Robert Gamble to Thomas Jefferson, 15 October 1805
From Robert Gamble
Richmond Octr. 15th. 1805
Sir
Your letter dated at Monticello the 28h. ulto: I only got by last mail—The statement therein, shewing a balance due you from the estate of Colo Thomas Bell of 17£–12. 10– accords with the list of debts taken from his Books.—I intended enclosing you a Bank—or post note to cover it but an arrangement by the directors precludes any being issued for less than 100 Dollars—Consequently as pr. receipt here in I paid the 58 Dollars & 80 cents to Messrs. Gibson & Jefferson of this place. with whom they say you have money transactions & will of course account with you for the same
From the extreme dilatoriness in the Courts—little progress has yet been made in Collections—& Where Judgments have been got—. appeals—injunctions &c are obtained by the defendants on the most frivolous pretexts—and from the most Minute examination into Matters—There will be a difficiency of assetts—to cover the claims on the Estate—the Western Lands are so involved with interferences believed to have prior rights, the Legatees will Scarcely find it worth Expense & trouble to investigate & obtain titles, if practicable—. Accounts from 1/6 to 30/. amounting to near 1000 £s. are against negroes. & other creatures scattered over the Country—dead & Insolvent & totally lost—I shall as a creditor be a sufferer—your mentioning the balance due you being for Nails—as Cash—has induced me to discharge the principal—and recollecting the great affection my deceased relative had for you, & the esteem you held him in—occasions my intruding on your time, with a sketch or narrative of his affairs I should otherwise have deemed irrelavent & improper as an Executor.
With regard. I remain your mo. obt & mo. hum st.
Ro. Gamble
RC (MHi); at foot of text: “Ths. Jefferson Esqr.”; endorsed by TJ as received 18 Oct. and so recorded in SJL. Enclosure: receipt of Gibson & Jefferson, Richmond, 15 Oct., for $58.80 on TJ’s account (MS in same).
Your letter: TJ’s letter to Gamble dated 28 Sep. is recorded in SJL but has not been found.
estate of Colo Thomas Bell: Bell was Gamble’s uncle, his mother’s brother. In his accounts for 18 Oct., TJ noted a payment of $58.50 from Gamble to Gibson & Jefferson, “being the principal of the balance due from Colo. Bell to me” (Joseph A. Waddell, Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871, 2d ed. [Staunton, 1902], 288; , 2:1165). For more on TJ’s posthumous account settlement with Bell, who died in 1800, see TJ to Thomas Carr, Jr., 6 Apr., and Vol. 32:342n.

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