Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Abigail Adams to William Smith Shaw, 14 January 1799 Adams, Abigail Shaw, William Smith
Abigail Adams to William Smith Shaw
Dear William Quincy Jan’ry 14 1799

your Aunt Cranch received a Letter from your Mother of Janry 1st in which she makes mention of having received a Letter from you: I wrote to her soon after she returnd Home, and sent the Letter to Boston. it was given to some private hand, and never has reachd her.1 I have since written to her by the post. She and your sister were well, and Abbes Arm much better for the application of Hughes ointment.

I have read Logans Letter what reliance to place upon his statement, time must devolope. I believe his Letter does not agree with his professions abroad, for it was confidently asserted and that from an Authority who seldom writes at Random, that Logan did give himself out, as a person sent in a public Character, by individuals—2

The Jacobins make a great Bluster about the conduct of Capt Loring. one would suppose that our whole Navy had been captured. I agree with them that an insult ought not to be submitted to from any Nation, but I cannot see the propriety of Legislative inteference I may however be wrong in my opinion.—3 There are some Members of the House of Reps, who ought never to be admitted to the table of the President again—Findley, New, Clay, Clopton, these infamous Letter writers, ought to be singled out.4 you will ask me, why then should the Matzzie Letter writer be invited. I really do not know how to answer that Question, but by repliing that he is invited as vice President,—as an officer of the Government. o I forgot Blair the 355 Irishman he too ought to be excluded, and if I was there not a Liar wretch of them all should come:5

I request you to present my Love to Mrs otis.

From your affectionate

Aunt A Adams

Louissa request her uncle to Frank the Letter for her Brother the one not addrest is for you to superscribe for col smith and forward as soon as you can—getting it Frankd first6

RC (DLC:Shaw Family Papers); addressed: “Mr William S Shaw / Philadelphia”; endorsed: “Mrs Adams / Jan 14th recd 23d. 99. / Answered 24th Jan”; docketed: “1799 Jany 14 / 14.”

1.

In her 1 Jan. letter to Mary Smith Cranch, Elizabeth Smith Shaw Peabody noted her pleasure at the improved health of Richard Cranch and AA and commented on Elizabeth Palmer’s efforts to adjust to life in Atkinson, N.H. (DLC:Shaw Family Papers). The letter AA wrote to Peabody in the fall has not been found.

2.

AA was likely referring to JQA’s characterization of Dr. George Logan’s unauthorized mission to France in his letter to her of 14 Sept. 1798, above.

3.

In search of British subjects hiding on American vessels, Capt. John Loring (d. 1808) of the British ship of the line Carnatic stopped the American sloop Baltimore, Capt. Isaac Phillips, on 16 Nov. off the coast of Havana and impressed five sailors. Democratic-Republicans emphasized this breach of Anglo-American relations to counter Federalist discussion of French depredations on American shipping. After some debate, the House of Representatives resolved on 2 Jan. 1799 to request that JA present to Congress any information he had on the matter. JA complied on 8 Jan., sending pertinent correspondence and the circular orders sent to naval captains instructing them not to permit their detention by foreign vessels and permitting the use of necessary force to avoid such detention. The orders made clear that sailors were never to be given up unless the ship itself was being surrendered. JA also dismissed Captain Phillips (Stark, Loyalists of Mass. , p. 425–426; DeConde, The Quasi-War , p. 202–203; Annals of Congress , 5th Cong., 3d sess., p. 2546, 2554–2556, 2574–2577).

4.

For these circular letters, see AA to William Cranch, 16 May 1798, and note 2, above.

5.

Shaw had reported to AA on 9 Jan. 1799 (Adams Papers) that Thomas Jefferson would be among the company dining with JA that day. For Jefferson’s letter to Philip Mazzei, in which he criticized George Washington and other Federalists, and for Blair McClenachan’s attacks on Washington and JA, see vols. 10:312, 313; 11:451; 12:164–165.

6.

Not found.

John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 15 January 1799 Adams, John Quincy Adams, Thomas Boylston
John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams
1. My dear Brother. [ca. 15] January 1799.1

We received your short Letter of 19. November written just as the pilot from the mouth of the Elbe was about to leave you.2 Since that time untill this day, we have had almost incessantly Easterly winds blowing, and we hope that you enjoyed the benefit of them, and long before this, find yourself restored to the bosom of our Country and friends.

356

Since your departure several circumstances have occurred within the circle of this Court, which from your acquaintance with it, you may think worth knowing.— I wrote you before you sailed, what had happened to Prince Radziwill—3 That affair however was immediately dropped.— For some weeks, the Courtiers all turned their backs to him, as a man altogether out of favour, and even yet he is treated with less apparent respect than formerly; but he seems not to take it much to heart, and more recent occurrences have contributed to efface the impression which that concerning him had made.

The Princes Ferdinand and Henry, believed, upon what grounds I am unable to say, that this affair, originated and was conducted by the instigation of Count Haugwitz, and from malevolence on his part either towards them, or Prince Radziwill— Prince Ferdinand of course forbad him his house, and Prince Henry sent word to the Princess, that if she admitted Haugwitz to appear again at her Courts she and her maids of honour should all be turned out of the Palace.— The Princess accordingly gave notice to Haugwitz of the orders she had received, and testified her regret at the necessity she was under of requesting that he would no longer appear at her Monday parties.— But the king upon being informed of this, ordered Haugwitz to go constantly every Monday.— The Princess embarrassed between two commands, neither of which she could disobey, was obliged to break up her Monday parties altogether, so that we have been for the last two months entirely relieved from attendance there.— The poor Princess however has been sadly distressed at the loss of all her State, and has been almost ever since ill.

About a fortnight ago, the Princess Louis, wrote a letter to Dr: Brown, requesting him to inform the king that she was seven months gone, with child by the Prince de Solms, a Major in the Regiment of Gardes du Corps, to whom she added she was married last April.— So the Major was removed from the Guards, to a Regiment of Hussars in garrison at Auspach, and the Princess is gone there to live with him.4

This incident has only served to occasion advancement among the officers of the guards, and your friend Perponcher has already attained the rank of a Lieutenant.— It has perhaps likewise contributed to postpone the commencement of the Carnaval, which should regularly have begun on the 6th: of this month, but was delayed untill the 14th:— The round of amusements and dissipation is much more constant than it was last Winter, and leaves us scarce a single 357 evening in the week to ourselves.— We are however very intimate with Count Bruhl’s and Doctor Brown’s families, both of which desire especially to be remembered to you.5

The most important political occurrences which since your departure have drawn the attention of Europe are the declaration of War by France against the kings of Naples and Sardinia, which in all probability was instigated by the misfortunes and losses which the french had been suffering for some months before.— To indemnify themselves they fell upon the prey that was nearest at hand, and most easy to be devoured— The king of Sardinia who had already delivered the Citadel of Turin itself into their hands, fell without a shadow of resistance. Joubert made him sign a capitulation ready prepared, by which all Piedmont was put under the authority of the french, and the king was allowed to retire into Sardinia—

It is now said that Joubert’s conduct has been disapproved by the Directory, as having granted terms too favourable to the king, and even that they have refused to ratify the capitulation.—6

The king of Naples began with some success and his troops advanced so far as to take possession of Rome, while another body of them landed under convoy of Nelson, and some English ships, and took Leghorn. But their stay at Rome was short: after several actions in all of which they were defeated, they fled before a number of french much inferior to themselves, and it is now the general expectation that Naples and Sicily very shortly will follow the fate of the rest of Italy.— The Emperor has not moved at all in support of his father in Law, though his force in Italy is great and daily increasing—7 He has met with the loss of a very valuable officer in Prince Frederic of Orange, who shortly since died of a bilious fever at Padua.8

From the french army in Egypt there are no accounts of any authenticity since the 19th: October, when the General and troops were all safe— Since then something has happened, but it is not yet precisely known what— The Turkish accounts boast of it as a very important advantage on their side, but are vague, indistinct and confused, without dates, and without any thing precise in the circumstances.— No french official accounts of it have been published— Private Letters speak of it as a riot among the populace at Cairo, (according to Buonaparte, la plus vilaine populace du monde,) in which the french troops were obliged to fire upon them, and kill some thousands of them.— I consider it, as an affair of no consequence, which the Turks have swelled into importance, for the sake 358 of a boast, and which the french are content to have so considered for the sake of crying up their future success over it, as another wonderful work of Buonaparte and the great Nation.9

We have had scarce any news from England since you sailed. The Easterly winds, which in this quarter of the world, are those that bring extreme cold in Winter, have obstructed the mouth of the Elbe with such a mass of Ice, that at this moment nine English mails are due here.— A new English Minister, Mr: Thomas Grenville, an elder brother of Lord Grenville has been for some time expected, and has hitherto been detained by the same cause which prevents the arrival of the mails.— Lord Elgin is appointed Ambassador to Constantinople.10

I wish it were in my power to give you a better account of your concerns which you left here.— Your lottery ticket came out a blank, and your horse remains yet upon Whitcomb’s hands.— He says he has taken all possible pains to put him off, but can get nothing like the price which You expected.— They tell him that now is a most unfavourable time to sell horses, because provender is excessively dear; but for my part I believe all times unfavourable, excepting for professed jockies, or for those who possess their talents.— Poor Whitcomb finds people enough willing to try the horse, but upon the return from their ride, some find him vicious, and others though they like him very well do not want a horse exactly of that kind.— Perhaps the Spring, may bring a purchaser, and if not, I believe I shall have him sold at auction, for otherwise instead of producing you any thing, he will prove a real expence.

