Abigail Adams to Cotton Tufts, 25 May 1798
Abigail Adams to Cotton Tufts
Philadelphia May 25 1798
my dear sir
I received yesterday your kind Letter of May 12th and was rejoiced to learn that you had recoverd from your
late indisposition so far as to be able to ride out. have you ever tried the use of
Calomil for your complaint, or Bleading? this climate is not so subject to disorders of
the lungs and Breast, as ours, but much more so to other inflamitory complaints which
call for speedy aid. we have had some very Hot weather; which has been suceeded by three
weeks of dry & cold in which the Grass and Grain have sufferd, but for two days past
we have had plentifull showers which I hope will restore it in on some measure. as yet
we hear nothing of any remarkable sickness, but I expect the fever will come in the
usual season for it is with that, as with our foreign Enemy. the people appear loth to
take vigorous measures tho they have every reason to believe that the one will enter our
houses & the other our harbours. the Representitives in Congress do not keep pace
with the Sentiments of the people without. in the senate they are pretty strong, but
there are there six Members always wrong sometimes 8. the two virginians would not be
persuaded to do right, even tho one rose from the dead to warn them.1 every wise and firm measure, is opposed by them.
they talk & talk consuming time and when beat of upon one ground, they will take an
other & if they were in the pay and service of France, they could not more strictly
adhere to her. I know you will be glad to learn that your old Friend Goodhue is as firm
as a Rock, and as honest as a good Heart and pure intentions can make him. such
oppositions frets him. he always comes to see us in the same familiar manner that you
would, and is realy a very valuable member. no man has the real good of his Country more
at heart. he frequently inquires affectionatly after mr Cranch & you. when you come
to look at the House; that is much more equally divided. the Anti party, tho struck dumb
at first by the disclosure of the dispatches & instructions, have rallied again,
& persue with equal industery the same measures: they always hang
together, and tho some of them think and talk differently, they dare not vote against
their Party. it is not so with the Federalists, for amongst them are some timid men, who
tho honest dare not assume the decisive tone, & act with vigor: whilst three of our
ships the Frigate the Ganges & the Hamburgh
packet now calld the Deleware are now Man’d and ready for see waiting only for Congress
to pass a Bill to render them usefull, when they are out. a motion is made to postpone
the consideration of it till the 2d of June, whilst the Coast is swarming with French
Privateers, and even our coasters are in danger. It is true it was rejected, but I
mention it to show that those who would do good, always have the evil present with them
in the persons of the Antis— and you know how disheartning it is, to be fetterd, when
every Limb & Nerve should be in full exertion.2 there is an other thing which disarms the
Federalists. I mean the unaccountable stay of our Envoys in France. whilst it furnishes
arguments to those who would not care a stiver if they were hang’d, it obstructs the Arm
of the Executive, and weakens the real Friends of the Country
If addresses would defend our Country, it will be well fortified. they however contain such pledges and assurences, and that in the most solem and decisive language as gives us reason to belive that our Countrymen will not be backward to defend their Rights, and Liberties. it gives the President a great additional share of writing. tho not more than one in 5 have yet been publishd, there have enough appeared to manifest the spirit of the people. I think no state in the union, have manifested a more perfect confidence in the wisdom & integrity of the Executive, and more warm and affectionate personal attachment, than the addressess from North Carolina a state which has but one Federal Member in Congress—and he has been uniformly so from the beginning against all his collegues.3 there is a very striking address from the Govr & officers of N Jersey, but your Boston papers are so small they cannot Print a 20th part of them—4 I hope they will all be collected and Printed in a vol’m It is a remarkable Fact in the French Revolution, that with swearing hatered to Royalty; and Friendship to Republicks, they should proceed to the total destruction, and dismemberment of every Republick, whilst as yet every Royal Government, their own excepted, stands. I hope and trust that Great Britain will be able to withstand them. in that Kingdom there is yet some virtue, Liberty and integrity, publick spirit & Energy— poor Switzerland! alass where are the William Tells of the present day?
I have almost filld my paper with politicks and left but little Room for my private affairs. I transmitted by the last post inclosed to mrs Cranch a Hundred dollors I will send you in June what further you may want.5 I have a paper in the house which was formerly purchased for one of my Rooms I think it will do for the Library it is a red Grund paper and is in the Garret in a coach Box I think. You will exeercise your own judgment as to the hire of help upon the place.
Your question respecting my sons Property I cannot answer as his buisness was all left in the Hands of dr Welch, but I rather think he had realizd his property, that is he ownd a share in the Theatre, which he has lost.6 he has some shares in the cannals, that with his House is I believe all he ownd in Boston, but I fear he has intrusted some in N york which has not been conducted with the discretion in the disposition of it, which it ought to have been. I hinted something of the kind to him, and recommended to your trust whatever in future he might have, but I believe he will not find more than a bare support in future. Berlin is more expensive than Holland: and I am sure he cannot save any thing. I will here if possible & I now want the President to place some in your Hands which I know we may spair, beside what I squeze from my monthly allowence7
I wish he did not Love Land so well, because I know we have enough to torment us. when we come to look to that for support, we shall find it difficult enough to procure it, and very much swallowd up by taxes & Labour. I am for having as little trouble as possible as we pass down the vale of years we shall want repose if we live— I have no objection to mr Clarks having the House an other year—
My kind regards to mrs Tufts, and to mr & mrs Norten as well as your son and daughter. I hope, but know not when to say Congress will rise. it depends much upon Events which may turn up. they talk of the middle of June. I fear it will be later. when ever it is, I am determined to bring on the President if we can only stay a fortnight, for he stands in great need of a journey. I order the carriage every afternoon & take him out, but tis only a few miles, and he does not these long days get a walk once a week. he is thin & pale but in good spirits, indeed he has not time to groan. he however smoaks more segars than I wish he did.
on the 11 of May the President nominated samll snow of the Eastern states to be consul at Canton—8
I am dear sir with Sentiments of / Sincere esteem & affection / your
A Adams
RC partial (Adams Papers). RC partial (IaHi:Charles Aldrich Autograph Coll.); endorsed: “recd June 6th– / Mrs. Adams May 25 1708”; notation: “13.”
1. AA was likely referring to Democratic-Republican senators Joseph Inslee Anderson of Tennessee, Timothy Bloodworth and Alexander Martin of North Carolina, John Brown of Kentucky, John Langdon of New Hampshire, Josiah Tattnall of Georgia, and Stevens Thomson Mason and Henry Tazewell of Virginia. These members consistently voted against Federalist proposals on defensive measures such as the creation of the provisional army ( ; , 5th Cong., 2d sess., p. 477).
2. The Senate had taken up a bill entitled “An Act more effectually to protect the commerce and coasts of the United States,” designed to address French depredations on American shipping. The intent of the bill was to permit JA to “instruct and direct” the captains of armed vessels to capture any vessel found along the U.S. coast attempting to seize an American ship. On 23 May Anderson moved that consideration of the bill be postponed “until we have certain accounts of the total failure of negotiation between the United States and the French Republic.” The motion failed, but among its supporters was Humphrey Marshall, a Federalist from Kentucky. The Senate passed the bill in a 16 to 7 vote that same day, and it was taken up by the House and passed on 26 May. The Ganges, commanded by Capt. Richard Dale, and the Delaware, originally called the Hamburgh Packet and commanded by Capt. Stephen Decatur, were purchased by the government at the beginning of May. The frigates Constellation, Constitution, and United States were also nearly ready to be put to sea ( , 5th Cong., 2d sess., p. 493; , 1:561; , 5th Cong., 2d sess., p. 1793, 1815–1835; , 1:63–64, 65, 67–69, 71, 82).
3. By this time JA had received addresses from Wilmington of [May 1798] (Adams Papers), New Bern, and Fayetteville, N.C., all of which approved of the measures taken by the federal government in light of French actions. The New Bern address in particular praised JA’s conduct as he faced opposing domestic factions, noting, “In the series of these various and critical events, the firmness and independency of your mind never once deserted you” ( , p. 322–324, 326–328; Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 26 May). The Federalist representative from North Carolina was William Barry Grove.
4. The address from the New Jersey militia was signed by Gov. Richard Howell as commander in chief of the state militia and by most of the militia officers. It declared the state troops’ readiness to fight if called upon, claiming that except for “a few degraded and a few deluded characters, … there is but ONE VOICE” in support of the federal government (Adams Papers, filmed at [20 June]). The address was first printed in Philadelphia newspapers on 15 May, and at noon on 31 May, senior officers of the militia and members of the state congressional delegation presented the address to JA (Howell to JA, 24 May, Adams Papers; Elizabethtown New-Jersey Journal, 5 June; Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 15 May; , p. 181–183).
5. AA enclosed these funds in her 20 May letter to Mary Smith Cranch, also commenting on JA’s health and voicing disbelief that France was changing its policy toward the United States (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters).
7. The portion of the RC in the Adams Papers ends at this point.
8. The Senate confirmed the appointment of Samuel Snow as consul to Canton on 14 May; he held the position until 1806. Snow (1758–1838), Brown 1782, was a native of Providence, had served in the Rhode Island militia during the Revolution, and was a merchant in the China trade ( , 5th Cong., 2d sess., p. 275; Jacques M. Downs, The Golden Ghetto: The American Commercial Community at Canton and the Shaping of American China Policy, 1784–1844, Hong Kong, 2014, p. 148; Edwin H. Snow, The William Snow Family, Providence, R.I., 1908, p. 24).