10 June 1816
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
8

10. VII:30. Wrote to G. W. Erving at Paris, and enclosed the Letter under cover to Messrs: Hottinguer and Co.— The Note to Lord Castlereagh on the case of the Nanina, with which I enclosed the Documents, left at my Office by Mr Walker, of the House of Greg Lindsay and Co. Correspondents and Agents of John B. Murray and Son of New-York, owners of the Nanina— Half a page of Journal— Received this morning a Note from Mr Capper of the Alien Office, in answer to that which I had written to Mr Lullin, formerly the chief Clerk— Mr Capper informs me that Mr Lullin has left the Office and retired to Switzerland— That no permission is now necessary from the Alien-Office to enable Aliens to embark at the different Ports—and that as soon, as the new Alien-Act now before Parliament shall have passed he will send me a copy of it.— Also a Letter from A. Glennie and Son, respecting the wages of the Seamen of the Baltimore—requesting me to appoint a time to meet one of them upon the subject— Mr Smith undertook when he went into the City on Saturday to give them, and also Coll Aspinwall and Mr Fox of Falmouth notice that I wished to meet them at my Office to-morrow on this business— Dr Nicholas’s daughters, Caroline and Laura paid with a Miss Armstrong a visit to Mrs Adams While we were at dinner, I received a Card, of the Countess of Jersey at Home this Evening— I went to the party, and arriving at 11 O’Clock, found a very small part of the Company assembled.— The only person whom I at first knew there, was the Marquis of Lansdowne. afterwards, there came the Russian, Spanish and Dutch Ambassadors, Prince and Princess EsterhazyCountess Lieven, Count Beroldingen Mr Pfeffel, Mr Neumann, Prince Esterhazy the father, Lady Castlereagh, Mrs Villiers, the Earl of Lonsdale, Lord Erskine, Captain d’Este, Son of the Duke of Sussex, the Prince of Coburg’s Gentleman Baron Hardenbroek, the two Count’s Bentheim, and many others—perhaps three hundred persons—among the rest was a young Lady, of remarkable appearance, whom I found upon enquiry to be a daughter of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, and of Mrs Pitcairn— Whether the one I had seen at Hamburg, as a child, or another, I could not ascertain— The two Young Frenchwomen, whom I had met at the Duke de la Chatre’s, with their father were there, and performed on the Piano, and sung several Songs, indifferently but much to the extasy of some of the Ladies. I came away about one of the morning: the company was then fast thinning off, and most of them were going to a Ball at Mrs Fitzherberts. It was about half past two when I reached home, and nearly broad day-light.

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Citation

John Quincy Adams, , , The John Quincy Adams Digital Diary, published in the Primary Source Cooperative at the Massachusetts Historical Society: