Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
d.Dec
r.1799
Your favors of the 19th &
22d I have recd.
no Vessell at present is up for Philaa. If any
one offers, I will endeavour to procure the articles you wish to be sent. it
is now so late in the season, that I do not expect I shall forward them— I
am much oblig’d to you for the papers you inclos’d, such Mad Men, as Cooper
can never do any injury to the Government their mad zeal, defeats their own
purposes. if no other state suffer’d from such conduct but Pensylva. they richly deserve it, for giving such
encouragement for Mad Men from every quarter of the Globe to resort there—
the Business respecting Robbins is well
understood in this quarter. The Letter in the Aurora, without doubt is a
fabrication, & in my opinion the French Paper never cross’d the
Atlantic. Mr C. has clear’d himself compleatly
by 66 his two Letters. Our Envoys I hope
before this are safe landed in Europe & I hope they will meet with
success. they have the best wishes of a large Marjority in this Quarter.
even the Junto are now silent & begin to
doubt whether they have not been deceived in their opinion.— every arrival
from Europe brings Bloody News. By an arrival
Yesterday from Hamburgh We have accounts of several severe actions in
Holland on the 1st & 2d Oct. in which the Dutch & French were oblig’d to retreat
some distance. it is said that in another action after these the Duke of
York was defeated with the loss of 4 or 5000. Men—1 I hope the Elections in the House
of Reps. have terminated favourably— I was at Atkinson a few weeks since the
Fa[mily] were all well. I attended the Exhibit[ion] & was much pleas’d
with the performances. Wm. & John had
conspicuous parts & perform’d very well. John perform’d his part in such
a manner as to gain the applause of the whole assembly— the performances
were in the Meeting House which was as much crouded as Cambridge Meetg House
on Commencement Day.— Mrs. S & our Children
are well she joins me in Affec. Regards to you & the President.—
Yrs. Affecly
m.Smith
RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “Mrs. Adams / Philadelphia”; endorsed: “Mr W
smith / Decbr 2d
1799.” Some loss of text where the seal was removed.
Anglo-Russian forces under Prince Frederick, Duke of
York and Albany, defeated Franco-Batavian troops under Gen. Guillaume
Marie Anne Brune in the Battle of Egmond aan Zee on 2 October. The
encounter was reported in the Boston press after the arrival of the ship
Argo, Capt. Howland, from Hamburg on 2
December. The two generals clashed again in the Battle of Castricum on 6
Oct., when Frederick’s army was defeated and 1,870 men under his command
were killed or wounded (Smith, Napoleonic Wars Data
Book
, p. 170–171; Massachusetts
Mercury, 3 Dec.).
th1799
Mrs smith Louissa Mrs Otis Rush Peters & a number of young Ladies are just gone to Congress to hear the Speech which is deliverd at 12 oclock to day; I should have liked well enough to have been of the Party, but it would not have been proper— You will see it, as soon as you will get the Letter I presume some people will not be pleased, I suppose, because it will not disclose enough about the mission to France. others will Growl because war is not waged against England, in Words at least; they will grumble at all events, and under all circumstances, and so let them.1 but their brightest 67 best, and Most peacefull days they now see; such at least are my predictions—
I have to request You my dear sister to look in my
large Hair cloaths Trunk which stands in the Garret for My White
Lutestring Gown & coat which is trimd with silver, and for a Napkin
in which is a plain Muslin Gown Embrodered with silk, which belongs to
Mrs smith, indeed all that is pind in the Napkin belongs to mrs smith.
these dresses I request you to have done up in the safest Manner and
take them to Mr smiths, with a request to send them to Me if possible by
some private conveyance; I sent Betsy yesterday to My Trunk to get them
and found to my great mortification that she had omitted to put them
up—or rather that she had by mistake put up what I did not want in lieu
of them. mrs smith is more dissapointed than I am, as she wants hers
more; if they should not be in that trunk they Must be in the imperial.
