Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Abigail Adams to John Quincy Adams, 20 July 1798 Adams, Abigail Adams, John Quincy
Abigail Adams to John Quincy Adams
my Dear son Philadelphia July 20th 1798

I wrote you in a Letter not long since: that as mr Malcom had declined going abroad, I had thought of Thomas Welch.1 Thomas has past through College with Reputation, and tho as you justly observe, you cannot expect to have your Brothers place supplied to you, you will find in Thomas Welch, personal attachment fidelity and honour. honesty of Heart must compensate to you for whatever is deficient in the Graces— His situation at leaving College, opend to him but a melancholy prospect. His Fathers affairs in a desperate and Ruined state; I felt hurt for a young man just entering into Life, when he had reason to expect some Aid, to find himself without the least suspicion of it, thrown pennyless upon the wide world. I made known to him the terms upon which he must embark, according to your statement in your Letter to me. I presume that he will live in your Family, as an indulgence. I hope he will arrive safe and be usefull to you. William shaw, will come to Philadelphia and take mr Malcom place. I have just closed a Letter to mrs Johnson in answer to one from her of the 7th and have informd her of this opportunity of writing which I have no doubt but She will embrace.2 I forwarded a Letter by the Secretary of states conveyance for mrs Adams by way of Hamburgh, in a vessel which saild on Monday of this week, by which I wrote you a few lines and sent you a bundle of News papers.3 Miss Johnson I presume has acquainted her sister that she expects soon to be married to a cousin—a son I suppose of Govenour Johnson’s I received the intellegence from her Mother.

Congress rose on Monday the 16th.— if we may credit the voice of the people from Georgia to Main, exprest in the Numerous addresses which have overwhelmd the Chief Majestrate for more than two months past, there lives and fortunes are ready at the call of their Country to be offerd up in the defence of it. with one voice, they repeat the toast Given—“Millions for defence, but not a cent for tribute”— The Navy of our Country is rising to respectability our three Frigates are all man’d with care & celerity, and are out several 197 20 Gun Ships are also out, besides Gallies— Captain decateur has captured a 12 Gun French Privateer, and brought her into this port. Philadelphia has shown a spirit of Patriotism which does them great honour. the Merchants have voted and subscribed 80 thousand dollors towards Building a ship to loan to Government. Nyork tho more dormant & less alive to their own danger, has subscribed 75 thousand Baltimore has done the same,4 but Boston outstrips them all. old mr Philips at one stroke subscribes 10 thousand dollors with the assurence that ten more were ready if wanted, and in three days the Subscription amounted to one Hundred & 27 thousand dollors— The General Court ceeded castle William to the united states, and voted $50,000 to purchase warlike stores for the use of the state.5 Mr dexter is appointed Senator in congress in lieu of mr sedwick resignd.6 the NEngland states are firm and strong, united and determined. the people throughout the united States, with few exception’s, would have heartily joind in the most decided declaration which Congress could have made. they calld for the declaration to be made from various quarters of the union,—but the majority in Congress did not possess firmness and decission enough to boldly make it. as in England there are Bouroughs which they term Rotten. so here we have false Brethren. foreign influence tho wounded and limping and hobling, Halts, and Rallies, and finds in every state some votaries. tho their Numbers are few—their mischief is extensive. whilst the Emissaries of France are permitted an assylum in our Bosom; we must expect the wounds of the assassin, and the stabs of the Bravado.

you will learn with high pleasure and satisfaction that the Commander in Chief of our Armies raised and to be raised, is the Great the immortal Washington. I inclose to you his Letter, and acceptance of the important trust. “His Name is a Host, and the knowledge that he lives, a Bulwark” His commission was made out & Signd on the 4 of july, and is a new Edition of our declaration of Independance—7

we are still without any News from mr Gerry. Since the arrival of mr Marshal, I have transmitted to you by different ways a copy of his Letter to the President. his remaining at the Instane of Talleyrand, as the one he chose to select and communicate with, is adding insult to injury, and in a manner dictating to the united States a minister but mr Gerry must e’er this time have received his recall. I was pleasd with a Toast given on the 4th of July at Walpole Elbridge Gerry Esqr—may his locks never be shaven by the Delilahs of France—8

198

I have this moment received a Letter from mr smith at Boston, who says there is an arrival from Lisbon to the first of June, which brings an account that the dispatches from our Envoys were publishd in a London paper, and received at Lisbon— it was said mr Gerry was orderd out of France in concequence of them.9 I sincerely hope it is true, or that upon the arrival of his orders, he required a pastport. I can never believe that he would take upon himself any responsibility. His stay was however a real injury it was a bub for the Antifederal Party to throw out, and they did not fail to make use of it. it caused an indecision in the counsels of our Nation.

As to your private affairs, I presume doctor welch will inform you of their state. by his son, I have requested him to transfer them to doctor Tufts, untill you shall send a power to some person. what you committed to the Hands of your Brother, I hope is safe. it is but a hope. I did not get an answer to my satisfaction when I applied to him— duty to you requires me to say this—

I have not any Letter from you of a date later than Feb’ry one from Thomas to your Father of March 4th the last scrap inclosed a Letter to your Sister from Thomas, of March 30th—10

I shall write to Thomas. with my kind regards to mrs Adams— / I am my dear son your ever affectionate / Mother

Abigail Adams

I have not been able to get the Acts for this conveyance

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed by TBA: “Mrs: A Adams / 20th: July 1798 / 13th: Septr: Recd: / 14 Do Answd.”

1.

AA to JQA, 12 June, above.

2.

In a letter to Catherine Nuth Johnson of 14 July, AA reported on family matters and commented on the assault on William Cranch. She also lamented that the Johnsons had settled in Washington, D.C., “the only Spot in America, where from particular circumstances of local, and partiall views of interest … the passions of individuals are excited, and their animosity kindled against each other” (Adams Papers).

3.

Johnson’s letter to LCA has not been found. AA’s letter to JQA of 14 July (Adams Papers) provided an update on congressional affairs as the session drew to a close and reported George Washington’s appointment to the command of the provisional army. She also wished JQA a happy birthday and commented on JA’s health. The letters likely went by the Elizabeth, Capt. French, which sailed on 16 July and arrived in Hamburg by 7 Sept. (Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 16 July; Baltimore Telegraphe and Daily Advertiser, 27 Oct.).

4.

Baltimore’s subscription efforts were progressing even more favorably than AA reported, having raised nearly $100,000 by this time (Leiner, Millions for Defense , p. 75).

5.

In a resolve of 25 June, the Mass. General Court ceded Castle Island and its accompanying fort to the federal government “for the purpose of erecting Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, Dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings thereon, for the defence of the United States.” Timothy Pickering wrote to JA on 15 Sept. (Adams Papers) enclosing his acceptance of Gov. Increase Sumner’s offer. The transfer occurred on 2 Oct. (Mass., Acts and Laws , 1798–1799, p. 16–17; Daniel Jackson to JA, 4 Oct., Adams Papers). For the Massachusetts appropriation for defensive provisions and the Boston naval subscription, 199 see William Smith to AA, 29 June, and notes 3 and 5, above.

6.

The Mass. General Court elected Samuel Dexter as senator after the resignation of Theodore Sedgwick. Dexter received 102 out of 156 votes in the house on 14 June and 26 of 27 votes in the senate on 15 June (Newburyport Herald, 15 June; Massachusetts Mercury, 19 June).

7.

Washington’s commission, which was made out on an elaborately embellished, partially printed form and dated 4 July, read in part: “Know Ye, That reposing special Trust and Confidence in the Patriotism, Valour, Fidelity and Abilities of George Washington I have nominated and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, do appoint him Lieutenant General and Commander in Chief of all the Armies raised or to be raised for the Service of the United States” (DLC:Washington Papers, Series 8b). For Washington’s 13 July letter to JA, see AA to Mary Smith Cranch, 17 July, note 4, above.

8.

The Fourth of July celebration in Walpole, N.H., the first there in several years, featured a procession, the singing of “Adams and Liberty,” and a “manly, terse, and pure oration” by Walpole lawyer Roger Vose. At the dinner that followed, several toasts supporting the administration and Federalist policies, including the one AA mentioned here, were given (Walpole, N.H., Farmer’s Weekly Museum, 10 July).

9.

In addition to the news AA relayed here, Smith’s letter of 13 July noted his satisfaction with both Washington’s appointment as commander in chief and the voiding of the treaties with France (Adams Papers).

10.

TBA’s letter to AA2 has not been found.

William Smith Shaw to Abigail Adams, 20 July 1798 Shaw, William Smith Adams, Abigail
William Smith Shaw to Abigail Adams
My dear aunt Atkinson July 20th 1798.

