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- GLC#
- GLC05573
- Type
- Letters
- Date
- December 25, 1816
- Author/Creator
- Adams, John, 1735-1826
- Title
- to Richard Rush
- Place Written
- Quincy, Massachusetts
- Pagination
- 2 p. : address : docket : free frank Height: 24.7 cm, Width: 19.6 cm
- Primary time period
- National Expansion and Reform, 1815-1860
- Sub-Era
- The Age of Jefferson & Madison
Adams in retirement to Rush as Attorney General. Written from "Montezillo," a playful reference to Adams' own home in Quincy, Massachusetts. References Rush's letter of 29 September 1816. In that letter Rush related a story about a horseback excursion to Monticello to visit Jefferson. Tells Rush about a 500 mile journey he undertook by horseback from Massachusetts to Baltimore in 1777. Tells of treacherous crossings of the Hudson and Raritan Rivers. Mentions that he has heard high praise of Monticello from various travelers. Tries to tempt Rush to make a trip to visit him, saying the journey is much easier than it used to be in the late 1770s. Says if he comes he will show him the magnificent "natural Beauty" of his home as compared to the "vast Wilderness" Rush saw on his trip to Monticello. Gives an introduction for a Colonel Sumner and his sister to Rush. Says his father's letters do honor to his memory, "But at present they would break up an hundred hornets nests."
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