Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Thomas Boylston Adams to William Smith Shaw, 21 May 1799 Adams, Thomas Boylston Shaw, William Smith
Thomas Boylston Adams to William Smith Shaw
My dear William Washington City 21st: May 1799.

Your friendly & excellent letters of the 1st: & 10 instt: have reached me at this place, where I arrived the night before last, having passed a few days at Baltimore & Annapolis on my way.1 My tour has hitherto been highly pleasing to me, and should it conclude as it began, I shall not regret having made it; indeed a more favorable moment could not have occurred, since had I remained in Philada: my time would not have been effectively employed, for want of an Office & a boarding place, which could not be had to my fancy until the beginning of next month. Should you be anxious to know in what street my dwelling is to be, I have no objection to your being informed, that the Bishop is one of my neighbors and that I hope to see the ladies of that family the oftener on this account.2

I am not in the humor to write you a “long excellent letter” at this time, for several reasons, which shall not here be given, nor do I promise to write you such a letter at any future period, & yet I may write you many letters.

The City of Washington, if I were in a descriptive mood, would furnish a most captivating picture— “Cities shall grow where forrests late have stood,” which might be parraphrazed thus—A City growing in the Midst of wood. What admiration must it not excite on reading of the stately Capitol, the magnificent Presidential palace, the 472 commodious Blodget Hotel, placed equi-distant from each other, though scarcely visible by reason of that distance—3 Here, in the language of Geographers, is a fine champain Country, well stored with wood, abounding in various sorts of game; a majestic river, navigable, full of fish & wild fowl; & other natural advantages too numerous to be enumerated.

The situation of the ground on which the City is to stand is very pleasant, from different positions you are presented with very fine prospects uniting landscape with water scenes, and from almost every point a view of Alexandria mingles with & diversifies the whole.— The Capitol is in very considerable forwardness; I mean one wing of the building, and might be finished in a few months; The Presidents house is not quite so forward; and as to the rest, they are yet on the ground.

During my stay at Annapolis I received great attention & hospitality from the first characters of the place and had an opportunity of making the acquaintance of several gentlemen of the Bar & Bench, among the former Mr: Winchester, Mr: Luther Martin & a Mr: Hollingsworth—all of Baltimore; Mr: Key of Annapolis & Mr: J. T Mason of Georgetown, brother to S.T.M. of memory.4

I ought to have mentioned the family of Governor Ogle & that of Charles Carroll of Carrollton from whom I received distinguished marks of politeness. Madam Ogle gave a Ball, which I am almost ashamed to say, was entirely a compliment to me.5 What a fine thing it is to have a father when his merits are thus visited on the child.

I intend to visit the General at the Mount on Thursday, accompanied by Mr: & Mrs: Johnson, who have been very kind & studious to accommodate me in every thing within their power. Mr: Tom Johnson has resided for some time at Annapolis for the benefit of his health and has recovered surprizingly; he enquired very kindly after you.

Mr: Cranch is well; better I think since I have been here—we got him into company at Annapolis & revived his spirits wonderfully; Mrs: C— is yet confined to her chamber, though doing very well—6

Present me kindly to my father & mother, to Louisa & Boylston I had forgotten to notice the triumph in town meeting warfare— B——n’s remark was in character. Poor Benjy , how frail we are! I do suppose the whole connection will now be ready to desert the Government & abandon it to its fate, as Rats will a ship, just before she sinks.7

473

I shall write soon to my Mother, whom I now thank for her favor of the 10th:.8 The newspapers are acceptable.

Thomas B Adams.9

RC (MWA:Adams Family Letters); addressed: “William S. Shaw / Quincy”; internal address: “W. S Shaw.”; endorsed: “Washington City / 21st May / T B Adams. / Ans 7th June.”; docketed: “1799 / May 21.”

1.

Not found.

2.

Episcopal bishop William White and his daughters, Elizabeth (1776–1831) and Mary (1777–1826), lived at 89 Walnut Street (Emma Siggins White, comp., Genesis of the White Family, Kansas City, Mo., 1920, p. 139–140; Philadelphia Directory , 1799, p. 148, Evans, No. 36353).

3.

Blodget’s Hotel was designed in Palladian style by James Hoban on a commission from Samuel Blodget Jr. In 1793 and 1794 Blodget attempted to use the property as a lottery prize, but the venture failed. It was never used as a hotel, and in 1800 it became a theater (Margaret Burri, “A New View of Blodget’s Hotel,” Washington History 2:103 [Spring 1990]; Washington, Papers, Presidential Series , 14:593–594, 602; 15:109–110).

