Papers of John Adams, volume 18

To John Adams from Benjamin Goodhue, 20 December 1785 Goodhue, Benjamin Adams, John
From Benjamin Goodhue
Sir Salem Decr. 20th, 1785

Having an acquaintance with your good brother Mr. Cranch, from being a fellow member of the same Legislative body; at his request and from the Assurance which he has given me, that a letter from one of whom you have no Kind of Knowledge, where the views of the Writer are painted to the general good, would meet a Kind reception; I have taken this liberty of sending you inclosed the present state of our Cod & Mackerel fisheries in this Commonwealth, and hope the communication will be agreable—1 the statement is made 53 from the best information I could collect, and I dare say is not far from the truth— What proportion the quantity of fish caught this year, bears to what was taken before the War, I cannot determine; but only inform you the common opinion is that there is better then half, and there is no room to doubt, that in three or four years, We shall equal, if not exceed in this business what we ever have been before— I take notice in one of your letters to your Brother you wish to be informed of the state of the English & French fisheries &c— I have not been able to ascertain their situation any further then this, that the Cod fishery at Nova Scotia is so inconsiderable as not to deserve notice, and I am sure if we conduct with the least prudence it never can be, because from the sterility of their soil they must be for ever beholden to us for many of their supplies; and their almost eternal fogs, will ever prevent their fish from being cured in such a manner as will put it in competition with ours— their fisheries at Newfound Land doubtless are great; with what advantages they carry it on, I do not precisely Know, but am pretty confident they could not with any profit, if they were excluded from supplying themselves from the United States— the French have a considerable number of Vessels, perhaps two or three hundred, but from the size of their Vessels which are too large, and the natural indolence of men on hire, togather with their unacquaintedness with the bussiness, I believe they make no great hand of it, they ship chief of their fish to France, and altho, they have put a duty of half a Dollar per Quintal on our fish carried to their West India Islands, and placed the same duty as a bounty on the fish cured at Miquelon, only two small cargoes of their fish have for the Year past been exported to their Islands— on the whole I think it abundantly apparent, that we have greater advantages for carrying on the Cod fishery, then the Inhabitants of any other Country, and it gives me much satisfaction, that there appears a disposition with us to improve it— The Whale fishery you are sensible is in a very languid condition, and for ought I see must continue so, unless Britain should unexpectedly relax from her present measures, or untill what I most hope, We may be able to find a sale for the Oyl in some other markets— The General Court, after much labour from the few Commercial characters in that Body, did the last session grant a bounty on Oyl, (a copy of which I inclose),—2 it was design’d as a temporary relief, to prevent those employ’d in the Whale fishery from immediately quiting the Country (which very few have already done) and to see what events might turn up to occasion its revival— Britain & France with whom 54 we should from our reciprocal wants, be most naturaly connected in commerce, have thrown such embarrassments in the way of our carrying bussiness, that it is at present very discouraging to those who have provided themselves with Vessels for the purpose. the number of which is as great as before the war, and might with ease be increased to any number required— I have ever consider’d this togather with the fisheries as particularly congenial to this Government, and to be the only thing which can give importance to the Massachusetts, when compared with the other States, and what alone would materialy produce that power in the United States, which the European Nations have reason to wish us dispossess’d of, And I sincerely hope Sir, that Our Countrymen, will not long be influenced by partial views, individual benefits or be gulled into erroneous measures, by false notions of National gratitude—

I cannot omit mentioning the very great pleasure I receiv’d when I found by your Letters, to Govr. Bowdoin, Messrs. Cushing, Hancock Higginson & Cranch,3 which they were Kind enough to shew me, that you so warmly approved Our Navigation Act, and the pleasure was much enhanced, on account of its being a Child, I had with much difficulty brought into being, and whose existance, from its powerful opponents, promised to be of no long duration, the sentiments in your letters silenced their clamours, and the Act remains, essentialy the same, taking off only part of the restrictions on foreigners (British excepted) by reason of the difficulty of sending our produce to Market in our own bottoms, while the Algerine war continues— in carrying through this Act it became necessary to combat the interest of many considerable characters who found their account in foreign consignments, and who had been very industrious in prejudicing the minds of our Country brethren, by telling them that their Cattle &c would necessarily be sold at a less price—

it is much to be regretted that our commercial importance is so little understood, and that even our Sea port Towns in a great degree neglect chusing persons to represent them who have an acquaintance with the subject, there has been for several years past, but two members in one branch of the Legislature, and almost as few in the other, that ever had any connection in the bussiness or pretended to scarce any Knowledge of it— and sorry I am to say that some even of respectable characters, appear to view our commercial affairs as trivial and unimportant— What will be the future issue of our National concerns, deeply affects me with anxiety, and I confess 55 from the sinister persuits of individuals, the discordent and perhaps opposite interests of some of the States, and the General aversion there is of giving Congress, those powers essential for the purposes of our federal government, the prospect to me appears not a little gloomy; the only consolation I derive, is from a reflection, that when the evils become severely felt we may be willing to apply a remedy—

pardon my freedom in writing this letter, and be assured that I shall esteem myself honour’d in executing any commands you may see fit to lay upon me—4

