26 May 1831
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Colonization Movements
189

26. IV. Thursday.

Daniel

Charles went to Boston and returned to dine— Brought me Loudon’s Encyclopaedia of Gardening, borrowed at the Athenaeum— A person by the name of Daniel, who said he was of New-York, but whose speech bespoke an Irishman, came as an Agent for the American Colonization Society; with a Subscription book for the African Repository— I said I believed I received it at Washington; he said he had come to seek Subscribers in this Village; and enquired for the dwelling of the Minister, to which I gave him the direction— J. Kirke took in to Boston the second horse he had brought to me, from Forbes’s upon Trial; but who does not suit me— I Received a Letter from my Son, which I immediately answered— Resumed the writing of the sketch of my father’s Life— May I no more neglect it— Read a few pages of Dr Waterhouse upon Junius— Began a Letter to A. B. Johnson and others, upon the rates of interest in this Commonwealth—but must make further enquiries to answer theirs— It was Isaac H. Adams’s birth-day and he went to dine at his father’s— In the Garden, the appearance in Book-box N. 1. of a new Apple-seedling, shewed that the vegetation of that fruit has not yet ceased— Nursery Appearance of Chesnut seedlings 7 and 8— Half of one of my 4 yearling Apricots has suddenly withered— A new incognitum seedling up. I rode up to Mr Capen’s and went with him over my Lawyer’s Common which he wishes to take upon Rent— There was a growth of standing Pine-wood upon that lot sold in November 1829. and cut down that Winter— I now saw a beautiful growth of Oak, Chiefly white Oak, but intermixed with, black, grey, and barren’s scrub Oak, on the same Spot— I had heard and read of this phenomenon, but now witnessed it with my own eyes— There is fencing wanted upon the lot, and I agreed to give Capen an old dead apple tree, to put up a patch of wall near where it stands. I made sundry observations as I went along, which I might turn to account— Plucked up one tree or shrub, which I set out in my Garden— Saw many flowers in blossom; but neither Capen nor I knew what they were— Several wild strawberries, in blossom— The low Blackberries are also in Blossom— I walk’d home by the way of Deacon Adams’s; but he was not at home.

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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: