Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Abigail Adams to John Quincy Adams, 12 June 1798 Adams, Abigail Adams, John Quincy
Abigail Adams to John Quincy Adams
my dear son Philadelphia June 12th 1798

The June packet is to sail tomorrow. as I know you must be anxious for constant intelligence, at this critical & important period, I will not let her sail without writing to you, tho it is a hazard whether she will go safe, for our very coasts are infested with French Privateers, who insult us in our own Waters.

every exertion is making to get our Frigates to sea. we have some 20 Gun vessels out. Newburryport has sit an example, by voteing & raising money to Build a 20 Gun ship and loaning it to Government.1 Newyork have voted 2 & this City 2; the Sea ports will all follow the example, and we shall have a Navy Spring up like the Gourd of Jonah; I hope however that it will not wither, as soon.2 The eageness with which the Youth of Family fortune & Education enter the Navy, and Army, is a surety for our Country, that the spirit of the Fathers, live in their son’s—

I cannot send you a hundred part of the addresses which have been, and still, are pouring in from every state Town & Village. No sovereign, ever had more voluntary Lives, and fortunes tendered to him, in proportion to his dominions, than have been offerd to the Chief Majestrate of United America, in defence of the Liberty and Independance of the Country.

This city, which was formerly torpid with indolence, and fettered with Quakerism; has become one Military School, and every morning, the sound of the drum and fife, lead forth “A Band of Brothers joind” the Martial spirit resounds from one end of the Country, to the other.

An age of Peace, would not have, informd and enlightned our Countrymen, with respects to their Rights, & the just value of a free and equitable Government, as the unprovoked and unjust conduct of France towards us.

114

I inclose to you a Boston paper, in which you will read, a wise & judicious speach of Gov’r Sumner a song written by mr T Pain, and the Last Dispatch.3 Heaven Grant that it may be the last, dispatch from our Lamb like envoys! there pulse beats, not like my dear Thomas’es, who tho absent near four years, has not forgotten that he is An American. by his last Letter to his Father of March the 4th, he judges better of the feelings of his Countrymen, than to belive them capable of crouching to the terms of the haughty Gauls. Let them know; “that united we stand, and defy the foul Fiends.”4

I have just received a Letter from mrs Johnson dated the 4th of June, in which she informs me, that she had at length received Letters from you & her dear Louissa. she meant to write by the packet, but will be too late. the Family were all well. mrs Johnson is frequently troubled with Billious complaints. she must have a seasoning. she appears better contented by her last Letters than she was. we write often to each other, and keep up a friendly intercourse. Tell mrs Adams, that she must keep a Journal. it will become pleasent to her by habit, and greatly facilitate her writing, which is only urksome by disuse. She will find it a source of amusement to her, and her Friends, hereafter.

Your Brother Charles and Family and sister smith were well last week— whilst I am writing, I have lide down my pen, to read a Letter brought me from your Aunt Peabody.5 her Letters were always a treasure, and she knows as well as ever shakspear did, every avenue to the Heart. I can never get through a Letter of hers; without wetting it with my tears.— She is very anxious now for her daughter Betsy, who had a fever in the winter which has left her with many allaming symptoms of a consumptive nature, and tho in her person she is not her Mother, she is otherways every way Lovely and desirable, and to lose her would be a stroke, which her Mother would not know how to support. she writes me pleasing accounts of my Grandsons. it will be the making of them. the Fathers misfortunes will prove the salvation of the Children, has their Grandfather some times observed to me. Your Aunt desires to be rememberd in the most affectionate terms to you & to your Brother, whom next to her own Children she loves— she participates in your pleasures; and She has sympathized in the suffering of your dear Louissa, Whom she says you must instruct to Love her.

I know it will give you pleasure to learn, that mr Cranch has removed to George Town, at the request of mr Johnson who has patronized him, and put his buisness into his Hand.

115

I have to communicate to you the painfull event of dr Welchs failure in Property. the inclosed Billet will state the particulars. I fear you are a sufferer. I have written to Charles to stop his making any remittance to him on your account, even tho you had orderd it, and requested to be informd by him of the state of your Property in his Hands tho a week has elapsed, I have not an answer. I wish I knew of a certainty that it was safe. Indeed my dear son, I am not with out my fears, that you will lose all you have been so prudently and carefully saving.— I will do for your security what I can. the 25 Guineys are still in my hands which I owe, you and which I will pay into mr smiths or dr Tufts Hands when I know which of them you will commit your interest to—6

I am distrest for the dr and Family and do not know but that I shall send Thomas Welch to you to take your Brothers place—

God Bless and preserve you / and yours, and all who are / dear to your truly affectionate

Mother A Adams

your Father send you his Blessing. You know he cannot write—any thing but answers to the addresses—

ENCLOSURE

I am sorry to announce, an event that must afflict you, as it has, every friend & connection of the family.— Dr. W. for sometime past has been much embarrassd. The last Week he clos’d his Doors— judge what Mrs. W. situation must be, not to have the least suspicion ’till the moment it took place— she is in the greatest distress. What has become of his property is a mystery to all his Friends. The demands against him are more than double to all his property he ever possest. all his nearest Friends will suffer severely by him. I have secur’d all the property that I know of & yet it will not be sufficient for my demand. The Dr. holds a Power, from Mr J.Q.A. to take charge of his business— if you think proper you may recommend his assigning it to me—7

RC with enclosure in William Smith’s hand (Adams Papers); endorsed by TBA: “Mrs. A Adams / 12 June 1798 / 22 July Recd / 25 do ansd.”

1.

A group of Newburyport merchants voted on 23 May to build by subscription a 20-gun warship to loan to the U.S. Navy. The first to do so, they set an example that was followed by several seaports, including Philadelphia and New York. In Philadelphia merchants met at City Tavern on 11 June pledging $23,000 toward two 20-gun ships and creating a committee to gather further subscriptions, which came to more than $70,000 within four days. In New York subscription efforts for a 36-gun frigate began in early June but did not reach $70,000 until July (Leiner, Millions for Defense , p. 3–4, 20, 23, 54–55, 140–142).

116 2.

Jonah, 4:6–7.

3.

Enclosure not found, but the Boston Columbian Centinel, 6 June, published Gov. Increase Sumner’s 5 June speech to the Mass. General Court, in which he offered his approbation of the measures already taken by the federal government and urged the legislature to improve the state’s military preparedness. The newspaper also printed a summary of the 9 March dispatch from the commissioners and an advertisement for Boston printer Thomas Paine’s new song, “Adams and Liberty.” The 9 June edition printed the song’s lyrics, which asserted the nation’s resolution to stand firm against any assault on its rights and in its final verse declared, “Her PRIDE is her ADAMS—his LAWS are her CHOICE.”

4.

AA joined the moral of Aesop’s fable “The Four Oxen and the Lion” with Shakespeare, King Lear, Act III, scene iv, line 101.

5.

Elizabeth Smith Shaw Peabody to AA, 15 May, above. No letters from CA or AA2 to AA in this period have been found.

6.

For the money AA owed to JQA for his purchase of a watch and satin, see vol. 12:352.

7.

This enclosure is possibly a page from William Smith’s letter to AA of 28 May, not found, but for which see AA’s reply of 4 June, above.

Louisa Catherine Adams to Abigail Adams, 12 June 1798 Adams, Louisa Catherine Adams, Abigail
Louisa Catherine Adams to Abigail Adams
My Dear Madam Berlin June 12th 1798

After having so long delayed to answer your very affectionate letter I feel perfectly ashamed of making any excuse as I am consious it is not in my power to make a proper one I must therefore rely upon your known indulgence and in future be more careful—1 Our jouney from Hamburg was extremely unpleasant the roads were very bad and I was in constant dread of our being overset but fortunately we arrived very safe and I flattered myself that I should feel no ill effects from the fatigue. hoever it proved otherwise and I suffered a dreadful illness from which I thank God I am entirely recovered—

The people in this Country have been extremely polite and kind to me which has made my residence in Berlin much more agreeable than I expected it is very gay, as there are several Princesses many of them have parties every day The Queen is very young and very Handsome of a lively disposition and fond of company it is therefore supposed that the next winter will be remarkably brilliant but I rather doubt it as the King though very young is a very domestic man and dislikes the ceremony which must always attend a Court I have been presented both to the King and Queen and the Princesses have been very kind to me but I seldom go out as I do not like large parties. The coronation in Berlin is fixed for the sixth of next Month2 there would have been some splendid entertainments made for the Queen but she expects so soon to be confined that it would be too fatiguing particularly after the long journey she has taken and from which she is not yet returned—3

You will see by this letter My Dear Mother what a very bad correspondent you have but I am sure you will have the goodness to 117 excuse my inability to write any thing amusing and reflect that though I may not succeed I endeavor to do my best—

Adieu my Dear Mother offer my affectionate duty to my Father and love believe me your dutiful and affectionate Daughter

Louisa C. Adams

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “Mrs: A. Adams”; endorsed by William Smith Shaw: “Mrs. L C Adams / June ’98.”

1.

AA to LCA, 24 Nov. 1797, for which see vol. 12:309–310.

2.

For LCA’s presentation at the Prussian court, see LCA, D&A , 1:56–59, 68–69, 73–75. For the ceremony of homage to King Frederick William III, see TBA to Joseph Pitcairn, 9 July 1798, and notes 2 and 3, below.

3.

Queen Louise Auguste Wilhelmine of Mecklenburg-Strelitz gave birth to a daughter, Frederica Louise Charlotte Wilhelmina, on 13 July. Known as Princess Charlotte, she became Alexandra Feodorovna after she married Nicholas, Grand Duke of Russia, in 1817 (D/JQA/24, 13 July 1798, APM Reel 27; Brian L. D. Coghlan and Leon P. Bignold, Virchow’s Eulogies: Rudolf Virchow in Tribute to His Fellow Scientists, Boston, 2008, p. 114; Princess Louise, Forty-five Years , p. 444).