Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Abigail Adams to William Cranch, 16 May 1798 Adams, Abigail Cranch, William
Abigail Adams to William Cranch
Dear sir Philadelphia May 16 1798

I received your Letter of the 8th dated Annapolis I congratulate you my dear Sir, that altho the clouds have been darkned round you, and you have been recently call’d to mourn over the Graves of 36 departed Friend’s, it is a consolation that others are rising up to supply their places. The opening which now presents itself to you, is such as may give you Sanguine hopes, and bright prospects, and I sincerely hope they may be succeeded, by solid and durable advantages, and that you may find in mr Johnson and Family, steady, and firm Friend’s mr Johnson has been long in buisness, and has always sustaind a fair and Honorable Character; nor has he, that I ever heard, been engaged in Wild Speculations of any kind

you have been so great a sufferer from your connection with those who have, without being yourself personally engaged, that I most heartily rejoice to see you Reassumeing the Profession to which you were bred, and escapeing from a vortex which has swallowd so many. I hope You will be able to liberate yourself from the weight, which appeard to bow down your Spirits, when you were last in this City1

I know You will not neglect advice given you by one who so sincerely interests herself in Your happiness. let me then intreat you, not to suffer the benevolence of your Heart, to conquer Your judgment, and the duty which you owe to your own increasing family Become not surety for any one. If Providence blesses your Labours, and you have any thing to spair, let the Aged, and the blind, be your first objects, but let the young exert themselves. whilst you are clog’d in any way of responsibility, you are not independant.

With respect to the sale of your Fathers Farm, I thought with you, when he first offerd it, and your uncle declined purchasing it for more than a year, your Father said he was determined to part with it, and that the Taxes and labour devoured the whole of the Profits. he found himself daily less able to labour himself in the season of it. he exhausted his strength and spirits. I conversed with Your Mother, and told her Land could not so easily vanish as money, but she thought the money at interest, would afford them much more clear profit, and that without any trouble; Your uncle paid the full sum which Your Father ask’d 800£ pounds for 42 or 45 acres, I am not sure which, but it was a much larger price than he would have given to any other person. for altho some of the land is good, the Hill part which adjoins to your uncles Farm, is very poor. for two years past it has been broken up, and the first year Eleven acre’s did not produce 30 Bushels of Corn. the 2d it was rather more productive; but did not pay the labour it requires much manure and was so distant from your Fathers home that he could do but little in that way. the manuring a Farm is a very expensive thing. the Canker worm has 37 destroyd the Trees in such a manner, that not more than 4 & 5 Barrels of cider have been made from it, for two years past.

I have written to your Mother to impress upon her mind, the necessity there is, that she should not have any part of the Principle touchd during your Fathers & her Life, that the Children could better contend with difficulties, than those who were advanced in years.

I hope you will enforce this Idea when you write to them. having determined upon the disposal of it, I have not a doubt, that it is gone where you would rather have wisht it to, than into any other Hands. tho I was averse to your uncles purchasing any more land, it is properly to us a sinking fund, and will ever prove so to us—

Present my compliments to mr & mrs Law when you see them. I really contracted a sincere regard for her, whilst she was here

Let me hear from your little boy. the season is favorable for the Small pox.

The publick mind has indeed undergone a Change since you was here, and the people are leading their representitives. I hope such an other set is not to found as most of those who come from Virgina & several of the other states. false wicked and malicious, the Clabourns the Clays the Cloptons, the Findley & Gallitin, with N—s & G—s, have done the Country lasting mischief— their circular Letters which have been sent here, & publishd, are one continued tissue of misrepresentations and falshood’s2

Truth is Great, and I hope will prevail

we are however in a very unpleasent situation in this City. Emissaries are thickly scatterd, and for the vilest purposes. we have an influx of Foreigners, from all Nations, and very feeble Authority to restrain them;—or to punish them, in proportion to their crimes for as Peter say’s poor Pensilvana keeps no Gallows, and the utmost difficulty is now experienced to get through the Alien Bill in Congress— it will be curtaild, & confined, in such a manner, as to render it a mere nulity. the City has been threatned with fire; and with Massacre. the Inhabitants are constantly upon the allarm & watch. we had a fire last night about Eleven oclock which broke out in a stable, and which is suspected to have been done with design. it consumed a Barn & House and caught several others. during the fire the troop of light Horse patrold the streets. nothing but the Awe of the Military, will keep these wretches in order.3