O how happy should I be, were I to sit down to write you of my dear sisters better health, but alas I cannot. She fails every day & has now grown so weak that she is not able to wride out or even to come below stairs. She still keeps her usual flow of spirits, & sits “like patience on a monument, smiling” even tho in the arms of death.1 How miserable should I be, my aunt, in seeing my dear sister thus mouldering away, did I believe with the boasting modern philosophers, that after death, she would be consigned, like beasts, to eternal sleep and putrefaction. No, I firmly believe & have the strongest grounds for my belief, which afford consolations, neither few nor small, that she dies but to live forever—“that christianity will seat herself by her dying pillow, draw aside the curtains of eternity, point her closing eyes to the opening gates of everlasting life & convey her departing spirit in peace & transport to a state of perfect evergrowing knowledge, virtue, enjoyment, usefulness & glory:”2

I wrote to you in a letter which I hope you have received, that I should not be at commencement I found no difficulty in being excused. The president was so sick that his life was despaired of for more than a week Dr. Howard presided in his place com. day.3

The resolute conduct of the Americans, will I hope, prove to France & the world, what we ought to blush & be ashamed ever to 200 have had doubted, that we are resolve’d on a continuance of our independance or death—that rather than be slaves to a foreign nation, we will all die, like Hanibal, by our hands. As for myself, I verily swear—I speak it with reverence, as being in the presence of my God— I solemnly swear, that the “impression of keen whips, I will wear as rubies, & strip myself to death as to a bed that longing I have been sick for,” ere I will writhe under the scourge of any foreign tyrant on earth.4

The excellent patriotick songs, from various parts of the US, serve to enkindle a glorious enthusiasm in every soul, in which there is a single spark of fire.5 Let me compose your songs & ballads (said a celebrated English patriot, I forget his name) & I dont care who makes your laws.6 Washingtons appointment, for I have no doubt but he will except, must electrify every bosom in his countrys cause. Under his banners, who can fight otherwise than valiantly? May the French have cause to say of our soldiers, as Tigranes the Persian exclaim’d of the Athenians, soon after the invasion of Xerxes Heavens! against whom have we come to contend? insensible to their own interest, they fight only for glory.7

I most ardently wished & fondly anticipated 8 to have seen you long before this. I felt afraid that the extreme warm weather would make it sickly in P— that you may soon arrive at Q with health & happiness is the fond wish of your nephew / In great haste,

Wm S Shaw

your little grandsons are well

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “W s shaw August July / 20 1798.”

1.

Shakespeare, Twelfth Night, Act II, scene iv, lines 117–118.

2.

Timothy Dwight, The Nature, and Danger, of Infidel Philosophy, Exhibited in Two Discourses, Addressed to the Candidates for the Baccalaureate, in Yale College, New Haven, 1798, p. 91, Evans, No. 33657.

3.

Shaw’s letter has not been found. Rev. Joseph Willard remained dangerously ill for the rest of the summer. In his place, the Harvard College commencement was led by the senior clergyman of the Harvard Corporation and Willard’s close friend, Rev. Simeon Howard (1733–1804), for whom see vol. 7:466. The governor and lieutenant governor were escorted by cavalry to Cambridge for the ceremonies, which “were marked by that true spirit of federalism.” After dinner, “Adams and Liberty” and “Hail Columbia” were sung with enthusiasm (Boston Gazette, 23 July; Sidney Willard, Memories of Youth and Manhood, 2 vols., Cambridge, 1855, 2:4–5, 67–68; Sibley’s Harvard Graduates , 14:279, 286, 288; New York Commercial Advertiser, 23 July).

4.

Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Act II, scene iv, lines 101–103.

5.

In addition to “Hail Columbia” and “Adams and Liberty,” in the patriotic fervor of the spring and summer of 1798 a large number of songs were written that encouraged Americans to assert their rights against the French. These songs included “Washington and the Constitution,” a “Harvard Patriotic Ode,” “Washington and Independence,” “Portsmouth Federal Song,” and rewrites of “Yankee Doodle” (Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 14 June; Boston Columbian Centinel, 30 June; New York Spectator, 28 201 July; Massachusetts Mercury, 31 July; Newport, R.I., Weekly Companion, 7 July; Alexandria Times, 10 July).

6.

Andrew Fletcher, An Account of a Conversation Concerning a Right Regulation of Governments for the Common Good of Mankind, Edinburgh, 1704, p. 10.

7.

John Gillies, The History of Ancient Greece, Its Colonies, and Conquests, 2 vols., London, 1786, 1:356.

8.

Shaw initially wrote the two italicized phrases in the reverse order but then numbered them “2” and “1” to identify his intended order.