Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

Abigail Adams to Abigail Adams Smith

Mary Smith Cranch to Abigail Adams

Abigail Adams to Catherine Nuth Johnson, 13 March 1800 Adams, Abigail Johnson, Catherine Nuth
Abigail Adams to Catherine Nuth Johnson
Dear Madam Philadelphia March 13 1800

I received Your Letter with those inclosed from Berlin. I thank You for the entertainment which they have afforded me. those for Berlin arrived at a very fortunate time. I gave them with Some, which I had written, to the Prussian Consul who is returning immediatly to Berlin and who promissed to deliver them himself—1

I have delayed sooner replying to your Letter, that I Might have it in my power to request You to consider this House as your Home when you visit this city. I have a Bed at your service. Mrs smith who has been with me untill last week, has now gone to the Jersies, and 169 tho we give a Rent of two thousand seven Hundred Dollors a year for this House, we have but one spair Chamber in it, which we can offer to a Friend. the Rent is a very great imposition, but advantage was taken, of their being no other House in the city to let, So well calculated to accomodate the President, and the owner of the House very obligingly doubled the Rent upon us, when we came into it, refusing at the same time to make those repairs which, he ought to have considerd indispensable—2 necessity knows no Law, and we have been obliged to submit.

The Roads are just at present so very bad that I should rather advise your waiting untill April when they will probably be more setled. I do not see any prospect of Congress rising untill June. Mrs smith experienced so Much inconvenience in going to the Jersies, that if I could have form’d an Idea of the travelling I should not have consented to her leaving me.

I congratulate You upon the safety of mrs Helm, and upon becomeing a Grandmamma.3 I hope she is recovering from a situation which made me shuder when I read it— will not one of the young Ladies accompany you. Philadelphia is very Gay, tho I consider myself as very fortunate, in not being under any necisity of joining in the Parties, except in my own House. I am too old and infirm to go into public, and tho I have a high relish for society; one may be much in company; without what I term society—

Present me kindly to Your Family.

I am with sentiments of Regard / and Esteem Your &c

A Adams4

RC (Adams Papers); notation by CFA: “To Mrs C. Johnson.”

1.

Charles Gottfried Paleske (1758–1816) came to Philadelphia in 1783 and worked there as a merchant, serving as Prussia’s consul general from 1792 to 1802. In addition to letters to LCA from the Johnson family, which have not been found, Paleske carried JA’s letter to JQA of 28 Feb. 1800, above, and AA’s of the same date (Adams Papers), for which see JQA to AA, 12 June, and note 2, below (Jefferson, Papers, Retirement Series , 4:160; JQA to JA, 19 June, below).

2.

The President’s House in Philadelphia was owned by Andrew Kennedy, and after his death in February, by his brothers Anthony and John Kennedy. The Kennedys leased the house to the city of Philadelphia, which set the annual rent. After JA refused the state’s request in 1797 to occupy a newly built presidential mansion on Ninth Street, the city doubled the annual rent of the President’s House to £1,000 Pennsylvania currency, or about $2,666 (vol. 12:7, 8; Edward Lawler Jr., “The President’s House in Philadelphia: The Rediscovery of a Lost Landmark,” PMHB , 126:51–53, 55 [Jan. 2002]).

3.

Johnson Hellen, first child of Ann Johnson and Walter Hellen, was born in Washington, D.C., on 5 Feb. 1800 (George Norbury Mackenzie and Nelson Osgood Rhoades, eds., Colonial Families of the United States of America, 7 vols., N.Y., 1907–1920; repr. Baltimore, 1966, 2:384).

4.

AA wrote to Catherine Nuth Johnson again on 26 March, repeating her invitation to visit Philadelphia (MH-H:Autograph File, A).