Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
r.
y.22. 1798
Yours of the 8th. I received the 17th. Inst. and broke the Affair to
Mr. Cranch, who has it under Consideration and expect he
will give me an Answer this Week—1
A Day or two previous to the Receipt of yours, Solomon Thayer of
Braintree came to my House and offered me a piece of Pasture Land adjoyning to a
detached Piece of the Farm which You bought of Elkanah Thayer, the same Piece he had
offered me last Summer @ 18 Dollr. Pr. Acre, I then refus’d the offer— Dr. Fogg had now
made him an offer of his Pasture (@ 30 Dollr Pr. Acre) the Money to be paid in 3 or 4 Days. this laying near
Thayers House, led him to renew his offer to me— Although I felt an Aversion to engage
without consulting you upon it—Yet several Considerations induced me to make him an
Offer with which He finally closed, it turnd out 11 Dollrs.
& 47 Cents Pr. Acrend by Admeasurement, about 13 Acres.
have paid him & received a Deed— In the Piece now purchased is a living spring which
Thayer assures me He never knew to be dry; in Your Land adjoyning the water fails in a
Dry Season— heretofore You could not get into Your Land without passing through his—
Thayer has also cleared up & cut off a greater part of the Bushes in the Fall2 past— The Purchase of half an Acre (or an
Acre at most) of John Hobart, which I am told may be easily made, would bring You into
all Your Lands in that Quarter, without being dependant on any Body for a Passage—3 These Considerations led me to think that
the Purchase would be agreable to You, if not You must rap my Knuckles & tell me to
do so no more—4
For two Months past I have been upon the Enquiry for Barley in Quincy, but without Success— I hope to collect some in Weymouth or Hull— I shall not feel easy untill it is secured, as I foresee that it will be difficult to secure it in the Spring—
Burrell is disposed to keep his Station another Year— French seems
to be undetermind— I settled Accounts with him about Ten Days past He appeared very
dull, He told me He had worked hard 361 and should close the
Year with a Loss of (at least) 50 Dollrs. His Barley had
been lost his Crop of Corn greatly diminishd, on these Articles He had placed much
Dependance for his Profits, He askd me whether I could make him any Allowance, I declind
doing it without Advice, He wishd me to represent his Case to You, this I have now done,
and shall follow Your Directions—
The Subject Matter of Your Letter I shall carefully attend to, and in my next give You information of my Proceedings—
Mine & mrs. Tufts’s best Regards to
Mrs. Adams and accept of the best Wishes of / Your Friend
& H Servt.
RC (Adams
Papers); internal address: “President of the Unitd
States.” Dft (Adams
Papers).
The letter has not been found but was almost certainly regarding the sale of the Cranch farm, for which see Richard Cranch to JA, 15 March 1797, and note 2, above.
In the Dft, Tufts wrote “Summer” instead of “Fall.”
JA replied to Tufts on 1 Feb. 1798 approving the
purchases from Solomon Thayer and John Hobart. Thayer (1755–1835) had served in the
Revolutionary War and was a farmer in Braintree; the lands JA purchased
were among those he asked his brother to value in May 1803. Hobart (or Hubbard) was
possibly John Hobart (1755–1834) who was the constable of Braintree in 1777 and the
town’s surveyor of highways in 1783 (MHi: Anna E. Roth Coll.; Sprague,
Braintree Families
; JA to Peter
Boylston Adams, 5 May 1803, Adams Papers, Adams
Office Manuscripts, Box 1, folder 2).
In the Dft, Tufts continued, “If Mr. Cranch should decline acceptg the offer I shall employ
the Money agreably to your Instructions—”