John Adams to Thomas Jefferson, 15 October 1822
From John Adams
Montezillo October 15th 1822
Dear Sir.
I have long entertained scruples about writing this letter, upon a subject of some delicacy. But old age has over-come at last.
You remember the four Ships, ordered by Congress to be built, and the four Captains appointed by Washington—Talbot & Truxton & Barry &ca to carry an Ambassador to Algiers and protect our Commerce in the Mediterranean. I have always imputed this measure to you; for several reasons. First, Because you frequently proposed it to me while we were at Paris, negotiating together for peace with the Barbary powers. 2dly Because I knew that Washington and Hamilton, were not only indifferent about a Navy, but averse to it. There was no Secretary of the Navy; only four heads of Departments—You were Secretary of State; Hamilton Secretary of the Treasury, Knox Secretary of War; and I believe Bradford was Attorney General—I have always suspected that you and Knox were in favour of a Navy—If Bradford was so, the majority was clear. But Washington, I am confident was against it in his judgment. But his attachment to Knox and his deference to your opinion, for I know he had a great regard for you—might induce him to decide in favour of you and Knox, even though Bradford united with Hamilton in opposition to you—That Hamilton was averse to the measure, I have personal evidence—for while it was pending, he came in a hurry and a fit1 of impatience, to make a visit to me. He said, he was like to be called upon for a large sum of money to build Ships of war, to fight the Algerines and he asked my opinion of the measure. I answered him that I was clearly in favour of it. For I had always been of Opinion, from the Commencement of the Revolution, that a Navy was the most powerful, the safest and the cheapest National defence for this Country.2 My advice therefore was that as much of the Revenue as could possibly be spared, should be applied to the building and equipping of Ships—The conversation was of some length, but it was manifest in his looks and in his air—that he was disgusted at the measure as well as at my opinion, that I had expressed.
Mrs Knox, not long since, wrote a letter to Dr Waterhouse, requesting him to procure a Commission for her Son, in the Navy; that Navy, says her Ladyship, of which his Father was the parent, for, says she, “I have frequently heard General Washington say to my husband; the Navy was your Child.” I have always believed it to be Jefferson’s child, though Knox may have assisted in ushering it into the world. Hamilton’s hobby was the Army. That Washington was averse to a Navy, I have full proof from his own life—in many different conversations, some of them of length, in which he always insisted that it was only building and arming Ships for the English.
“Si3 quid novisti rectius istis—Candidus imperti—
Si non—his utere mecum”
If I am in error in any particular—pray correct
John Adams
RC (DLC); in an unidentified hand, signed by Adams; endorsed by TJ as received 22 Oct. 1822, but recorded in SJL as received seven days later. RC (DLC); address cover only; with Dft of TJ to Thomas Ewell, 5 Jan. 1825, on verso; addressed in same unidentified hand: “Thomas Jefferson. late President of the United States Monticello—Virginia”; franked; postmarked Quincy, 16 Oct. FC (Lb in MHi: Adams Papers).
Under the terms of a 1794 “Act to provide a Naval Armament,” Congress authorized President George Washington to procure four ships of forty-four and two of thirty-six guns. Silas talbot, Thomas truxton, John barry, Samuel Nicholson, Richard Dale, and Joshua Barney were named captains ( , 1:160, 161 [3, 4 June 1794]; , 1:350–1). Adams had previously inquired about TJ’s role in the passage of this measure in an 11 June 1813 letter.
During TJ’s tenure as secretary of state, Edmund Randolph was attorney general. William Bradford acceded to this post in January 1794, when Randolph succeeded TJ. si quid novisti … utere mecum (“If you know something better than these precepts, pass it on, my good fellow. If not, join me in following these”) is from Horace, Epistles, 1.6.67–8 ( , 290–1).
1. Word not emphasized in FC.
2. Omitted period supplied from FC.
3. Omitted opening quotation mark supplied from FC.
Index Entries
- Act to provide a Naval Armament (1794) search
- Adams, John; and A. Hamilton search
- Adams, John; and U.S. Navy search
- Adams, John; letters from search
- Algiers; relations with U.S. search
- Army, U.S.; A. Hamilton supports search
- Barney, Joshua; as naval captain search
- Barry, John; as naval captain search
- Bradford, William; as attorney general search
- Congress, U.S.; and naval expansion search
- Dale, Richard; as U.S. Navy commodore search
- Hamilton, Alexander (1757–1804); and J. Adams search
- Hamilton, Alexander (1757–1804); and naval expansion search
- Hamilton, Alexander (1757–1804); secretary of the treasury search
- Horace; quoted by J. Adams search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Public Service; as secretary of state search
- Knox, Henry; as secretary of war search
- Knox, Henry J.; seeks naval appointment search
- Knox, Lucy Flucker (Henry Knox’s wife); seeks appointment for son search
- Navy Department, U.S.; establishment of search
- Nicholson, Samuel; as naval captain search
- Randolph, Edmund; as attorney general search
- Randolph, Edmund; as secretary of state search
- Talbot, Silas; as naval captain search
- Truxton, Thomas; as naval captain search
- Washington, George; and appointments search
- Washington, George; and naval expansion search
- Washington, George; cabinet of search
- Waterhouse, Benjamin; and appointment for H. J. Knox search