I had depended upon mine for fryday Evening next and as they wanted a
little alteration, I discoverd that they were missing by sending to my
Trunk for them;— it is like there will be persons comeing on from Boston
who will in the course of the Winter take them on for me Gen’ll Lincoln designs to come about Christmass
but that may be uncertain. I will trust to mr smith care to convey them
for Me. sew them in a coars cloth as well as a Napkin.— and I will give
who ever brings them safe; as many good dinners as they will Eat—
I should certainly use some Red Broad cloth if I could come at it, for red cloth Cloaks are all the mode, trim’d with white furs— this is much more rational than to wear only a shawl in winter; I wish any thing would persuade the Ladies that Muslin is not a proper winter dress— so far as example goes; I shall bring in the use of silks— at my Age I think I am priviledged to Sit a fashion. the real truth is that Muslin is new every time it is clean, & new trim’d, so that it is, they say upon a principle of oconomy they use it, fewer changes being required—
I have not had a Letter from You for some time. I communicated to the President mr J Cranchs Letter and he gave it to the secretary of war to see what can be done. I shall ask the Secretary soon respecting it, and then will write you.—2
I learn from some of the Essex leaders that Judge Dana is to be Sit up for Govenour.3 he will make a very able one. the Bench will also lose a learned Judge. I Question however whether Judge dana is sufficiently popular for that place he wants the amiable & 68 concilitating Manners of Sumner— alass I know not where, is to be found all the qualities which he possess’d, concentered in any person who will be held up as a canditate
upon Mr sheaf
the Member from Portsmouth will be like to come soon. he will call at Mr
Storers no doubt, and I have been thinking if you was to buy Me a small
trunk just large enough to hold the articles whether Mr sheaf would not
take charge of it for me, & bring it within the carriage.4 the sooner you can get the
things to Town the better.
Mrs smith is very well and sends her duty to you, so does Mr Adams mr shaw & Louissa. the City is now said to be very healthy. the Members of both Houses have been punctual to a day, a sufficient Number to make both houses I inclose the speech— with hopes of hearing from You this week I close, adding Love to mrs Norten & Greenleaf / affectionatly Your sister
please to send all you find in the Napkin belonging to Mrs smith
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); addressed: “Mrs Mary Cranch / Quincy.”
JA in a 3 Dec. opening speech to
Congress called for a restructuring of the U.S. judicial system as
“indispensably necessary” to ensure that “individuals should be guarded
from oppression.” He reiterated his confidence in the second mission to
France and the resumption of trade with St. Domingue and commented on
recent Anglo-American disagreements over the Jay Treaty. The speech was
printed in the Philadelphia press on the same day and as a pamphlet, Speech of the President of the United States to
Both Houses of Congress, 3d December, 1799, Phila., 1799, Evans, No. 36589 (
Annals
of Congress
, 6th Cong., 1st sess., p. 11, 188–190;
Philadelphia Gazette, 3 Dec.;
Philadelphia Constitutional Diary, 3
Dec.).
For the patronage appeal on behalf of Joseph Cranch, see Elizabeth Palmer Cranch to AA, 27 Dec., and note 1, below.
The Essex Junto was a group of New England
Federalists with ties to Essex County, Mass., that originated as a group
opposed to the proposed Massachusetts constitution of 1778. More than a
dozen prominent adherents, including Fisher Ames, George Cabot, and
Timothy Pickering, aligned themselves with the Hamiltonian faction of
the Federalist Party. In the April 1800 Massachusetts gubernatorial
election, members of the Junto supported Francis Dana’s unsuccessful
candidacy (vol. 13:493; David H. Fischer, “The Myth of the Essex Junto,”
WMQ
, 21:195, 196, 213–214, 221, 223 [April 1964];
A New Nation
Votes).
James Sheafe (1755–1829), Harvard 1774, was a
Federalist who represented New Hampshire in the House of Representatives
during the 6th Congress and in the Senate from 4 March 1801 until his
resignation on 14 June 1802 (
Biog. Dir. Cong.
).