4 March 1845
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
63 Washington Tuesday 4. March 1845

4. VIII. Tuesday

Cutts Richard D.

Inauguration of James Knox Polk as P.U.S.

The day after the closing scene of a dying Congress reminds me of what is said of Typhon in the Asiatic Seas, and of a West India hurricane, when it often happens that the transition from the most terrific fury of the tempest to a dead and breathless calm is instantaneous— Such is the change of ones personal existence between the whirlwind of yesterday, and the tranquility of this day— There was an unusual degree of pomposity paraded in the inauguration of James Knox Polk as President of the United States, by the democracy but I witnessed nothing of it— A Committee of arrangements, for the reception and inauguration of the President elect had been appointed by the Senate consisting of Levi Woodbury of New-Hampshire, Sidney Breese of Michigan, and Walter T. Colquitt of Georgia, all rank democrats, who in a very polite note, enclosed to me, three printed copies of the arrangements, with a notification that a position had been assigned to the Ex-Presidents which the committee would be happy to have me occupy. I did not avail myself of the invitation— There was a procession of 10 or 11. military companies who escorted Mr Polk and Mr Tyler, who rode together, in an open carriage, from Coleman’s National Hotel to the Capitol—They first assembled in the Senate, chamber where George Mifflin Dallas, Vice-President elect was qualified as President of the Senate, and whence they proceeded to a platform protruding from the portico at the top of the flight of stairs ascending the eastern front to the entrance of the Rotundo— There Mr Polk delivered his inaugural address—half an hour long, to a large assemblage of umbrella’s for it was raining hard all the time— The official oath was then administered to him by Chief Justice Taney, and the draggle-tail procession thinned in numbers escorted him back to the President’s house— At night there were two balls, one at Carusi’s hall, at 10 dollars a ticket of all parties—the other of pure democrats at 5 dollars a ticket at the National Theatre— Mr Polk attended both but supped with the true blue 5 dollar democracy.— My family and myself received invitations to both but attended neither— A young man (I forget his name) came and asked me for a copy of my oration upon La Fayette for a friend of his in New-York, which I gave him— He gave me a copy of the inaugural address at which he had been part of the time present I took this afternoon a short solitary walk— Richard D. Cutts was here this evening.

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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: