21 November 1820
adams-john10 Neal MillikanDuelingWest, The
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21. VI: Calling at the President’s this Morning I found with him Mr Williams a Senator from Tennessee and Thomas H. Benton, one of the Senators elect from Missouri; a man of much notoriety from having killed in a duel a young man by the name of Lucas, and from having also had a personal rencounter with General Jackson whom he shot with a pistol— These are incidents of almost daily occurrence in those Western regions of our Union, where hardihood of character is the first qualification for popularity. I mentioned to the President, what Taylor had said last Evening to me respecting the Administration, and personally respecting himself— He said that as to the appointment of Judge of the Western District of New-York, he had long hesitated between Taylor, and Roger Skinner, whom he finally nominated because he had served some time there as District Attorney, and still held that office at the time— I dined at the President’s with a company of about thirty-five persons— Members of Congress principally; all men, the state of Mrs. Monroe’s451health not admitting of her attendance at numerous dinner parties. There was a re-appearance of the jealousies about precedence at this dinner.— The President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives sat on the two sides of the President, and Mr Macon a Senator from North-Carolina, opposite to him; the President sitting at the centre of the table— The President told me he had asked Mr Macon to take that seat— Macon is a stern Republican, who has been about 25 years without interruption in Congress— A man of small parts and mean education; but of rigid integrity and a blunt though not offensive deportment— He was several years Speaker of the House of Representatives, and is now one of the most influential members of the Senate— His integrity, his indefatigable attention to business and his long experience, give him a weight of character and consideration, which few men of far superior minds ever acquire. One of the great foundations of his popularity is his parsimony— He votes against all claims and all new Appropriations— Nothing takes with the people like this stubborn opposition to expence— I came home from the President’s between 7 and 8. and Dr Thornton spent part of the Evening with us.

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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: