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III. To the Abbé de Mably, 15 January 1783

III. To the Abbé de Mably

Paris January 15. 17831

Sir

It was with Pleasure, that I learn’d your Design of Writing upon the American Revolution, because your other Writings which are much admired by the Americans, contain Principles of Legislation, Polity and Negotiation perfectly conformable to theirs: so that it is impossible for you to write upon the Subject without producing a [p. 173] Work which will be entertaining an instructive to the Public, and especially to America. But I hope you will not think me guilty of Presumption nor Affectation of Singularity, if I venture to give you my Opinion that it is too Soon to attempt a compleat History, of this great Event and that there is no Man in Europe or America, who is as yet qualified for it, and furnished with the necessary Materials.

To accomplish Such a Work a Writer Should divide the History of North America into Several Periods 1. From the first Settlement of the Colonies in 1600, to the Commencement of the Controversy between them and Great Britain in 1761.— 2. From this Commencement, which was by an order of the Board of Trade and Plantations in Great Britain to the Custom house officers in America, to carry into a more rigorous Execution the Acts of Trade, and to apply to the Courts of Justice for Writs of Assistance for that Purpose, to the Commencement of Hostilities on the 19 of April 1775. during this Period of 14 Years, it was a Controversy upon Paper. 3. From the Battle of Lexington, to the Signature of the Treaty with France on the 6 of February 1778, during which Period, of 3 Years the War was carried on Singly between Great Britain and the United States. 4. From the Treaty with France to the Hostilities between Great Britain and France, first & then Spain, then to the Completion of the neutral Confederation and the War against Holland, all of which Movements at last Unravelled themselves in the present Negotiations for Peace.

Without a distinct Knowledge of the History of the Colonies, in the first Period a Writer will find himself constantly puzzled, through his whole Work to account for Events and Characters which will occur to him in every step of his Progress through the Second, third and fourth.

To acquire a competent Knowledge of the first Period, one must read all the Charters to Colonies, and the Commissions and Instructions to Governors, all the Law Books of the Several Colonies, and thirteen folio Volumes of dry Statutes are not perused with Pleasure, nor in a short time; all the Records of the Legislatures of the Several Colonies, which are only to be found in Manuscript, and by travelling in Person from New Hampshire to Georgia; the Records of the Board of Trade and Plantations in Great Britain, from its Institution to its dissolution, as well as the Papers in the offices of some of the Secretaries of State.

There is another Branch of Reading too, which cannot be dispensed with, if the former might, I mean of those Writings which [p. 174] have appeared in America, from time to time, Some of which may be hinted at though I pretend not in this Place, absent from all Books and Papers to recollect them all. The Writings of the ancient Governors Winthrop and Winslow, Dr Mather, Mr Prince, Neals History of New England Douglas’s Summary of the first planting progressive Improvement & present State of the British Colonies, Hutchinsons History of the Massachusetts Bay, Smiths History of New York, Smiths History of New Jersey William Penns Works, Dummers Defence of the New England Charters The History of Virginia, and many others. all these are previous to the present dispute which began in 1761.

During the Second Period, the Writings are more numerous and more difficult to obtain.— There are extant in print, Writings of great Importance in this Controversy, of the following Persons, who were all of them living Actors in the Scæne at the times when they wrote, and Persons of great Consideration. These were the Royal Governors Pounal, Bernard and Hutchinson, Lieutenant Governor Oliver, Mr Sewal Judge of Admiralty for Halifax, Jonathan Mayhew D. D. James Otis, Oxenbridge Thatcher Samuel Adams, Josiah Quincy, Joseph Warren Esqrs. and perhaps of equal Importance to any are the Writings of Mr Dickinson Mr Wilson and Dr Rush of Philadelphia, Mr Livingston and McDougal of New York, Coll Bland and Arthur Lee of Virginia and many others. The Records of the Town of Boston, and especially of its Committee of Correspondence, of the Board of Commissioners of the Customs, of the House of Representatives, and Council Board of the Massachusetts Bay Besides all these the Gazettes of the Town of Boston, at least if not of New York and Philadelphia, ought to be collected and examined from the Year 1760. All this is necessary, in order to write, with Precision and in detail the History of the Controversy, before Hostilities commenced, comprehending the Period from 1761 to the 19 of April 1775.

