28 May 1834
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Health and Illness Alien and Sedition Acts Diplomacy Foreign Relations
323

28. V:30. Wednesday.

Litchfield Franklin

Wrote to my Son Charles, and also to the Committee of Arrangements for the festival on the 31st of this month at Fredericksburg. Called at Gadsby’s and saw Lord Powerscourt and Mr Parnell.— At the House, I asked the Speaker Stevenson, if under the rule of the House he could introduce Strangers into the Lobby— He said yes— He told me that he was very unwell, and was about to undergo an operation for a fistula— Soon after the Meeting of the House he placed H. Hubbard in the Chair— With leave of the House I moved that the use of the Hall should be granted for a meeting in behalf of the exiled Poles, to-morrow Evening, and it was granted. The meeting failed on Monday, from the weather— Several reports of Committees were received, among which a Bill with a Report from the Committee on the Judiciary, to refund Matthew Lyon’s Sedition Law fine, to his Heirs and Representatives. N. 498. and it was referred to the Committee of the whole, who have already before them a Bill of the same complexion for the relief of Thomas Cooper 485. The contested Kentucky election followed— Vanderpoel of New-York, and Pope of Kentucky made successive Speeches, each of an hour, in favour of Moore. Then Amos Davis, a speech of two hours against Moore and the Report of the Committee— Then Jones of Georgia replied and offered an Amendment to the Amendment proposed by Banks; and after speaking till four O’Clock moved to adjourn, which motion was carried— In the Evening I had a visit from Franklin Litchfield, Consul of the United States, at Porto Caballo in Venezuela, and had a long Conversation with him on the present Condition of that Country— The Republic of Colombia is dissolved, and its very name is extinct— It forms three Independent States—Venezuela—New-Grenada, and Equador. Each recognising the two others as separate and Sovereign States— There is not the remotest prospect of their ever being united together again— Mr Litchfield says the Government of Venezuela, acknowledges as the Treaty of the Republic of Colombia with the United States as binding upon them— So do the Governments of New-Grenada and of Equador— This inability of South-America, to live united under one Government is ominous.

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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: