From George Washington to Edmund Randolph, 27 September 1795
To Edmund Randolph
Mount Vernon 27th of September 1795
Sir,
I have lately received three letters from you: two bearing date the 15th instant; the other the 21st. One of the former came to hand the 19th, the other the 21st1—and the latter yesterday.
Your signature as Secretary of State to the ratification of the Treaty having been given on the 14th of August2—and your resignation not taking place until the 19th it became necessary, in order to be consistent (the original being dispatched) that the same countersign should appear to the copies; otherwise, this act would not have been required of you.
It is not in my power to inform you at what time Mr Hammond put the intercepted letter of Mr Fauchet into the hands of Mr Wolcott. I had no intimation of the existence of such a letter until after my arrival in Philadelphia, the 11th of August. When Lord Grenville first obtained that letter, and when the British Minister here received it from him; are facts with which I am entirely unacquainted.3
I have never seen in whole, or in part, Mr Fauchet’s dispatches numbered three and Six; nor do I possess any document, or knowledge of papers which have affinity to the subject in question.4
No man would rejoice more than I should, to find that the suspicions which have resulted from the intercepted letter, were unequivocally, and honorably removed.
Go: Washington
ALS, DLC: Edmund Randolph Papers; ADfS, DLC:GW; LB, DLC:GW. For publication of this letter, see
20.1. The draft and letter-book copy have the 22d.
2. For GW’s ratification of the Jay Treaty on 14 Aug., see Timothy Pickering to GW, 16 Aug., n.4.
3. For a description of French minister Jean-Antoine-Joseph Fauchet’s dispatch No. 10 and the process by which it came into GW’s hands, see Pickering to GW, 31 July, n.3; and GW to Oliver Wolcott, Jr., and Pickering, 12–18 Aug., source note.
4. These two dispatches are discussed in Pickering to GW, 31 July, n.3.