Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

Abigail Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 3 February 1801 Adams, Abigail Adams, Thomas Boylston
Abigail Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams
Dear Thomas Twesday 3 Feb’ry 1801

The Roads and Weather prevent my leaving this place this day as I had designd; mrs cushing and otis advise me to take lodgings at mr Staell’s in 3d street, Your former lodgings— I shall want a chamber with two Beds and one Bed for a Man servant; I always chuse to have my Maid and susan sleep in the Room with me. She has got the hooping cough. I hope the worst part of it is over.

555

when I get to Quincy I can furnish the Letters you request, but have them not here; I inclose to you the Subscription Money for the port folio. I do not however approve all that I see in it; I knew Fabius the Moment I read him in replie to Manlius— I do not expect to get to Philadelphia untill next Week. mr shaw Will advertize you when I leave here— as I have no hand in the approaching election, if it should go contrary to the Wishes of the united Paddies, I hope they will not make a Riot whilst I am in your city at least; I am as perfectly at a loss to conjecture which of the candidates will be the chosen one, as I was the day it was first known that there were two equals

is it not Jaffer in Venice Preserved who says “oh what dreadfull moments intervene between the Birth of plots, and their last active scene?—[”]1

I fancy our Presidents Elect feel Some of these moments. the vice President made me a friendly visit yesterday in order to take leave and wish me a good journey. it was more than I expected. I thought I would Say Some things to him, provided he was, or Might be, so & so respecting the house, and furniture &c he say’d—as I had mentiond the subject; should he have any thing to do in the buisness, he would be very happy to retain all domesticks that I could recommend,2 beged me to be assured nothing would so much contribute to his happiness as to be able in any Way to be Serviceable to mr Adams myself or any of My Family— I thanked him, inquired particuliarly after mr J Q A—whether he liked his residence at Berlin &c he never sees me but he inquires with affection after him. I told him frankly, that I expected mr Adams would return to America. I did not tell him I had just read the Secretary’s Letter of leave of absence which was true—3

adieu company below. I must close

Your Mother

A A

RC (Adams Papers).

1.

A conflation of Thomas Otway’s Venice Preserved and Joseph Addison, Cato, Act I, scene iii, lines 53–54.

2.

Thomas Jefferson retained three servants from the Adamses’ presidential household: the “vallient” Christopher, Jack, and their groom (William Cranch to JA, 13 June 1801, Adams Papers; AA to TBA, 12 Oct. 1800, above).

3.

On 31 Jan. 1801 JA requested John Marshall to prepare letters recalling JQA from his mission to Prussia. Although JA felt that “justice” required JQA to be sent to another post in Europe, he believed it was his “duty to call him home.” Marshall complied with the president’s request, drafting letters to Frederick William III of 31 Jan. (Adams Papers) and to JQA of 3 Feb., in which the secretary of state informed JQA that “the objects of your mission to Berlin having been entirely accomplished,” he should take leave of the king and return immediately to the United States. The letters and several Dupl’s sent by 556 various routes were first received by JQA on 26 April. Two days later JQA replied to Secretary of State James Madison that he had requested an audience with Frederick William III to present his letter of recall and would depart Prussia as soon as his personal circumstances allowed. The Adamses left Berlin in July and arrived in the United States in early September (Marshall, Papers , 6:61, 67; Madison, Papers, Secretary of State Series , 1:124; D/JQA/24, 8 July, 4 Sept., APM Reel 27).

William Smith Shaw to Thomas Boylston Adams, 3 February 1801 Shaw, William Smith Adams, Thomas Boylston
William Smith Shaw to Thomas Boylston Adams
City of Washington February 3d 1801.

Agreeable to my promise in my last, I now inclose to you Mr Jeffersons letter, which I consider to be the counterpart of the letter to Mazzei and which, you must have more philosophy, than I think you possess, to read without bitter indignation—without execrating the author, in the most unqualified terms. The whole letter is in the canting style of the vilest demagogue of our Country.— Throughout insidious—in some places obscure. The letter is supposed to have been written to T. Fairfax of Berkely county in answer to one Mr. J. received from him, requesting him to deny that he was disbeliever of the Christian religion. It is confidently asserted that F. wrote such a letter to Mr. J. and there are good grounds for believing this is the answer.— Is it true, “that the great question which divides our citizens (true democratic dialect) is whether it is safest, that a preponderance of power should be lodged with the monarchical or the republican branch of our government.”1 No. A man must be politically blind, totally unacquainted with the state of parties in this Country or an infernal rascal who would dare to make so false an assertion. The great question in this Country is whether we shall have a mild government, administred on the mildest principles or anarchy—“the tempestuous sea of liberty.” This is the grand question which agitate parties in this Country. Dont you agree with me?

