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    • Adams, John

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Documents filtered by: Period="Madison Presidency" AND Correspondent="Adams, John"
Results 41-70 of 1,857 sorted by date (ascending)
THE gentlemen of the Senate informed me, that they came to confer with me on the subject of the...
Please to convey the three inclosed Sheets to the Printers. I beg of you to come up in the Stage....
Your Letter of 29 January Last Came duly to For which be pleased to Except my moste respectful...
I have the honour at this time to address you for the purpose of requesting your acceptance of...
An individual, obscure, & to yourself unknown, begs leave to address you. May I be permitted,...
THE message mentioned in my last letter, was in these words: Gentlemen of the Senate , The...
I am much pleased with the Specimen you have given of the Use of your Wings upon a certain...
I was duly favoured with yours of the 24th. ult. The species of sensibility excited by your...
A Dispute existing at New–Orleans involving property to an immense amount and also very...
At first I intended to encumber your paper with no Documents but such as were absolutely...
Mr. Hamilton, in his famous pamphlet, page 23, says, “the conduct pursued bore sufficient marks...
Your Letter of the 15th April I have had the honor to receive; and have read it over and over...
On the 6th of March a letter was written by the Secretary of State by my order, in the following...
In a A Letter from Alexander Hamilton concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams...
Another of my crimes, according to my great accuser, page 28, was nominating Mr. Murray, without...
Mr. Hamilton, in his pamphlet, page 28, speaking of Talleyrand’s dispatches, says, “overtures so...
The sight of your Venerable and Respectable Name in the papers on a subject so interesting to...
In pamphlet , page 27, it is said that the great alteration in public opinion had put it...
As you felt So Sensiblÿ for mÿ Sorrows, it is highly becoming, that you Should be among the...
Mr. Hamilton , in his pamphlet, page 21, speaks of the anterior mission of Messieurs Pinckney,...
WITH a view to collect and preserve the Military Science, which must still exist among the...
IN page 25, is a strain of flimsy rant, as silly as it is indecent. “The supplement to the...
I recd in Season your interesting favor of the 10th of May: but have not had Opportunity to...
In page 28, Mr. Hamilton acknowledges that "the President had pledged himself in his speech, (he...
Yours of May 6th, I have not acknowledged, and cannot particularly consider the abundance of...
Your Letters are not apt to lie a month unacknowledged. That of May 5th. is before me since which...
In page 26, Mr. Hamilton says, that the mission “could hardly fail to injure our interests with...
IN page 20, Mr. Hamilton says, my "conduct in the office of President was a heterogeneous...
IN page 29. Mr. Hamilton says, "when an ordinary man dreams himself to be a Frederick," &c. To...
Your Letter of April, 18th. 1809, came safe to my Hand. It was soon read by our Lawyer in Gray....