19 January 1846
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
388 Washington. Monday 19th.— January 1846—

19. VI.

This day was devoted to the funeral services at the interment of William Taylor member of the House of Representatives from the state of Virginia. They were performed according to the usual custom upon the decease of Members of Congress a Committee of Arrangements were appointed by the Speaker consisting of Dromgoold of Virginia Dunlap of Maine McKay of North Carolina Abbott of Mass Hungerford of N.Y. Vantz of Ohio and King of Georgia. Eight Pall Bearers appointed by this Committee were Arnold of Rhode Island Sykes of New Jersey, Ritter of Pennsylvania Chapman of Maryland Black of South Carolina Martin of Tennessee, Houston of Alabama and Boyd of Kentucky attended the corps which was transported into the Hall of the House of Representatives, at 1/2 past 12 o clock. The members of the Senate preceeded by the Vice President and their Secretary came into the House in procession. the Vice President taking his seat at the right hand of the Speaker in his Chair and the Senators being accommodated with seats in the aria fronting Clerks Table. The President of the United States and the members of the Cabinet the Judges of the Supreme Court the Commander in Chief of the Army and other distinguished Officers, Military and Naval occupied seats, in common with the members of the House— A Methodistical Prayer was made by Mr. Milburn the Chaplain of the House of Representatives and a Presbyterian Discourse with some small notice of the Deceased was preached by Mr. Tustan the Chaplain of the Senate after which the Coffin was taken from the Hall and the members of Congress in a procession of Hackney Coaches, went to the Congressional Burying Ground near the Navy Yard where the Body was deposited in the temporary Sepulcher awaiting the usual monument erected over the remains of Members of Congress who die at the seat of Government— I rode in a carriage with Mr. Benjamin Thompson member from the fourth Congressional District of Massachusetts. John F. Scamman member from the first Congressional District of Maine and another member whose name I did not discover— After the deposit of the Body we returned to the Hall of the House of Representatives where the speaker resumed the Chair with about eight or ten members present and immediately adjourned the House till to-morrow. This is the routine of Congressional Funerals it was passed three oclock before I reached home walking from the Capitol—

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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: