Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
st:1799
In addressing a small publication to the President, I am naturally led to congratulate You upon your recovery from your late tedious indisposition.1 May you long continue to enjoy your present health, and to add by your kindnesses, to the happiness of all Connected with you.—
Your Son Thomas calls now & then to see us, but not so Often as we wish. He is fixed in a part of the city which does not promise him immediate success in business. I wish he were situated nearer to market street. Perhaps he has made choice of his present retired Office for the Sake of qualifying himself more fully by previous study for the duties of his profession.— we hear Nothing now of his Attention to the Ladies, so that the President’s fears of his checking his studies, and prospects in life by a premature marriage are Altogether without foundation.— The President I hope has not forgotten 499 the conversation in the presence of both our sons, to Which the above information alludes. I did not think, nor coincide with him. The sooner our sons marry, After they acquire the means of Subsistence, the better. But I will not debate this matter with our friend, at our present distance. After all that can be said on both Sides the Question, our sons will follow their inclinations.—
Our City was alarmed a few days ago with reports of several Cases
of the bilious fever, for they cannot be yellow fevers,
since the laws we have passed to destroy our trade, in Order to present their
importation from the West Indies. At present the public mind is more composed. If the
disease should revive, I shall whisper in your son’s ear
the necessity of flight, for I have acquired so much of General Lee’s rascally Virtue of
prudence upon this subject, that I dare not openly advise even my friends to leave the
city.2 A horseshoe upon the sill of a
farmer’s door to keep away witches, does not strike my mind as a more degrading proof of
the Weakness of the human Understanding, than the present Quarantine laws of the state
of Pennsylvania to prevent the importation of the yellow fever, and the cruel treatment
they give the men who advise the prevention of it from domestic sources.3
My dear Mrs Rush joins me in most
affectionate regards to you & the President. Most of our family are in the Country.
Our Eldest son has received his Leiutenant’s Commission in the Navy with great
gratitude, and I hope will not dishonour it. He was well on the 25th of may cruising off St Christophers.—4 We do not expect to see him before October.—
From my Dr madam / Your sincere
friend
n:Rush.
RC (Adams Papers); docketed: “Dr Rush to Mrs Adams / July 1st 1799.”
No letter to JA from Rush has been found, but Rush
almost certainly sent him his latest work, Three Lectures upon
Animal Life, Delivered in the University of Pennsylvania, Phila., 1799, Evans, No. 36255.
Rush was referring to Gen. Charles Lee’s retreat at the Battle of
Monmouth on 28 June 1778, for which see JA, Papers
, 7:164.
Pennsylvania’s quarantine policy was set out in the 22 April 1794
“Act for establishing an Health-office” and in supplemental acts passed in 1795, 1796,
1798, and 1799. The legislation established a health office on State Island and two
hospitals, prohibited “all intercourse with infected places within the United States,”
and quarantined both U.S. and foreign vessels for ten to thirty days. Ships’ captains
were required to answer questions about their vessels, cargoes, and crews. On 25 Feb.
Congress passed “An Act respecting Quarantines and Health Laws,” upholding state laws
and mandating the use of brick warehouses for quarantined materials (A Compilation of the Health-Laws of the State of
Pennsylvania, Phila., 1798, Evans, No. 34324; Health-Office, Phila., 1795,
Evans, No. 29304; Simon
Finger, The Contagious City: The Politics of Public Health in
Early Philadelphia, Ithaca, N.Y., 2012, p. 128, 131–132, 136–138, 147;
U.S. Statutes
at Large
, 1:619–620; Oliver Wolcott Jr. to JA, 29 June, Adams Papers; JA to Wolcott, 5 July,
CtHi:Wolcott Papers).
John Rush (1777–1837) enlisted in the U.S. Navy in May 1798 and
was serving as a surgeon aboard the sloop of war Ganges,
which had departed St. Christopher’s (now St. Kitts) on 20 May 1799 in pursuit of
French privateers (Eric T. Carlson and Jeffrey L. Wollock, “Benjamin Rush and His
Insane Son,” Bulletin of the New York Academy of
Medicine, 51:1318, 1321, 1328 [Dec. 1975]; New York Spectator, 19 June).
nd1799
I am commissioned by my truly distress’d Mother to say for her,
that she cannot acquire resolution sufficient to adress you, but so greatful does she
feel for your comforting and consoling letter, that she is hurt it has not met that
attention it merited long before this
1 she flatter’d herself week after week she should
be able to write you. I am griev’d to add, she too much gives up to her sorrow! and
alas! refuses to receive the comfort we are all anxious to administer—to a feeling mind
like yours my worthy Madam it is needless to say how heavy our affliction is. you knew
our dear departed relative, you honor’d her with your
esteem, and I doubt not shed a tear to her Memory, as has our much lov’d Louisa. a
Channel so often bedew’d with its own sorrow, can never be callous to the feelings of
others, and most soothing to our wounded hearts, is the sympathy we have receiv’d from
our Friends—
Many have been the uneasy Moments this family have experienc’d on
your infirm health, but the last accounts we had was more pleasing as we heard you were
much better, we one and all sincerely pray you may enjoy many years of permanent health,
and remain a blessing to all that have the honor of being acquainted with you: My
Parents request their best regards may be presented to the President, and accepted by
yourself— Mr Deblois with my Sister Kitty unites with me in
offering our sincere respects—and love to Louisa—
And be assur’d my worthy and respected Madam I remain with every proper sentiment Your most humble Servant—
RC (Adams Papers).
AA’s letter of condolence to Ruth Hooper Dalton on the death of Sarah Dalton has not been found.