Adams Family Correspondence, volume 10

John Quincy Adams to John Adams, 2 March 1794 Adams, John Quincy Adams, John
John Quincy Adams to John Adams
Dear Sir. Boston March 2. 1794.

You will doubtless hear before this reaches you, the event of a Town-meeting which was called here lately for the purpose of helping forward Mr: Madison’s resolutions, and of intimidating our respresentatives who opposed them. After great [exertion] had been made to raise a Committee ready for every thing, [and the?] Committee had reported a number of resolves to answer [their purpo]ses, a very decided majority of a crowded town-meeting, voted to adjourn without day, and did not even hear a discussion of the resolves. The lurking serpent was perceived and avoided. The commercial part of the Town were almost unanimous, and the aversion to any measures which might be productive of War, appeared very decidedly to be the prevailing sentiment with the citizens of every description. The Jacobins were completely discomfited, and will have the mortification to find their intended poison, operate as an invigorating cordial.

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The arrival of the new Minister from France, and recall of Genet is another circumstance of mortification to the same party. They are not yet sure that Mr: Fauchet, will imitate his predecessor by connecting himself and his Country with a desperate Faction intent upon the ruin of our own Government, and while that remains an uncertainty they feel extremely fearful of losing their main support. I hope however that the new plenipoteniary, will pursue a different system, and that we shall still be permitted to remain at Peace.

Our Supreme Court has been sitting about a fortnight. Without being overburthened with business, I have on my hand[s sufficie]nt to employ almost all my time, and to keep upon my mind, a continual anxiety, which unfits me for any thing else. This will be my excuse, for having so long neglected to write you.

Since the contest between Americanus and Barneveld, the reputed author of the former, has treated me with an unusual degree of civility. He has even in one or two causes of considerable consequence, advised his client’s to engage me.— I know the Man, and shall have as little dependence upon his kindness, as I have fear of his resentment. I know he will never injure me, while I keep myself out of the reach of his malice.

My mother I presume gives you constant information respecting the state of my Grandmother’s health. She has had a long illness, and still continues in a dangerous situation. At her age every disorder is alarming; we have hopes however that she will yet recover.— The rest of our friends, here, and at Quincy are well.

The abandonment of Toulon by the fleet of England and Spain, and recapture of the place by the French republicans is our most recent European intelligence, and that is not yet fully authenticated. We have no late arrivals from Europe here, though I believe some are soon expected.

I remain Dear Sir, your affectionate Son

J. Q. Adams.

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “The Vice-President of the United States / Philadelphia.”; endorsed: “J.Q. Adams / March 2. And 13 / 1794.” Some loss of text where the seal was removed.

Charles Adams to John Adams, 5 March 1794 Adams, Charles Adams, John
Charles Adams to John Adams
My dear Father New York March 5 1794

I have this moment received your letters to the third instant.1 In answer to the queries respecting The meeting of the Citizens on 99 thursday last I can say that for about a week before the day proposed for the assemblage a Card was inserted in our newspapers inviting the inhabitants to convene on that day to consider the impediments which had been thrown in the way of our Commerce by Great Britain and to pass some resolves declarative of their sentiments upon the subject and to send instructions to our Representatives in Congress relative to the propositions which have agitated the lower house You are acquainted with the violence of the party who style themselves democrats seventy five men Friends to the French Revolution &ca I wrote you last summer an account of some of their proceedings2 Taking advantage of the moment, plausibly pretending that the virtuous inhabitants of the town of Boston to whose opinion much respect is paid by all clases of people in this City had found it necessary to direct their Representatives contrary to the votes they had given This party upon the day appointed appeared A warning had the evening before been inserted in our paper cautioning any who were opposed to the French revolution any who were not strict Democrats to appear of attempt to use any influence at the meeting. At the first gathering of Citizens on thursday the Cloven foot was discovered and The Democratic Society stood exposed to view The weather cock politics of the Livingstons is not unknown to you They were active in the scene The first Orator was a Mr White Matlack an excommunicated Quaker who for lesser crimes had long since been read out of their Society and who since by fraudulent bankruptcies defrauding widows and filching the poor pittance of the Orphan had sufficiently brazened his face for advocating a total neglect of payment of our debts to England the favorite subject upon which he discanted.3 The Livingstons came next The detestation of Hamilton and all his proceedings begged in head and ears Indian Wars Algerine depredations British impositions Generosity of France all these were consequences of The Chancellors dissappointment in not obtaining the place of Secretary of the Treasury—4 About a thousand Satellites were collected The Committee all previously arranged and everything was swallowed One person who attempted to speak against the tide was hissed threatened to the thrown over the ballustrade and forced to silence. Many of those who were upon the Committee appointed were not at the meeting In answer to your questions respecting Your old friends I will tell you my sincere opinion Gates is superannuated Smith turned fool and Osgood I fear a [knave?] The two former are tools of the Livingstons Col Smith was taken by his foible vanity and put 100 upon a Committee to serve their purposes I speak and write my sentiments very freely and if there is any fault in it I must charge those who made me for I am very sure it was born with me. We are tomorrow to consider the resolutions which have been entered into They are indeed very harmless a mere declaration of a few maxims of the laws of Nature and Nations Viz Resolved that a Nation has a right to remain neuter when not inconsistent with existing treaties Resolved that if Nations at war endeavour to prevent that neutrality they act unjustly.

