John Quincy Adams to Louisa Catherine Johnson, June 2, 1796
The Hague June 2. 1796. You remember I was ordered peremptorily to be at Gravesend on Saturday morning by ten or eleven o’clock at the latest, though it was impossible…
Louisa Catherine Adams was the first lady of the United States from 1825 to 1829 during the presidency of her husband John Quincy Adams. She was born in England and raised in France. Her father was an influential American merchant, and she was regularly introduced to prominent Americans. After her family returned to England, she met John Quincy Adams in 1795, and the two began a tenuous courtship. They married in 1797 after being engaged for a year, beginning a marriage of disagreements and personality conflicts. She joined her husband on his diplomatic mission to Prussia, where she was popular with the Prussian court. When they returned to the United States, her husband became a senator and she gave birth to three sons. John was appointed minister to the Russian Empire in 1809, and they traveled to the Russian Empire without their two older sons, against Louisa's wishes.
The Hague June 2. 1796. You remember I was ordered peremptorily to be at Gravesend on Saturday morning by ten or eleven o’clock at the latest, though it was impossible…
The Hague August 13. 1796. I hope my amiable friend has before this received my letters of the 9 th: of last month, and of the 6 th of the…
The Hague September 12. 1796. I have received, my amiable friend, your letters of the 19 th: and 28 th: of last month, and am properly grateful for the readiness…
Amsterdam December 5. 1796. I have just now received, my dearest friend, your letter of the 15 th: of last month, 1 since which I hope you have before now…
The Hague December 31. 1796. Since my Letter of the 20 th: I have not enjoyed the pleasure of receiving any from my friend, but I do not forget the…
The Hague Sunday February 12. 1797. “This day, which saw my Delia’s beauty rise, Shall more than all our sacred days be blest; The world, enamour’d of her lovely eyes,…
The Hague February 20. 1797. I hope we shall never get into a habit of writing to one another angry and kind Letters alternately, for it would be far from…
The Hague March 20. 1797. I have successively received your Letters of the 28 th: and 24 th: of last month, which I mention thus in inverted order because they…
The Hague April 13. 1797. The day after I sent off my last Letter, I received that of my good friend, dated the 27 th: of last month; and at…
The Hague 12. May. 1797. And is it possible that my charming friend should feel an uneasy sentiment a sentiment of fear in sitting down to write to me: to…