Thomas Jefferson Papers

To Thomas Jefferson from Theodorick Bland, 3 June 1781

From Theodorick Bland

Philadelphia June 3d 1781

Sir

The letter from the delegation to your Excellency will apprize you of the Situation of Public affairs at this time, and of our endeavors to promote every thing that can give energy to the operations of the Army in defense of our distressed Country. I should not therefore have troubled your Excellency with the perusal of this which relates to myself did not my own peculiar Situation render it necessary and had I not reason to conjecture from the several late ineffectual applications I have been driven through dire necessity to make, that my letters may have miscarried. I can hardly suppose them to have passed unnoticed. The long expected and long wishd for remittance which was to have come through the hands of Mr. Braxton has afforded us no relief and has evaporated into smoke. My Finances are as well as my Credit entirely exhausted, my Private resources in Virginia Cut off by the Enemy, and I am at this moment without the means of buying a dinner or of procuring money even to purchase a bait of oats for my horses. I have even offerd my Horses for sale, (but can not meet with a Purchaser) in order to procure a present Subsistance for my family. The money I have Borrowd with the most solemn assurances to repay, and which I am disappointed in doing, is this day exhausted to the last Shilling. The anxiety I feel in this Situation (new, to me) is insupportable especially as it in some degree incapacitates me from turning my thoughts with that application I would wish to do to those important concerns which I would wish to engross my whole attention. The Subject is such an one as I cannot but with the utmost Sense of pain commit to Paper, and with feelings which I cannot so well describe as your Excellency may concieve. I must therefore cease to prosecute it further by assuring you I am Yr. Excelly’s obedt. Svt,

Theok: Bland

RC (Vi); addressed to TJ; franked by Bland and endorsed.

On 19 June the House passed a resolution, agreed by the Senate, instructing the Governor and Council “to use every means to make remittances to our delegates in Congress in discharge of their allowance, either by giving orders for the purchasing and transmitting to them tobacco or hemp, or by pursuing such other mode as to them shall appear most effectual” (JHD description begins Journal of the House of Delegates of the Commonwealth of Virginia (cited by session and date of publication) description ends , May 1781, 1828 edn., p. 23, 28). This action may have been taken as a result of TJ’s forwarding the letter to the legislature in Staunton.

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