John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 27 March 1794
John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams
Boston March 27. 1794.
My Dear Brother
I received yesterday your very laconic favour enclosing a draft upon the bank for 500 dollars which I shall pay over according to your directions.1
We are in great apprehension of being forced into a War. The last intelligence we have from the West Indies is that they capture and condemn all our vessels without discrimination— A Man arrived yesterday with an account of more than thirty sail being condemned in the Island of Nevis only.—2 This is beyond all toleration.— We wait with great anxiety for the measures which will be adopted by congress at this crisis
Your Grandmother has been very dangerously ill and is not yet out of danger; she is however better, and there are hopes of her recovery. The rest of our friends are in health
your affectionate brother
J. Q. Adams.
RC (NN:T. H. Morrell Coll.).
1. Not found.
2. A Captain Lee arrived in Massachusetts from St. Eustatius carrying reports of the condemnation of 37 vessels at Nevis and St. Kitts. Another article a few days later suggested that the British had condemned more than 250 American ships in the West Indies (Boston American Apollo, 27 March; Boston Gazette, 31 March).