Resolved that when nations at war take the ships or goods of the Citizens of Neutral nations unless contraband they do an injury.

Resolved that Great Britain has not fulfilled her treaties by not giving up the Western posts &ca Resolved that if Our Rulers should think it necessary to go to war we will submit to the expence. My opinion is if Mr Watts did not know all these things before his Constituents as they call themselves had laid them down he is very unfit for the office he holds They do not however pretend to instruct their Representative which is a modesty I hardly expected.5 The Chamber of Commerce has publicly called upon all those who have sustained injuries to come forward to them and make complaint They met last evening upon the business Every body would have expected that they would have been fully engaged Not a single complaint except one Captn of a Vessel for some slight offence committed by the Ambuscade.6 I am not surprized at this I have learned not to be surprised at any thing. By last evenings paper I find that the Committee in Boston had reported and that after some debate The meeting had been adjourned sine die There is certainly a great degree of good sense in that people, They meet together in large bodies discuss subjects of great magnitude with calmness take questions deliberately and separate without broken heads. In this City parties have different meetings where those of different sentiments are in a measure excluded So that meeting is opposed to meeting Resolutions set up against Resolutions and each party strenuous to puff the numerous concourse and Respectable assemblage which they have been able to call together in all the newspapers in town. Mr Burr’s practice must be lucrative Chancery business and that of the Court for the Correction of Errors is what he principally engages in. He has however a very expensive family and is generally supposed to be involved. I managed as well in my last causes as possible that is to say by the help of good Counsel I gained them no more is permitted an Attorneys business consists in drawing pleadings well I am 101 pretty accurate at that. I wrote a long letter to you respecting Mr G’s reception Proclamations and neutrality you have not acknowledged the receipt.7 Adieu My dear father beleive me your / Affectionate son

Charles Adams

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “C. [Adams?].” Some loss of text due to a cut manuscript.

1.

Besides his letter of 2 March, above, JA also wrote to CA on the 1st, primarily quoting excerpts from Constantin François Volney, Les Ruines; ou, Méditation sur les revolutions des empires, Paris, 1792 (MHi:Seymour Coll.). For more on JA’s didactic letters to CA, see John Adams on Natural Equality and the Law of Nations, 6 Jan. - 8 May 1794, above.

2.

See CA to JA, 25 Aug. 1793, vol. 9:444–446.

3.

White Matlack (b. 1745) was a New York brewer and iron manufacturer. He was read out of the Society of Friends in 1781 in Pennsylvania for taking an active role in the Revolutionary War and joined the Free Quakers (Young, Democratic Republicans, p. 356; Henry D. Biddle, “Owen Biddle,” PMHB, 16: 315 [1892]).

4.

Chancellor Robert R. Livingston had been a staunch supporter of the Constitution during New York State’s ratifying convention and was disappointed not to receive a federal appointment in the first Washington administration. Livingston was particularly strongly opposed to Alexander Hamilton’s financial policies and became an active Republican ( DAB ).

5.

On 27 Feb. 1794 a town meeting took place at the New York City Hall with over 1,500 citizens in attendance to discuss American foreign trade, especially British attacks on it. The meeting appointed a committee—including Horatio Gates, WSS, and Samuel Osgood—to draw up resolutions to be adopted and sent on to New York’s congressional representatives. The meeting reconvened on 6 March, this time with 2,000 people present. Those attending unanimously approved the recommended resolutions largely as CA outlined them here and forwarded them on to Rep. John Watts of New York City (New York Diary, 27 Feb., 6 March).

6.

A committee of the New York City Chamber of Commerce met on 4 March at the Tontine Coffeehouse to hear “authenticated evidence” of any “unjustifiable vexation and spoilation committed on our merchant vessels by the powers at war.” The only person to claim vexation was a Captain Harvey of the ship Alice, who had complained some months earlier of poor treatment by a French ship. The committee reported the case to the executive department of the United States (New York Daily Gazette, 4 March; New York Daily Advertiser, 5 March; New York Columbian Gazetteer, 28 Oct. 1793).

7.

Probably CA to JA, 17 Feb., for which see John Adams on Natural Equality and the Law of Nations, 6 Jan. - 8 May, above.