23 April 1818
adams-john10 Neal MillikanCommerceTreaty of Ghent
338

23. VI:30. St. George’s day. Upon which I purposely dated the Plaster of Paris Proclamation, one of the most significant acts, though upon a very insignificant subject, that the Government of the United States will have issued, since the Declaration of Independence— I drafted this Proclamation, as a proposal to the President, without any previous Communication with him of my ideas concerning it— I read the Draft to him this Morning without any comment— He made no remark upon it, but asked me to leave it with him, that he 339might read it over again, before he should conclude to sign it— I left it with him, requesting him that it might bear date this day, as its operation commences from the date, and ought not to be delayed— But without telling him that I wished it to be dated on St. George’s day. He sent it to me, in the course of the day, approving it without the alteration of a word— It is a curious speculation in my mind, whether it will be felt and noticed, here, in Nova-Scotia, or in England—or whether it will pass unobserved as an ordinary proclamation— The point of the date, is one of those recondite mysteries which no human being will understand without an explanation— The operation of our Plaster Law, was purposely made to commence on the fourth of July— This every body understands— Its termination upon St. Georges day will pass unperceived— Mr Hasler called this morning and kept me about two hours, on the subject of his removal from the survey of the Coast, and his appointment as Astronomer, to the Commission under the 5th. Article of the Ghent Treaty— He called afterwards at the Office. Young Fenwick also came to renew a solicitation for one of the two new Clerkships in the Department; but all the Clerks who are already in the Department are so extremely adverse to his admission that I shall be obliged to reject him— I dined this day at Mr Bagot’s with a diplomatic Company— The foreign Ministers and their parties were all in full court dresses— Mr Campbell, and myself were the only Americans there. The party broke up before nine.

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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: