Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
1797]
I send you the Letters— I could not keep my hands off of
Nabby’s.1 I beg her Pardon. They write
me flattering Accounts from Phila. Mr Anthony writes most confidently. No danger. No fever—alls well.—2
When Brisler goes he should throw Lime into the Cellar Vault &c.
I think We ought to have been together to day. But tomorrow will do.
269I am glad Malcom came out. We must prepare to go to Phila. the first Week in Novr. if no
bad news.
Caroline & all are well
RC (Adams Papers); docketed: “J A to A A.”
TBA to AA, 24 July, 17 Aug., JQA to AA, 29 July, all above, and JQA to JA, 10 Aug. (Adams Papers), for which see TBA to AA, 10 Sept., note 2, above. JQA and LCA’s joint letter to AA2 has not been found, but see AA2 to JQA, 4 Nov., below.
Joseph Anthony wrote to Timothy Pickering on 21 Oct. reporting
“the good News of the Fever having done in this City … there is Some of it yet; but it is going off
Rapidly,— so that the Vissiting Doctors, and the health Committee assure me, the
Citizens may Return Next week, or Even Now, with the most
perfect Safety.—” Anthony asked Pickering to communicate this news to JA
in New York “to Comfort and Compose his mind,” adding that “there is No Sort of Danger
Near where he Resides.” Pickering forwarded the letter to JA, writing on
the back, “the best account I have recd. from
Philadelphia” (Adams Papers).