John Jay Papers
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From John Jay to George Washington, 18 April 1796

John Jay, by Ellen Sharples (probably after James Sharples), c. 1795. Pencil on paper. (£ Bristol Culture/Bristol Museum & Art Gallery)

To George Washington (private)

New York. Monday 18 Ap. 1796

Dear Sir

You can have very little Time for private Letters, and therefore I am the more obliged by the one you honored me with on the 31 of last Month.1 I was not without apprehensions that on Inquiry it might not appear adviseable to gratify Mr Pickman’s wishes,2 for altho’ Integrity and amiable manners are great yet they are not the only Qualifications for office—3

Your answer to the Call for Papers, meets with very general approbation here.4 The prevailing party in the House of Representatives appear to me to be digging their political Grave. I have full Faith that all will end well, and that France will find the United States less easy to manage than Holland or Geneva.

This Session of our Legislature is concluded, and nothing unpleasant has occurred during the course of it. I think your measures will meet with general and firm Support from the great Majority of this State— There is no Defection among the Fœderalists—as to the others they will act according to Circumstances— These contentions must give you a great Deal of Trouble, but it is apparent to me that the conclusion of them, like the conclusion of the late war, will afford a Train of Reflections which will console and compensate ^you^ for it— attachment to You as well as to our Country urges me to hope and to pray that you will not leave the work unfinished. Remain with us at least while the Storm lasts, and untill you can retire like the Sun in a calm unclouded Evening. May every Blessing here and hereafter attend You. I am Dr Sir, your obliged & affectte Servt

John Jay

The President of the U. S.

ALS, DLC: Washington (EJ: 10659). Marked: “private”. Dft, NNC (EJ: 08462); Tr, MH: Sparks; WJ, 1: 393; HPJ description begins Henry P. Johnston, ed., The Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay (4 vols.; New York, 1890–93) description ends , 4: 208–9.

1For the letter of 31 Mar. 1796, see above.

2For more on the consideration of Pickman as an American commissioner to settle British debts, see GW to JJ, 31 Mar., and note 3, above.

3This sentence was excised from the WJ description begins William Jay, ed., The Life of John Jay: With Selections from His Correspondence and Miscellaneous Papers (2 vols.; New York, 1833) description ends and the HPJ description begins Henry P. Johnston, ed., The Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay (4 vols.; New York, 1890–93) description ends volumes.

4For more on GW’s response regarding the House resolution calling for the release of the instructions to the American minister in Britain, see GW to JJ, 31 Mar. 1796, and note 2, above.

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