To John Adams from the Marquis of Carmarthen, 6 July 1786
From the Marquis of Carmarthen
Whitehall July 6th: 1786
Sir,
I have received His Majesty’s Commands to inform You, that, in order to prevent the Abuses to which the Indulgence given by the Foreign Ministers is frequently liable, by granting that Protection which their Compassion often inclines them to afford to Persons who solicit it for the sole Purpose of screening themselves from the Laws of their Country, His Majesty has instructed His Secretary of State, for the future not to give Notice to the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex to insert the Name of any of His Majesty’s Subjects in the List of those, who are to be deemed under the Protection of any Foreign Minister excepting only such Persons, as may be employed by the said Foreign Ministers in the Capacity of menial Servants.1
I am with great Truth and Regard / Sir / Your most obedient / humble Servant.
Carmarthen.
RC (r &c &c &c”; endorsed: “Lord Carmarthen / July 6. 1786. / respecting Secretaries &c / which dont concern me, / having never protected any / one.” Some loss of text due to a torn manuscript.
); internal address: “[John] Adams Esq1. This order presumably resulted from the 1786 effort by Sir James Cockburn, former M.P. from Linlithgow Burghs, hopelessly in debt owing to a failed loan to the nawab of Arcot, Mohammad Ali Khan Walajah, to shield himself from his creditors by claiming diplomatic immunity as a secretary to the Prussian minister Spiridion, Baron von Lusi ( ; ; , 3:329).