28 December 1833
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Recreation Elections, Presidential 1836 Bank of the United States
212

28. V.30. Saturday—

Blunt Joseph

I answered the Letter of Mr W. P. Sherman, and enclosed with it copies of the two pamphlets containing my Letters to W. L. Stone and to E. Livingston. I left Cards of Visits at Sir Charles Vaughan’s for him, and for Mr William Pitt Adams and Mr Andrew Buchanan, who are attached to the British Legation— I was going to visit Mr Bell, Senator 213from New-Hampshire, but met him in Pennsylvania Avenue.— I bespoke his attention and favour to the Bill which has passed the house in favour of Jotham Lincoln— I met also Mr S. A. Foot, member of the House from Connecticut; who told me that Franklin the new Clerk of the House had dismissed this morning three of the subordinate Clerks—Fletcher, Patterson, and another— Mr Foot was quite indignant at this act of authority; but there is no help for it— I left a Card also for Chilton Allan of Kentuckey at Brown’s Hotel; and gave a sitting of an hour and a half to Mr Rembrandt Peale; whose mode of painting differs from that of any other Painter, who has tried his skill upon my face— He takes the likeness first in Crayons upon Paper, and copies from that in Oil upon the canvass— Mr Peale’s conversation is not so amusing as that of Stewart used to be; but his Portraits are among the best I have seen painted in this Country next to those of Stewart— We had whist again this Evening, and Mr Blunt came in and took a hand— He discovered unwittingly his revived hopes in support of Mr Clay for the succession to the Presidency—and there is now every probability, that the public questions which have already arisen from the Bank and the condition of the Treasury will reduce the next Presidential Election to a struggle between Clay and Van-Buren— All the straggling parties for others will be whipped in to one or the other of these.

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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: