151Enclosure III: Edmund Randolph to Christopher Gore, 23 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I have to acknowledge the receipt of your letter, giving information of the dismission of the...
152To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 22 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I did myself the honor of writing to you yesterday and the day before. It has since become...
153To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 21 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I was this morning honored by your letter of the 19th instant from Baltimore. Mr Adams’s...
154To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 20 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of inclosing to you a copy of the rule (no. 1.), prescribed to hostile...
155Enclosure IV: Edmund Randolph to George Hammond, 19 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I am this moment honored by your letter of yesterday’s date, acknowledging the receipt of the...
156Enclosure VI: Edmund Randolph to Thomas Newton, Jr., 19 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I am to acknowledge the receipt of your letter to the President of the United States,...
157Enclosure VII: Edmund Randolph to Perez Morton, 19 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
It is impossible to recollect the sufferings of our captive brethren in algiers, without feeling...
158Enclosure II: Edmund Randolph to Jean-Antoine-Joseph Fauchet, 19 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph with respects to Mr Fauchet informs him, that he shall by the post of tomorrow take...
159Enclosure II: Edmund Randolph to Foreign Ministers, 18 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of enclosing to you the determination of the President of the United...
160To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 5 June 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of State has the honor of reporting to the President of the United States upon the...
161To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 31 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of informing the President of the United States, that,...
162To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 28 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
May 28. 1794. The Secretary of State has the honor of informing the President, that the most...
163To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 26 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The secretary of state has the honor of informing the President, that Mr Adams is of opinion,...
164To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 23 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of transmitting the papers and message; taking at the same...
165To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 22 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of submitting the inclosed letter from the director of the...
166To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 22 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of sending to the President Mr Hammond’s reply, this moment...
167To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 22 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of returning to the President, the list, which was yesterday put into...
168To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 20 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of State has the honor of informing the President of the United States, that Mr Van...
169To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 19 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of handing to you the following names, for consideration, as successors to...
170To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 15 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of State has the honor of submitting to the President the draft of a letter to the...
171To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 15 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of inclosing to you some very afflicting letters from M. de la Fayette to...
172To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 15 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of State begs the favor of the President to cast his eye over the inclosed draft of...
173To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 14 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The secretary of state has the honor of returning to the President the letters from Mr Morris and...
174Cabinet Opinion, 13 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
At a meeting of the heads of the departments and the attorney General, at the house of the...
175To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 8 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
We were so late in getting here last night, that I had not an opportunity of putting this letter...
176To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 6 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
The secretaries of the treasury and war department being of opinion, that it is constitutional...
177To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 5 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of informing the President, that General Knox and Mr Bradford have been...
178To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 4 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of sending to you a copy of the instructions as they were first drawn and...
179To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 1 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
Mr Dalton informed me yesterday, that, not being pressed as to time before monday next, he would...
180To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 1 May 1794 (Washington Papers)
I am of opinion, that a passport ought to be granted for the above vessel, on condition, that she...
181To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 29 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of submitting to the President the inclosed rough draft of a...
182To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 28 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
With the change of the word “ embassy, ” which is a technical term for a particular diplomatic...
183To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 28 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of submitting to your consideration the draught of a letter, intended as an...
184To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 27 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
I own, that if a loan could be completed to the amount of the whole fourteen millions, or if it...
185To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 27 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of inclosing to the President the draught of a nomination; and begs...
186To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 26 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of inclosing to the President of the U.S. a letter from General...
187To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 23 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of submitting to your consideration a few reflections on the manner of...
188To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 19 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The secretary of state has the honor of informing the President of the U.S., that the commission...
189To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 19 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
(Private) Dear sir Philadelphia April 19. 1794. I called upon Mr Monroe, and obtained his...
190To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 19 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of state has the honor of sending to the President the opinions of the gentlemen on...
191To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 9 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
Among my first reflections upon the two letters, which you did me the honor of shewing to me...
192To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 9 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
I do myself the honor of inclosing for your consideration the request of Mr Philip Mark to be...
193To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 6 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
I conclude from what you observed yesterday, that in the nomination of an envoy extraordinary to...
194To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 3 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of sending to the President in another parcel three letters from Mr...
195To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 2 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The secretary of State has the honor of inclosing to the President the opinions of the gentlemen...
196To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 2 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The message and papers appear to me to be right. The Minister of France has certified a copy of...
197To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 1 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph would ⟨have⟩ done himself the honor of waiting on the President with the inclosed, to...
198To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 1 April 1794 (Washington Papers)
The distraction of my head from pain scarcely enables me to hope for tolerable exactness in my...
199To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 31 March 1794 (Washington Papers)
The laying of Mr Fauchet’s letters before congress came into my mind. But I did not observe upon...
200To George Washington from Edmund Randolph, 31 March 1794 (Washington Papers)
E. Randolph has the honor of submitting the inclosed application for a passport to the President,...