Papers of John Adams, volume 18

220 From John Adams to James Bowdoin, 24 March 1786 Adams, John Bowdoin, James
To James Bowdoin
Sir Grosvenor Square March 24. 1786

I do myself the honour of inclosing a few Extracts of Letters written in 1783 to Mr Livingstone,1 which it is to be presumed were laid before Congress: but I have not heard that the Plan Suggested in them of purchasing raw Sugars in France, Spain and Portugal, to be refined in Boston, New York and Philadelphia for Exportation to Russia, Germany & Italy, has been ever attempted, untill this Winter by Mr Thomas Boylston.2 Upon the Arrival of a Cargo of Oil in the Thames he resolved instead of paying the Alien Duty, to embark on board of the Vessell and carry it abroad. He arrived in Ostend, unloaded the ship, Seperated the Sperma Cæti from the Oil, and went with both to Havre de Grace and thence to Rouen. He had Letters from me to Rouen & to Paris, particularly to Mr Jefferson, the Marquis de la Fayette & Messrs Le Couteulx. with Some difficulty they got the Duties somewhat reduced, and with his Sagacity, Activity and Perseverance, he got the better of those Devices which are too frequent in Trade in that Country, sold his Oil for a good Price, bought a Quantity of raw sugars which cost him Six or seven hundred Guineas more than the Proceeds of his Oil, and sent the Head matter and sugars, to Boston. No other Man at his Age, would have undertaken So much fatigue Risque & Vexation: and I much question whether Delays and Charges and Leakage considered, his Profits have been very great. but A Beginning is made and an Example sett. If We can make Remittances to Russia in this manner, it will be a Resource.3 It well deserves the Consideration of the state of Massachusetts, whether any Encouragement can be given by Bounties or Drawbacks of Duties upon Sugars thus imported from Europe. a Markett in this Way may Surely be found for all your Oil. Mr Boylston has certainly rendered a considerable service to his native Country, by applying his Capital, his Talents and Industry in this manner.

With great Respect I have the Honour to be / Sir, your Excellencys most obedient & most / humble servant

John Adams.4

RC (MHi:Winthrop Papers); internal address: “His Excellency James Bowdoin / Governor of Massachusetts.”; endorsed: “John Adam’s esqr. / his Letter relative to / Commerce &c / March 24. 1786.” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 112.

1.

JA’s enclosed extracts have not been found. But for JA’s views on the potential for American profit in the sugar trade, articulated in a set of 1783 letters written to Robert R. 221 Livingston which were all laid before Congress, see his 19 March 1786 letter to Elbridge Gerry, and note 4, above.

2.

With substantial aid from Thomas Jefferson and the Marquis de Lafayette, Thomas Boylston had succeeded in the first step of his original proposal, to sell American whale oil to France. Boylston reinvested the profits in West Indian sugar and molasses, to be sold on the American market, and simultaneously sought to acquire an arrangement similar to Robert Morris’ tobacco monopoly with the French Farmers General (Jefferson, Papers , 9:29–31).

3.

After the 1783 failure of Francis Dana’s mission to St. Petersburg to obtain Russian recognition of the United States and a Russo-American commercial treaty (vol. 15:179–182), few American merchants—only an estimated nineteen vessels before 1790—attempted the market. By JA’s presidency, however, roughly forty American vessels arrived in St. Petersburg each year to trade raw sugar from Martinique and southern foodstuffs for Russian hemp, canvas, and iron (Nikolai N. Bolkhovitinov, The Beginnings of Russian American Relations, 1775–1815, transl. Elena Levin, Cambridge, 1975, p. 95–98).

4.

On 27 March 1786, JA resumed his Diary after a ten-month absence, but he made only scattered entries in it until the Adamses departed for America in May 1788 (JA, D&A , 3:181–217).

To John Adams from Thomas Barclay, 27 March 1786 Barclay, Thomas Adams, John
From Thomas Barclay
Dear Sir Madrid 27th. March 1786

I arrived here the 10th. and expect to be able to proceed to Cadiz in a few days, the Copys of three short Letters which I wrote to Mr. Jefferson, will place before you our Progress untill this day,1 when I had the pleasure of receiving through the hands of Mr. Carmichael The Kings Letter to the Emperor; informing him that it would be better the Peace should be made in Morocco than in Spain, and recommending the Object of the Mission to His Majesty’s Attention. The Count De Florida Blanca has also sent me Letters to General O-Riely at Cadiz, to the Consul General of Spain at Morocco, & to one of the Spanish Fathers placed at Mequinez for the Redemption of Captives; In short I have the greatest Reason to be pleased with the Part this Court has taken in the Affair which I think reflects much honor on Mr. Carmichaels Influence and Attention. To shew you at once the State in which I found the Business with Morocco situated on my arrival here, I send you Copy of a Letter written by the Count De Florida Blanca to Mr. Carmichael offering the intervention of His Catholic Majesty on the Idea of the Business being done here, with Mr. Carmichaels Reply. And I have now to add that I shall set forward with the most flattering prospects of success, hoping soon to be able to give you a satisfactory Account of the Business being finished; It will not perhaps be in my Power to write you very often, There are at this Place and at Vitoria, persons appointed to translate or decypher every suspicious paper & from them little can escape. Nothing new of consequence will 222 probably arrise untill I reach Morocco. If I [am] able to close the treaty to my satisfaction, I shall send it to you by Land and remain in Africa or Spain untill you return it with the Ratification, and I embrace this Opportunity of offering my services, if you want them, at Tunis & Tripoli, where I am certain this Court will on application give its weight to the Person employed at those places— If you should think my going farther than Morocco necessary, let me know as soon as possible your Intentions, that I may arrange Matters accordingly, and avail myself of the Disposition which this Court shews to serve us; Please to put your Letters under Cover to Mr. Carmichael unsealed that he may be at once Master of the Subject; situated as we are, we cannot leave this without being presented, which will be done I expect in a few days by the French Ambassador, when we will continue our Journey; but the Roads to Cadiz are in such shocking order that the Gentleman by whom I now write has been twenty four days coming from thence.

Mr. Lamb purchased a Vessel of about 50 Tons at Barcelona, and sailed for Algiers the Eleventh with a Wind capable of placing him in Port the next day; He went under Spanish Colors which I hope may protect him, tho’ there is no Peace hitherto signed between the two Countries.

A Person is expected every hour from Algiers who will be able to give a particular Account of Mr. Lamb,2 if I am so lucky as to see him, I will transmit you what I can learn and Mr. Carmichael will give you all the information he can collect—

I am with great respect / Dear Sir / Your Most obed serv.

Thos Barclay

RC and enclosures (Adams Papers); internal address: “His Excellency / Jno. Adams Esqr. / London”; endorsed: “recd 24. Nov. 1786 / by Post.” Some loss of text due to wear at the fold.

1.

Barclay enclosed copies of his letters of 13, 20, and 23 March, all written to Thomas Jefferson from Madrid. In them he reported that his meeting with the Conde de Floridablanca, delayed by the death of the conde’s father, finally took place on 22 March and resulted in the Spanish letters of introduction to the emperor of Morocco that Barclay refers to here (Jefferson, Papers , 9:327, 348–349, 352–353).

2.

Barclay did not hear of John Lamb or his secretary, Paul R. Randall, until 5 April when William Carmichael received letters from the two men, each probably dated 26 March, reporting their arrival at Algiers on the 25th (Jefferson, Papers , 9:376).