Abigail Smith Adams to Harriet Welsh, January 30, 1818
[ , Start insertion, January 30, 1818 , End, ] Dear Harriet I received the articles this morning cloth Nankeen Ribbon Letter covers &c altho the Gospel declares man &…
Abigail Adams was the wife and closest advisor of John Adams, the second president of the United States, and the mother of John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States. She is widely considered to be an influential figure in the founding of the United States, and was both the first second lady and second first lady of the United States, although such titles were not used at the time. She and Barbara Bush are the only two women in American history who were both married to a U.S. president and the mother of a U.S. president.
[ , Start insertion, January 30, 1818 , End, ] Dear Harriet I received the articles this morning cloth Nankeen Ribbon Letter covers &c altho the Gospel declares man &…
Quincy Febry. 1st 1818 My Dear Daughter I received yesterday your journal to the 21st of Jan’ry. Washington Seems to be in a whirpool of dissipation—well described by Scott in…
[ , Start insertion, March 1818 , End, ] Dear Harriet I beleive you thought me very imprudent to consent to the Presidents going to Town So cold a day…
Quincy March 14th 1818. Dear Sir Agreable to your Request we have concluded to Send you the picture. Mr Adams has been So occupied by public Buisness that he has…
Quincy March 17th 1818 my Dear Daughter I received your Letter of March 2d which has increased my anxiety to hear again from you, for a series of misfortunes Seem…
Quincy, March 22d, 1818. My Dear Caroline: “Delightful praise, like summer rose, That brighter in the dew-drop glows.” They were sweet drops which flowed from the heart to the eyes…
Quincy May 20th 1818 My dear daughter Your Letter of May 2d was so long comeing, that I feared Sickness had arrested your pen—as Subjects for the use of it…
Quincy May 30th 1818 my Dear Son I think I once heard you Say—to make a thing choice it Should be rare. your kind Letter last Evening received—possesst both those…
Quincy July 28th 1818 My Dear Daughter I received Your Letter of July 18th on Saturday 25th. It was a great damper to me, who had been pleasing myself with…
Quincy August 21st 1818 dear daughter Since the 18th July, I have not received a Line from you or my Son, altho I have been in daily expectation of hearing…