Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
r21
st1797.
I acknowledge the receipt of your very obliging favour of th’ 23d of Novbr
1 and should have done myself that pleasure before
but was prevented by a severe indisposition (from which I am now pretty well recover’d)
and the afflicting loss of my Father which has called my Sister from me2
I am extremely anxious to hear from Mr.
Gerry at Paris I find by my letters from him previous to his quitting the Hague that the
other Gentlemen where misinformed with respect to the place he sailed for having heard
that it was Havre instead of Rotterdam which occasioned their proceeding without him I
hope that as soon as any probable cojecture can be formed of the time of his return you
will be so obliging as to inform me of it. with my best respects to the President and
wishes for many returns of the season I remain / Dear Madam with sentiments of the
highest / respect and esteem your obliged friend
RC (Adams Papers).
In her letter to Gerry of 23 Nov., AA relayed news of the safe arrival of Elbridge Gerry at Rotterdam en route to Paris (private owner, 1971).
In addition to giving birth to a son in October, Ann Gerry was
suffering from an eye aliment. Elbridge Gerry consulted several oculists in Europe and
transmitted their recommendations in several of his letters. Ann Gerry had also
learned about the death of her father James Thompson, for whom see vol. 7:142 (Gerry, Letterbook
, p. 24, 27,
31).
Ann Gerry wrote again on 15 Jan. 1798 informing AA that she had received a letter from her husband with news of his arrival at Paris and that the envoys had presented their letters of credence and received cards of hospitality but were waiting for further response from France (Adams Papers).
I have not been So shock’d for a long time as by the account of
mr & mrs Halls death. Cousen Louisia mention’d it in her Letter to her sister
which accompany’d yours to mrs Black.1
I sat down & wrote a Letter to her my Self to prepare her for what she was to find
in yours & sent our Boy with it. the weather was So cold & I almost Sick with
a cold that I could not go to carry the melancholy tydings in person both mr & mrs
Black are greatly affected they had been a long time uneasy at not hearing from them.
mr Black concluded mr Hall had when he left the city met with a Farm which he had
purchas’d. but why he did not hear from him was strange. they are greatly oblig’d to
you for the trouble you have taken in informing yourself of So many circumstances
relative to them I have just left them. their anxiety now seems Wholy about the child.
it would be difficult bringing So young a baby so far in the winter. they wish to know
if the nurse is a married or a Single woman if the later if She would be willing to
come with the child. but above all if you can find out whether tis taken good care of
& is with a person who will 333 not be likely to
give it any bad dissorder they Shall feel themselves under the greatest obligation
they hope that these Solemn Scenes their Brother has had to go thru will have a good
affect upon him mr Black will go to Philadelphia in the spring & bring the child
here—if it lives mr Black wishes to know a thousand things about them which she says
she never shall know mr willm. Black has not a happy
talent of communicating his Ideas mrs B Says if she could get the child here she would
bring it up by hand She should not value any trouble She should be at if She could but
know it was well treated that its mother was always the most attentive nurse to her
& that she can now only reward her by being a mother to orphan Babe She would be
greatly oblig’d to cousin Louisia if She would call & see the child if it would
not be improper for her so to do. Some time, When the nurse did not expect it Or get
mrs Brisler or some of your Girls to go She thinks you could form a better judgment
than only to see them at your house. She would not ask Such a favor but in behalf of
helpless innocence. She knows the profligacy of the city & is always affraid of a
mercinary nurse. If you Should find that all is not right she begs that you would
perswaid mr Black to let another be procur’d She would wish it might be one who would
be willing to come here with it. She should feel miserable if you was not in the city
She told me—
There is no one without trouble our neighbour mr Prat has lost a
Son cotton Prat went to sea you know with Capn. Brown
returning home in a very windy night he was upon the ropes doing Something & fell
& was drown’d.2
Pheby will Soon be deliver’d from her trouble I believe Abdy is just gone. he is hardly alive now. they thought him dying last night mr Porter carried her some wood & I sent her Such things as I thought She wanted. I certainly Shall not let her Suffer if She will let me know her wants. She has had watchers for these three weeks. the Town are never enough you know in providing for Such things. I sent her cheese Sugar rice raisins meat &c. I beleive She needs bread corn as much as any thing— the weather continues extreamly cold we have not Snow enough for Slieghing— we & all our Friends are well mrs Black will write to you Soon herself She does not use her pen So often as we & must take more time She has deputized me for the present
I hope you are well & will let me hear from you often I feel disappointed when the mail comes & nothing for me—
yours affectionately
mr Whitman Supplys the pulpit till march. preach’d two excellent Sermons to day
Love to the President & cousin L
RC (Adams
Papers); addressed: “Mrs / Abigail Adams /
Phladelphia”; endorsed: “mrs / Cranch / Decbr 24 /
1797.”
For AA’s letter to Esther Duncan Black of 7 Dec., see her letter to Cranch, 12 Dec., and note 1, above.
Probably Cotton Pratt (b. ca. 1772), the eldest son of Mary Green
and Thomas Pratt, for whom see vol. 10:279 (Sprague, Braintree Families; History of
Weymouth, 3:517).