From James Madison to James Monroe, 4 June 1806
To James Monroe
Washington June 4. 1806.
Dear Sir
With this you will receive a duplicate of the dispatches taken with him by Mr. Pinkney who sailed from Baltimore fourteen days ago;1 as also a supplemental instruction to you & him on the subject of the Indian trade;2 together with some other documents, particularly copies of Mr. Merry’s communication & my answer on the notified blockade of the 4 German rivers.3 Mr. Merry communicated verbally at the same time the contents of a letter to him from Mr. Fox dated apl. 7. in which Mr. Fox apologized for the delay in Treating with you on the subjects in controversy, expressed the good will of the King towards the U. S. and his wish for the establishment of friendship on solid & lasting foundations, and gave assurances that not a day would be unnecessarily lost in proceeding to the work. As a like communication has probably been made to you, we expect daily to hear from you on the subject.
In the instruction to yourself relating to the Convention of limits, it was signified as necessary, to guard agst. a constructive relinquishment on our part, of the Island of Grand-Menan. I have not yet been able to investigate fully the several questions concerning that object. But although in some respects the possession of it is desireable to the U. S. I doubt the propriety under all circumstances of suffering our claim to the island to defeat or retard a definative4 adjustment if in other respects satisfactory. It will be well at the same time to go a prudent length in maintaining our claim, and if possible to avoid shutting the door against a future discussion of it.
I find by the last accts. from Boston that the Republicans have at length succeeded in getting a majority in each branch of the Legislature. In the Senate the majority is a bare one. In the House of Reps. it amounts to about fifty. Govr. Strong has a hundred or two votes more than Mr Sullivan. But it is not certain that for want of a Constitutional Majority, the election will not devolve on the Legislature. In New York the federalists have also rather lost ground; but a violent schism exists between those of their opponents who adhere to Govr. Lewis, and those headed by the Clintonian family. The proportional relation between these parties does not appear to be ascertained. In general the politics of that States [sic] are but imperfectly understood out of it.
The President has not yet returned from Monticello. He is expected here in 3 or 4 days. He confirms in a letter just recd. from him, the destruction which the Wheat fields are suffering from a Caterpillar which is overspreading the Southern Country.5 It is said to attack also the Tobo. Maiz, and the Meadows, as well as various weeds. In the neighborhood of this City its appearance is also announced with circumstances truly alarming. I have not learnt whether its ravages are extended further to the North; but it is not improbable that its appearance keeps pace with the progress of the season and that it is retarded only, not prevented by Climate.
I have heard nothing since my last6 with respect to your particular friends; nor from your brother Andrew relative to your affairs in Albemarle.
Mrs. M. sends her best respects & regards to Mrs. Monroe & Miss Eliza, to which I beg leave to add mine, with assurances of the esteem & friendship with which I am Dr. Sir yrs.
James Madison
RC (DLC). Decoded interlinearly in an unidentified hand; docketed by Monroe. Italicized words are those encoded by JM and decoded here by the editors (for the code, see 4:352 n. 1).
2. JM to Monroe and Pinkney, 30 May 1806, ibid., 625–26.
3. Anthony Merry to JM, 22 May 1806, ibid., 609; and JM to Merry, 3 June 1806.
4. Encoded “definative”; decoded “definitive.”
5. Thomas Jefferson to JM, 30 May 1806, 11:627–28. Jefferson wrote James Bowdoin on 10 July 1806: “Our crops of wheat are greater than have ever been known & are now nearly secured. A caterpillar gave for a while great alarm, but did little injury” (DLC: Jefferson Papers).