Papers of John Adams, volume 14

From John Jay

From Wilhem & Jan Willink

From Philippe Jean Joseph Lagau, 3 March 1783 Lagau, Philippe Jean Joseph Adams, John
From Philippe Jean Joseph Lagau
Monsieur a hambourg ce 3 mars 1783

C’est avec le plus sensible plaisir que j’ai l’honneur de vous annoncer que Monsieur Votre fils s’est embarqué à Copenhague pour Kiel d’ou Il se rendra à hambourg ou nous L’attendons incessament.1 Monsieur le Chevalier de Viviers Ministre du Roy en cette ville2 se fait un plaisir de faire sa Connoissance et je ne manquerai pas de lui temoigner tout mon empressement à lui être util, pour Convaincre Votre Excellence du zêle que j’ai à vous Convaincre du profond respect avec lequel j’ai L’honneur d’etre / Monsieur / de Votre Excellence / Le très humble et très obeissant Serviteur

Lagau
Translation
Sir Hamburg, 3 March 1783

It gives me great pleasure to inform you that your son has embarked at Copenhagen for Kiel, whence he will travel to Hamburg, where we await 309him forthwith.1 The Chevalier de Viviers, the king's minister to this town,2 will be happy to make his acquaintance, and I myself shall not fail to express my eagerness to assist him, the better to convince your excellency of the deep respect with which I have the honor to be, sir, your excellency's very humble and very obedient servant

Lagau

RC (Adams Papers).

1.

JQA reached Copenhagen on 15 Feb., intending to sail from there to Kiel. But contrary winds and harbor ice forced him to abandon that plan, with the result that he departed Copenhagen on 5 March, traveled overland to Hamburg, and—although his diary indicates the 10th—arrived there on the evening of the 11th. Lagau's information about JQA's planned departure from Copenhagen was derived from a letter to the French minister at Hamburg written by Matthieu de Basquiat, Baron de La Houze, the French minister at Copenhagen, whom JQA had seen on 19, 23, and 24 Feb. (JQA, Diary , 1:171–174; AFC , 5:97–98, 104; from Pierre Penet, 17 March, below).

2.

Claude Antoine, Chevalier de Viviers, French minister to Hamburg since Oct. 1782, was the Comte de Vergennes’ brother-in-law ( Repertorium , 3:119; Murphy, Vergennes , p. 167). For the minister's letter of 3 March to the Duc de La Vauguyon, which repeated Lagau's report on JQA's movements at somewhat greater length, see Dumas’ letter of 11 March, and note 1, below.