6 December 1818
adams-john10 Neal MillikanAmerican RevolutionPressPrivateering
453

6. V:45. Visits to Mr Middleton at Kalorama, the place which belonged to the late Mr Barlow, and to Mr W. Gracie, and Mr King at Crawford’s Hotel Georgetown. Middleton told me that a piece sometime since published in the Newspapers signed Franklin, in which it was said that any judge who should presume to condemn the privateersmen, under South-American colours, could not expect to exist long either as a judge or as a Man, was written by Skinner, the Postmaster at Baltimore. That he had seen it in his hand-writing. Skinner is under indictment for being concerned in this very privateering; and Judge Houstoun the District Judge at Baltimore, received shortly before the sitting of the Court this newspaper under a blank cover— That a pirate should threaten to murder his judge is not very surprizing— Mr King told me that Walsh had shewn him a manuscript biography of Dr Franklin which is to be published in a Review; and that he is going to swell it afterwards into a Book— That he is to make Franklin the Atlas of our American Revolution; as Wirt has attempted to make Patrick Henry. King says he told Walsh, that in all this there was no truth, but Walsh must make his Romance, and 454will not be balked of his Hero— Mr Mason of Boston came and spent an hour with me this Evening. Mrs Adams was unwell, and had retired to her chamber— I was not altogether well myself, but employed the leisure of the day in writing private Letters.

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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: