A Letter From Abigail Adams To President Jefferson
SIR, (to President Thomas Jefferson) Your letter of June 13th,
came duly to hand. If it had contained no other sentiments and
opinions than those which my letter of condolence could have
excited, and which are expressed in the first page of your reply,
our correspondence would have terminated here. But you have
been pleased to enter upon some subjects which call for a reply
; and as you observe that you have wished for an opportunity
to express your sentiments, I have given them every weight they
claim. "One act of Mr. Adams's life, and one only (you
repeat) ever gave me a moment's personal displeasure. I did
consider his last appointments to office as personally unkind;
they were from my most ardent political enemies." As this
act, I am certain, was not intended to give any personal pain
or offence, I think it a duty to explain it, so far as I then
knew his views and designs. The Constitution empowers the President
to fill up offices as they become vacant. It was in the exercise
of this power, that appointments were made, and characters selected,
whom Mr. Adams considered as men faithful to the constitution,
and where he personally knew them, such as were capable of fulfilling
their duty to their country. This was done equally by General
Washington in the last days of his administration, so that not
an office remained vacant for his successor to fill upon his
coming into office. No offence was given by it and no personal
unkindness thought of. But the different political opinions,
which have so unhappily divided our country, must have given
rise to the idea that personal unkindness was intended. You
will please to recollect, Sir, that at the time these appointments
were made, there was not any certainty that the Presidency would
devolve upon you, which is another circumstance to prove that
no personal unkindness was intended. No person, I am sure, was
ever selected from such a motive, and so far was Mr. Adams from
harboring such a sentiment, that he had not airy idea of the
intolerance of party spirit at that time. I know it was his
opinion, that if the Presidency devolved upon you, except in
the appointment of Secretaries, no material change would be
made. I perfectly agree with you in opinion that those should
be men in whom the President can repose confidence, possessing
opinions and sentiments corresponding with his own ; or if differing
with him, that they ought rather to resign their offices than
to cabal against measures which he may consider essential to
the honor, safety and peace of the country. Neither ought they
to unite with any bold and daringly ambitious character to overrule
the Cabinet or to betray the secrets of it to friends or enemies.
The two gentlemen who held the offices of secretaries, when
you became President, were not of this character. They were
persons appointed by your predecessor nearly two years previous
to his retirement. They had cordially cooperated with him, and
were gentlemen who enjoyed the public confidence. Possessing,
however, different political sentiments from those which you
were known to have embraced, it was expected that they would,
as they did, resign. I have never felt any enmity towards you,
Sir, for being elected President of the United States. But the
instruments made use of and the means which were practised to
effect a change have my utter abhorrence and detestation, for
they were the blackest calumny and the foulest falsehoods. I
had witnessed enough of the anxiety and solicitude, the envy,
jealousy and reproach attendant upon the office, as well as
the high responsibility of the station, to be perfectly willing
to see a transfer of it ; and I can truly say, that at the time
of election, I considered your pretensions much superior to
his who shared an equal vote with you. Your experience, I dare
venture to affirm, has convinced you, that it is not a station
to be envied. If you feel yourself a freeman, and can conduct,
in all cases, according to your own sentiments, opinions and
judgment, you can do more than either of your predecessors could,
and are awfully responsible to God and your country for the
measures of your administration. I must rely upon the friendship
you still profess to entertain for me, (and I am conscious I
have done nothing to forfeit it), to excuse the freedom of this
discussion, to which you have led with an unreserve, which has
taken off the shackles I should, otherwise, have found myself
embarrassed with. And now, Sir, I will freely disclose to you
what has severed the bonds of former friendship, and placed
you in a light very different from what some viewed you in.
One of the first acts of your administration was to liberate
a wretch, who was suffering the just punishment of his crimes
for publishing the basest libel, the lowest and vilest slander
which malice could invent or calumny exhibit, against the character
and reputation of your predecessor of him, for whom you professed
a friendship and esteem, and whom you certainly knew incapable
of such complicated baseness. Until I read Callender's seventh
letter containing your compliment to him as a writer and your
reward of fifty dollars, I could not be made to believe that
such measures could have been resorted to, to stab the fair
fame and upright intentions of one who, to use your own language,
"was acting from an honest conviction in his own mind that
he was right." This Sir, I considered as a personal injury
; this was the sword that cut asunder the Gordian knot, which
could not be untied by all the efforts of party spirit, by rivalry,
by jealousy, or any other malignant fiend. There is one other
act of your administration which I considered as personally
unkind, and which your own mind will easily suggest to you ;
but as it neither affected character nor reputation, I forbear
to state it. This letter is written in confidence. Faithful
are the wounds of a friend. Often have I wished to have seen
a different course pursued by you. I bear no malice. I cherish
no enmity. I would not retaliate if it was in my power ; nay
more, in the true spirit of Christian charity, I would forgive
as I hope to be forgiven. With that disposition of mind and
heart, I subscribe the name of Abigail Adams
Quincy, MA July 1, 1804