Executive “patronage.” This is an old hackneyed subject & has been harped upon by demagogues of all ages. It has been urged as a mighty argument for a reform under a monarchical government and has been made a principal engine of opposition in this. It is a political bugbear, imposed upon the people by insidious and unprincipled men to excite their passions—to make them jealous of and withdraw their affections from their government. Undue executive patronage does not exist in this Country and how is it possible that it should? Comprehending an immense territory, with nearly 8 millions of inhabitants, every one of whom thinks himself fully competent for any & every office in the Presidents power to give? There is no office vacant, however low in rank—however small its pecuniary reward, but 557 what there ten or fifteen, frequently twenty and thirty and sometimes I have known nearly an hundred, who have sollicited it. All the dissappointed candidates immediately are become embittered against the President and opposed to his administration and it is a certain and well known fact, that you may trace all the principal opposition of this Country to unseccessful sollicitations for office. So that I have solid ground for saying, that so far from the Executive gaining improper patronage by the his constitutional power of appointing to office, he makes himself many violent ennemies without any very warm friends. I say further, that there is scarcely a single power, vested in the Executive, which if he executes with integrity and to its full extent, will not make him as many ennemies as friends. In this Country, under our present Constitution, there is no danger of the a preponderance of the Executive over the legislative branch—but experience has proved, that there is every thing to fear from frequent attempts of the popular branch to usurp the prerogatives of the other and thus destroy the Constitution. “Armies and navies” “useless pageants”!!

Your letter of the 29th I have received with a sett of the Port folio— If it were not for your brothers Silesian tour I would not give much for all the numbers, but they render them invaluable. This seems to be the general opinion here. No writers beside have appeared of very great merit

None of the Judges of the S.C. have yet arrived except Judge Cushing & Chace. Judge P. will not be here & it is very doubtful whether Judge More will attend.

In great haste

Wm S Shaw

The Senate have not yet concurred in the J. bill, the foolish conduct of Hillhouse & some others I fear, render it very doubtful whether it will pass2

RC (ViU:Adams Family Letters); internal address: “T B. Adams Esqr”; endorsed: “W. S Shaw / 3 Feby 1801 / 6th: Dc: Recd: / 8th: Do ansd:

1.

Shaw quoted from Thomas Jefferson’s 4 Sept. 1800 letter to John (Johannes) Vanmetre, in which Jefferson argued that the executive branch could not maintain superiority over the legislative branch “but by immense patronage, by multiplying offices, making them very lucrative, by armies, navies, &c.” Such a system, Jefferson continued, would “doom the labouring citizen to toil & sweat for useless pageants.” The letter was published in the Richmond, Va., Examiner, 27 Jan. 1801, after Vanmetre shared it with local Democratic-Republicans. The Washington, D.C., National Intelligencer, 2 Feb., and the Philadelphia American Daily Advertiser, 10 Feb., both reprinted it. Shaw misidentified Jefferson’s correspondent as Ferdinando Fairfax (1774–1820) of Berkeley County, Va., a member of a general standing committee of Virginia Democratic-Republicans (Jefferson, Papers , 32:126, 33:103; Madison, Papers, Secretary of State Series , 1:309). For Jefferson’s 558 letter to Philip Mazzei, which Shaw paraphrased at the end of the paragraph, see vol. 12:164–165.

2.

Connecticut senator James Hillhouse served on a committee of five Federalists that on 29 Jan. recommended passage of the House version of the judiciary bill without amendment, fearing the bill would be doomed if an amended version was sent back to the House for reconsideration. The gambit worked; several amendments proposed on the floor of the Senate were defeated, and the House version was approved without alteration and signed into law ( Annals of Congress , 6th Cong., 2d sess., p. 735, 737; Biog. Dir. Cong. ; Doc. Hist. Supreme Court , 4:292). For the passage of the bill, see Shaw to TBA, 8 Jan., and note 7, above.