4.

James Winchester (1772–1806) was a Baltimore lawyer whom JA commissioned to the U.S. District Court of Maryland during the congressional recess and who was appointed to the position on 10 Dec. 1799. Zebulon Hollingsworth (ca. 1762–1824) had been appointed U.S. attorney for the district of Maryland on 21 Nov. 1792. Philip Barton Key (1757–1815) was a lawyer who served in the Md. House of Delegates between 1794 and 1799; on 25 Feb. 1801 JA nominated him to the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court. John Thomson Mason (1765–1824) was the younger brother of Stevens Thomson Mason and a prominent lawyer in Maryland and Washington, D.C. (vol. 12:535; Doc. Hist. Supreme Court , 1:220; U.S. Senate, Exec. Jour. , 2d Cong., 2d sess., p. 125, 126; 6th Cong., 1st sess., p. 325, 327; Madison, Papers, Secretary of State Series , 7:645; Biog. Dir. Cong. ; Jefferson, Papers , 33:380). For Luther Martin, see William Cranch to AA, 8 May 1798, and note 4, above.

5.

On 16 May 1799 TBA dined with Gov. Benjamin and Henrietta Margaret Hill Ogle at Jennings House and went to the theater. The following day he dined at the estate of Charles Carroll of Carrollton and then attended a ball hosted by Governor Ogle (TBA, Diary, 1798–1799).

6.

Anna (Nancy) Greenleaf Cranch gave birth to Anne Allen Cranch (d. 1822) on 28 April (Greenleaf, Greenleaf Family , p. 222).

7.

On 11 March nine people were elected as Boston selectmen. The Massachusetts Mercury, 12 March, reported the results as “another instance of the popularity of Federalism” because after the vote the service of several outgoing selectmen was acknowledged with the exception of Benjamin Austin Jr., causing him to call for “an investigation of his conduct as a Selectman.” A “vote of thanks” was then offered but passed only “after a struggle” (Boston Independent Chronicle, 11–14 March).

8.

Not found.

9.

TBA wrote again to Shaw on 8 June, summarizing his recent travels, including his visit to Mount Vernon. Comparing the estate with Peacefield, TBA reported that he told George Washington, “If the President were to see Mount Vernon, he would be quite ashamed of his own place,” to which Washington only “smiled” (MWA:Adams Family Letters).

John Adams to William Stephens Smith, 22 May 1799 Adams, John Smith, William Stephens
John Adams to William Stephens Smith
Sir Quincy May 22d 1799

I have received your letter of the 16th & the bundle of papers inclosed with a great deal of pain. The thing has not a good appearance. Mr. Shieflin had better have addressed his letter & papers to 474 me than to you who are not the Secretary of War. You are suspected & have been accused of improper speculations in the neighborhood of Detroit & in connection with characters whose friendship does you no honor. These Indian pretensions are suspected to have been excited by you and your associates.1

I send you back all the papers. If you will take upon yourself to send them to the Secretary at War, you may, I will not. If you desire the command of Detroit you must sollicit it of the Secretary at War, the commander in chief of the army or Major Gen. Hamilton. I will not interfere with the discipline & order of the army because you are my son in law

I am with usual affection yours.

LbC in William Smith Shaw’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “Col Smith.”; APM Reel 119.

1.

In his letter to JA of 16 May (Adams Papers), WSS enclosed a packet of documents relating to JA’s Dec. 1798 meetings with representatives of several Native American tribes, for which see William Smith Shaw to AA, 20 Dec., and note 1, above. WSS claimed that, contrary to what James McHenry told Shaw, the chiefs left Philadelphia “highly irritated” and no longer bearing a “friendly aspect” toward the United States. WSS reported that Jonathan Schieffelin (1762–1837), a land speculator and the agent of Indian affairs at Detroit, was “apprehensive” about future diplomacy unless he was “authorised to say, that Commissioners will be appointed, to hear and report fully, to Goverment the subjects of their uneasiness.” WSS informed JA, “I seriously believe, that there is an absolute necessity of holding a conference, with them or immediately reinforcing the frontier posts.” He further noted the possibility of French or Spanish interference along the Mississippi River “to take the advantage of the present dissatisfied state of the Indian mind,” which WSS alleged could be “tranquilized, by pursuing that system of benevolence, and expanded Justice, which is due from the Civilized to the savage Man” (Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 8 May 1799; Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present, eds. Hartmut Berghoff and Uwe Spiekermann, www.immigrantentrepreneurship.org).