Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
I enclose herewith the second number of my Gazette, which completes
the Journal for the month of March. By the last post I sent to Hamburg a letter for my
mother with the information, that on the 12th: instr: my wife was delivered of a son.1 But she was then extremely ill, & I wrote
under the impression of great alarm on her account. She has since very much recovered,
& as I am assured quite out of danger. I hope this will reach you at the same time
with my letter to my mother, & relieve you from an interval of anxiety &
suspence, which if proportioned to my distress, the three days succeeding the 12th:—must be painful in the extreme.
An armistice of fourteen weeks has been concluded between the 56 English & the Danes. It has settled nothing as
to the main question between the parties, but secures to the english the free passage of
the Sound, which to be sure is nothing at all, & cuts off the co-operation of
Denmark to the military & naval measures of the other northern powers. The english
fleet will proceed, it is said, up the Baltic, & the
Swedish ports being inaccessable, & the Swedish fleet not very likely to run the risk of coming out, will direct their second visit to
the port of Revel, where there are ten Russian ships of the line. They will surely
however not venture this attack, after hearing of this change in Russia, without further
& precise instructions from their Government. The english might perhaps have imposed
more burthensome terms upon the Danes. But it is not the interest, nor the policy of
England to press them too hard. The convention will apparently give the English the
command of the Baltic for this season, & promote the pacific disposition of the
northern powers. Perhaps even of France.2
LbC in Thomas Welsh Jr.’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “John Adams. Esqr:”; APM Reel
134.
Enclosure not found, but see JQA to TBA, 11 April, and notes 2 and 3, above. JQA announced GWA’s birth in his letter to AA of 14 April, above.
After Britain’s 2 April victory in the Battle of Copenhagen, the
British fleet tarried off the coast of the Danish capital until the negotiation of the
9 April armistice, for which see
JQA to TBA, 4 April, and note 8, above. The fleet
then headed north to Reval (now Tallinn, Estonia), but an engagement with the Russian
fleet was averted after Paul I was assassinated and his successor, Alexander I, opened
negotiations with Britain that led to a maritime convention signed on 19 June
(Geoffrey Bennett, The Battle of Trafalgar, Barnsley,
Eng., 2004, p. 70–72).