Adams Papers
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To John Adams from Benjamin Rush, 2 July 1788

From Benjamin Rush

Philadelphia July 2nd: 1788.

Dear Sir,

Permit an old friend to congratulate you upon your safe arrival in your native country. I rejoiced in reading, of the respectful manner in which you were received by your fellow Citizens.1 you serve a grateful & enlightned people. may you long continue to enjoy their Confidence, & may they long—very long continue to enjoy the benefits of your patriotism & knowledge.—

I have to thank you for many short letters during your Absence from America, but I owe more than I can express to you, for your excellent Volumes upon goverment. They shall be the Alcoran2 of my boys upon the great Subject of political happiness.— You have laid the world & posterity under great Obligations by your researches. I am not more satisfied of the truth of the first axioms any one proposition in Euclid than I am of the truth of your leading propositions in goverment.— Go on my dear friend in removing the rubbish of ignorance & prejudice from the Minds of your fellow Citizens. We live in an important Æra, and in a new Country. Much good may be done by individuals, & that too in a short time.

America has ever appeared to me to be the theatre in which human nature will receive its greatest civil & literary—and religious honors.— Now is the time to sow the Seeds of each of them. Providence seems to have intended you to have a material hand in this business. your labors for your country are only beginning. I hope—I expect—nay more—I am satisfied I shall see you in One of the first posts of the new goverment.— The Citizens of Pennsylvania will joyfully concur in this measure, especially if the southern & Eastern states should gratify them by fixing the Seat of Congress on the Delaware.3 This must be the compensation for their placing a citizen of Virginia in the Presidents Chair, and a citizen of New England in the Chair of the Senate.

The new goverment will demolish our Balloon Constitution. If it had no Other merit, this would be eno’ with me.— But it has a thousand other things to recommend it. It makes us a Nation. It rescues us from Anarchy—& Slavery.— It revives Agriculture & commerce. It checks moral & political iniquity. In a word, it makes a man both willing to live, & to die.— To live, because it opens to him fair prospects of great public & private happiness. To die, because it ensures peace—[and] order— Safety—& prosperity to his children.

Your letter, enclosing one from the German Chaplain of the king of Britain came safe to hand. The packet of this day will carry and Answer to Mr Milhoff enclosing Vouchers of the life &c of the german lady After whom he enquires.—4

My dear Mrs Rush joins me in most [res]pectful Compliments & congratulations to Mrs Adams.— We count five living, out of eight Children. Our Eldest boy will act the part of a young Midshipman on board the Ship Union which is to make a distinguished part of our procession in honor of the establishment of the new goverment.5

With every possible mark of respect and esteem, I am dear Sir your / Affectionate Old friend / & humble Servant

Benjn Rush.

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “The honble: / John Adams Esqr: / Boston”; endorsed: “Dr Rush. July 2. Ansd / Decr. 2. 1788.” Some loss of text where the seal was removed.

1For JA’s celebrated return to Boston, see John Hancock’s 7 May letter, and note 1, above.

2That is, the Koran.

3On 2 July Congress appointed a committee for “putting the said constitution into operation in pursuance of the resolutions of the late federal Convention.” On the 28th, Congress took up the question of where to locate the seat of the new federal government. The dispute over the temporary capital raged for two months as several sites were considered, including Philadelphia, New York City, Lancaster, Penn., Baltimore, Annapolis, Md., and Wilmington, Del. Finally, on 13 Sept. Congress resolved that its “present seat”—New York City—would serve as the location for “commencing proceedings under the said constitution” (JCC description begins Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Worthington Chauncey Ford, Gaillard Hunt, John C. Fitzpatrick, Roscoe R. Hill, and others, Washington, D.C., 1904–1937; 34 vols. description ends , 34:281, 358–360, 367–368, 383–385, 393–394, 456–457, 487–488, 521–523).

4See JA’s letter of 28 Feb., and note 2, above.

5Benjamin and Julia Stockton Rush’s eldest son, John (1777–1837), was one of four young men invited to ride on a float “in the character of Midshipman; the duties of which station you are faithfully and diligently to perform” during a Philadelphia parade held to celebrate the Fourth of July and the ratification of the U.S. Constitution (AFC description begins Adams Family Correspondence, ed. L. H. Butterfield, Marc Friedlaender, Richard Alan Ryerson, Margaret A. Hogan, Sara Martin, and others, Cambridge, 1963– . description ends , 13:315, 500; Rush, Letters description begins Letters of Benjamin Rush, ed. L. H. Butterfield, Princeton, N.J., 1951; 2 vols. description ends , 1:lvii, 112; Whitfield J. Bell Jr., “The Federal Processions of 1788,” NYHS, Quart. description begins New-York Historical Society, Quarterly. description ends , 46:20 [Jan. 1962]).

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