Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
d1797
I received by this Days post your Letters of the 9th 11th and 13th, that of the 13th I hoped would
have containd a post Note that my word which I had given for the payment of Haydens
Note, and to the collecters of Taxes might not be forfeited. yesterday the collector
calld upon me for the 2d Time. I told him I could not pay
him, but that I would in the course of the Month, relying upon the post of this day. he
observed if I could not pay, who could? I told him I had not the money. I could have
added that I had but one solitary 5 Dollors bill at my command. I get Letters only once
a week from you. the various dates then come together perhaps you do not send them to
the office as you write them. concequently I cannot receive any thing further untill the
30th which will be next thursday. that my word may be
stricktly kept, I must have recourse to our old Friend the Gen’ll. for the sum which I
have to pay, is the Note to Hayden which is 100.6 dollors or near it, and 200 hundred
taxes, 178 dollors 20 cents; for the tax Bill presented me, 25 as half taxes to the
other place & 8 as half of Burrel.1 I
have a hired Man whose time will expire on the 30th. I have
to pay for an ox bought for French 35 dollors. I have to hire day Labour as an assistant
to Bracket, in plowing and tending manure Billings is wholy occupied with the Wall, and
there he had better be kept. there is a peice against Deacon Bass to be made next, then
against Jonathan Bass and against Bracket, replaceing old walls &c. as usual a
multiplicity of Buisness comes on and many hands are wanted at once, that time which
waits for none may not be lost. the seed is arrived. I will make inquiry about the 46 oats. I have endeavourd to be as frugal as I could
of the money remitted, and in one instance only, have afforded myself an indulgence at
the expence of 30 dollors which was for a pr Runners, that I might not be wholy indebted
to my Neighbours for conveyance even to meeting. 30 I paid to mr Bass for keeping the
cattle at the Island. 30 I paid to vesey for 3 months labour, & 25 to Billings. some
of the remaining Sum was necessaryly expended for shoes cloathing for my Boys and girls,
and a little very little for myself. Family expences in the course of 3 months have
brought me some in Debt every article having risen instead of falling.
I can give you no satisfaction with respect to mears. he had my
proposals in writing, he considerd them for a month, and then came and told me, that my
offers were generous were satisfactory, but he should have a responsibility upon him
that he feard to engage in, that he should lose his custom which must finally be his
living, that now when his day labour was performd, he had no care no anxiety, but should
he take Such a charge upon him, he should not enjoy an hours comfort. he should be
always in fear of not doing right. he ownd he could not clear the sum I offerd begd me to excuse him, tho it paind him to refuse. he had not an
alteration that he could have wisht me to have made. he promised to keep the whole
secreet, but where I am now to look or what next to do I can not tell. I know not of any
other person who could be equally confided in. I must finish off the out house and Marry
up Polly, & let her and Jonathan go in this Winter I believe, & take charge of
the place till another Season.2 to quit
here in october, will leave considerable buisness remaining to be done. I see not what
else is to be done better I do not know that the man has any faculty but for shoe
making: but we must consider of this subject. perplexitys surround me which ever way I
look.
I know you feel the want of your usual Rural amusement and relaxation. I hope you will not suffer in concequence of it. I feel too, as if we ought not to be so seperated. I want to talk with, & to you of a thousand things which should not be committed to paper, but I will close this as it relates wholy to our own Domestick matters and begin an other sheet upon other Subjects.
most affectionatly yours
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mrs A. March 23 / 1797.”
For AA’s previous comments regarding the Adamses’ property taxes, see vol. 11:561. In her letter of 29 March she informed JA that she had borrowed $300 from Gen. 47 Benjamin Lincoln in order to settle her outstanding debts. She also complained that she had lost a valuable farmhand who was offered higher wages by two of her neighbors (Adams Papers).
That is, Polly Doble Howard and Jonathan Baxter Jr. (1773–1845),
the son of Lt. Jonathan and Susanna Field Baxter (Sprague, Braintree Families
).
For the couple’s marriage, see vol. 10:281.
I take my pen to make a Recuest to you in Behalf of Elisha adams as you are in high Surcomestances I was affraid to Right Butt have Ben [Prevld?] with to Dear madam the Case is this Elisha adams has Bought a Plase which he agred to give 1600 hundrede Dollers and has Paid 800 Dollers Try Be So kind as to Lend him 4 or 5 hundrede Dollers tis Not in my Power to Let him have the money I Shuld be exciding Glad if he Can get the money I wish it was in my Powre to help him1
I will Promice to Pay the Intrest I fear he will Not Be aeble to Pay for his Place un-les Some Person will Send him the Cash he Can Not Pay it in 1 year But may in 3 or 4 yers Dear madam Pray Be So kind as to faver him if it is in your Power for how Can I Endure to See him turndout of Dors I Beleve in a fue years he Can Pay for it the man he Bought it of is in Destres for the money
Pray madam Parden me if I have Intrud Excuse my Poor Speling and Riting I must in form you that he is under oblations to Pay the money By the first of aprel
I fel very anckches abot the affar
Pray Reade with Cander if I am Denide I Remaine your Sincer friend till Death
N B the Barer will in form you of his Charicter
Pray Rite By the Barer2
RC (Adams Papers).
Elisha Adams, son of Hobart and JA’s brother Elihu Adams, appears to have purchased a property in Abington, Mass., comprising approximately 44 acres (MBNEH: Direct Tax List of 1798 for Massachusetts and Maine, 12:596, 626). For the financial assistance provided by the Adamses, see JA to AA, 7 April, and Cotton Tufts to AA, 8 June, and note 1, both below.
AA received this letter from Dr. Richard Briggs of
Abington, whom she met while on the road to Weymouth (AA to
JA, 29 March, Adams Papers;
Benjamin Hobart, History of the Town of Abington, Plymouth
County, Massachusetts, from its First Settlement, Boston, 1866, p. 136).