James Madison Papers
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To James Madison from Elbert Anderson, 12 October 1823

From Elbert Anderson

Westchester 12 October 1823. Newyork

Dear sir,

The institutions of our Country are wisely calculated to mete out happiness and pleasure to every Citizen. The administration of an Executive retiring to the shades of private life carry with them the applause of after ages. Indeed, sir, they live in the past the present and future, and their Official history will be recorded in the security of the laws and in the happiness of generations yet to come.

The retired statesman, and Executive of these United States is more to be envied than the Autocrat of Russia or other sovereigns of unhappy Europe. These “imbecilles” collect at Annual Congress for purpose of self aggrandizement or to suppress the lights of reason and shut the door against rational liberty. Our Executive in retirement teach mankind how easy it is for a virtuous man to command himself and that no Situation in life is exempt from pleasure and happiness.

The writer of these lines, altho’ once a busy man in public duty and one who devoted his best days to public service has retired to the wholesome exercise of husbandry and can now look calmly back to the trying circumstances of past duties, in furnishing supplies under the peculiar exigencies of the late war, the seat of which was immediately within his district. And he has the satisfaction to say “30 days notice” was never plead by him to th[e] disadvantage and expence of Government, but all the Contingencies of marches & countermarches, of sudden calls of militia for offence or defence of calls to meet secret and rapid military movements by land and water, were met with that promptness, that has ever given him the consoling approbation of his own conscience, and he now lives in retirement to be proud that the United States, has never within the State of Newyork been compelled to pay a cent over the contract price for a single ration from his first contract in 1809. to the close of the war in 1815.

I now take the liberty to send you the enclosed copies of letters, which were the subject of confidential conference at the period they were written and likewise a late letter from the former head of the War department.1 Can I flatter myself with any expression of your views of my past services, such as one Citizen may render to another in his best recollections of past events. I am with sentiments of respect & esteem Your Obdt Svt.

Elbert Anderson2

Late army contractor

RC and enclosures (DLC). RC in an unidentified hand, except for Anderson’s addition of “Newyork” to the dateline, complimentary close, and signature. For enclosures, filed at 6 Jan. and 8 Feb. 1813, respectively, see n. 1.

1Anderson enclosed copies of (1) Anderson to James Monroe, 6 Jan. 1813 (3 pp.), discussing the price of rations “that may be required, below the Confluence of the river Sorrel with the St Laurence”; and (2) John Armstrong to Anderson, 8 Feb. 1813, announcing the acceptance of Anderson’s proposal for “subsisting the Army for one year … within the state of Newyork” to which is appended Armstrong to Anderson, 12 Aug. 1823 (2 pp.), commending Anderson’s conduct as an army contractor as both “able and honest,” and as “shewing a disposition to promote the success of pending military operations, by doing rather more, than less, than was prescribed by the letter of your Contract.”

2Elbert Anderson (d. 1830), an army contractor during the War of 1812, initiated a claim against the United States in 1823 for “amounts actually due him by the terms of the said contract, partly by way of compensation for articles furnished and services rendered beyond the requisitions of the said contracts, and partly by way of indemnity or compensation for alledged breaches of the covenants therein contained by the United States.” This claim was still being adjudicated by his executor in 1860 (“H. J. Anderson, Administrator of Elbert Anderson vs. The United States,” No. 203, Reports from the Court of Claims, Submitted to the House of Representatives during the First Session of the Thirty-Sixth Congress [5 vols.; Washington, 1860], 1:1–2, 37).

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