3 March 1841
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
266 Washington Wednesday 3. March 1841.

3. VI. Wednesday.

Robbins Josiah Payne

Close of the 26th. Congress.

Mr Robbins belongs to Plymouth Massachusetts, and is very desirous of the re-appointment of Schuyler Sampson, as Collector of the Customs at Plymouth— Mr Solomon Lincoln had informed me last Evening that another person a whig had been recommended; and that Mr Sampson had appointed very obnoxious inspectors at Duxbury, Marshfield and Scituate— Robbins says the name of the whig candidate is Stoddard a Son in Law of Coll. John B. ThomasMr Payne the Astronomer, wishes for an appointment as Secretary of Legation somewhere in Europe, and I had sometime since received a Letter from him on the subject— He now desired a recommendation from me; but I do not feel justified in recommending any one, though willing to bear testimony, if desired—

These Gentlemen detained me so that I was belated at the House— All was confusion as usual at the expiration of a Congress.— Private Bills under consideration from 10 till 12. Conversation with Solomon Lincoln, who told me that he had been invited to come here, upon a very numerous, and respectable recommendation of young men, altogether unexpected and unsolicited by him—but that when he arrived here he found that Governor Levi Lincoln had step’d forward and ranged himself among the candidates— That there was some objection to him as a member actual elect of Congress; but that from his standing and preponderance of pretensions, he would probably be appointed— I know not why, but it seemed to me as if Levi Lincoln, shrunk in all his proportions into the dimensions of a pigmy, from a nine years Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to a Collector of the Customs at Boston— Solomon Lincoln said he should not stay to see the pageant to-morrow, but would depart in the Cars this afternoon— He mentioned to me also my Son’s report of the joint Committee of the Massachusetts Legislature on the North-eastern boundary question, and the movements of Theophilus Parsons, a chip of the old block, and now a Senator from Boston, to take it out of his hands.— I went into the Supreme Court, where James T. Austin, Attorney General of Massachusetts was arguing a boundary question, between Massachusetts and Rhode-Island— At the Clerk’s Office to search for the Records of the Supreme Court in the case of the Antelope— Found the dates of two mandates to S. L. Southard Secretary of the Navy— Conversation in the house with Abbott Lawrence who told me he was invited here, and is consulted about the system of administration to be pursued— Home to dinner— Returned to the house between 5 and 6. My wife and Mrs. Smith visited the old Theatre preparations for the inaugural Ball— Maine and Georgia log-rolling— Dodge and Ioway, Casey’s Preemption Bill— Call of the house Midnight and the Congress expires.

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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: