12 March 1834
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Bank of the United States Nullification
270

12. V:30. Wednesday.

James K. Polk, chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, to whom I had given, the Letter from the Postmaster General recommending that provision should be made for a Post-Office together with the Custom-house at Plymouth, returned me the Letter, and said that the Committee of Ways and Means, approved of the object, but declined proposing an Appropriation as I had requested, because the Bill for erecting the Custom-house was reported by the Committee of Commerce— He said he should propose to the House to postpone the Report of the Committee of Ways and Means, on the deposit and Bank questions till next Tuesday, and would not object to suspend the rule to allow me to present the Resolutions of the Massachusetts Legislature— At the meeting of the House, he moved that the Report and Resolutions of the Committee of Ways and Means, which had been made the special order for this day, should be postponed till next Tuesday; Wilde of Georgia, objected; and said that he was ready and desirous to address the House upon the subject now— A debate of two hours ensued, till Wilde withdrew his opposition to the postponement— M’Kennan of Pennsylvania moved that the postponement should be till next Tuesday week, but this the House refused—and voted the postponement till next Tuesday— I then asked leave to present the Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts— Objection being made, I moved the suspension of the rule, for that purpose, which the House refused to grant— Polk then moved a Resolution, to make the Deposit and Bank report, the special order for every day at one O’Clock from next Tuesday till the decision of the House upon the Resolutions; Saturdays excepted; and Mondays for the reception of Memorials and Petitions— I objected to the reception of this motion, and Polk moved and carried a suspension of the Rule, that he should make it— The Speaker said the Resolution must lie over one day; upon which Polk moved a suspension of the rules again, that his motion might be considered now; and just carried it by two thirds 115 to 56— I opposed the Resolution, and an Amendment to it was moved by Vinton of Ohio; but the Speaker and the party had settled it otherwise, and Polk’s motion was accordingly driven through the House, with the exception only of the Saturday’s and Monday’s— Adjourned at 1/2 past three— I dined with Coll. Robert B. Campbell of South-Carolina, at his lodgings at Gadsby’s There was a party of upwards of 30 persons, including the whole delegation from South-Carolina in both Houses of CongressJames Blair one of the members is deeply at variance with all the rest being the only unionist and anti-nullifier of the delegation— He was reserved and silent. Coll. Campbell introduced to me Henry Laurens Pinckney, the new member from Charleston 271who takes the place of Coll. Drayton— He is one of the most ardent of the nullification party. He spoke with much indignation of the Speaker Stevenson’s partiality this morning; to which he justly attributed the rejection of my motions for leave to present the Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts.

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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: