Adams Papers

To John Adams from Elbridge Gerry, 14 July 1785

From Elbridge Gerry

New York 14th July 1785

My dear sir

I have lately returned to this City after four Months Absence, & am favoured with your several Letters of the 31st Jany 9th of March & 13th of April, in neither of which is any Mention of several Letters I wrote to You in Jany Feby & March last— You wish to be informed when “You are to be one of Us”? the Answer is easy, when You please.1

I have enquired of my Friend King whether any Order is taken for enabling your Colleagues to draft Money, & he informs me, that while I was absent the matter was committed to the Board of Treasury, & he thinks they have made the proper Arrangements—2 With Respect to the Money which You have borrowed—& applied to discharge Mr Morris’s Drafts three Commissioners are to be appointed to examine his Accounts & if You can transmit to the Board of Treasury a State of the Payments to Mr Morris, they will deliver it to the Commissioners.3

The States begin to act with Spirit respecting Commerce. N Hamshire & Massachusetts have by legislative Acts prohibited the Exportation in british Bottoms of any kind of American produce, & laid heavy Imposts on british Manufactures especially such as can be carried on in those States.4 Congress are considering of the best Mode of obtaining additional Commercial powers for the Regulation of internal & external Trade, but the Measure is embarrassed & they have come to no Conclusion at present.

The Department of foreign Affairs under Mr Jay, of the War office, under General Knox, of the Treasury under Mr Walter Livingston & Mr Osgood, with a third Commissioner to be elected who will probably be Mr Eveleigh of So Carolina are well administered.5 Mr Gardoqui has had an Audience & Mr Jay will probably be appointed to negotiate with him— Governer Rutledge is appointed Minister to the Hague.6

Congress have passed a land ordnance which having been printed in all the papers You have undoubtedly seen.7 I think the price at a Dollar an Acre too high, but the Lands properly managed may be a good Fund for sinking the greatest part of the national domestic Debt.

Mr Jay has made an excellent Report respecting the Consular Convention signed at paris, which You may be assured (I think) will not be ratified.8

Our Finances are a little embarrassed but I conceive the Way is clear for retreiving of publick Credit. the Debt of the public as I mentioned before may be greatly lessened by the Sale of Lands, if properly managed. a short Time will I conceive increase our Staples, which have been greatly lessened by the War, so as to exceed our Imports, which happily for Us are daily decreasing. a Ballance of Trade must then ensue, which will supply Us with Bullion, & facilitate the payment of Taxes, to which We are now competent, if We had but a Medium.— to be very honest with You, I think America will by being pressed by public & private Creditors, be brot to her proper Reflexion, & discover that she has acted like a foolish young Heir who with a great Fortune has embarrassed himself by Imprudence & Extravagance; & after this Discovery she will retrench her Expences, adopt a System of œconomy, discharge her Debts, & then subsist independently & with Dignity on her own Means— You know I am no Friend to gloomy Philosophy, the brightest suits me best— adeiu My Friend & be assured I am yours sincerely on / every Occasion

E Gerry

We have a Report before Congress for establishing a Mint.9

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Honble Mr Adams.”

1For JA’s letters of 31 Jan. and 9 March, and Gerry’s letters of 14 and 24 Feb., and 5 March, see vol. 16:505, 520, 526, 544, 551. For JA’s of 13 April, see above. The quotation is from JA’s 31 Jan. letter.

2In his 10 Jan. letter to Richard Henry Lee and his 31 Jan. letter to Gerry, JA pressed Congress to authorize him to draw on funds from the Dutch loans to pay his salary as well as the salaries of Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, David Humphreys, William Carmichael, and C. W. F. Dumas. On 4 April, in Gerry’s absence, Congress appointed a committee to “report arrangements for the regular payment of the salaries of the Officers of the United States at foreign Courts.” The matter was referred to John Jay, who supported JA’s position in his report but thought the issue properly belonged to the Board of Treasury. In any event, no authorization for JA to draw on the Dutch funds was forthcoming (vol. 16:486–487, 506; JCC description begins Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Worthington Chauncey Ford, Gaillard Hunt, John C. Fitzpatrick, Roscoe R. Hill, and others, Washington, D.C., 1904–1937; 34 vols. description ends , 28:227).

