Andrew Jackson to Thomas Jefferson, 8 December 1823
From Andrew Jackson
City of washington Decbr 8th 1823
Sir
I was extremely happy to hear in passing thro charlottsville that you were in good health; and should have been still more pleased had it been in my power to have visited you at your house; my not having done so will not, I am persuaded on your part, be ascribed to any unkind feelings or want of respect or proper friendship on mine; the length of our acquaintance, & a constantly subsisting harmony between us will preclude any such opinion
The truth was, the Session of Congress was at hand & my time limited, too limited to have paid any other at that moment than a mere howdi’do visit; but above all, I felt that in Ventureing to call upon you the busy ones of the day would have discovered in it, or at least thought they did something intended rather to meet political than friendly intercourse; and with such feelings I could not but forbear to visit you at your seat. I did stop a short time at the College in the hope I might meet you there; but not finding you I proceded on my Journey.
Andrew Jackson
RC (DLC); endorsed by TJ as received 14 Dec. 1823 and so recorded in SJL. RC (MHi); address cover only; with Dft of TJ to Bernard Peyton, 6 May 1825, on verso; addressed: “Thomas Jefferson Esqr Monticello Virginia” by “mail”; franked.
The new session of congress opened on 1 Dec. 1823 (JHR, 17:3). Jackson, who had evidently passed through Charlottesville and briefly visited the University of Virginia (the college) at the end of November or beginning of December, arrived in Washington on the morning of 3 Dec. 1823 (Jackson, Papers, 5:320, 321).
Index Entries
- Congress, U.S.; opens search
- Jackson, Andrew; and University of Virginia search
- Jackson, Andrew; friendship with TJ search
- Jackson, Andrew; in Charlottesville search
- Jackson, Andrew; letters from search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Health; good health of search
- Virginia, University of; Construction and Grounds; visitors to search