During the 3d and 4th Periods, the Records, Pamphlets and Gazettes of the thirteen States ought to be collected together with the Journals of Congress, part of which however are yet Secret and the Collection of the new Constitutions of the Several States.—2 The Remembrancer,3 and annual Registers, periodical Papers published in England Les Affaires de L’Angleterre et de L’Amerique, and the Mercure de France, published in Paris4 and Le Politique Hollandais printed at Amsterdam.—5 The whole Series of General Washingtons Correspondence with Congress, from the Month of July 1775 to this [p. 175] [p. 176] Day, which has not yet been published and cannot be, untill Congress Shall order or permit it. And I beg Leave to Say, that untill this vast Source of Information Shall be opened, it will be to little Purpose for any body to attempt an History of the American War. There are other Papers of Importance in the offices of the Secret Committee, the commercial Committee the Committee of foreign Affairs, the Committee on the Treasury the Marine Committee and the Board of War, while they Subsisted, and of the Offices of War, Marine, Finances and foreign Affairs Since their Institution. There are also Letters from American Ministers in France, Spain, Holland and other Parts of Europe.

The most material Documents being yet Secret, it is too early to attempt any Thing like a general History of the American Revolution, but nobody can begin too Soon or be too industrious in collecting Materials.— There have however been already two or three general Histories of the American War and Revolution published in London and two or three others in Paris. Those in English are masses of Party Billingsgate and those in English and those in French both mere Monuments of the total Ignorance of their Authors of their Subject.6

It would require the whole of the longest Life, to begin at Twenty Years of Age, to assemble from all the Nations and Parts of the Globe in which they are deposited, the Documents to form a compleat History of the American War, because it is nearly the History of Mankind for the whole Epocha of it. The History of France Spain Holland, England and the Neutral Powers, as well as America are at least comprized in it. Materials must be collected from all these Nations, and the most important Documents of all, Such as Shew the Characters of Actors and the Secret Springs of Action, are yet locked up in Cabinets and in Cyphers.

Whether you Sir, however, Shall undertake to give a general History, or only Remarks and observations like those upon the Greeks and Romans,7 you will produce a Work highly interesting and instructive both in Morals, Politicks and Legislation, and I should esteem it an Honour as well as a Pleasure to furnish you with any little Helps in my Power in your Researches.— I am not able to Say however, whether the Government of this Country would wish to See any Thing very profoundly written, and by any Author of Great Name, in the French Tongue.— Principles and Systems of Religion and Government, must be laid open, So different from any Thing which is to be found in Europe, especially in France, that perhaps it [p. 177] would be Seen with a Jealous Eye.— of this however, I am no competent Judge.

Let me close this Letter, Sir, by giving you a Clue to the whole Mistery. There is a general Analogy, in the Governments and Characters of all the thirteen States: But as the Controversy and the War, began in the Massachusetts Bay, the principal Province of New England, their Institutions had the first operation. Four of those Institutions, Should be Studied and fully examined by any one, who would write with any Intelligence upon the Subject because they produced the decisive Effect, not only by the first decisions of the Controversy in publick Councils, and the first determinations to resist in Arms, but by Influencing the Minds of the other Colonies to follow their Example and to adopt, in a greater or less degree the Same Institutions and Similar Measures.

The four Institutions intended are, 1. the Towns. 2. The Churches. 3. The Schools. and 4. the Militia.8

1. The Towns are certain Pieces of Land or Districts of Territory, into which the Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Rhode Island are divided.— Each Town contains upon an Average Six miles or two Leagues Square. The Inhabitants who live within its Limits are erected by Law into a Corporation or Body Politick and are vested with certain Powers and Priviledges, Such as repairing the Roads, maintaining the Poor, choosing the Select Men Constables Collectors of Taxes, and other Officers, and above all their Representatives in the Legislature; and that of Assembling, whenever warned to it by their select Men, in Town Meeting to deliberate upon the publick affairs of the Town, or to instruct their Representatives. The Consequence of this Institution has been, that all the Inhabitants have acquired from their Infancy, an Habit of debating, deliberating and judging of public Affairs. it was in these Town Meetings that the Sentiments of the People were first formed, and their Resolutions taken from the Beginning to the End of this Controvesy and War.

2. The Churches are the religious Societies, which comprehend the whole People. each Town composes one Parish and one Church at least. most of them have more than one, and many of them Several. Each Parish has a Meeting house and a Minister, Supported at its own Expence. The Constitutions of the Churches are extreamly popular and the Clergy have little Authority or Influence, except such as their own Piety, Virtues and Learning naturally give them. They are chosen by the People of the Parish and ordained by the [p. 178] neighbouring Clergy. They all marry and have families, and live with their Parishes in mutual Friendship and good Offices. They visit the sick are charitable to the Poor, attend all Marriages & Funerals and preach, twice on every sunday. The least Reproach to their moral Character, ruins their Influence and forfeits their Livings, so that they are a wise virtuous and pious set of Men. Their sentiments are generally popular and they are zealous Friends of Liberty.

