You
have
selected

  • Author

    • Lloyd, James
  • Recipient

    • Washington, George
  • Period

    • Adams Presidency
    • Adams Presidency

Dates From

Dates To

Search help
Documents filtered by: Author="Lloyd, James" AND Recipient="Washington, George" AND Period="Adams Presidency" AND Period="Adams Presidency"
Results 1-5 of 5 sorted by date (ascending)
  • |<
  • <<
  • <
  • Page 1
  • >
  • >>
  • >|
I do myself the honor to enclose a message from the President of the U. States which was communicated to both Houses, yesterday. Private letters have been received by the vessel that brought the dispatches from our Envoys which mention that General Pinckney and General Marshall intended leaving France and that Mr Gerry had determined to remain notwithstanding the pressing remonstrances of...
I had the honor to receive your favor, dated the 13 Inst:, yesterday. I enclose a handbill, this moment from the press, by which you will see that Mr Marshall has arrived at New York. I sincerely wish that Mr Pinckney may not have cause to repent of having gone to the South of France. Mr Gerry remains at Paris. He has written a letter in which he declares that he does not consider himself...
I have now the honor to forward to you the letter of Talleyrand to our Envoys with their answer. Mr Marshall arrived here on tuesday evening and was received in a manner highly pleasing to him & all the true friends of America. The information we have received from him is, that a great majority of the French nation wish for the reestablishment of monarchy but that they are disavowd and...
Your Excellency’s favors of the 25 and 27 Ulto came duly to hand and I beg you to accept my sincere thanks for them. You will have heard before this reaches you, that you were, yesterday, by the unanimous vote of the Senate, appointed Lieutenant General & Commander in Chief of the Armies of America. To all, but the few wicked men who, for base & selfish purposes, wish to subject our Country to...
I take the liberty to forward to you, under cover with this, Mr Gerry’s correspondence with M. Talleyrand and the report of the Secretary of State, on the transactions relative to the U. States and France. I did myself the honor to write you a long letter, in the beginning of last July, in which I gave you, agreeably to your request, the best information I was able to procure, of the...