Thomas Jefferson to Charles Willson Peale, 16 March 1817
To Charles Willson Peale
Monticello Mar. 16. 17.
Dear Sir
Your favor of Feb. 28. came to hand yesterday evening only. mr McIlhenny is right in saying he left a letter for me; but I did not get it till a month after he went away. however all is well. we have had the good fortune to get a Swiss from Neufchatel, inferior, I think, to no watchmaker I have ever known. sober, industrious, and moderate. he brought me recommendations from Doctr Patterson & mr Haslaer. he compleatly knocks down the opposition-bungler who came from Stanton to contest the ground with mr McIlhenny, gets more work than he can do, and sells more watches than he could have done in Philadelphia. brought up among the mountains of Switzerland, he is delighted with ours.—I admire you in the variety of vocations to which you can give your attention. I cannot do this. I wish to be always reading, and am vexed with every thing which takes me from it. with respect to my letters to you mentioning some agricultural practices Etc make what use you please of them, only not giving my name. this would draw letters upon me, which are the affliction of my life by the drudgery they subject me to in writing answers. we have sometimes practised the feeding with our corn-stocks. we chop them in a trough with a hatchet, which is a guillotine, you know, worked by hand. I doubt if the descending force added by the arm to the gravity of the hatchet is1 as laborious as would be the lifting power exercised to raise a guillotine of such weight as that it’s gravity alone should produce the same effect. but trial alone can2 prove this, as every thing else in life, and as it has proved to me the value of your friendship and produced for it the sincere return of mine.
Th: Jefferson
RC (TxU: Thomas Jefferson Collection); at foot of text: “C. W. Peale esq.” PoC (DLC); on recto of reused address cover of William Sampson to TJ, 9 Feb. 1817; torn at seal, with some words rewritten by TJ; endorsed by TJ.
The letter Joseph E. McIlhenney wrote TJ before leaving Charlottesville was dated 21 Dec. [1816]. The swiss from neufchatel was Louis A. Leschot, who was recommended along with his family in Ferdinand R. Hassler to Robert Patterson, 2 Dec. 1816, enclosed in Patterson to TJ, 13 Dec. 1816.
1. Reworked from “to it’s own gravity is.”
2. TJ here canceled “decide this.”
Index Entries
- cattle; fodder for search
- Charlottesville, Va.; watchmaker needed in search
- clocks; repairman needed for search
- corn; as fodder search
- fodder; for cattle search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Correspondence; fatiguing to search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Correspondence; publication of papers search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Opinions on; reading search
- Leschot, Louis A.; as watchmaker search
- machines; corn brake search
- McIlhenney, Joseph E.; as watchmaker search
- Peale, Charles Willson; and watchmaker for Charlottesville search
- Peale, Charles Willson; letters to search
- Switzerland; emigrants from search