3. The Schools are in every Town. By an early Law of the Colony, evey Town consisting of Sixty Families, is obliged, under a Penalty to maintain constantly a School House and a school Master, who teaches Reading, Writing Arithmetick and the Rudiments of Latin and Greek. To this public school the Children of all the Inhabitants poor as well as rich, have a Right to go. In these Schools are formed schollars for the Colleges at Cambridge New Haven, Warwick9 and Dartmouth, and in those Colledges are educated, Masters for the schools, Ministers for the Churches, Practitioners in Law and Physick, and Magistrates and officers for the Government of the Country.

4. The Militia comprehends the whole People.— By the Law of the Land every Male Inhabitant between Sixteen and Sixty Years of Age is enrolled in a Company and a Regiment of Militia, compleatly organized with all its officers, is obliged to keep at his own Expence constantly in his House, a Firelock in good order, a Powder Horn with a Pound of Powder, twelve Flynts four and Twenty Bullets, a Cartouch Box and an Havresack.—so that the whole Country is ready to march for their Defence at a short Warning. The Companies and Regiments are obliged to assemble certain Times of the Year, at the Command of their Officers, for the View of their Arms and Ammunition and to go through the military Exercises.

Thus, Sir you have a Brief Sketch of the four Principal Sources of that Wisdom in Council, and that skill and Bravery in War, which have produced the American Revolution and which I hope will be Sacredly preserved as the foundations of a free, happy and prosperous People.

If there is any other Particular in which I can give you any Information, you will do me a favour to mention it.

With very great Esteem I have the Honour to be, sir your most obedient and most humble servant

LbC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Monsieur L’Abbé de Mably.”; APM Reel 108.

[p. 179]

1The importance that JA placed on this letter and the advice that it contained is clear from the fact that he published it no fewer than three times during his lifetime. On 10 March he wrote to Antoine Marie Cerisier to seek its publication in Le politique hollandais, below. In 1787, again in French, he published the letter as a postscript to vol. 1 of his Defence of the Const. (p. 384–392). In 1816 it appeared in English, likely copied from the Letterbook, in the North American Review (4:48–57 [Nov. 1816]). In each case JA described the circumstances that led him to write the letter—briefly in his letter to Cerisier, at more length in his postscript to the Defence, and with the most detail in his account in the North American Review.

In the North American Review, JA (speaking of himself in the third person) explained that “some of those publications, which in France, as you very well know, are called foreign Gazettes and Journals, announced to the world, in 1782, that the Congress of the United States of America, had directed Dr. Franklin and Mr. Adams to request the Abbe de Mably, to furnish them with a plan of a code of laws for their future government. By whom so ridiculous a fiction was imagined, and how it found its way into those publick prints, I never knew, and always thought it idle to inquire. But if you recollect the ambition of the French Philosophers, and their ardent desire to be distinguished by foreign States and Princes; the examples of J. J. Rousseau, Abbe Condillac, D’Alembert, Diderot, La Harpe, &c.; you will not be surprised that the report of such glory to De Mably, as to be the Legislator of the New World and of hundreds of millions of future people, became a ‘scandal to philosophy,’ and spread jealousy and envy through the whole Coterie, of which Grimm was a principle member, both at the baron D’Holbach’s and at Mr. Necker’s.

“The Abbe de Mably himself, in his observations on our Constitutions, has said that ‘Mr. Adams desired his sentiments.’ This is true. But the meaning and the circumstances of that ‘desire,’ ought to be known, that those who think it of any consequence, may understand in what sense it is true.

“Upon Mr. Adams’ arrival in Paris from the Hague, upon the business of the Peace, in 1782, the Abbe de Mably’s work, ‘on the manner of Writing History’ was put into his hand. At the conclusion of that publication, the learned and ingenious Abbe declared ‘his intention of writing on the American Revolution.’

“Meeting the Abbe de Mably soon afterwards at dinner, at the country seat of Monsieur de Chalut, the Farmer-General, the Abbes De Chalut and Arnou, who were of the party, and to whom Mr. Adams had been somewhat familiarly known in 1778, 1779, and 1780,: informed him, that their friend the Abbe de Mably, was about writing ‘THE HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION!’ and would be obliged to Mr. Adams, for any facts or memorials, that might be in his possession or within his power.

