13 December 1847
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Whig Party Health and Illness Amistad
232 Washington Monday 13th. December 1847.

13. VI.

At the House the appointment of the standing Committees was announced. Samuel F Vinton is Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, John A. Rockwell of Connecticut of the Committee of Claims, Washington Hunt 233of New York, of the Committee of Commerce, Jacob Collamer of Vermont, of the Public Lands, William L Goggin of Virginia, of the Post Offices and Post Roads, John G. Chapman of Maryland, of the District of Columbia, Joseph. R. Ingersoll of Pennsylvania, on the Judiciary, and Daniel. P. King of Massachusetts, on Revolutionary Claims, Andrew Stuart of Pennsylvania of Manufactures, Hugh White of New York, of Agriculture, and P. Gentry of Tennessee, of Indian Affairs, John M Botts of Virginia, Military Affairs, Thomas. B. King of Georgia on Naval Affairs, Truman Smith of Connecticut of Foreign Affairs, and C. B. Smith of Indiana on the Territories, All the Chairmen, of the standing Committees are whigs—of the Speakers creed and he has made me Chairman of the Joint Library Committee on the part of the House, with Wm. B. Preston of Virginia and Henry. C. Murphy of New York. The whigs not of the Speakers School, are all placed, in the most insignificant positions on the Committees. an arrangement which has given much dissatisfaction. There was scarcely any transaction of business, the House having received very early in the day a message from the Senate announcing the decease of Jabez. W. Huntington Senator from Connecticut who died after a short illness at his residence in Norwich on the 2d. day of November last. upon which Mr. John. A. Rockwell, made the usual obituary Eulogium, and offered the usual resolutions, adopted on such occasions, concluding with one that the House do adjourn, which was accordingly done— Of all the existing members of the Senate, Mr. Huntington was the one with whom I most thoroughly sympathized in sentiment, and I consider his loss, as a grievous misfortune to the Country— His successor appointed by the Governor of Conn during the recess of the Legislature, of that State, is Mr. Roger S. Baldwin, who was my associate in the Trial before the Supreme Court, in the case of the negroes, of 234the Schooner Amistad.

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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: