Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Thomas Welsh to Abigail Adams, 13 June 1798 Welsh, Thomas Adams, Abigail
Thomas Welsh to Abigail Adams
Dear Madam. Boston June 13 1798

I enclose a Duplicate of a Letter which I have lately received from Mr Adams.1 I have not heared of an House which would agree with the discription but if I had the Course of Exchange is so much against Holland, that I should not think of doing any thing at present.

Mr Smith has informed me of the Proposal for my Son Thomas to go to Berlin to relieve Mr Thomas B Adams. as Mr Smith has writen, to you on Monday on the Subject2 I shall not now add any thing further than to say that the Offer was very agreable to us and will be embraced with Gratitude and Alacrity on his part he will be ready on the shortest Notice either before or after Commencement as he might obtain his Degree provided it was necessary to go before that Period.

Mr Appleton the Loan Officer is dangerously Sick and there is the greatest reason to think he will not live many Days, in Case of his Discease Many Applications will be made to obtain the Office I do not particularly offer myself as a Candidate but having met with severe Misfortunes which Mrs Cranch informs me she has made Known to you I wish to be considered as a Candidate for such an Apointment as in the Judgement of the President may be proper for him to give and for me to receive.3 One in the Neighbourhood of Boston or in it would be prefered either in the line of my Profession or any other and for such an one I should feel myself greatly obliged. & would confer on my Family great Comfort. conscious of Your Benevolence and that of the President I have been induced with reluctance to lay open my wishes to you but as I am confident no injury can arise from it I have done it freely. wishing you & the Family every Felicity and the President every Comfort which can arise from the consciousness of a Life devoted to the best Interest of his Country and Mankind. I am with sentiments of the Highest respect your afflicted Friend.

Thomas Welsh

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs Adams.”; endorsed: “Dr Welch 13 / June 1798.”

1.

The enclosure has not been found but was a Dupl of JQA to Welsh, 24 Jan., for which see vol. 12:363–365.

2.

Not found.

3.

Nathaniel Appleton, who had served as U.S. loan commissioner for Massachusetts 123 since 1777, died on 25 June 1798. For JA’s refusal to appoint Welsh to this post, see AA to William Smith, 26 June, below. Welsh wrote again to AA on 26 June (Adams Papers) repeating his request for the position and reporting to AA that Thomas Welsh Jr. had applied to obtain his degree before the Harvard College commencement so he could depart for Berlin at the first opportunity (vol. 7:425; Massachusetts Mercury, 26 June).

Jeremy Belknap to Abigail Adams, 14 June 1798 Belknap, Jeremy Adams, Abigail
Jeremy Belknap to Abigail Adams
Dear Madam Bo June 14 1798

As the extract which you marked in yr Son’s letter was too long for one paper I divided it & gave one half to Benjn & the other half to John Russell, the latter part appears in the Commercial Gazette of this day, the former I hope will come out on Saturday.1

I have read Robisons Conspiracy with astonishment, it contains the seeds of all the mischiefs which we have been tormented with for years past— God grant we may be able to stop the progress of this worse than mortal pestilence. Thinking men are very much alarmed about the matter— The book is getting into repute notwithstandg the acco wh the Analytical Reviewers have given against it— Are not they probably among the illuminati?

Pray who or what is General Eustace? & what is his errand to this Country?2

Will you be so good as to ask the Presidt whether he has in his Library Thurloe’s State papers?3 & if so whether he will allow me the inspection or loan of such part of the work as I may want?

I send you another & the only Subscription paper wch I have. I am much obliged by your very kind offer of assistance— I wish to have both returned by the beginning of next month. The book is now at the press & will probably be published in all July.

If you are not tired, Madam, with my Queries I beg to know one thing more, & that is Whether any of our armed Vessels will be employed to convoy trading vessels to the W. Indies this Summer— The reason of my asking is that one of my Sons who has had a mercantile Education & is now of age has some prospect of making a Voyage thither as Super cargo, but it will depend on the prospect of safety either by insurance or convoy & the latter may sensibly affect the former.4

I will not trouble you with another Word but only to assure you of my readiness to do you or the public thro’ your means any Service in my Power.

124

Mrs B reciprocates your obliging Salutations & joins me in respectful & cordial compliments to the Presidt & yourself—

I am madam / yr obliged friend & / hbl servt

Jeremy Belknap5

Mr Appleton the Loan Commissioner lies dangerously ill of a putrid fever & will probably not recover.

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “Mrs Abigail Adams”; endorsed: “Dr Belknap 14 / June 1798.”

1.

As Belknap notes, the extract that AA had sent of TBA’s 4 March letter to JA was broken into two parts and published in the Boston Russell’s Gazette, 14 June, and the Boston Columbian Centinel, 16 June.

2.

Gen. John Skey Eustace, a frequent political agitator, was arrested in the Netherlands in 1794 and then expelled from France and England in 1797. William Vans Murray wrote to Timothy Pickering on 8 March 1798 (MHi:Pickering Papers) that Eustace planned to renounce his American citizenship but changed his mind after reading Robert Goodloe Harper’s Observations on the Dispute between the United States and France, Phila., 1797, Evans, No. 32226, for which see vol. 12:257. In her reply to Belknap of 25 June (MHi:Jeremy Belknap Papers), AA explained that Eustace had been arrested again in the Netherlands and ordered to leave the country. He arrived in New York on 30 May. AA further reported that Murray had written in support of Eustace as a “man of tallents & much general information,” but AA thought he might be “classd, in the List of Adventurers” (vol. 10:402; Madison, Papers, Congressional Series , 17:182–183; Hamilton, Papers , 22:213; New York Argus, 1 June).

3.

A Collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe … Containing Authentic Memorials of the English Affairs from the Year 1638, to the Restoration of King Charles II, 7 vols., London, 1742. In her letter of 25 June, AA reported to Belknap that JA did not own a copy of the work (MHi:Jeremy Belknap Papers).

4.

This was probably Belknap’s youngest son, Andrew Eliot (1779–1858), who had just turned nineteen. He served as supercargo on the schooner Samuel, Capt. Williams, in 1801, and became a prominent merchant in Boston during the nineteenth century (Kirsch, Jeremy Belknap , p. 11; Boston Independent Chronicle, 13–16 April 1801; Boston Weekly Messenger, 27 Jan. 1858).

5.

On 18 June 1798 AA wrote a short letter to Belknap (NhD:Ticknor Autograph Coll.) enclosing two pamphlets: John Dennis, An Address to the People of Maryland, Phila., 1798, Evans, No. 33626, and Anthony Aufrere, The Cannibals’ Progress; or, The Dreadful Horrors of French Invasion, Phila., 1798, Evans, No. 33334.