Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

Thomas Boylston Adams to Abigail Adams, 1 June 1800 Adams, Thomas Boylston Adams, Abigail
Thomas Boylston Adams to Abigail Adams
My dear Mother Philadelphia 1st: June 1800

I returned to the City the night before last on the 18th: day after my departure. My Father sat off on Tuesday and I found the house turned inside out. My own things were carefully packed up by Mr: Briesler and yesterday I had them removed to my lodgings in the same family that I was with last year.1

Mr: Briesler & family will be ready to sett out on Tuesday and will leave the house in good condition. I received from him the two demijohns of Wine, which were drawn off by your direction, for which I kindly thank you.

My journey was safe & agreeable and has conduced much to my health, though even my complection is several shades darker for it. The Country thro’ which I travelled was rude enough; but growing daily in population & improvement. The land is excellent in many places—fertile & where the settlements are considerable, very well cultivated— I passed through the Shire or County towns of nine different Counties on the route & met with hospitable treatment every where, though the Company I kept was pretty generally with federal people— But the sovereign people of several Counties through which I passed are deeply and generally Antifederal in their politics. At Huntingdon 200 miles from the City, we met two of our Supreme Court Judges and several of the Country Lawyers— Being detained on the road a day by the rain, prevented our arriving so seasonably as we could have wished.

On our return we passed through Northumberland and took a survey of Dr: Priestleys house & garden, externally. The house 270 consists of a two story frame building—painted white, with small wings on each side, pleasantly situated, and commanding a good prospect of the River Susquehannah— It is very much in the style, altogether, of a plain, neat & well finished New England Country house—2 I neither saw the owner, nor enquired if he were at home, but on my arrival at Sunbury was informed by my friend Mr: Charles Hall that the philosopher was on the spot—

I hope my jaunt has furnished me with a stock of health sufficient to last me the Summer through— In the Fall I shall make another excursion.

I have not heard when my father intends to return from Washington, but I presume in the course of a month, if not sooner—

Present me kindly & affectionately to all our friends at the Eastward and believe me with all love & duty / Your Son

T B Adams

PS. On my return I received a letter from Mr: Pitcairn from Hamburg of the 7th: of April, but he says nothing of my brother.3

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs: A Adams.”

1.

TBA again lodged in the boardinghouse of Martha Roberts, for whom see vol. 13:470, 471.

2.

After moving from Philadelphia to Northumberland, Penn., in 1794, Joseph Priestley purchased five lots overlooking the Susquehanna River and began the construction of a large house laid out on a plan developed by his wife, Mary Wilkinson Priestley. The Federal-style house, now a museum, was completed in 1798 and featured a laboratory and library (Robert E. Schofield, The Enlightened Joseph Priestley: A Study of His Life and Work from 1773 to 1804, University Park, Penn., 2004, p. 346–347).

3.

Not found.