Papers of John Adams, volume 19

TRANSLATION

To Wilhem & Jan Willink and Nicolaas & Jacob van Staphorst

246 To John Adams from Thomas Jefferson, 31 December 1787 Jefferson, Thomas Adams, John
From Thomas Jefferson
Dear Sir Paris Dec. 31. 1787.

Mr. Parker furnishes me an opportunity of acknoleging the receipt of your favors of Nov. 10. Dec. 6. 10. 18. & 25. which I avoid doing thro post. the orders on the subject of our captives at Algiers have come to me by the last packet.1 they are to be kept secret even from the captives themselves, lest a knolege of the interference of government should excite too extravagant demands. the settlement of the prices, in the first instance, is important as a precedent.— Willincks & Van Staphorsts answered that they had money enough to pay the February interest, and our draughts for salary for some time, but that the paiment of Fiseaux’ capital would oblige them to advance of their own money: they observed too that the paiment of such a sum without the orders of the treasury would lay them under an unnecessary responsibility. I therefore concluded the business by desiring them to pay the year’s interest becoming due tomorrow, and praying mr̃ Fiseaux to quiet the lenders with that till I could procure the orders of the Treasury to whom I wrote immediately an account of the whole transaction. I was the better satisfied with this on receiving your letter of the 25th. by which I find it your opinion that our credit may not suffer so materially. the declining the paiment came from the Willincks, the Van Staphorsts having offered to advance their moiety. I inclose you a letter I have received from the Comptroller general and an arret on the subject of our commerce. they are the proof sheets, as, at the moment of writing my letter, I have not yet received the fair ones. but the French column is correct enough to be understood.2 I would wish them not to be public till they are made so on the other side of the water.— I think the alliance of this court with the two imperial ones is going on well. you will have heard of the Emperor’s having attempted to surprise Belgrade & failed in the attempt. this necessarily engages him in the war, & so tends to continue it. I think it settled that this country abandons the Turks.3

Mr. Parker takes charge of the 10. aunes of double Florence for mr̃s. Adams. the silk stockings are not yet ready. I had ordered them to be made by the hermits of Mont Calvaire who are famous for the excellence & honesty of their work, & prices.4 they will come by the first good opportunity. Be so good as to present my respects to her, 247 and to be assured of the sincere attachment & respect of Dear Sir / Your most obedient / & most humble servant

Th: Jefferson

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “H.E. mr̃ Adams.”; notation by CFA: “Mr Jefferson / Decr 31. 1787 / not published.” CFA presumably meant that the letter was not published in Jefferson, Correspondence, ed. Randolph.

1.

Jefferson had received John Jay’s 24 Oct. letter enclosing Congress’ 18 July resolution regarding the Algerian captives’ redemption, a copy of which JA also enclosed in his 10 Dec. letter to Jefferson, above (Jefferson, Papers , 12:266).

2.

Not found. Jefferson enclosed a copy of a 29 Dec. letter from French finance minister Charles Guillaume Lambert and an arrêt of the same day encouraging Franco-American trade (same, 12:466–471, 475).

3.

An alliance between Russia and Austria obligated the latter to support Russia if attacked by the Ottoman Empire. The Austrians mounted a surprise attack on Belgrade on 2–3 Dec., which failed due to fog (Black, British Foreign Policy , p. 149).

4.

AA had asked Jefferson to procure “half a dozen pr. of mens silk stockings.” In a 2 Feb. 1788 letter to AA, Jefferson wrote that the Mont Calvaire hermits, whom he often visited, had completed the order. Acknowledging receipt on 21 Feb., AA told Jefferson that the stockings had arrived and “were perfectly to my mind” (Jefferson, Papers , 12:417; AFC , 8:223, 224, 236).