Current Exhibition & Auction

Auction 739 April.

Boston

Auction 739 April.

Date & Location

Boston

How to Bid

1

Register Account

Create an account and verify your identity to participate.

2

Place Proxy Bid

Set your maximum bid before the live hammer session.

3

Live Hammer

Join the live auction room for final competitive bidding.

Proceed to Registration
Reset
3 Results Found

John Quincy Adams

Opening: $200

Estimate: $2,000 - $4,000

LS as secretary of state, one page, both sides, 8 x 13, March 1, 1820. Addressed from the “Department of State” in Washington, a letter to John Clark, governor of Georgia, acknowledging receipt of Clark's letters of January 19 and 20 with their enclosures: copies of resolutions of the Georgia Legislature approved December 8, 1810, and December 10, 1819, together with sundry papers relating to allegations charging General D.B. Mitchell, U.S. Agent to the Creek Indians, with having participated in or been accessory to the unlawful introduction of African slaves into the United States.

Adams advises that the papers were immediately laid before President Monroe, who directed Adams to enclose a copy of a letter from the Secretary of War to General Mitchell apprising him of the charges implicating his conduct and of the necessity for investigation, and that the president thought it inadvisable to communicate the documents to Congress at this time. He requests transmission to the State Department of any additional evidence Clark may think necessary to authenticate the facts. Regarding the resolutions concerning Africans unlawfully brought into the Port of Savannah, states that the existence of those resolutions was unknown to the President and the Department until received with Clark's letter, that the President "duly appreciates the Spirit of Patriotism of the Legislature of Georgia manifested in their adoption," and will give them every effect within the powers of the Executive.

Adams continues: “The President considers that the forfeiture of the bonds cannot vest a right of any kind in those by whom they were given — He directs me to request Your Excellency's exertions that those persons may be recovered and delivered up to the Marshal of the United States, to be removed and sent to Africa, and liberated conformably to the existing Law.” He concludes by noting that the District Attorney has been instructed to take every measure within his competency to accomplish the object of the third Resolution, and promises a further communication on the subject of Clark's January 19 letter. In very good to fine condition, with old tape stains and discreet professional repairs.

David Brydie Mitchell (1766–1837) had served two terms as Governor of Georgia before President Madison appointed him U.S. Agent to the Creek Indians in 1817. Within months of his appointment, he became involved in a slave-smuggling ring operating out of Amelia Island, Florida, through which at least 110 Africans were illegally imported into the United States in violation of the Act of 1807 prohibiting the slave trade.

The contraband enslaved people were brought up the Flint River to Mitchell's agency, where they were divided among Mitchell and his business partners. The investigation was triggered when John Clark, who had just defeated Mitchell's political faction to win the governorship of Georgia in 1819, found incriminating correspondence in Mitchell's desk and forwarded it to Washington.

This letter, written fourteen months before Mitchell's formal dismissal, documents the early stage of Monroe's response: the President was unwilling to send the evidence to Congress, but directed that the Africans be located, transferred to federal custody, and repatriated under the provisions of the 1819 Slave Trade Act. Mitchell was ultimately dismissed in 1821 following a formal opinion by Attorney General William Wirt concluding that he had ‘prostituted his power as agent for Indian affairs…to the purpose of aiding and assisting in a conscious breach of the act of Congress of 1807.’ Adams would later, as president and then as a congressman, become one of the most forceful antislavery voices in American political life.

Opening: $200

Estimate: $1,000 - $2,000

ALS as a congressman-elect, signed "J. Q. Adams," one page, 7.75 x 9.75, February 1, 1831. Addressed from Washington, a handwritten letter to his nephew, Lieutenant Thomas B. Adams, stationed at Fort Moultrie in South Carolina, in which encloses a blank power of attorney to be executed by Adams to enable JQA's son, Charles, to receive dividends on stock in the Suffolk Insurance Company of Boston held in Adams’s name; instructs that once executed, Adams should give Charles directions for disposal of the interest accruing on his Boston funds.

The letter then turns to a more pressing matter: "There is a Resolution before the House of Representatives, the object of which is to discharge from the Army all the Supernumerary Officers, who after passing through the Academy at West Point, have received Commissions by Brevet — In This number I think you are still included, and although it is doubtful whether the measure will be adopted at the present Session of Congress, you will do well to be thinking of what course of life you may find it expedient to adopt, in the event of your being disbanded. Should this event, contrary to my expectation take place the ensuing Spring, I invite you to come and Spend it, and the Succeeding Summer, with me, at Quincy, and in that time you will have Leisure to look out for such other occupation as may be suitable to your interest and inclination." JQA closes with a note on the unusually rigorous Washington winter, observing that the heavy snowstorms ranging from North Carolina to Maine have apparently not reached Fort Moultrie, "perhaps owing to an extra portion of Caloric in South Carolina." In fine condition, with some light staining at the left edge.

John Quincy Adams wrote this letter from Washington at the opening of the Twenty-Second Congress, having just won election in the fall of 1830 as a representative from Massachusetts — the only former president to serve in the House after leaving the White House. He was fifty-three days from taking his seat when he wrote to his nephew. The recipient, Thomas Boylston Adams Jr. (1809–1837), was a grandson of President John Adams and a son of JQA's younger brother, Thomas Boylston Adams, Sr. He had graduated twelfth in the West Point Class of 1828 and was serving as a Second Lieutenant in the 2nd Artillery at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina. The congressional resolution JQA describes reflects the Jacksonian-era effort to reduce the officer corps by eliminating brevet commissions, a politically charged measure that targeted the professional military class closely associated with West Point. Thomas was not in fact discharged; he was promoted to First Lieutenant in 1834, served in the Second Seminole War in Florida, and died of typhoid fever at Fort Dade on December 14, 1837, at the age of twenty-eight. "Charles" is Charles Francis Adams (1807–1886), JQA's youngest surviving son, later minister to Great Britain during the Civil War.

Opening: $200

Estimate: $300 - $400

Ink signature, "J. Q. Adams,” on an off-white 2.25 x .75 slip, matted and framed with a portrait engraving to an overall size of 7.75 x 10.75. In fine condition.