Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

Thomas Boylston Adams to Joseph Pitcairn, 5 September 1800 Adams, Thomas Boylston Pitcairn, Joseph
Thomas Boylston Adams to Joseph Pitcairn
Dear Sir Philadelphia 5th: September 1800

On the 12th: of last month I received your favor of the 30th: May which is the most recent of my European advices—1 I have not a line from Berlin for a period of more than six months, although I cannot accuse myself of any remissness in writing. These things were not wont, so to be, but I doubt not the Minister has a reasonable excuse— I must scold a little more directly than I have done or I may not get satisfaction.

In one of my last letters I told you it was time for you and all other advocates for the present order of things in this Country, so to fashion your conduct as not to become obnoxious to any new Administration which great exertions are making to secure—2 A schism between the Federalists has really taken place, as to the Man who shall be chosen to rule over us, and it behoves every one who has a preference to make his election as to the Candidate, in season. But the doctrine of the times is, that if the man who is in, may not be continued, because of the unpopularity of some of his measures, he ought to be given up, even by his friends for the sake of bringing in another of the same side. The head & chief of the Schismatics lives at New York & has made “a fine kettle of fish,” of the federal cause in that State. I believe that his conduct has destroyed public confidence more than that of any other man in this Country. What effect this threatened division may produce, I know not.

It is a pretty gloomy time for men of real concern for the welfare of their Country. Popular elections are so constantly recurring, that 397 the minds of the people are kept in a continual ferment; and public offices are so much sought after & so eagerly pursued, that elections begin to grow more tumultuous, more numerously attended; and the animosity of parties proportionably increased. The people are naturally fond of the importance which a controul over elections, confers, and they are tenacious, extremely so, of this prerogative— Little evil would result from it if it were confined to proper limits & the only difficulty on this subject seems to be to ascertain what those limits ought to be. It is very doubtful whether any amelioration of the right of suffrage can ever be operated, but by the sad experience of the evils which are ingrafted upon the present system. All our public Legislative bodies & many of the Executive State departments are verging towards democracy— The removal of the seat of government has in fact operated disadvantageously— It has occasioned the resignation of twenty or thirty federal members of Congress, whose places will be generally supplied with men of inferior talents or opposite sentiments.3 These things all augur ill to the cause of government; & yet even supposing the democrats to gain a complete ascendancy, they must govern us some how or other; though I am confident the present Constitution will be a miserable pageant under their management.

The news from Europe is all in favor of the french, and creates some wonder among us, but miracles, though told are not always performed. Fortune has not yet abandoned her favorite & high priest.

The negotiation at Paris on our behalf, excites much interest here; sometimes we are told it is entirely broken off & the Commissioners are returning home; at other times, the negociation is in a fair & prosperous train & a Treaty may be expected to result from it. &ca: Our Minister at Berlin is accused of having sacrificed in the late treaty, the rights of neutral powers, and it is said in the Jacobin papers, that he had much difficulty to persuade the Prussian Minister to consent to such an article.4 You will observe, that neither the treaty or any correspondence relative to it, have ever been published.

Our Cities of New York & Philadelphia have hitherto escaped the yellow fiend; but several of the lesser Sea ports have been visited by it.5 The quarrantine laws have been rigorously enforced, at both the former places; whereas none have existed in the infected towns; a very strong proof, that the fever is an imported disease. Business florishes almost beyond example, for the season, though I now & then hear a Merchant say, that shipping business is dull & 398 discouraging— A proof of it is, that not a week scarcely goes by, without our hearing of the departure or arrival of more than an hundred sail, under convoy for or from the West Indies.

When you write to Berlin, please inform, that we are all well.

With much esteem, I am, Dear Sir / Your Mo ob: hble Servt

T. B. A.

RC (OCHP:Joseph Pitcairn Letters); addressed: “Joseph Pitcairn Esqr. / Consul of the United States of America / Hamburg”; internal address: “Joseph Pitcairn Esqr:”; endorsed: “Thomas Adams / 5 Sepr 1800 / 4 Nov. Rd— / 8 Der.”