3On 7 June, the Board of Treasury issued a report on the “Serious, and most alarming Situation” of national finances, which was laid before Congress on the 9th. There the board noted the ballooning foreign debt and sharply criticized state governments for collecting taxes “with so much Languor;” both were problems that had festered during the superintendency of Robert Morris, who resigned on 1 Nov. 1784. Congress responded on 20 June 1785, resolving to appoint commissioners to “inquire into the receipts and expenditures of public Monies, during the Administration of the late Superintendant of finance.” Three weeks later, Congress was still struggling to find suitable commissioners for the task because, as Pennsylvania delegate David Jackson wrote, “the influence of the great man is so extensive in Philada, that few probably of the citizens there properly qualified could be found perfectly free from bias.” In his reply of 13 Dec., JA advised Gerry that the Dutch bankers had already relayed the requested details of accounts to the Board of Treasury (JCC description begins Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Worthington Chauncey Ford, Gaillard Hunt, John C. Fitzpatrick, Roscoe R. Hill, and others, Washington, D.C., 1904–1937; 34 vols. description ends , 28:443–452, 468; vol. 16:239; Smith, Letters of Delegates description begins Letters of Delegates to Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Paul H. Smith and others, Washington, D.C., 1976–2000; 26 vols. description ends , 22:506–507; MHi:Elbridge Gerry Papers).

4On 23 June, the same day that the Mass. General Court passed “An Act for the Regulation of Navigation and Commerce,” New Hampshire legislators also passed an identically named law (Laws of New Hampshire, ed. Henry Harrison Metcalf, Concord, N.H., 1916, 5:78–81). The law’s provisions were drawn directly from the Massachusetts legislation described in William Smith’s letter of 2 May, and note 2, above.

5Nicholas Eveleigh (ca. 1748–1791), former delegate from South Carolina, was nominated twice, on 4 April and 14 July, to the Board of Treasury in place of John Lewis Gervais, but he never served. Four years later, Eveleigh became the first comptroller of the U.S. Treasury (JCC description begins Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Worthington Chauncey Ford, Gaillard Hunt, John C. Fitzpatrick, Roscoe R. Hill, and others, Washington, D.C., 1904–1937; 34 vols. description ends , 28:232, 29:535; Biog. Dir. Cong. description begins Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774–1989, Washington, D.C., 1989; rev. edn., bioguide.congress.gov. description ends ).

6On 5 July, Congress appointed John Rutledge of South Carolina to replace JA at The Hague, but on 24 Aug. Rutledge declined the post, and JA remained as American minister to the Netherlands until he presented his recall on 30 March 1788 (vol. 16:566).

7JA received a copy of this ordinance as an enclosure to Lee’s 28 May 1785 letter. For the substance of the ordinance, see note 2 to that letter, above.

8For the controversial Franco-American consular convention signed by Franklin and the Comte de Vergennes on 29 July 1784, and Jay’s recommendation that it not be ratified, see vol. 16:505.

9The postscript was written vertically in the left margin. On 6 July 1785 Congress adopted three key recommendations of the grand committee’s 13 May report on coinage. The dollar was to be the “money unit of the United States,” the smallest copper coin was to be 200 to the dollar, and the several other coins were to increase at a decimal ratio. The ordinance establishing the United States Mint, however, was not adopted until 16 Oct. 1786 (JCC description begins Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, ed. Worthington Chauncey Ford, Gaillard Hunt, John C. Fitzpatrick, Roscoe R. Hill, and others, Washington, D.C., 1904–1937; 34 vols. description ends , 28:354–358; 29:499–500; 31:876–878).

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