John Adams to Benjamin Rush, May 23, 1807
Quincy May 23d. 1807 Dr Sir I received at an Exhibition of Musick in our polite Village of Mount Woollaston, on thursday, your Letter relative to Mr Loude, and sent…
Benjamin Rush was an American revolutionary, a Founding Father of the United States and signatory to the U.S. Declaration of Independence, and a civic leader in Philadelphia, where he was a physician, politician, social reformer, humanitarian, educator, and the founder of Dickinson College. Rush was a Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress. He later described his efforts in support of the American Revolution, saying: "He aimed well." He served as Surgeon General of the Middle Department of the Continental Army and became a professor of chemistry, medical theory, and clinical practice at the University of Pennsylvania.
Quincy May 23d. 1807 Dr Sir I received at an Exhibition of Musick in our polite Village of Mount Woollaston, on thursday, your Letter relative to Mr Loude, and sent…
Quincy June 23. 1807 Dear Sir I have received your favour of the ninth of this Month, and conveyed to Dr Tufts your Letter to him, who desireses me to…
Quincy June 25. 1807 Dear Sir John Bunjan, if he had written my last Letter to you would have called it an history of Gods Judgments against Lyars and Libellers.…
Quincy November 11 1807 My dear Phylosopher and Friend I have, long before the receipt of your favour of the 31 of October, supposed that either you were gazing at…
Quincy June 20, 1808 My dear Physical and Medical Philosopher. I give you this Title for the present only. I Shall Scarcely allow you to be a political, moral, or…
Quincy July 25 1808 Dear Benjamin Handsome Bradford, of thy City, allarmed me, the other day at our Athenaeum in Boston, by telling me, that Dr Rushes Business had amazingly…
Quincy January, 23. 1809 Dear Sir What Signify Clamours against Commerce Property Kings Nobles Demagogues Democracy, the Clergy Religion? For to each and all of these has the Depravity of…
Quincy March 14. 1809 My dear Friend Your Anecdotes are always extreamly Aprospros and none of them more So than those in your Letter of Mar 2d The King of…
Quincy March 23d 1809 My Sensible and humorous Friend I agree with Sidney as quoted in your favour of the 13th. That civil War is preferable to Slavery and I…
Quincy June 7. 1809 Dear Sir, Your Letters are not apt to lie a month unacknowledged. That of May 5th. is before me since which I have recd. an Aurora…
Quincy August 31. 1809. My dear old Friend,— If I were not as disinterested as a Patriot, I should answer every Line from you as soon as recd. in order…
Quincy Sept. 1. 1809. Dear Doctor,— Thanks for yours of Aug. 25 and the Papers enclosed. They are very high and very warm. You pretend that you have outlived your…
Quincy October 25. 1809. My dear Sir I received yesterday your new Edition on Animal Life and Madam read it in the evening to me and all the Family, to…
Quincy January 21st. 1810 Learned ingenious, benevolent beneficent Old Friend of 1774 Thanks for “the light and Truth” as I used to call the Aurora, which you sent me. You…
Quincy May 14th 1810. Dear Sir What can I say to my Friend in return for his Letter of 26th of April? My Grief for the Melancholy Fate of my…
Quincy June 28 1810. Friend I acknowledge my fault in neglecting to answer two or three of your last favours. I now thank you for the Letters and the “Light…
Quincy September 1st 1810 Dear Sir, I have been entertained and diverted with the humour and the Wit of my Old Friend O Brian as you call him. The Jackass…
Quincy Decr. 27. 1810 Dear Sir I Sent my Wife to the Post Office this morning with a Letter to you inclosing a Review of Fisher Ames, and as she…
Quincy February 13. 1811 Dear Sir In your Favour of the 4th., according to my Judgment you have given up the whole Controversy. You have no Objection, you say to…
Quincy July 31st. 1811 Dear Sir. I have several sweet letters from you the last of which is the 20th of this month. The table of Cider and health and…
Quincy [ , Start insertion, 12 , End, ] Septr 1811 you will I hope pardon the Liberty I have taken to address myself to you Sir upon a Subject…
Quincy October 13. 1811 Dear Rush Sobrius esto! Recollect your own Non Nobis! Your Letter of the 20th. of September I communicated to Mrs Adams as you advised. Mrs Adams…
Quincy Decr. 4. 1811 Dear Sir Shall I congratulate or condole with you on the appointment of your Son to be Comptroller of The Treasury? You will know the delightful…
Quincy January 27. 1812 Friend I agree with you that The Ocean ought to be and must be the Theatre of the War. Our Government will come by Degrees to…