2 February 1826
adams-john10 Neal MillikanRecreation
83

2. V:30. Capitol Square Fahrenheit 26.

Van Rensselaer Tibbits King— W. R. Owen— George M Kerr—John Leeds Gouverneur. Sam. L Hay. Charles. Hunter— W. Sherburne Mrs Clay S.S.

General Van Rensselaer came to introduce Mr Tibbits of New-York. W. R. King Senator and G. M. Owen Member of the House of Representatives from Alabama, came to recommend a Mr Dillet as District Judge U.S. in that State— Tait’s resignation was received yesterday— King and Owen are exceedingly averse to the appointment of Crawford; in whose favour the recommendations are numerous and highly respectable— Mr Kerr, a member of the House of Representatives from Maryland, brought me a letter urging the appointment of a youth named Harrison, to be a Cadet at West-Point. Kerr said he himself had recommended another person in his district. Gouverneur is lately from New-York going to see Mr Monroe at Loud oun— Charles Hay had a paper from the Secretary of the NavyW. Hunter came for some papers not to be found at the War Department, and which I have not. Mrs Sherburne, wife of the Man dismissed from a Clerkship at the Navy Department, came to solicit and to plead her poverty and her five children— Mr Clay came and prepared a Letter of Instruction to send to Mr Anderson at Bogota, ordering him to come and meet Mr Sergeant at Porto-Bello; thence to proceed to Panama— He spoke also of appointing the Legislative Council of the Michigan Territory; and I expressed to him my doubts, on the territorial Law, by virtue of which the election was held in districts— He asked me to see Governor Cass, and promised to give him notice to call upon me to-morrow Morning. He also thought it would be indispensably necessary to appoint W. Crawford as District Judge in Alabama— Said there was no doubt he was the person best qualified— Mrs Adams and Miss Mease were both unwell— Confined to their chambers all day.

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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: