Adams Papers
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To John Adams from Thomas Jefferson, 24 September 1785

From Thomas Jefferson

Paris Sep. 24. 1785.

Dear Sir

My letter of Sep. 19. written the morning after mr̃ Lamb’s arrival here, would inform you of that circumstance. I transmit you herewith copies of the papers he brought to us on the subject of the Barbary treaties.1 you will see by them that Congress has adopted the very plan which we were proposing to pursue. it will now go on under less danger of objection from the other parties. the receipt of these new papers therefore has rendered necessary no change in matter of substance in the dispatches we had prepared.2 but they render some formal changes necessary. for instance in our letter of credence for mr̃ Barclay to the Emperor of Marocco, it becomes improper to enter into those explanations which seemed proper when that letter was drawn; because Congress in their letter enter into that explanation.3 in the letter to the Ct. de Vergennes it became proper to mention the new full powers received from Congress & which in some measure accord with the idea communicated by him to us from the M. de Castries. these & other formal alterations, which appeared necessary to me, I have made, leaving so much of the original draughts approved & amended by you as were not inconsistent with these alterations.4 I have therefore had them prepared fair to save you the trouble of copying; yet wherever you chuse to make alterations you will be so good as to make them; taking in that case the trouble of having new fair copies made out.

You will perceive by mr̃ Jay’s letter that Congress had not thought proper to give mr̃ Lamb any appointment. I imagine they apprehended it might interfere with measures actually taken by us. notwithstanding the perfect freedom which they are pleased to leave to us on his subject, I cannot feel myself clear of that bias which a presumption of their pleasure gives, & ought to give. I presume that mr̃ Lamb met their approbation, because of the recommendations he carried from the Governor & state of Connecticut,5 because of his actual knowlege of the country and people of the states of Barbary, because of the detention of these letters from March to July, which considering their pressing nature would otherwise have been sent by other Americans who in the mean time have come from N. York to Paris; & because too of the information we received by mr̃ Jarvis.6 these reasons are not strong enough to set aside our appointment of mr̃ Barclay to Marocco: that I think should go on, as no man could be sent who would enjoy more the confidence of Congress. but they are strong enough to induce me to propose to you the appointment of Lamb to Algiers. he has followed for many years the Barbary trade & seems intimately acquainted with those states. I have not seen enough of him to judge of his abilities. he seems not deficient as far as I can see, & the footing on which he comes must furnish a presumption for what we do not see. we must say the same as to his integrity; we must rely for this on the recommendations he brings, as it is impossible for us to judge of this for ourselves. yet it will be our duty to use such reasonable cautions as are in our power. two occur to me. 1. to give him a clerk capable of assisting & attending to his proceedings and who, in case he thought any thing was going amiss, might give us information. 2. not to give a credit on Van Staphorst & Willinck, but let his draughts be made on yourself, which with the knowlege you will have of his proceedings, will enable you to check them, if you are sensible of any abuse intended. this will give you trouble; but as I have never found you declining trouble when it is necessary, I venture to propose it. I hope it will not expose you to inconvenience as by instructing Lamb to insert in his draughts a proper usance you can in the mean time raise the money for them by drawing on Holland. I must inform you that mr̃ Barclay wishes to be put on the same footing with mr̃ Lamb as to this article & therefore I return you your letter of Credit on Van Staphorsts & co.7 as to the 1st. article there is great difficulty. there is no body at Paris fit for the undertaking who would be likely to accept of it. I mean there is no American, for I should be anxious to place a native in the trust. perhaps you can send us one from London. there is a mr̃ Randolph there from New York whom mr̃ Barclay thinks might be relied on very firmly for integrity & capacity. he is there for his health: perhaps you can persuade him to go to Algiers in pursuit of it.8 if you cannot, I really know not what will be done. it is impossible to propose to Bancroft to go in a secondary capacity. mr̃ Barclay & myself have thought of Cairnes at l’Orient as a dernier resort. but it is incertain, or rather improbable that he will undertake it. you will be pleased in the first place to consider of my proposition to send Lamb to Algiers, & in the next all the circumstances before detailed as consequences of that. the inclosed letter from Richard O’Bryan furnishes powerful motives for commencing by some means or other, the treaty with Algiers more immediately than would be done if left on mr̃ Barclay. you will perceive by that that two of our vessels with their crews & cargoes have been carried captive into that port. what is to be done as to those poor people? I am for hazarding the supplementory instruction to Lamb which accompanies these papers. alter it or reject it as you please. you ask what I think of claiming the Dutch interposition. I doubt the fidelity of any interposition too much to desire it sincerely. our letters to this court heretofore seemed to oblige us to communicate with them on the subject. if you think the Dutch would take amiss our not applying to them, I will join you in the application. otherwise the fewer are apprised of our proceedings the better. to communicate them to the States of Holland is to communicate them to the whole world.

Mr̃ Short returned last night & brought the Prussian treaty duly executed in English & French. we may send it to Congress by the mr̃ Fitzhughs going from hence. will you draw & sign a short letter for that purpose?9 I send you a copy of a letter received from the M. Fayette. in the present unsettled state of American commerce, I had as lieve avoid all further treaties except with American powers. if Count Merci therefore does not propose the subject to me, I shall not to him, nor do more than decency requires if he does propose it.10 I am with great esteem Dr. Sir / your most obedient humble sevt.

Th: Jefferson

RC and enclosures (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mr Jefferson Sept. 24. / ansd 2. & 3. Oct. 1785”; notation by CFA: “published. vol 1st. p. 320,” that is, Jefferson, Correspondence, ed. Randolph description begins Memoir, Correspondence, and Miscellanies: from the Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Thomas Jefferson Randolph, Charlottesville, Va., 1829; 4 vols. description ends , 1:320–323. For the enclosures, see note 1.

1John Lamb brought John Jay’s long-anticipated letter of 11 March and its multiple enclosures relating to negotiations with the Barbary States, for which see vol. 16:559–563. At 11 March in the Adams Papers are two sets of documents containing Jay’s letter and the enclosures. The first set, except for Congress’ resolution of 14 Feb. (to Benjamin Franklin and Jefferson, 29 May, note 2, above), is in David Humphreys’ hand and is probably what Jefferson enclosed with this letter. The second set consists of duplicates—many of them with the signatures of Richard Henry Lee, Jay, or Charles Thomson and endorsements by JA—of the documents included in the first set copied by Humphreys, but also the commissioners’ 11 March letters of credence to the rulers of Algiers, Morocco, Tripoli, and Tunis, notifying them of the commissioners’ powers to conclude treaties with them and to appoint an agent to conclude the actual negotiations (vol. 16:564–565). The second set also includes Congress’ letter of 11 March to the emperor of Morocco, explaining the delay in opening negotiations, which led to the revision of Thomas Barclay’s letter of credence, for which see the documents referred to in note 3.

It is not known when JA received the second set of documents, but in his 2 Nov. letter to Jefferson, Jay indicated that “Duplicates of the Papers he [Lamb] was charged with will be sent Tomorrow to Mr. Adams by a Passenger in the English Packet” (Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, Charles T. Cullen, John Catanzariti, Barbara B. Oberg, and others, Princeton, N.J., 1950–. description ends , 9:8). For the joint commissions of 11 March to negotiate treaties with the Barbary States, see vol. 16:563–564.

2Jefferson’s reference to “dispatches” is probably to the commissioners’ letters to the president of Congress of 11 Nov. and 15 Dec. 1784 (vol. 16:420–427, 471–472); and to John Jay of 18 March 1785 (same, p. 568–570), 13 April, 11 May (both above), and the letter to Jay of 18 June signed only by Franklin and Jefferson (Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, Charles T. Cullen, John Catanzariti, Barbara B. Oberg, and others, Princeton, N.J., 1950–. description ends , 8:235–236), in which they commented on negotiations with the Barbary States.

3See Barbary Negotiations, 12 Sept. – 11 Oct., Nos. I and VI, both above.

4See same, Nos. V and IX, both above.

5In his 11 March letter, Jay referred to recommendations for Lamb supplied by Matthew Griswold and Samuel Huntington (vol. 16:561, 563). But see also Abiel Foster’s 26 March letter to Jefferson, with which he enclosed a letter to him of 1 Jan. from Samuel Holden Parsons, Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, Charles T. Cullen, John Catanzariti, Barbara B. Oberg, and others, Princeton, N.J., 1950–. description ends , 8:60; Burnett, Letters of Members description begins Letters of Members of the Continental Congress, ed. Edmund C. Burnett, Washington, D.C., 1921–1936; 8 vols. description ends , 8:72–73.

6According to Jefferson’s 22 June letter to William Carmichael, New York merchant James Jarvis informed the commissioners that “Congress were about to appoint a Mr. Lambe of Connecticut their Consul to Marocco and to send him to their ministers commissioned to treat with the Barbary powers for instructions” (Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, Charles T. Cullen, John Catanzariti, Barbara B. Oberg, and others, Princeton, N.J., 1950–. description ends , 8:247).

7Jefferson returned the commissioners’ 12 Sept. letter to the loan consortium (Barbary Negotiations, No. III, above). For JA’s revised letter to the consortium of 6 Oct., and the letters of credit issued to Barclay and Lamb, see Nos. XI and XII, and notes, above.

8JA also refers to “Randolph” in his reply of 2 Oct., below, but both men meant Paul R. Randall, who, as JA indicated in a 5 Oct. postscript to the 2 Oct. letter, had been “prevailed upon” to accept the appointment as Lamb’s secretary.

9See the commissioners’ [11 Oct.] letter to Jay, below, signed by JA on 2 Oct. and Jefferson on the 11th.

10The enclosed copy of the Marquis de Lafayette’s 4 Sept. letter to Jefferson is at its date in the Adams Papers. Writing from Vienna, Lafayette commented on his discussions with Austrian officials, including Wenzel Anton, Prince Kaunitz-Rietberg, the prime minister, regarding trade between Austria and the United States and the possibility of an Austro-American commercial treaty (Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, Charles T. Cullen, John Catanzariti, Barbara B. Oberg, and others, Princeton, N.J., 1950–. description ends , 8:478–480). Clearly Jefferson was unenthusiastic over the prospect of such a treaty, and if the Austrian ambassador to France, Comte Mercy d’Argenteau, made no treaty proposal, he would make none.

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