Papers of John Adams, volume 19

451 From John Adams to Roger Sherman, 14 May 1789 Adams, John Sherman, Roger
To Roger Sherman
My dear Friend New York May 14. 1789

Inclosed is a Letter of Thanks to our fellow Citizens of New Haven and to Mr Edwards, for the most endearing Compliment I ever received.1 I suppose myself chiefly indebted to your Friendship for the favourable Representation of my Character among your Neighbours which has produced this obliging Result. I hope it will not be long before We shall have an opportunity to renew our former Acquaintance and Intimacy: in the meantime let me pray your acceptance of my Sincere Thanks for the Diploma under your Mayoralty and Signature; and that you will take the trouble of transmitting the enclosed Letter, which I leave open for your perusal, to Mr Edwards.

With the most cordial Affection / and the highest Esteem, I have / the Honour to be, dear sir, your / most obedient and most humble / servant

John Adams.

RC (MHi:Foster Family Autograph Coll.); addressed: “The Honourable / Roger Sherman Esqr / No. 59. Wall Street. / New York”; internal address: “The Honourable Roger Sherman Esqr / Mayor of New Haven &ca.”; endorsed: “Honble / John Adams’s Letter.”

1.

The enclosure has not been found, but see JA’s 2 May letter to Pierpont Edwards, above.

From John Adams to James Searle, 15 May 1789 Adams, John Searle, James
To James Searle
Dear Sir New York, May 15. 1789

I received your friendly Letter last Evening,1 and thank you for your kind Remembrance, of your Old Friend.

To hear of your Success and Prosperity in Business; the Independence of your Circumstances, and the Contentment of your heart,2 gives me a Pleasure, the more exquisite, as it is so rare.— It is almost the Single Instance, that I have received Since my Return to America. My Correspondence has Served to little other purpose than to pour out before me the Griefs Complaints and Distresses of my Friends and the Friends of their Country, whose Ruin has been accomplished in Part by the turn of Affairs at the Revolution and in part by the bad Policy of our Country, Since the Peace.

The friendly disposition, which dictated your desire to come to New York, is very obliging: but I beg you would not come, till I have an house to receive you, and a dinner and a little Wine to share with you;3 for at present I have neither at my Command: so great a Thing 452 is it to be one, who is, Sir, your most obedient and / most humble servant: not without hopes / however of better times.

John Adams

RC (NHi:Gilder Lehrman Coll., on deposit); internal address: “The Hon. James Searle Esqr.” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 115.

1.

Searle’s letter was of 11 May, above.

2.

In the LbC, this word was rendered as “mind.”

3.

By mid-May JA had rented Richmond Hill, a prominent house on the city’s west side facing the Hudson River (now the southern part of Greenwich Village), so that AA and their family could join him. JA described it in a 13 May letter to AA as “about a mile out of the City, in a fine situation, a good Stable, Coach House, Garden, about 30 Acres of Land.” At JA’s request, AA sent along trunks filled with carpets, bedding, and linen, which arrived on 30 May but without any keys to unlock them. At a cost of £33, WSS arranged for Capt. Thomas Barnard, New York Packet, to carry the rest of the Adamses’ furniture on his sloop, and on 20 June he delivered the household goods to within 100 yards of JA’s new home. On 12 July AA sent her sister Mary Smith Cranch a description of Richmond Hill: “the House is convenient for one family, but much too small for more, you enter under a Piazza into a Hall & turning to the right Hand assend a stair case which lands you in an other of equal dimensions of which I make a drawing Room. it has a Glass door which opens into a gallery the whole Front of the house which is exceeding pleasant. the Chambers are on each side. the House is not in good repair, wants much done to it, and if we continue here I hope it will be done” ( AFC , 8:xv–xvi, 351, 354, 356–358, 364, 369, 375, 391).