27th.
Brother Charles came to town this morning. I paid a number of visits and dined, at Deacon Smith’s, with Mr. Otis1 and his family. At about 4 o’clock I mounted on horseback: and Mr. Chaumont in his Chaise with Mr. Toscan the french Consul; we went out and stopp’d first at Mr. Swan’s2 house in Dorchester, where the former governor Mr. Hancock3 lives, at present. He is much afflicted with the gout, and has it at this time. After spending about half an hour with him We went to Mr. Hichborne’s4 Summer seat and drank tea. We found there the lieutenant governor5 with his Lady, and Mr. and Mrs. Swan. I left the Consul and Mr. Chaumont, and went as far as Genl. Warren’s6 at Milton. He introduced me to his four sons, one of whom, Charles, is to sail in a few days for Europe: he means to spend the Winter at Lisbon, where his brother Winslow is: But I fear very much he will never reach Europe, I don’t know that I ever saw a person look more wretchedly. He has been consumptive for a long time, and went last fall to the West Indies, where he recover’d his health in some measure, but lost it again by returning here in the spring. If he lives to reach Lisbon, I hope the Climate of Europe, which is so much better than that of St. Domingo, will restore him entirely.7 I left Milton between 7 and 8 and before I got to Mr. Cranch’s, I again stopp’d at my uncle Adams’s,8 and there saw my aged Grandmother,9 who enquired much after my Parents, and wishes them to return. I at length arrived at the end of my journey, at about 9 o’clock, and was welcomed by my aunt;10 I also found Mr. Tyler11 there and was introduced to him.
1. Samuel Allyne Otis, a Boston merchant and son-in-law of Deacon Isaac Smith ( , 14:471–480).
2. James Swan, a Boston merchant and speculator, and Revolutionary officer ( ).
3. John Hancock was governor of Massachusetts (except for the years 1785–1787) from 1780 to 1793 ( , 13:416–446).
4. Benjamin Hichborn, Boston lawyer and Revolutionary officer, was well known to JA as carrier of his letters that were intercepted by the British ( , 17:36–44; JA, Papers, 3:90, 255–257).
5. Thomas Cushing, a moderate revolutionary who lost his place in the congress, was lieutenant governor, 1780–1788 ( , 11:377–395).
6. James Warren, who served briefly as paymaster general in the Continental Army and major general in the militia, was on the Navy Board, 1777–1782, and was in and out of Massachusetts politics throughout his life ( , 11:584–606).
7. Charles died in Spain in November. Winslow, for whom JA was to seek an appointment as consul in Portugal, was a merchant in Lisbon at this time; he returned permanently to America later in the year (Mrs. Washington A. Roebling, Richard Warren of the Mayflower and Some of His Descendants, Boston, 1901, p. 28; Winslow Warren to JQA, 13 July 1784; JA to John Jay, 3 Dec. 1785, LbC, Adams Papers).
8. Peter Boylston Adams (1738–1823), JA’s younger brother, a militia captain and Braintree officeholder.
9. Mrs. John Hall (1709–1797), formerly Susanna Boylston Adams, who lived with her son Peter Boylston after the death of her second husband in 1780 ( , 4:3).
10. Mary (Smith) Cranch (1741–1811), AA’s sister and wife of Richard Cranch.
11. Royall Tyler, a Braintree lawyer and later an important early playwright and novelist. Tyler had been courting AA2 before her departure for Europe with AA in 1784. Subsequently the romance cooled, owing to Tyler’s failure to answer her letters and to stories about his behavior sent to the Adamses by Mary Cranch, in whose house Tyler lived. For a full account, see , p. 18–30.