Papers of John Adams, volume 14

To Jean de Neufville & Fils, 19 January 1783 Adams, John Neufville, Jean de & Fils (business)
To Jean de Neufville & Fils
Gentlemen Paris Jany. 19. 1783

You favour of the 30 of December, I have recd, as well as the Letter mentioned in it.—1

I am obliged to you Gentlemen, for paying the Interest you mention, which if you please Messrs Willinks Van staphorsts and De la Lande and Fynje will repay you, on Account of the United States.

In order to Save you the Trouble for the future would it not be best to desire the Holders of those Seven obligations, to deliver them to Messrs Willinks &c and take others in stead of them from them.? or at least you may refer them in future to those Houses to receive the Interest.2

I have the Honour to be, very respectfully, Gentlemen your most / obedient &c

199

LbC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Messrs John De Neufville & son / Amsterdam.”; APM Reel 108.

1.

The Neufville firm's letter of 30 Dec. (Adams Papers) referred to a letter of 29 Nov. sent to JA under cover of a letter to Benjamin Franklin. Neither the letter intended for JA nor that to Franklin has been identified.

2.

Neufville & Fils reported in its 30 Dec. letter that it had paid a half year's interest on seven outstanding obligations from its failed loan of March 1781. For the result of JA's recommendation, see the letters exchanged by JA with the loan consortium on 17 and 23 Feb., and 3 March, all below.

From Robert Morris, 19 January 1783 Morris, Robert Adams, John
From Robert Morris
Sir Office of Finance 19th. Jany 1783—

Altho’ I have not yet been honored with any Letters from your Excellency I cannot omit the Occasion of Writing which offers itself by Mr. Jefferson.1 Having already congratulated you on the Acknowlegement of our Independence by the States General, and on the rapid Successes of your Labors equally splendid and useful. I hope when this Letter shall have reached your Hands I may have the additional Cause of Congratulation that the Loan you have opened in Holland shall have been compleated, this is a Circumstance of great Importance to our Country and most particularly so to the Department which I have the Honor to fill— Whatever may be the Success of it whether general or partial I pray your Excellency to favor me by every Conveyance with every minute Detail which can tend to form my Judgment or enlighten my Mind. For the more perfect Security of our Correspondence, I do myself the Honor to enclose the Counterpart of a Cypher to the Use of which you will soon become familiarized and I hope you will be convinced that any Confidence with which you may honor me shall be safely reposed and usefully employed for the public Benefit—

I have the Honor to be / with perfect Respect / Sir / your Excellency's / most Obedient / & / humble Servant

Robt Morris

Mr. Jefferson will charge himself with the Delivery of the Cypher mentd—.2

RC and enclosures (Adams Papers); internal address: “His Excellency / John Adams Esqr. / Minister Plenipotentiary / of the United States / of America”; endorsed: “Mr Morris / 19. Jan. 1783 / recd & / ansd 21 May 1783.” Dupl (Adams Papers).

1.

In anticipation of his departure for Europe, Morris delivered this and other letters to Thomas Jefferson on 24 January. On 7 April, following his decision not to go, Jefferson returned the letters to Morris, who in turn gave them to John Vaughan, brother of Benjamin. John Vaughan presumably forwarded this letter from London when he 200arrived there in early May (Morris, Papers , 7:360, 673, 697–698).

2.

The cipher that Morris intended for JA has not been found, and JA does not mention it in his reply of 21 May, below. Jefferson likely returned it with the letter on 7 April, and Morris may have decided not to entrust it to John Vaughan.

Mentioned neither by Morris in this letter nor by JA in his reply are copies of two congressional resolutions that are with this letter in the Adams Papers and may have been enclosed with it. The first, adopted on 27 Dec. 1782, approved JA's purchase of the legation at The Hague. The second, voted on 31 Dec., instructed the joint peace commissioners “to obtain for the citizens and inhabitants of the United States a direct commerce to all parts of the British dominions and possessions” in any commercial agreement with Great Britain ( JCC , 23:832, 838).