“Mr. Adams asked ‘what part of the Revolution, was intended to be written?[’] The answer was ‘THE WHOLE!’ Adams asked, ‘Where had the Abbe obtained the materials?’ the answer was, ‘It is supposed they might be obtained from the publick papers and inquiry of individuals.’ In reply to this, many difficulties were started by Mr. Adams, and the conversation was long and lively. Neither of the three Abbes’ understood the American language. Adams’ French was miserably bad. At last the gentlemen requested Adams’ sentiments in writing, said they would get them translated into French, and consider them more maturely. Accordingly, in a few days, Adams wrote to the Abbe de Mably, the following letter; by which you will see that the invitation to the Abbe to write was a mere compliment, and rather a civil admonition not to expose his reputation by attempting a history for which he was wholly unqualified, than any formal or serious request that he would write at all.”

While JA’s memory of his conversation with the abbés that motivated him to write this letter to Mably is likely accurate, his recollection of the time and place of the conversation is not. JA’s Diary mentions three evenings spent with Mably and the abbés Chalut and Arnoux. At the first, on 19 Dec. 1782, JA noted the recent publication of De la manière d’écrire l’histoire and described the author as being “74 or 75 Years old” and “very agreable in Conversation, polite, good humoured and sensible.” At the second meeting, on 5 Jan. 1783, JA “had more conversation with De Mably than at any Time before” and indicated that the Frenchman was contemplating “a Work upon our American Constitutions.” It was likely at this meeting that JA received the request to write to [p. 180] Mably, for the encounter described in the North American Review apparently occurred, according to the Diary, on 27 Feb. (JA, D&A description begins Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, ed. L. H. Butterfield and others, Cambridge, 1961; 4 vols. description ends , 3:97, 101–102, 109). For more on Mably, see Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 4, above.

2Presumably The Constitutions of the Several Independent States of America; the Declaration of Independence; the Articles of Confederation between the Said States, published by Congress at Philadelphia in 1781. For JA’s role in its publication and his use of it in Europe, see vol. 11:477; 12:125–127, 219–220; 13:xii.

3John Almon, The Remembrancer; or, Impartial Repository of Public Events, 17 vols., London, 1775–1784, but see also the 24 Jan. letter from Addenet de Maison Rouge, and note 1, below.

4Affaires de l’Angleterre et de l’Amérique, which appeared from early 1776 through late 1779, and its successor Mercure de France were clandestine publications of the French foreign ministry (vol. 6:192; 9:98). For JA’s contributions to both publications, see the indexes to vols. 6, 8, and 10.

5For Cerisier’s Le politique hollandais and JA’s contributions to it, see the index to this volume and those to vols. 10 through 13.

6The histories to which JA refers cannot be identified with certainty, but one of them was likely the Abbé Raynal’s Révolution de l’Amérique, London, 1781. For JA’s four unpublished letters of Jan. 1782 criticizing Raynal’s work, see vol. 12:204–213.

7JA refers to Mably’s Observations sur les Grecs, Geneva, 1749, and Observations sur les Romains, Geneva, 1751. JA’s library at MB contains a 1770 English translation of the former and the 1767 second edition of the latter (Catalogue of JA’s Library description begins Catalogue of the John Adams Library in the Public Library of the City of Boston, Boston, 1917. description ends ).

8JA’s observations on the role played by Massachusetts institutions in the origin and progress of the American Revolution are not unique to this letter. He had repeatedly expressed them in letters and in print since 1778 as part of his effort to educate otherwise uninformed Europeans about what was happening in America. They should be compared with JA’s 1780 rebuttals to speeches in Parliament by Henry Seymour Conway and Lord George Germain that were published in both the Mercure de France and the London General Advertiser and Morning Intelligencer (vol. 9:321–324, 350–358, 504–506).

9This is likely an inadvertence. Since the other three schools are all in New England, JA probably meant to refer to Brown University, or Rhode Island College as it was called before it moved to Providence in 1770 and was renamed in 1804. However, Rhode Island College was founded in 1764 at Warren, not Warwick, Rhode Island. It is worth noting that while the reference to Warwick was retained in the versions of the letter published by Cerisier and in Defence of the Const., in the North American Review either JA or the editor changed the word, and thus the institution, to Princeton.

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