Papers of John Adams, volume 20

To John Adams from James Sullivan, 23 July 1789 Sullivan, James Adams, John
From James Sullivan
Sir Boston 23d July 1789

I have to acknowledge the honor of receiving your Letter dated the 14th July. as to the subject respecting an opposition to the constitution of the united states, there are no doubt men in every society whose desperate Fortunes render them alike Enemies to all Government, but the people with very few exceptions, and these by no means important consider the Government of the united states as the palladium of their Liberty and a System which at all events is to be supported. there are in it imperfections which we all wish to have cured and hope that Wisdom and Experience will point us to the remedy— That matter of Trial by Juries I must always repeat is a matter of consequence with me. but should the Executive Legislative and Judicial powers be properly balanced the security of trial by Jury would grow out of that balance naturally. if there is an objection against that balance of power in the minds of the people of this Country, it has arisen from the Exorbitant power of the Crown while we were a part of the british Empire. perhaps as we had no representative in Parliment the reasoning is wrong to conclude that an Executive power here possessing the same prerogatives as a King 104 there did would be dangerous to us, but will not Time and reasoning bring all right?

we are a young nation; and I conceive that the several separate powers will gain strength from time to Time as the Limbs in an animal gain strength and proportion by age, and that there will see a period (God give it Soon) when the Constitution of the united States will arrive at compleat perfection and will after in Time like that of other Countries decline: but in the mean time every aid will be given by the patriots which can be applied without convulsing the whole frame. perhaps in this moment when such an intire confidence is placed by the people in the men at the head of Government many Masterly and [Efficaous] strokes may be given to insert in some measure the equlibrium wanting

we have nothing new here all is peace quietness & patient Expectation for blessings which no form of Government can bestow.

I am Sir with sincere / friendship to you & your Lady / To whom pray present my Compts. / Your most obedient Humble / Servant

Ja Sullivan

This Days paper is inclosed1 tomorrows I have ordered to be thrown into the mail

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “His Excellency Mr Adams”; endorsed by CA: “Judge Sullivan / July 23d” and by JA: “ansd. sept. 21. 1789.”

1.

The enclosure has not been found.

From John Adams to Jeremy Belknap, 24 July 1789 Adams, John Belknap, Jeremy
To Jeremy Belknap
Dear Sir New York July 24. 1789

I have, this morning received your Letter of the 18th., George Chalmers, I have Seen in London. He is a Scot, who adventured to Maryland and practised Law,. When Hostilities commenced, he fled to the British Army in N. York. He has much of the Scornful, fastidious Temper of his nation; has been a very bitter Tory: but is a laborious writer. There is no Second Volume of his Annals, and as he has had the Art of obtaining Some Employment under the present Ministry, I Suppose it probable, that he will neither find Profit nor Pleasure to tempt him, to labour longer at Annals.

Mr Fenno asked my Leave to publish the Letters to Kalkoen, and I consented.— There was never any other Reason for printing them, more than a dozen Volumes of others, but this, that the originals of 105 them, were on loose Papers, instead of proper Letter Books; and consequently in continual danger of being lost.—1 Mr Jay has Surprized me, Since I came here, by Shewing me, Six folio Volumes of my dispatches to Congress, recorded in a beautiful hand. He has taken the Same prudent Care of the Dispatches of all the other American Ministers abroad—so that this branch of our History is well Secured.— Private Letters however, are often wanted as Commentaries on publick ones.— and many I fear will be lost, which would be necessary to shew the Secret Springs.2

There are Several Circumstances, which I wish were preserved Somewhere, of much Importance, to this End, which are in danger of being lost—respecting the opposition to Bernard and Hutchinson and British Ministers and Measures in the Massachusetts—to the formation of the Union of the Colonies in 1774—to the organization of our Army in 1775—To the Negotiations in France, and Holland—and to many other Events.

some of these ought not to be public, but they ought not to be lost.— My Experience, has very much diminished my Faith in the Veracity of History.— it has convinced me, that many of the most important facts are concealed.— some of the most important Characters, but imperfectly known—many false facts imposed on Historians and the World—and many empty Characters displayed in great Pomp.— All this I am Sure will happen in our American History.

The Idea, that a Party or Faction should demolish thirteen, established Governments, and erect as many new ones, in opposition to the Sense of the People, and in opposition to large Armies and powerful Fleets, is ridiculous.—

The Anecdote of Baron De Kalb, that you enquire after, never came to my Knowledge.— De Kalb was in America, before the War, and not long after the Peace of 1763, but it was accidental; owing to shipwreck as I have heard—very probably he might make Such a Report that the Americans were indissolubly attached to England to the French Ministry: but I dont believe he ever was sent by them.

After the Loss of Canada, the vast Addition to the naval Power and commercial Advantages of England, allarmed the French very much and there is no doubt, that the thought of assisting the British Colonies to throw off the yoke, occurred to them—as the Loss of America now rankling in the hearts and tingling in the Veigns of the English nation, is every day suggesting to them, Projects of Assisting the Spaniards of South America to Seperate from Spain. Monsieur Le Roi, a french Accademician, who had been acquainted with Dr 106 Franklin in England, upon introducing him at Paris to some Members of the Accademy of Sciences, Said Voila Monsieur Frankland, qui est de ce Pays la en Amerique, qui nous debarrassera, un jour de ces Angloises. 3 This Le Roi told me in Presence of Franklin who Said he remembered it very well.— This sentiment I doubt not had its Influence in procuring Franklin to be elected a Member of that Accademy.— But it was a vague tho general Presentiment—and no explicit Advances were ever made to him or any one else by the French Court, till 1775.—

I Shall have more occasion for Apology than you have, if I proceed. The oftener you write me, and the more you enquire of me the more you will oblige, sir your / most obedient

John Adams

RC (MHi:Jeremy Belknap Papers); internal address: “The Revd. Mr Belknap.”; endorsed: “John Adams July 24. 1789.” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 115.

1.

JA’s Twenty-six Letters, Upon Interesting Subjects, Respecting the Revolution of America was printed in London in 1786. John Fenno printed JA’s sixth letter to the Amsterdam lawyer Hendrik Calkoen in his Gazette of the United States, 22 April 1789. By June Fenno had issued the first of two American editions, and he also reprinted the letters in his newspaper between 14 Oct. and 26 Dec. (vol. 10:199).

2.

For John Jay’s archiving of diplomatic correspondence, see vol. 19:125, 126, 162.

3.

French physicist Jean Baptiste Leroy (1720–1800), a member of the Académie royale des sciences since 1751, conducted electricity experiments with Benjamin Franklin at Passy. The U.S. minister to France, who steered Leroy’s 15 Jan. 1773 election to the American Philosophical Society, found Leroy to be a key supporter of the patriot cause. As JA recalled Leroy’s quip: “Here is Mr. Franklin, who is from that country of America, which will one day rid us of those English” ( AFC , 3:183; Franklin, Papers , 8:359, 19:278; Hoefer, Nouv. biog. générale ).