Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
If the Compass by which my course is directed does not vary again through unavoidable necessity I shall sit out for Quincy next 209 week. we shall probably be 12 days in comeing. I shall want some preparation at Home. I will write to you from N york.1 Betsy wrote to her Mother to know if her sister Nancy was at home & that I should want her during my stay at Quincy2
The Hot weather of july has weakend us all. complaints of the Bowels are very frequent and troublesome. I received your Letter of 13 yesterday I have suspected unfair dealings in the post office for some time, tho I cannot say where the fault is. as to the Girls Letters I believe they were foolish enough to send them without any Frank. I received a Letter yesterday from your Son who was well, and expected, to come to Philadelphia soon on buisness.3 I fear I shall be away, but I shall write him to come & put up at the House the same as if we were here
Let mrs Porter know that I should be glad she would have mrs Bass to clean up the House I hope it will be white washd first— the post will be gone if I do not close—
yours affectionatly
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); addressed: “Mrs Mary Cranch / Quincy”; endorsed
by Richard Cranch: “Letter from Mrs / A: Adams (Pha:) / July 19. 1797.”
JA and AA left Philadelphia on 24 July
and arrived in Quincy on 5 Aug. after spending time with CA and his
family in New York City and visiting AA2 in Eastchester, N.Y., where they
picked up William Steuben Smith and John Adams Smith (Philadelphia Southwark Gazette, 25 July;
AA to Cranch, 29
July;
AA to Elizabeth Smith Shaw Peabody, 12 Aug., both below).
Nancy Howard (b. 1779) was the sister of Betsy Howard and Polly
Doble Howard Baxter (Sprague, Braintree Families
).
William Cranch to AA, 12 July, above.