the 1787 Constitutional Convention, to hold a ratifying
convention, or to select electors to choose a president and vice president. Under
increasing commercial pressure and in order to participate in the debates over the
Bill of Rights, Rhode Island finally called a convention and ratified the Constitution
in May 1790 by a vote of 34 to 32 (Florence Parker Simister, The Fire's Center: Rhode Island in the Revolutionary Era, 1763–1790,
Providence, 1979, p. 233–240).
John Brown's house, located
at the corner of Power and Benefit Streets in Providence, was considered at the time
one of the finest homes in America. Today it houses the Rhode Island Historical
Society. John and Sarah Brown's only surviving son, James (1761–1834), chose not to
enter the family mercantile business (James B. Hedges, The
Browns of Providence Plantations: The Colonial Years, Providence, 1968, p. xx,
19, 199).
For the Bowen family, see AA to Mary Smith Cranch, 19 June, note 6, above.
Henry Marchant (1741–1796)
had known JA in the Continental Congress, where Marchant served from 1777
to 1779. He represented Newport in the Rhode Island General 380Assembly from 1784 to 1790 and was a staunch
advocate of ratification. He and his wife, Rebecca Cooke, had two daughters, Sarah and
Elizabeth, as well as a son, William (
DAB
; James N. Arnold, Vital
Record of Rhode Island, 1636–1850, 21 vols., Providence, 1891–1912,
4:104).
Capt. James Brown was married
to Free-love Brown (ca. 1765–1819), the daughter of Col. William Brown of Providence
(Arnold, Vital Record of Rhode Island, 13:221,
14:541).
For Martha Washington and her family, see Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 11, above.
George Washington's illness
was more serious than most people realized, with a fever stemming from an infection
connected to a tumor in his leg. He had the tumor removed on 17 June 1789. By early
July, he was able to conduct government business though he remained weak for some time
thereafter (Washington, Papers, Presidential Series
, 3:76–77).
Tobias Lear (1762–1816),
Harvard 1783, originally from New Hampshire, served as Washington's private secretary
from 1786 to 1793 (
Harvard Quinquennial Cat.
; Washington, Papers, Presidential Series
,
1:98).