Thomas Jefferson Papers
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Philippe Jacques Dahler to Jefferson and Congress, 6 February 1802

Philippe Jacques Dahler to Jefferson and Congress

Strasbourg ce 17 Pluviôse an 10.
6 fevrier 1802.

Messieurs!

C’est pour procurer à ma famille des renseignemens sur l’existence oû la mort de nôtre Oncle et depuis longtems vôtre compatriote Jean Daniel Hammerer que j’ose Messieurs m’adresser jusqu’à Vous respectables Président & Membres du Congrès.

Depuis 1774 époque de la derniere de ses nouvelles, nous lui avons écrit à reïtérées fois, sans avoir pu recevoir reponse, ni de lui ni des Siens.

Comme des arrangemens de famille exigent une nouvelle authentique, sur son existence oû sur celle de ses rejettons ou héritiers, nous avons recours à vôtre bienveuillance, pour nous procurer, ce que nous avons sans succès taché à nous procurer par des autres canaux.

L’extrait de sa derniere lettre dont copie cy jointe vous fournira les details nécessaires à sa recherche. Nous désirons que lui en cas de son existence oû ses rejettons nous fassent passer des témoignages légitimes de leures existences, et à tout événement oserions nous vous demander des certificats de vie ou de mort de son dernier rejetton.

Pardonnés ma franchise; attribués-la au denuement d’autres ressources; et au besoin urgent de ces pièces pour porter l’ordre, dans les affaires d’une famille.

pour nôtre gratitude de ce service nous offrons à l’Elite d’une Nation amie et Alliée de la Nôtre tout ce qui est de nôtre ressort

avec le plus profond respect J’ay l’honneur d’être Messieurs! Vôtre devoué

Philippe Jacques Dahler

Editors’ translation

Strasbourg 17 Pluviôse Year 10 6 Feb. 1802

Gentlemen!

It is in order to obtain for my family information about the existence or the death of our uncle, and your longtime compatriot, John Daniel Hammerer, that I dare, gentlemen, address myself even to you, respectable president and members of Congress.

Since 1774, the date of the last of his news, we have written to him repeatedly, without having been able to receive an answer, neither from him nor from his relatives.

Since family arrangements demand authentic information concerning his existence or that of his offspring or heirs, we have recourse to your kindness to obtain for us, what we have unsuccessfully tried to obtain through other channels.

The extract of his last letter, a copy of which is enclosed, will furnish you with the details necessary for seeking him. We desire that he, in case of his existence, or his offspring, send us legitimate proofs of their existence, and in any case we would dare to ask of you certificates of the life or death of his last offspring.

Forgive my frankness; attribute it to the total absence of other resources; and to the urgent need of those documents to bring order into the affairs of a family.

In our gratitude for this service, we offer to the elite of a nation that is friendly and an ally of ours all that is in our power.

With the deepest respect I have the honor of being, gentlemen, your devoted

Philippe Jacques Dahler

RC (DLC); at head of text: “A Mrs Mrs Le President & Membres du Congrès Gal des Etats Unis d’amerique” (to gentlemen the president and members of the General Congress of the United States); below signature: “Neveu de Jn Dl hamerer” (nephew of John Daniel Hammerer) and “ruë du corbeau No 5 à Strasbourg Departmt du Bas Rhin en france” (No. 5 Corbeau Street, Strasbourg, Department of Bas-Rhin, France); endorsed by TJ as received 8 Aug. and so recorded in SJL. Enclosure: John Daniel Hammerer to unidentified (“Messieurs chers amis & Cousins”), 1 Mch. 1774, from Augusta, Georgia, discussing family matters and relating that he came to Augusta on an offer of employment, but his plans have been disrupted by conflicts between the Georgians and the Creek Indians that could result in war; he may go to Savannah, where he has sent his wife and infant daughter for safety (Tr in DLC; in French, in Dahler’s hand).

In 1765, when three Cherokees returned to America from a visit to Great Britain, John Daniel Hammerer, a Lutheran originally from Strasbourg, accompanied them. In Britain, Hammerer had issued a prospectus in which he proposed to go to Georgia, live among the Creek Indians, and recruit artisans and a farmer to help him instruct the Native Americans in the ways of civilization. After a stop in Williamsburg, Hammerer took up residence with the Cherokees. By 1767, he was teaching some children of that tribe to read and write, and the South Carolina legislature authorized the expenditure of up to £100 sterling in support of his work. By January 1779, Hammerer was in Savannah, where he established the Royal Georgia Gazette. He appeared on the newspaper’s masthead for less than a year. He was also a schoolmaster in the Savannah area (Hammerer, Account of a Plan for Civilizing the NorthAmerican Indians [London?, 1765]; Samuel Cole Williams, ed., Lieut. Henry Timberlake’s Memoirs, 1756–1765 [Johnson City, Tenn., 1927], 165–75; Rowena McClinton, ed., The Moravian Springplace Mission to the Cherokees, 2 vols. [Lincoln, Neb., 2007], 1:17, 588n; Georgia Gazette, 14 Jan. 1767; New-York Gazette or the Weekly Post-Boy, 23 Apr. 1767; Royal Georgia Gazette, 22 Feb. 1781; Brigham, American Newspapers description begins Clarence S. Brigham, History and Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690–1820, Worcester, Mass., 1947, 2 vols. description ends , 1:131).

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