Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
th1801
Yourss of the 20th &
21st are received.1 I also received this morning a
compleat sett of the Port folio without any letter or direction respecting
them. Presuming they were sent to be at my disposal, I shall send them by
tomorrow’s mail, to Anapolis where I expect to get many subscribers. I some
time since sent a sett to Boston and another to young Chace at Baltimore,
and if I had a number more, I think I could dispose of them to
advantage.2 A few more of
the “Prospectus” at least would be agreeable. But notwithstanding all the
exertions of his friends, if Mr. Dennie
continues to admit the observations of such political heretics as “a native American,” he never can and ought
not to receive encouragement. For a periodical publication “submitted to men
of afluence, men of liberality and men of letters” as is the Port folio and
which justly assumes so high a rank, in its third number, to be so lavish,
in terms of unqualified approbation, of a hireling miscreant, who has
calumniated our government and our Country and insulted the understanding of
every individual in it is in my opinion, not only very impolitic but
materially wrong. I allude to what the author says of Cobbet.3 Many of the gentlemen of Congress
have told me they were very sorry to see such a production admitted and Mr.
Rutledge among the rest. The whole piece is very exceptionable and I was
very sorry to see it. You ought to expostulate with Dennie, on the
impropriety of admitting such publications
I am surprised to hear that you never knew till lately of
the “Romans in Greece.” It laid on
the Presidents & mine my table all
last winter at Philadelphia. The manuscript was sent to the P——t by our
consul in Italy Mr Willys. I was so pleased with the perusal that I obtained
leave to have it published and it was accordingly given to Nancrede, but I
doubt whether he ever sold many of them.4
I told you in my last, that a committee was authorized to bring in a bill, renewing the sedition law. Two or three of the democrats have since taken seats in the house and there is great reason to fear they will not be able to carry it.5 If they do not, it will be very lamentable. I wish the law with some alterations should be permanent. I would make it ten times as severe as it now is. In addition to fine and imprisonment I would add certainly the pillory & perhaps the rack. To establish a government founded on public opinion and to allow that public opinion to be misled and corrupted by the lowest miscreants of society, who have talents only to invent a falshood is not my system. No, no. Government should be respected—character should not be violated with impunity. A bill has been reported to the house for the government of this district similar to the system proposed by “Epaminondas” which I think a tolerable good one and hope will pass. A strong energetic government would add to the respectability—hasten the growth and progress of this city and if any thing under heaven will, establish a degree of harmony among the citizens. The Committe of Commerce & manufactures are authorized to bring in a bill for the further suspension of the intercourse between the US & France.6
I inclose to you with this the Prussian treaty, three
copies and will send you more if you wish for them.—7 I also send a letter of R. B.
giving an account of himself, which I hope & believe Mr Dennie will
consider worthy of an insertion in his port folio otherwise I must request
you to return it as I highly value it…8 I have been collecting a compleat sett of Statepapers for myself
I want nothing to compleat it, but the pamphlets published under the sixth
article of the Brit. treaty, for which I wish you to apply to Mr Reid & or Mr Evans who I presume will
have no objection to furnishing you with a sett.—9 The P——t ought to be supplied with
a compleat sett also. Please to attend to this immediately. With this you
have also the judiciary bill, which has undergone considerable alterations
and is now more like the one first reported to the house last session
In haste yours
RC (ViU:Adams Family Letters); internal address:
“T. B Adams Esqr”; endorsed: “W. S. Shaw / 25th: Jany 1801. / 30th: Recd: / Do acknd: &
answd:.”
TBA’s letters to Shaw of 20 Jan. (MHi:Misc. Bound Coll.) and
21 Jan. (MWA:Adams Family
Letters) commented on the popularity of the Port
Folio in Washington, D.C., and conveyed Joseph Dennie Jr.’s
thanks for Shaw’s role in soliciting subscribers.
Probably Samuel Chase Jr. (1773–1841), a Baltimore
lawyer (The New Baltimore Directory,
Baltimore, 1800, p. 26, Evans, No. 38040; A Biographical
Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1635–1789, ed. Edward
C. Papenfuse and others, 2 vols., Baltimore, 1979–1985, entry on Samuel
Chase Sr.).
The Port Folio, 1:18–19
(17 Jan. 1801), printed an article by “A Native American,” who argued
that the Convention of 1800 should not be ratified and the United States
should commit to an alliance with Britain. The author also described
William Cobbett as a writer of “bold and energetic talents” who was
forced into exile by “persecution, and ingratitude.”
The Romans in Greece. An
Ancient Tale, Descriptive of Modern Events, by Vittorio
Barzoni, compared the French to ancient Roman conquerors. Boston
bookseller Paul Joseph Guerard de Nancrede published the work in 1799,
Evans, No. 35160
(vol. 11:501;
JA, Papers
, 19:363; Madeleine
B. Stern, “Joseph Nancrede, Franco-American Bookseller–Publisher,
1761–1841,” The Papers of the Bibliographical
Society of America, 70:44 [1976]). For U.S. consul at Barcelona
William Willis, see
TBA to AA, 3 Oct. 1800, and
note 1, above.
On 31 Dec. a committee in the House of
Representatives recommended that the Sedition Act, which was due to
expire on 3 March 1801, be extended for two years. During debate on 21
Jan. the committee chair, Federalist Jonas Platt of New York, called
arguments questioning the constitutionality of the act “absurd.”
Democratic-Republican William Charles Cole Claiborne of Tennessee
countered that the act was “a violent outrage upon the great charter of
American rights—the Constitution.” On 19 Feb. Platt introduced a bill to
extend the act, but it was defeated by four votes two days later, and
the Sedition Act consequently expired (
Annals of
Congress
, 6th Cong., 2d sess., p. 874, 876–877, 916–940,
946–958, 960–976, 1038–1039, 1047–1050).
On 10 Feb. Samuel Smith, as chair of the House
Committee on Commerce and Manufactures, introduced a bill to extend the
June 1798 prohibition against American ships entering French ports and
vice versa. The bill was defeated in a 59 to 37 vote, and the
prohibition expired on 3 March 1801 (vol. 13:96, 398;
Annals
of Congress
, 6th Cong., 2d sess., p. 1011–1020). For
Augustus Brevoort Woodward’s Epaminondas essays, see Shaw to
TBA, 8 Jan., and note 16, above.
Enclosure not found. The Prussian-American Treaty of
Amity and Commerce of 1799 was printed in English and French after its 4
Nov. 1800 proclamation as Traite d’amitié et de
commerce, entre Sa Majeste le Roi de Prusse, et les Etats Unis de
I’Amerique, [Washington, D.C., 1800], Evans, No. 38910.
Ellipsis in MS.
Probably John Read, Observations on the Part of the United States … to the Reply of
Daniel Dulany. Under the Sixth Article of the Treaty of Amity,
Commerce and Navigation, [Phila., 1798], Evans, No. 49910, and a
work by Thomas Macdonald, Thomas Fitzsimons, and William Cobbett, A Brief Statement of Opinions, Given in the
Board of Commissioners, under the Sixth Article of the Treaty of
Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, Phila., 1800, Evans, No. 37428. Read
(1769–1854), Princeton 1787, was U.S. general agent and Griffith Evans
(1760–1845) was secretary to the board of commissioners overseeing
British claims under Art. 6 of the Jay Treaty (
Princetonians
,
4:222–224; Townsend Ward, “Griffith Evans,”
PMHB
, 6:342,
343 [1882]).