Papers of John Adams, volume 20

To John Adams from Richard Varick, 21 July 1790 Varick, Richard Adams, John
From Richard Varick
Sir New York July 21st. 1790.

The Corporation of this City have applied to the President of the United States to permit Colo. John Trumbull take his Portrait to be 396 placed in the City Hall, to which the President has consented & Mr. Trumbull has suggested to me that as the Portrait will be large the Room in the Hall in which those of the King and Queen of France are placed will be most eligible to perform the Painting in & that he will take Care that no Possible Injury or Inconvenience shall be occasioned by this Indulgence to him.

The whole of the Hall being devoted to the Use of Congress, I take the Liberty of thus Addressing You Sir, as well as the Speaker of the House of Representatives on the Subject & of soliciting your Permission, under a Persuasion that your respective Assent will be sufficient, without troubling the Senate or House of Representatives.1

I pray Your Answer on this Subject, & have the Honor to be with great Respect / Sir / Your Obedt. & very / Hble Servt.

Richd: Varick

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Honble. John Adams Esqr. / Vice President / of the United States.”

1.

New York mayor Richard Varick (1753–1831), former secretary to George Washington, guided the decoration of Federal Hall. JA and his congressional peers sat near copies of two full-length portraits, Antoine François Callet’s “Louis XVI in Coronation Robes” and Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun’s “Marie Antoinette in Ceremonial Dress.” The city council recruited Col. John Trumbull to produce additional artwork. For Trumbull’s portrait of Washington, see Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 7, above ( ANB ; Washington, Papers, Presidential Series , 6:103; T. Lawrence Larkin, “A ‘Gift’ Strategically Solicited and Magnanimously Conferred: The American Congress, the French Monarchy, and the State Portraits of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette,” Winterthur Portfolio, 44:31, 49, 53–54 [Spring 2010]).

From John Adams to Richard Varick, 22 July 1790 Adams, John Varick, Richard
To Richard Varick
Sir New York— July 22. 1790

I received Yesterday the Letter you did me the honour to write me, Soliciting Permission for Mr Trumbul, to paint the Portrait of the President in that room of the City Hall, in which the Portraits of the King and Queen of France are placed.

This morning I took the Liberty to read your Letter, Sir, in Senate, and have the orders of the members to inform you, that they consent with Pleasure to Mr Trumbuls request. I am happy, sir in the opportunity, of obliging Mr Trumbul as well as Yourself and have the honour to be, with great Esteem / your most obedeint and most humble / servant

John Adams

RC (private owner, 1979); internal address: “The Honble Richard Varick Esqr / Mayor of the City of New York.”

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