Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
I send this day a packet, to your father containing the Journals and other publications of the day; with an Intelligencer, containing the account of our festival on Friday last.— That is to say, of the dinner— To morrow evening there is to be a Ball for the same purpose.
One of the toasts drank at the feasts was “An Union of Parties,” which is like drinking the Millennium— I suppose they will
come together— The Vice-President was there— And was treated with much coolness.1
Our bill for the protection of (deserting
British) Seamen, still sleeps— But will pass in some mischievous form or other—
The 333 Vice-President said to me the other day “I paused
longer than usual, before putting the question upon that bill— But if you had not risen
to oppose it, the bill would certainly have pass’d without one observation and without
one dissenting voice”— The truth was that knowing the topic to be delicate and somewhat
invidious, I waited to the last moment to see if no one else would make a stand— But I
was forced to come out, and I wrote you what a hornet’s nest burst upon me for it, at
the first moment—2 However, they will
find it harder of digestion than they thought for— The fraud, (for it deserves no better
name) of calling it a bill for the protection of the Seamen of the United States, came
within a hair’s breadth of being completely successful— Several circumstances have since
occurr’d to expose the real project, and I hope the federalists will in the end unite in
the opposition— Not one soul of them stood by me at the first sally— Mr: Tracy was indeed absent— The opinions however upon which I grounded my opposition are apparently
strengthening— And at the last vote I shall at least not be left alone.
The Louisiana Government Bill creeps with the pace of a snail— We have not yet got through the Sections prohibitive of Slavery— We have nothing material else before us.
I am delighted to the utmost to find your Spirits growing lively since your new residence— I flatter myself they will continue to do so.— Interest yourself in the objects around you— Make yourself a useful citizen to the Town— It will occupy your mind, and will soon give your life the advantages of variety— I hope to be with you some time in March or April, and promise myself great satisfaction from being so near you the Summer through—
I grieve to find my dear Mother has again been visited with illness; and hope she has ere this recovered—
My wife and children are well; and I must go home to dinner with them; it being close upon 4. o’clock.
Judge Cushing arrived here last Friday but I have not yet seen him.
RC (Adams
Papers); internal address: “T. B. Adams Esqr.”;
endorsed: “J. Q Adams Esqr: / 30th: January 1804 / 10th: Feby Recd: / 11th:
Answd:.”
Among the publications JQA sent to JA,
not found, was the Washington, D.C., National
Intelligencer, 30 Jan., which reported that on the 27th members of Congress
escorted Thomas Jefferson from his residence to Stelle’s Hotel on Capitol Hill for a
dinner to celebrate the Louisiana Purchase. Proffered toasts included to “the Union of
the States” and to “our brothers of Louisiana.” Aaron Burr’s attendance was also
noted, and the newspaper praised the assembled officials who “by means unstained with
the blood of a single victim … had acquired almost a new world, and had laid the
foundation for the happiness of millions yet unborn!” JQA described the
gathering in his Diary: “The President and the Heads of Departments were there by
invitation— Scarcely any of the 334 federal members
were there— The dinner was bad, and the toasts too numerous.” JQA and
LCA attended a ball at the Union Tavern in Georgetown, D.C., on 31
Jan., which JQA described as “very much crowded with company; but the
arrangements and decorations were mean beyond any thing of the kind I ever saw”
(D/JQA/27, APM Reel 30; Jefferson, Papers
, 37:50).
JQA to TBA, 22 Jan., and note 2, above.