Adams Papers
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Adams/04-10-02-0239

John Adams to Charles Adams, 2 February 1795

John Adams to Charles Adams

Philadelphia Feb. 2. 1795

Dear Charles

A Letter from Mr Jay of the 24. of November informs me, that he had recd two Letters from your Brother in Holland, one of the 14th. and another of the 20th. the first at the Hague the last at Amsterdam, which inform’d him that your Brother had been presented to their High Mightinesses, and recd and acknowledged by them, and that he had Afterwards had an Audience of the statholder. so that he had gone through his Ceremonies at the Hague and proceeded to Amsterdam upon Business. Inform your Brother and Sister smith of this: and I congratulate you all upon it. It is a Satisfaction to know that they had escaped all Danges of Seas and of Ennemies or Friends in their Passage, and that the Hague and Amsterdam were neither under Water, nor Obstructed in their Communication with each other.

We are in anxious Expectation of the Treaty with England. I cannot now think of leaving this Place till the Treaty is dispatched or Congress rises.

Mr Wolcott is nominated to Day in Place of Col Hamilton. Mr Jay I think will be at home in Season to be what you please to make him in New York.

Letters from your Brother are much to be desired for his Account of the state of Things will be well weighed, and very entertaining. I waited on the President to Day to communicate my little Letter, to him, to whom Mr Jay had written the Week before Dispatches which have not yet arrived at the Office.1

I am afraid I shall not find time to write you my remarks on The Lecture. It is an elegant Thing and the Course will be well worth your Attention.2 I am Dr sir / yours affectionately

John Adams

RC (MHi:Seymour Coll.); internal address: “Charles Adams Esqr.”

1On 19 Nov. 1794 John Jay informed the president that negotiations had concluded and the treaty was signed earlier the same day (NNC:John Jay Papers). The diplomatic dispatches containing the treaty were finally received in Philadelphia on 7 March 1795 (Annals of Congress, description begins The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States [1789–1824], Washington, D.C., 1834–1856; 42 vols. description ends 4th Cong., special sess., p. 855).

2For James Kent’s Introductory Lecture, see JA’s first letter to CA, 14 Feb., and note 1, below.

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