Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
th1797
I got through the 4 July with much more ease than I expected. it was a fine cool day, and my fatigue arose chiefly from being drest at an early hour, and receiving the very numerous Sets of company who were so polite as to pay their compliments to me in succession in my drawing Room after visiting the President below, and partaking of cake wine & punch with him. to my company were added the Ladies of foreign Ministers & Home Secretaries with a few others. the parade lasted from 12 till four oclock. Fenno has saved me further occasion of detailing the Events of the day. he has given them with accuracy. I inclose his account of it—1
You will see an intimation in his paper of some Mal practices by
a senator. I inclose to you the Letter this day made publick.2 When shall we cease to have Judas’s? here is a
diabolical plot disclosed. When the Message was sent to the senate with the original
Letter mr Malcomb the Presidents Secretary met mr Blount comeing out, who stopd and
askd him what message he had got, upon which mr Malcomb replied it was a secreet and
confidential one. mr Blount did not return untill after the Letter was read which
threw the whole senate into a consternation. upon his comeing in, the Letter was again
read. he turnd very pale, said he did write a Letter at that time to a mr Cary, but
desired a coppy of it, and untill the next day to make his defence. it was granted,
but mr Blount has not since been seen. search was made after him yesterday and a
vessel found which he had Charterd to go off in. Poor Pensilvanna keeps no Gallows, as
Porcupine says. the senate will expell him, & it belongs to the House of Reps—to
impeach, but they have not yet reported— it does not appear that his offerd Service
was accepted by the British, tho it is a glorious kettle for the Jacobines to Swim in.
how they rejoice. corruption, is corruption from what ever source it originates. this
same Tenesse Senator was arrested for debt four different times on his return home
last fall, and but for his Priviledge as senator which Screens him 20 days, he would
have been lodged in Jail, which he no doubt richly deserves. he has a Brother in the
House who lately took fire at the mention of French
Faction & challenged mr Thatcher in concequence of it.3 this Buisness tho communicated last twesday to
both Houses, is but just transpiring. the House have orderd all the papers to be
publishd. I will send them as soon as they are publick—4
I thank you for your kind Letter of 27 June. I derive much
pleasure from your account of the Garden and rose Bush. I wish I could enhale the one
& taste the other, but I fear not. I past an hour or two with mrs wolcot last
Evening the Lady of the Secretary of the Treasury. mr Wolcot seemd anxious at the Idea
of the Presidents going so far from the Seat of Government at so critical a period. I
know he will not leave here for any time if the Ministers think his presence
necessary. we may truly say, we know not what a day will bring forth— from every side
we are in Danger. we are in Perils by Land, and we are in Perils by sea; and in Perils
from false Breathern. Dr Blair gave us an Exelent discourse a sunday or two ago.
“Trust in the Lord, for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting Strength.[”]5 if it
was not for that trust and confidence, our Hearts would often fail us. I inclose with
this a part of a Letter written a day or two since, one part of which I thought proper
to cut of, and am too laizy to coppy the remainder—6
Congress expect to rise this week. I will write you again, as soon as I can determine what will be the result of our deliberations.
My Love to all inquiring Friends present me respectfully to mrs welch and be assured I am my dear sister most affectionatly Your
Let the Friends of my domesticks know that they are all well
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); endorsed by Richard Cranch: “Letter from Mrs. / A: Adams (Pha:) / July
6th. 1797.”
The enclosure has not been found but likely was the Philadelphia
Gazette of the United States, 5 July, recounting the
celebrations of the previous day: “At noon, the Governor of this Commonwealth,
officers of the general and state governments, members of both houses of Congress, the
society of the Cincinati, Officers of the militia in their uniforms, the Foreign
Ministers and many private citizens waited on the President of the United States with
their congratulations.” As host of the day, JA “was dressed in full
uniform on the occasion, and looked extremely well. He shewed by his countenance the
delight he felt at the return of the auspicious anniversary.”
Enclosure not found. Several Philadelphia newspapers published
the letter revealing William Blount’s conspiracy, for which see Descriptive List of Illustrations,
No. 4, above. See, for example, Gazette of the United
States and the special supplement of the Philadelphia
Gazette, both 6 July.
Thomas Blount (1759–1812) ran a mercantile business in Tarboro,
N.C., and represented the state in the 3d, 4th, and 5th Congresses. During a 9 June
debate on the proposed defensive measures, George Thatcher claimed that a resolution
introduced by Blount carried pro-French connotations. After a heated exchange, Blount
challenged Thatcher to a duel, but the latter declined to fight, citing his family’s
reliance on him (
Biog. Dir. Cong.
; Lorenzo Sabine, Notes on
Duels and Duelling, Boston, 1859, p. 66–67;
Annals of Congress
, 5th Cong.,
1st sess., p. 282, 284).
Only the Senate printed its report during the current
congressional session: In Senate of the United States, July
6th, 1797. The
193
Committee to Whom Was Referred … a Letter Purporting to Have
Been Written by William Blount, Phila., 1797, Evans, No. 48290. The House report was issued during the
subsequent session as Report of the Committee of the House of
Representatives of the United States, Appointed to Prepare and Report Articles of
Impeachment against William Blount, Phila., 1797, Evans, No. 34785.
Isaiah, 26:4. Rev. Samuel Blair, the former chaplain of Congress,
resided at Germantown, Penn., and occasionally returned to the capital to preach (vol.
9:340; Sprague, Annals Amer.
Pulpit
, 3:269).
The enclosure was part of a [5 July]
letter to Mary Smith Cranch congratulating her on the birth of a new grandson,
offering to help procure law books for William Cranch, and mentioning that a letter
and post note sent to AA2 had been miscarried. AA cut away
most of the verso folio page, leaving only a fragment at the bottom with text on both
the first and second pages. The recto folio page remains intact with text on the third
page (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters).
AA also wrote to Mary Smith Cranch on 11 July, sending her a handkerchief and asking for farming news from Quincy (MWA: Abigail Adams Letters).