Papers of John Adams, volume 21
The President of the United States to the Vice President of the United States, and President of the Senate.
Certain matters touching the public good, requiring that
the Senate shall be convened on Monday the 8th.
of June next; you are desired to attend at the Senate Chamber in
Philadelphia on that day, then and there to receive and deliberate on such
communications as shall be made to you on my part1
o:Washington
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “recd 12
March 1795 / ansd The Secretary of / State
16th. 1795.”; docketed by
JA: “Summons. 3. March / ansd 16. 1795.”
The president convened a special session of the Senate to debate ratification of the newly arrived Jay Treaty, for which see JA’s 5 Feb. letter to Thomas Jefferson, and note 2, above.
d.Is
d.
th.March 1795
I was honoured with your most obliging favours of the
6th. Decr. &
29th. Janry. on
the subject of obtaining permission from the Ministers of Spain, for the
Ship Ascention, S. Chase Master, to Enter the Port of Havanna.—1 The week past we had, by a special
messenger, that we had sent on to Philadelphia, with the required,
authenticated certificates, the honour of receiving, from His Excellency Don
Joseph de Jaudenes a polite Letter accompanyed with his Permission for sd. ship &ce &ce—
The Owners of the Ship are convinced, that through your
kind influence only, the grant was obtained,
and desire me in their Names, to return You, their thanks of gratitude,
joined with my peculiar obligations to you Sir for this favour?
You very truely observe, that many of our Contemporaries
are droping off. One of my Collegues Mr.
Deshon2 & the
Continental Agent Mr Bradford are in the number.
And my much honoured Friend the Cheif Majestrate of Massachusetts, whom I
had the pleasure of taking by the hand, in July last at Boston, seems to be
very feeble & fast approximating to his dissolution. We are all of us,
making room for Posterity to conduct the affairs of this mighty Republic: I
hope a propicious Providence, will grant them Wisdom & every Virtue, to
Govern the extensive Dominions and increaseing Inhabitants of the United
States of America.
I feel my self willing to depart, could I have the
satisfaction of imbraceing my Son, that Imbarked with You & under your
countenace, in the Ship Boston for France in the Year 1778, the many
unmerited benefits, that he received, by your notice of him, I have a
grateful sense of.3 But!
alass! he yet remains in that distracted Country: I cannot prevail with him
to return, by every indearing Parental soothing or harsh menaces— Doctr. Franklin, Mr
Jefferson, Marquis la Fayatte, Mr Short &
many others, have indeavoured to prevail with, to return to America, where
he might be useful to his Country.— Doctr.
Franklin, before he left France Wrote him a Letter, and insisted upon his
returning with him, and if he was imbarrassed in his 384 Finances, to let him know the amount,
and he would find means to discharge them. He did not answer his Letter, but
ever after shuned his House.— The Doctr. upon
his arrival at Philada. inclosed me a copy of
the Letter, and advised me in the strongest terms, to cross the Atlantic,
and he would furnish me with the means of forceing him away: for he was a
subject, worth saveing; as he did not know of any vice, that he was guilty
of: and it would be his ruin to remain.—
At my time of Life, and not having had the small-Pox, detered me from going, and has rendered my Life extreemly unhappy, in being deprived of a Son for Seventeen Years, that I had hopes of being a consolation & not a grief in Old Age.
Mr. Short prevailed with him
Three years past, to leave Paris & go to Bordeaux & Imbark for
America, which he promised to perform immediatly, but has remained there to
this day.
The fascinating manners, customs & habits of France, has made such an impression upon his Mind, that he abandons his Country, Parent, an only Brother, Friends & connexions, to gratify, a mistaken Pleasure & happiness, and even to forego the prospect, of ever receiving a farthing of my Estate, (which he well knows) unless he returns—before my decease?
I beg Sir you will excuse, this long dis-interesting
Letter & believe me, with sentiments of purest truth & sincere
regards.— Your most Obedient / and most Humble servt
m.Vernon
RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Honble / John Adams Esquire.”
Not found.
New London, Conn., shipowner John Deshon served with
Vernon on the Boston-based Navy Board during the Revolutionary War (Hamilton, Papers
, 11:55).
William Vernon Jr., Princeton 1776, joined a
mercantile firm in Guienne, France, in 1778, subsequently turning down
JA’s offer to serve as a diplomatic secretary. His
brother Samuel (1757–1834) was a Newport, R.I., merchant who
participated in the African slave trade (JA, D&A
, 2:271; Harrison Ellery, “The Vernon Family and Arms,”
NEHGR
, 33:318–319 [July 1879]).