I am with sentiments of high regard / Your Excellency’s Friend & servant

Benja. Goodhue

NB. Rhode Island has pass’d a Navigation Act, & Pensylvania has laid very considerable burthens on Vessels belonging to Nations not in alliance

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “His Excellency, John Adams Esqr. / Grosvenor Square, Westminster”; endorsed: “Mr. B. Goodhue. / 20 Decr. 1785 / ansd. 10. March 1786.”

1.

Richard Cranch wrote to JA on 29 Dec. that he had asked his fellow senator Benjamin Goodhue of Salem “to answer your Request to me about the Cod-Fishery” ( AFC , 6:506–507). Goodhue’s enclosed account of the “Cod & Mackerel fisheries” has not been found. In his 29 Dec. letter Cranch identified Goodhue (1748–1814), Harvard 1766, as “a Merchant largely concerned in the West India Trade” who was the “Father” of the Massachusetts navigation act. Goodhue was later an ardent Federalist who served Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress as both representative and senator ( Sibley’s Harvard Graduates , 16:359–367).

2.

Closing parenthesis editorially supplied. This enclosure has not been found, but for the bounty on whale oil adopted by the Mass. General Court on 28 Nov., see vol. 17:598.

3.

See JA’s letters of 15 Aug. to Thomas Cushing, 2 Sept. to John Hancock, and 4 Oct. to Stephen Higginson (vol. 17:337–338, 384–385, 489–494), as well as those of 22 Aug. to Cranch ( AFC , 6:294–295) and 2 Sept. to James Bowdoin (LbC, APM Reel 111).

4.

See JA’s reply to Goodhue of 10 March 1786, below.

To John Adams from John Jebb, 20 December 1785 Jebb, John Adams, John
From John Jebb
Dr. Sir Parlt. Street 20t Dec— 85.

I have been prevented from paying my respects to you hitherto by the feeble State I have been in for some time— I am now still further prevented by an operation on my leg.—1 but I cannot help referring you to a publication intitled observations on a late publication intituled Thoughts on executive Justice printed for Cadell in the 56 Strand & Faulder in New-Bond street—which must please you— if The work fails, the letter at the End will gratify—2 but both are admirable— Eden has made a poor piece of work of it— & if he continues to go on, as he began—I shall not repine— Mr. Pitt, & he alone of all the Cabinet negotiated the dark transaction—3

Mrs Jebb Joins me in every expression of respect & good will to Mrs Adams & Miss Adams & I remain truly yrs

John Jebb

I beg respects to Col. Smith— I shuld wish to see yr Servt. agn. if convenient at the same Hour as before—

RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Dr Jebb. 20. Decr / 1785.”

1.

This is JA’s last letter from Jebb, who died on 2 March 1786, at the age of fifty. According to the London General Evening Post of 2–4 March, Jebb “fell a sacrifice to unremitting exertions for the best interests of mankind.” JA’s attendance at Jebb’s funeral was reported in the newspapers, including the London Chronicle of 9–11 March, and in a resolution of 10 March (Adams Papers), the Society for Constitutional Information thanked JA for the “mark of respect shewn by him to the Memory of their late Member, that real patriot and distinguished Assertor of the rights of Mankind, Doctor John Jebb, by Attending the voluntary Procession at his Funeral.”

2.

Jebb enclosed Samuel Romilly’s anonymous Observations on a Late Publication, Intituled, Thoughts on Executive Justice: To Which is Added, a Letter Containing Remarks on the Same Work, London, 1786 (not found). It was a reply to Martin Madan’s anonymous Thoughts on Executive Justice, with Respect to Our Criminal Laws, Particularly on the Circuits, London, 1785. Madan argued for the strict enforcement of criminal laws, even those requiring the death penalty for minor thievery. Romilly believed, however, that the punishment should fit the magnitude of the crime. To support his argument he included “A Letter from a Gentleman Abroad to His Friend in England” (p. 137–162), which was in fact a 14 March 1785 letter from Benjamin Franklin to Benjamin Vaughan.

3.

William Eden, M.P. for Heytesbury and later 1st Baron Auckland, accepted an appointment in early December to negotiate a commercial treaty with France, a task he completed in Sept. 1786. By accepting the appointment, Eden removed himself from the parliamentary opposition to the Pitt ministry, of which he had been a major figure since the fall of the Fox-North coalition. This may have been the “dark transaction” referred to by Jebb (Namier and Brooke, House of Commons ).