13 July 1826
adams-john10 Neal MillikanFamily Relations (Adams Family)Recreation
335

13. IV:30. Boston. Quincy.— Night of intense heat.

I know not that I ever experienced at Washington a warmer Night. The morning however was cooler— Mr Edward Cruft, Dr. T. Welsh, Mr D. Webster, Judge Joseph Hall, and Mr F. C. Gray called upon me this morning— After breakfast, I came out with my two sons, George and John to Quincy— I found at my fathers House, my brother with his family, consisting of his wife, his daughter Abigail Smith, his sons Thomas Boylston junr. a Cadet on the establishment at West Point, but now here on a furlough—John Quincy, and Joseph Harrod—his second daughter, Elizabeth Coombs, being now with my wife at Washington, and his second Son, at School at Roxbury— Louisa C. Smith is also here and my brother Charles’s eldest daughter, the widow Susan B. Clarke, with her only daughter Susan: all well— Mrs Hall, once Elizabeth Smith, youngest daughter of my Uncle, my mother’s Uncle, Isaac, came out and spent the day here; and returned this Evening to Boston— General H. A. S. Dearborn also came out in the Evening, and W. H. Adams son of Elihu Adams of Abington— At. 6 this afternoon, with my brother, my two, and his three Sons, I went and bathed at Mr Daniel Greenleaf’s wharf— Water very warm— But that eruptive efflorescence on my skin, which was troublesome to me before I left Washington, has not yet passed off. I swam from the upper to the lower wharf and returned. Coming back I stopped at Mr Daniel Greenleaf’s. Mr and Mrs Whitney, and their Son George were there— A Mr Ingraham a brother to the one whom we saw in Russia, with his wife, and some other persons also— The weather turned cool this Evening— The family remains here still, as it was before— Every thing about the house is the same. I was not fully sensible of the change till I entered his bed-chamber, the place where I had last taken leave of him; and where I had most sat with him at my two last yearly visits to him at this place— That moment was inexpressibly painful, and struck me as if it had been an arrow to the heart. My father and my mother have departed. The charm which has always made this house to me an abode of enchantment is dissolved: and yet my attachment to it, and to the whole region round is stronger than I ever felt it before— I feel it is time for me to begin to set my house in order, and to prepare for the Church-yard myself— Other duties in the meantime devolve upon me from this recent event, the full extent of which I pray that I may know— As I do for the holy Spirit of grace to discharge them.

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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: