9 May 1835
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Health and Illness Native Americans Territorial Expansion
553

9. V:15. Saturday.

Cold North-East storm, with rain all the morning, and until near Sunset— It obliged us to kindle again all our fires; and affected my wife so that she had a fainting fit, and took to her bed. Mary was also very unwell— Before dinner I went to the General Land-Office to enquire, if there were not some explanatory documents respecting the survey of the Michigan and Ohio boundary, the map of which was reported to the House of Representatives by President Monroe in March 1820 The Commissioner of the General Land-Office, Mr Heyward was not there; but I saw the Chief Clerk 554John M. Moore, and the next in order, Samuel D. King, and from them received some useful information— The General Land-Office, was established by Act of Congress of the 25th. of April 1812. and on the 5th. of May—Edward Tiffin of Ohio was appointed the first Commissioner— On the 14th. of November 1812 Josiah Meigs was appointed Surveyor General, and on the 10th. of October 1814. they exchanged places—Meigs being appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office, and Tiffin Surveyor General— On the 20th of May 1812. Congress passed an act to authorise the President of the United States to ascertain and designate certain boundaries— This act directed the surveyor general under the direction of the President, as soon as the consent of the Indians could be obtained, to cause to be surveyed the western and northern boundary of Ohio, bordering on the Territories of Indiana and Michigan, agreeably to the Act of 30. April 1802 for admitting Ohio into the Union; and to cause to be made a plat or plan of the boundary line from the Southern extreme of Lake Michigan to Lake Erie— Upon this Survey nothing was done, till 1815 when under an order from the Commissioner of the General Land-Office, the Surveyor General, employed a man named Harris, who instead of running a line according to the Acts of Congress, ran it according to the line proposed in the Constitution of the State of Ohio— This line of course was not approved—but in 1818. under a new order from the Commissioner of the Land Office, the Surveyor General employed a person named Fulton (Harris having declined, under a plea of inadequate compensation[)]— Fulton’s line is the one which was reported in March 1820, by President Monroe, to Congress— There are however several errors in this which require further clearing up— The most extraordinary circumstance of all is the wilful deviation of Harris, from the line prescribed by the Acts of Congress, to the line requested by the Constitution of Ohio.— There were shewn to me, several Letters, between the Commissioner of the general Land-Office, the Surveyor General, and the Governor of Michigan, then Mr. Cass— I deferred further enquiries till next week— I wrote a Letter to James Moorhead, with which I return to him his manuscript versification of the Psalms.

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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: