Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

148 Abigail Adams to Cotton Tufts, 21 February 1800 Adams, Abigail Tufts, Cotton
Abigail Adams to Cotton Tufts
Dear sir 21 Febry 1800

I take this opportunity by dr Morse to inclose to you two Hundred dollors towards the building; as soon in March as it can be framed and raised I wish to have it begun upon, and as many hands employd as can be usefully. I do not want to have any part of it, to do after the Presidents return. Congress talk of rising in April, tho I do not myself expect that they will so soon I hope Myself to be home the last of April; or the beginning of May. as soon as May be I should be glad to have the dimensions of the chimney, the height and front of the jams, as I design to procure here the Hearths, and fronts— I wish the carpenters to be very particular in covering and liding the parts which join to the other House to prevent leaking. Your Letters for Me be so good as to get mrs Cranch to convey to me. I have spoken to the President concerning the Farms. He says he is willing the Tennants should continue upon the same terms they were the last Year— with regard to Mr Porter, I should wish him to remain upon the place untill the 20 of Nov’br next, if agreable to him and Mrs Porter, but as I expect to spend the next Winter at Quincy, it will not be worth my while, to keep two Families. indeed it will be an expence I should wish to avoid, tho I think he should be allowd a hundred and 50 dollors for the seven months. I think he came on the latter end of April— If oats are to be procured at this Season I wish you to engage a hundred & 50 Bushel that we may not be at a loss for them when we return— there will be some occasion

dr Morse calls & I am not able to add a line more than a kind remembrance to all Friends—

yours

A A—

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mrs. Adams Feby 21. 1800”; notation: “20.”

Mary Smith Cranch to Abigail Adams, 23 February 1800 Cranch, Mary Smith Adams, Abigail
Mary Smith Cranch to Abigail Adams
My Dear Sister Quincy Feby. 23d 1800

I have not written you so often as I wish’d to do for these Several weeks— I have not been free from company since ordination: our house has been like a Tavern

Last week I receiv’d your kind present by General Lincoln for 149 which I most Sincerely thank you tis very pretty—& very delicate Muslin.— mrs smith sent me the little Gown for a pattern to make it by. I like the Form all but the apron & that I shall like to keep my Gown clean. it looks too much like Mother Eve’s Fig Leaf, but perhaps I may like it better when I see one worn. I dare not venture any Body here to make it at present. I am in a mourning dress for the death of aunt Austin who dy’d lately. At her Age & under her great infirmities her removal is no loss to her Friends. She has been a valuable woman in her Family & Supported the trying Scenes of her earley like which were very afflictive with a truely christian Temper1

I yesterday receiv’d your Letter of the 12th Feb & have again to thank you for the kind interest you have taken in the concerns of my unfortunate Son2 what heaven has in Store for him of joys or Sorrows I know not, & tis not best I Should. It may be best for him to meet with the disappointments he has. If he had prosper’d he might have been led into bad courses & run with the Multitude to do evil. I am Sorry he appears to have such a diffidence of his own abilities & quallification for the Profession he has chosen— He would not have been So Brow beatten in this State— If he Can only get into tolerably decent circumstances he will recover his spirits & feel of Some importance in the world. I Shall be sorry he Should miss of this appointment. but I fear he will, I hope he is prepair’d for a disappointment— he ought to be able to bear it.— was it mearly to gratify his ambition I should not regret it. I think he may be very useful in the office & doubt not of his giving Satisfaction. he would then Mix with those who would not Scorn him because he was poor—

I rejoice at the good news you have receiv’d from Mr & Mrs adams. it was like receiving them from the Grave— I greatly feared you would have lost them both— Cousin Thomas I hope looks better than he did when he left us. Shall you not bring Mrs Smith home with you? She must not live in a camp. I want to see her & the little chatter-box— I have scarcly heard a word about Cousin Louisia since she went from us— my Love to her & All My Freinds

yesterday Morning our Bell was Toll’d from eight a clock in the morning till Twelve when the Procession enterd the Meeting house They Form’d at the School House & came up to Capt. Brackits Corner & then back to the Meeting house—Master Heath & his Schoolars first, then the Millitary Offecers— they were follow’d by the Minister & Deacons. The Select-Men, Justice of the Peace, Treasurer & Town clerk & then the male inhabitants from old age to childhood 150 The Procession was a very long one. The Prayer & Sermon very proper & Good. the Pulpit cover’d with Black Clothe. The Parson with his Gown look’d very well—& now I hope we have done— Doctor Tufts deliver’d an oration at Weymouth the Two Parishs joined. Mr Norton had preach’d a funereal Sermon long since3

Mrs Norton & her little Thomas spent the night with me last week— it was the little Fello[w’s] birth day that they came. he just goes alone & is [as] pretty as ever. Mrs Norton sends her duty mrs Greenleaf does the Same. I was in Boston last Teusday it was So wet in the street that I did not go out

mrs Mears is in much better health than before she was Sick

Do you not begin to think of returning home I am ready to obey all your orders— tis always a joyful imployment to prepare for your reception

my Pen is too bad— I will write no more till I get a better— read & commit this to the Flames I am asham’d of it—

yours affectionately

Mary Cranch

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “Mrs / A Adams / Philadelphia”; endorsed: “Mrs Cranch Feb’ry / 23 1800.” Some loss of text where the seal was removed.

1.

AA’s aunt Mary Smith Austin (b. 1710) died on 9 Feb. and was described by the Massachusetts Mercury, 11 Feb., as “a pious, exemplary christian.” Austin’s husband, Ebenezer, died in 1742, and she never remarried (Thomas B. Wyman, The Genealogies and Estates of Charlestown, 2 vols., Boston, 1879, 1:29; Barbara Neville Parker and Anne Bolling Wheeler, John Singleton Copley: American Portraits in Oil, Pastel, and Miniature with Biographical Sketches, Boston, 1938, p. 28–29).

2.

See AA to William Cranch, [4] Feb. 1800, note 5, above.

3.

Rev. Jacob Norton delivered his sermon on George Washington on 29 Dec. 1799. The oration given by Cotton Tufts on 22 Feb. 1800 described Washington as a “great Warrior” and an “accomplished Statesman”; Elizabeth Cranch Norton called it “a handsome oration” (Cotton Tufts, An Oration, in Honour to the Memory of General George Washington, Boston, 1800, p. 14, Evans, No. 38681; MHi:Jacob Norton Papers, Elizabeth Cranch Norton Diary).