I am your ever affectionate brother

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mr: T. B. Adams.”; endorsed: “J Q Adams Esqr: / January 1799 / 7th: June Recd: / 26 Do Answd:”; notation by ECA: “A piece of / Scandal”; filmed at Jan. 1799. LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 133.

1.

The dating of this letter is based on the placement of the LbC in the Letterbook.

2.

Not found.

3.

See JQA to TBA, 13 Nov. 1798, and note 4, above.

4.

For more on Frederica Sophia Carolina of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Princess Louis, and her secret marriage to Frederick William, Prince of Solms-Braunfels, see LCA, D&A , 1:100–101.

5.

Berlin’s carnival ran from 13 Jan. 1799 to 13 Feb. and included operas twice a week, which JQA described as “all entirely at the king’s expence” with “boxes appropriated to various persons of distinction—one for the Cabinet, and foreign Ministers.— But the queen holds a sort of Court in her own box, at which the foreign Ministers make their appearance in the course of the Evening. … The house very handsome, but poorly lighted. No applause is permitted” (D/JQA/24, 13, 14 Jan., 13 Feb., APM Reel 27). For Count Karl von Bruhl and Hendrik George Perponcher-Sedlnitzky and for LCA’s recounting of carnival, see LCA, D&A , 1:79, 103–104, 132.

6.

Gen. Barthelemy Catherine Joubert (1769–1799) was named commander of the French Army of Italy in Aug. 1798. In need of 359 further war supplies, and prior to declaring war, the Directory sent Joubert in December into the Piedmont, where he secured the citadel of Turin and forced the abdication of King Charles Emmanuel IV on 9 December. The document of capitulation placed all Sardinian subjects under French command but permitted the king to peacefully retreat. Joubert’s feud with the Directory resulted from attempts by the Directory four days before France finally declared war to rein in its generals’ behavior in occupied territories, and Joubert ultimately resigned his commission over his belief that the Directory’s orders offended military honor (Hoefer, Nouv. biog. générale ; Cambridge Modern Hist. , 8:654; Ross, Quest for Victory , p. 206; Paris Gazette nationale ou le moniteur universel, 16, 21 Dec.).

7.

In November King Ferdinand IV of Naples led an attack on the French outpost at Rome while Napoleon was distracted by defeat in Egypt. The assault was made on the advice of his wife, Queen Maria Carolina, the daughter of Holy Roman emperor Francis II, and British rear admiral Horatio Nelson, in the hope that it would draw the Austrian empire into the Second Coalition; however, Francis II, despite the May 1798 Austro-Neapolitan defensive alliance, refused assistance. In response to Ferdinand’s aggression, the French declared war against Naples on 13 Dec., and Neapolitan forces were soon defeated and the king escaped to Sicily under Nelson’s protection. Napoleon declared the Neapolitan Republic on 21 Jan. 1799, pending the approval of the Directory, which never arrived (John A. Davis, Naples and Napoleon: Southern Italy and the European Revolutions, N.Y., 2006, p. 23, 73–75, 80–81; Cambridge Modern Hist. , 8:645, 650–653; Paris Gazette nationale ou le moniteur universel, 16 Dec. 1798).

8.

William George Frederick, Prince of Orange (b. 1774), was the son of William V and Frederika Sophia Wilhelmina, Prince and Princess of Orange, and was serving as commander of the Austrian Army in Italy when he died in Jan. 1799 (Gentleman’s Magazine, 69:165 [Feb. 1799]).

9.

A revolt against French rule broke out in Cairo on the morning of 21 Oct. 1798 following news of the Ottoman declaration of war against France in early September. The rebellion was short-lived once Napoleon began bombarding rebel areas, leading to about 3,000 civilian deaths (Philip Dwyer, Napoleon: The Path to Power, 1769–1799, New Haven, 2008, p. 402–404).

10.

For Thomas Grenville and his mission to Prussia, see LCA, D&A , 1:107, and JQA to AA, 16 March 1799, and note 7, below. Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, arrived in Constantinople in November (LCA, D&A , 1:72; Repertorium , 3:179).