Joseph C. Cabell to Thomas Jefferson, 3 December 1823
From Joseph C. Cabell
Richmond. 3d Decr 1823.
Dear Sir,
By the aid of my valuable friend Col: Boyd of the county of King & Queen I have been enabled to finish my business in the northern neck, and to return to this place on the 2d of this month. I took my seat in the Senate to-day. Finding that my private affairs could be so speedily adjusted, I returned hastily over stormy rivers, and frozen roads, to rejoin the band of stedfast patriots engaged in the holy cause of the University. I am now fixing myself in my old apartment1 at the Eagle, where there is a croud of members, & many of them men of influence. I have had but little opportunity to catch the popular sentiment. The Governor, who is a man of great prudence & discretion, & answers all our expectations, has put our claims before the Legislature in his happiest manner. As far as I can learn, the public sentiment is decidedly in favor of removing our debt. I shall go around, and endeavor to excite the enthusiasm of our friends, & to rouse them to action, and to prepare the public mind before the senate adjourns. Gordon is in the Eagle with me. Col: Randolph is at Mrs Higginbotham’s; & I have seen him but for a moment. I shall consult with them in every thing. Rest assured of my unceasing & unchangeable devotion. Your faithful friend
Joseph C. Cabell.
RC (ViU: TJP-PC); endorsed by TJ as received 7 Dec. 1823 and so recorded in SJL.
In his message to the Virginia General Assembly of 1 Dec. 1823, governor James Pleasants stated that he thought “it a matter of much moment, that the University, after the large sums expended in erecting the buildings, should get into operation as soon as practicable,” and asked “Might it not then, as far as the income of the fund will authorise it, without encroaching on that part of it allotted to the primary schools, comport with the true interests of the state, to disencumber the annuity in such a way, as to enable the institution to commence its operations to the greatest advantage?” (Richmond Enquirer, 2 Dec. 1823).
1. Word interlined in place of “room.”
Index Entries
- Boyd, William search
- Cabell, Joseph Carrington; and University of Virginia finances search
- Cabell, Joseph Carrington; as Va. state senator search
- Cabell, Joseph Carrington; letters from search
- Eagle Tavern (Richmond) search
- Gordon, William Fitzhugh; as Va. legislator search
- Higginbotham, Lucy; Richmond boardinghouse of search
- Literary Fund; and annuity for University of Virginia search
- Pleasants, James; and University of Virginia search
- Pleasants, James; as governor of Va. search
- Randolph, Thomas Mann (1768–1828) (TJ’s son-in-law; Martha Jefferson Randolph’s husband); as Va. legislator search
- Richmond, Va.; boardinghouses in search
- Richmond, Va.; Eagle Tavern search
- Virginia, University of; Administration and Financial Affairs; and remission of debt to Va. search
- Virginia; General Assembly search
- Virginia; Senate of search
- weather; effect on travel search