Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams to John Quincy Adams, December 27, 1814
St Petersburg December 27 1814 My best Friend With what pleasure I read your last kind Letter you are capable of judging who are so well acquainted with the warmth…
St Petersburg December 27 1814 My best Friend With what pleasure I read your last kind Letter you are capable of judging who are so well acquainted with the warmth…
Ghent 27. December 1814. My dear wife. On Saturday last, the 24th: of December, the Emperor Alexander’s birth day a Treaty of Peace and Amity was signed by the British…
Ghent 26. December 1814. My Dear Sir. Mr Hughes, the Secretary to the American Mission for negotiating Peace, was dispatched early this morning with one copy of the Treaty signed…
Quincy December 25th 1814 my Dear Charles Francis I have received two very pretty Letters from you, with which I have been much pleased, both with the composition, and the…
Ghent 24. December 1814. My dear and honoured mother. A Treaty of Peace between the United States and Great Britain has this day been signed by the British and American…
Ghent 23. December 1814. My dear wife. If in receiving two of your Letters at a time, I have some times mingled with the pleasure derived from them a thought…
Quincy December 23 1814 Dear Harriet The black hair Ribbon is just what was wanted, I thank you for thinking of it. I Should like 8 yds I believe of…
Quincy December 21 1814 my dear Daughter I shall make one effort more; to convey a Letter to you, and that by sending it to Ghent, where I really wish…
St Petersburg December 20th 1814 My best friend I was much disappointed at the receipt of your last letter having flatter’d myself that you would have had some letters from…
Ghent 20. December 1814. My dear wife. Our interval of leisure still continues—The British Messenger who took our last Note to England has not yet returned, but may now be…