Thomas Jefferson Papers
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From Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 8 August 1803

To Albert Gallatin

Monticello Aug. 8. 03

Dear Sir

It is suggested to me (indirectly from the person himself) that Jerome Bonaparte is at Baltimore under the name of Monsr. Dalbarton, with a son of Rewbell, and that they mean to ask a passage to France in one of our frigates. if this be the fact, he will have satisfied thereof the minister of his nation, thro’ whom we shall be apprised of it, & relieved from all trouble in deciding on it. this may yet be done, perhaps just as a frigate is ready to sail, and accompanied with a request of a passage in her, when no time will be left for consultation. our duty to our constituents would require us to lose no occasion of conferring personal obligation on the first Consul of France, and of procuring by just attentions the advantages of his good will to them. the same duties require us equally to give no just offence to the other belligerent power, and that we should not expose our flag to the humiliation of having a frigate searched by superior power, the search proved rightful by it’s result, and ourselves placed in the wrong. we should therefore be prepared with an answer, yea, or nay, should the application be made in proper form; for which reason I ask the favor of yourself, as I do of the other gentlemen of the administration, to advise me as to the answer to be given. I presume there is little time left for my recieving it.   Accept my affectionate salutations & assurances of constant esteem.

Th: Jefferson

RC (NHi: Gallatin Papers); addressed: “Albert Gallatin Secretary of the Treasury now at New York”; franked; postmarked Milton; endorsed. PrC (DLC). Recorded in SJL, along with letters to the State, War, and Navy Departments, with notation “Jerome Bonaparte.”

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