Adams Papers
Documents filtered by: Author="Digges, Thomas" AND Period="Revolutionary War" AND Correspondent="Adams, John"
sorted by: date (descending)
Permanent link for this document:
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Adams/06-11-02-0051

To John Adams from Thomas Digges, 23 January 1781

From Thomas Digges

Jany 23 – 81

I am without any of your favours for some time. Not a word of news to write about that concerns your country. We English yet think that the Mynheers will trukle to, and we are even so idle as to suppose Russia will be with us. Four mails are due from Holland, and we are extreemly anxious for the Answer to our memorial. If it is possible to get it before it comes out in the foreign news papers, pray inclose it to me. I am informd a warrant for apprehending Mr. W——rr——n is out and report says he is taken up for some improper correspondence with Mr. Ty——r their letters being intercepted and produced against W——n.1

I am yrs &c. &c.

W. S. C.

RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “A Monsieur Monsr. Ferdinand Raymond San Chez Monsr. Henri Schorn Amsterdam”; endorsed by John Thaxter: “Church 23d. Jany. 1781.”

1Winslow Warren, the son of James and Mercy Otis Warren, was captured on his passage to Europe in 1780 and later was involved in the events surrounding John Trumbull’s arrest for treason in Nov. 1780 (vol. 9:289; 10:365–366). According to the London Courant of 30 Jan., Warren was arrested on 23 Jan. on a warrant for high treason, taken to the “Public-office in Bow-street,” searched, and then released after a short interrogation by Lord Hillsborough about his innocuous correspondence with John Steele Tyler. Warren described the incident, as well as his later detention for four days at Margate, as he was about to sail for Ostend, in a letter of 28 April to Mercy Otis Warren (MHS, Procs. description begins Massachusetts Historical Society, Collections and Proceedings. description ends , 65 [1932– 1936]:252).

Index Entries