I inclose you the last dispatches from our Envoys.4 alass! alass! why are they not at Home? the decree of the directory respecting 38 Nutrals ought to have been there signal for quitting the Republick in 48 hours— they know not the feeling of their Countrymen— they have tyed their Hands. they prevent such measures as ought to be taken for the safety and security of the Country, and I fear we shall not see them at all

adieu my dear sir. present me kindly to Mrs Cranch. tell her to keep up her spirits, and to aid in supporting yours. better days await you. I wrote to mrs Johnson last week, and inclosed some Letters. if she has not returnd them, you have my permission to read them— there was a publick Letter from Mr A. received by the Secretary of state as late as 24 Feb’ry but no private ones—5

Most affectionately / Yours—

Abigail Adams

RC (Bryn Athyn Historic District Archives at Glencairn Museum:William Cranch Papers, on deposit at MHi); addressed: “William Cranch Esqr / George Town”; endorsed: “Mrs Adams May 16 / 1798.” and “Mrs. Adams May 16 / 1798.”

1.

Cranch had visited Philadelphia in March (vol. 12:435, 441).

2.

Several of the congressmen named by AA authored letters charging JA and Federalists in Congress with dragging the United States into an unnecessary war with France. John Clopton had written a short letter to his constituents informing them of the worsening situation. In a town meeting on 2 April they instructed him to avoid voting for any actions that could lead to war and also chastised JA for failing to release the commissioners’ dispatches. Virginia representatives Anthony New and Matthew Clay’s letters to their constituents were both published in the Philadelphia Porcupine’s Gazette, 25 April; that of Samuel Cabell was published on 30 April (Richmond, Va., Observatory, 2, 5 April). For William Findley’s letter to his constituents, see vol. 12:502, 503.

3.

At 11 P.M. on 14 May fire consumed Kelsey’s Livery Stables and ancillary sheds on Church Alley, killing at least nine horses. The abutting Fox and Dorsey’s Sugar House was saved by its 21-inch-thick brick walls and iron shutters. The Philadelphia American Daily Advertiser, 16 May, reported, “the fire is supposed to have been accidental.”

4.

Enclosures not found.

5.

In dispatches to Timothy Pickering of 19 and 24 Feb., JQA recounted his conversation with Count Christian August Heinrich Kurt von Haugwitz, one of the Prussian foreign ministers, regarding recent French decrees on neutral navigation and his efforts to provide the Prussian government with directions on appropriately addressing various branches of the U.S. government (LbC’s, APM Reel 132).

Mary Smith Cranch to Abigail Adams, 18 May 1798 Cranch, Mary Smith Adams, Abigail
Mary Smith Cranch to Abigail Adams
My dear Sister Quincy May 18th 1798

I too have taken my pen with the rising Sun. I have been so disturb’d with the account of the allarming riot before your Door on the fast day evening that I have not had a moments quiet sleep this night.1 I had no Idea the faction would have tried their Strength So oppenly I suppos’d the Letters which had been thrown into your house were mear threats. but I hope they have but Staid their time— had there been such an attempt before the Instructions & 39 dispatches had been published they might have found more Support. They are in the gall of bitterness— they have long been in the bonds of iniquity. our goverment are yet without walls & fences Sufficiently Strong to oppose with Spirit those gogs & magogs which the Divel has stir’d up against our Country. Their end however will be perdition they are permitted to Scourge us for our Sins. but their end will be destruction. darkness well over Shadows us for a time. but the Clips will I hope not be total light will arise & Mercy be remember’d for us my prospects would be brighter if I could see as great a morral as a Political change in this people but alass my dear Sister! tis easier to cure the errors of the head than the heart. congress must do something more effectual to Seperate the Sheep from the goats these Judas’s must be sent to their own place or we Shall never be safe. you ought to keep a Strickt watch—& if possible catch some of the people who are bringing those Letters. there is a Hellish plot I know by Some who yet keep themselves out of Sight— most ardently most fervently do I pray God to take the President into his holy keeping & may no weapon form’d against him prosper

I fear you have been much distress’d, more than you have been willing to own oh my Sister I wish you were in Quincy here you might Set under your own Vine & fruit Tree & have none to make you personally affraid

10 ’clock

mr & Mrs Black have just left me. he get to Town last evening mr Cranch was in Boston & Say him mr Cranch told me of your kind present to Mrs Gr–nleafs little girl & Mr Black handed me yours to me. oh my Sister! the recording Angle will never never cease from labour while you have breath & ability to exeercise your benevolence— thanks is all I can offer. but a reward awaits you beyond what mortals can give I am Sorry you should think my head worthy So costly a clothing I fear none but my Sister will estimate it So highly2

Captain Beal wishes me to inform the President thro you that he expects his Son Richard from Sea every moment—3 I have ingag’d Mr Lane to do the painting on your House. would you have the Library paper’d? the Doctor proposes only white washing. we have got a horse & now I should be able to go oftener to see after your Affairs.

Betsy Shaw is something better but her cough has not left her nor her fever I am full of aprehension about her. the loss of her would 40 be almost too much for her Mother tis strange when we see what brittle thread our Lives hang upon that we Should plan for an hour but as tho the chance for executing it, was against us. this life is but the embrio of existance, & ought not rationally to be desirable at least long life with its attendant burthens only as it give us an opportunity to improve the noble powers with which we are endow’d, & to exerise the best affections of the heart in a manner by which we may be qualified for more exalted Stations in a more perfect State

thank you my dear Sister for sending your amiable Sons Letters the Picture of the contending nations which they draw is dark indeed the demorralizing System darkness which can & will be felt— will nothing rouse the neutral powers to make a common Stand— your Son must not Shrink back. he must not refuse his Fathers appointment his dignified republican manners fit him for the important Stations in which he is plac’d, & his accurate knowledge of men & the real designs of France & his unshaken integrity Will render him respected & fear’d I would return the Letter this post but I want to read them again & to let more of our Friends do the same, but I will not keep them long when you write tell them both we feel an encreasing affection for them—& your new Daughter that She has an aunt prepair’d to love her

Mrs Cranch has written me that mr Johnson has taken a Friendly & paternal interest in my Sons welfair, & had advised him not to lose a moment in debating the propriety of removing to Georgetown & Steping in to mr Cooks business— he has follow’d his advise; Mrs cranch is charm’d with the Family Mrs Johnson in particular She felt so depress’d before that She did not know how to assume courage to visit the Family. I know She is oblig’d to you for the first visit. nancy wants incouragement

we are delight’d with the Presidents answers to the numerous addresses— I do not know how he finds language to vary them as he does. that to the Boston address was not So Strikingly understood as I wish’d. In stead of discovering the high complement contain’d in those words: “It must be an unnatural State of things to make it necessary or even proper, &c” many Supposed that the President was not pleas’d & censurd rather than approbated their addressing him with their professions of Support— the complement was too delicate for their uneducated minds— tis dificult for a man of Science to form an Idea how hard it is for those unus’d to Letters to discover 41 those delicate Strokes in composition which charm a cultivated understanding4

adieu my dear Sister I must close the Stage will be upon me before I shall have time to say / I am at all times your affectionate / & grateful Sister

Mary Cranch

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mrs Cranch 18 / May / 1798.”

1.

Although Cranch likely learned of this altercation from AA’s letter of 10 May, above, the Boston Columbian Centinel, 16 May, reported that the clash between a group wearing the French cockade and nearby bystanders took place directly outside the President’s House instead of in the State House yard.

2.

On 13 May AA wrote Cranch a brief letter accompanied by “a peice of Muslin for two Crowns of caps,” purchased for $6 per yard, and lace to border the caps (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters).

3.

The ship Britannia, Capt. Richard Copeland Beale, arrived in Boston on 22 May after a journey from Suriname of 22 days (Boston Columbian Centinel, 23 May).

4.

JA’s 7 May response to the address from Boston residents was published in the Boston Columbian Centinel, 12 May, and concluded: “It must, however be a very unnatural, and peculiar state of things, to make it necessary, or proper, in you, or any other American in your behalf, to declare to the world, what the world ought to have known and acknowledged without hesitation—that you are not humiliated under a colonial sense of fear, that you are not a divided people, in any point which involves the honor, safety, and essential rights of your country, that you know your rights, and are determined to support them” ( Patriotic Addresses , p. 33–34).