James Madison Papers

To James Madison from Thomas Jefferson, 1 May 1807

Monticello May 1. 07.

Dear Sir

I return you Monroe’, Armstrong’s, Harris’s & Anderson’s letters, & add a letter & act from Govr. Mc.Kean to be filed in your office. The proposition for separating the Western country mentioned by Armstrong to have been made at Paris is important. But what is the declaration he speaks of? For none accompanies his letter, unless he means Harry Grant’s proposition. I wish our ministers at Paris, London & Madrid could find out Burr’s propositions & agents there. I know few of the characters of the new British administration. The few I know are true Pittites & Anti-American. From them we have nothing to hope but that they will readily let us back out. Whether they can hold their places will depend on the question whether the Irish propositions be popular or unpopular in England. Dr. Sibley, in a letter to Genl. Dearborne, corrects an error of fact in my message to Congress of December. He says the Spaniards never had a single souldier at Bayou Pierre till Apr. 1805. Consequently it was not a keeping, but a taking of a military possession of that post. I think Genl. Dearborne would do well to desire Sibley to send us affidavits of that fact.

Our weather continues extremely seasonable & favorable for vegetation. I salute you with sincere affection.

Th: Jefferson

P. S. The pamphlet and papers shall be returned by next post

DLC: Papers of James Madison, Rives Collection.

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