You
have
selected

  • Period

    • Adams Presidency

Author

Sort: Frequency / Alphabetical

Show: Top 10 / Top 50

Recipient

Sort: Frequency / Alphabetical

Show: Top 10 / Top 50

Dates From

Dates To

Search help
Documents filtered by: Period="Adams Presidency"
Results 1831-1860 of 13,564 sorted by date (ascending)
The Secretary of the Treasury in obedience to the command of the President of the United States...
1832[Diary entry: 13 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
13. Soft & moderate—Wind Southerly. Mer. 42. a 46. Mr. Lear dined here & Mr. Lawe. Lewis returned.
Letter not found: to Burwell Bassett, Jr., 13 Dec. 1797. On 22 Dec. Bassett wrote GW : “Yours of...
Yesterday, in conversation with M r . FitzSimons (who, you will doubtless recollect, is one of...
1835[Diary entry: 14 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
14. Just such a day as the preceeding one. Mer. 46 a 52.
Peter has been with me to enquire my Opinion about the State of the navigation with respect to...
I am just honoured with your letter of the 11th. The William Penn will, I am told, sail from this...
I concieve it my Duty to state to Your Excellency the Situation of and proceedings in the two...
I arrived here on the 8th. day of my journey from Belmont, having suffered much with the severity...
1840[Diary entry: 15 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
15. Little or no Wind in the forenoon brisk So. Easterly & constant Rain afternoon. Mer. 38 a 50.
Since my last of the 28th Ult., a copy of which you will find on the other side, I have received...
I have the honour to transmit herewith, a Report on the Petition of William Imlay Commissioner of...
1843[Diary entry: 16 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
16. Wind at No. Wt. but not very hard or cold. Mer. 26 a 40.
The object of the present letter is little more than to acknowledge the receipt of his of July...
Within a day or two after my arrival here, I called on Mr. Traquair, the Stonecutter, to whom I...
I design’d to have written you last week but was prevented by company I have receiv’d your Letter...
1847[Diary entry: 17 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
17. Moderate with very little wind Mer. from 30 to 34. Gen. Huntingdon came to dinner. gen....
It is unnecessary, I persuade myself to assure you, that with whatsoever pleasure your letters...
Your letter of the 24th Ulto has been duly received; but one cause or another has prevented the...
As I do not send expressly to the post Office on the return of the Mail from Charlottesville your...
I wrote to you from East Chester, but I believe I have not written to you from hence. I was...
Agreeably to your directions, we have read and deliberately considered the correspondence between...
1853[Diary entry: 18 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
18. Wind shifted to No. Wt. in the Night & grew cold. Mer. from 18 to 32. Went up to Alex. &...
Your letter of the 26th Ulto came safe in the usual course of the Mail, and about a week ago Mrs...
Least I should forget it, I acknowledge the receipt of ten Dollars you sent while I was at...
In reading your Speach to the two Houses of Congress I could not but notice the emphatical manner...
1857[Diary entry: 19 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
19. Wind got to the Southward again but was very cold not with standing. Mer. 26 to 34. Genl....
To justify to our Country and to the world your protection of me at a moment when and powerful...
1859[Diary entry: 20 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
20. Wind Southerly in the Morng. with appearances of Snow No. Wt. in the afternn. & Cold Mer. 28...
I acknowledge the receipt of your very obliging favour of th’ 23 d of Nov br and should have done...