1.

Not found.

2.

TBA to Pitcairn, 31 May, above.

3.

A dozen Federalists and one Democratic-Republican resigned from Congress in 1800 and early 1801, though four of those departed to accept other federal positions and two to serve in state government. The Federalists who resigned without taking new posts were Jonathan Brace, Henry Latimer, James Lloyd, Benjamin Goodhue, Samuel Lyman, Samuel Sewall, and John Laurance ( Biog. Dir. Cong. ).

4.

The Philadelphia Aurora General Advertiser, 22 Aug., criticized JQA’s negotiation of the Prussian-American Treaty of Amity and Commerce of 1799, arguing that he abandoned core principles related to shipping that were in the treaty negotiated by JA, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson in 1785.

5.

Yellow fever struck Baltimore and Norfolk, Va., killing 1,197 and 250, respectively, while deaths in Charleston, S.C., New York City, and Philadelphia decreased from the previous year (K. David Patterson, “Yellow Fever Epidemics and Mortality in the United States, 1693–1905,” Social Science & Medicine, 34:857 [April 1992]; Philadelphia Gazette, 22 Aug.).

Abigail Adams to William Smith Shaw, 6 September 1800 Adams, Abigail Shaw, William Smith
Abigail Adams to William Stephens Smith
Dear sir Quincy sep’br 6 1800

Your Letter by Mr Rogers did not reach Me untill the last week.1 The Crisis which I have long apprehended is arrived and brought with it the Misiry I foresaw, but could not avert. all that intreaties, and pursuation could affect, I have attempted. I have conjured the unhappy Man by all that is Dear, Honour, reputation, and Fame, his Family and Friends, to desist, and to strive to regain what he was daily loosing in the estimation of the World. I have painted before him the misiry he was bringing upon himself his amiable wife and lovely innocent Children; but all has been lost upon him. He has already brought down a load of disgrace upon himself Family and connections, which even the bitterest repentance can never wash out; but of Repentance & reformation, I despair; his constitution is nearly destroyd and still he persists in Practises which must soon terminate in Death tho in the Eyes of the world he can never restore himself to that fair reputation which he has lost, yet with joy would his Parents draw a veil over all which is past; could they have 399 the joy of seeing a returning Penitant, could they say, this [“]My son was lost, but is found”—2 He well knows that his Father always told his Children, that he would assist them to the extent of his ability, in their Education; and that he would do for them as far as he was able provided they exerted themselves & behaved well, but that he would never pay a debt that any of them should contract, by vicious conduct or Profligacy; if any of them made so bad a use of their talents, they must abide the concequences— when his Father apprehended that he was conducting wrong, he wrote to him, and repeated the same thing to him— he also wrote to mr sands, and to mr Malcom more than a year ago to put them upon their guard—to advance any thing for him, would be only to give him a new credit, and to pay his debts, would be to uphold a profligate child, to the injury of the virtuous; His wife and Children we are willing to assist; Susan I have taken with the expectation of bringing up, provided my Life is prolonged. they are the innocent victims of a misirable Man, whom I can no longer consider as My Son— Yet am I wounded to the Soul by the consideration of what is to become of him— what will be his fate embitters every moment of my Life—

I can say no more— / but that I am Your affectionate / Mother

A Adams

RC (ICN:VAULT Case MS 6A 81) addressed by AA2: “Colln William S Smith / New York”; notation: “Sep. 6. 1800— / Mrs John Adams to / Wm. S. Smith—”

1.

The letter, not found, was probably carried by William Rogers (1761–1817), a New York merchant and friend of TBA’s and Joseph Pitcairn’s who had returned from Europe in July carrying dispatches from the U.S. envoys at Paris (TBA to Pitcairn, 30 July 1800, 11 July 1801, both OCHP:Joseph Pitcairn Letters; Frederic Fairchild Sherman, “John Trumbull’s Portrait of William Rogers,” Art in America and Elsewhere, 10:259 [Oct. 1922]).

2.

Luke, 15:24.