Description:

Jackson Andrew 1767 - 1845 Great Andrew Jackson with Battle of New Orleans Association, mentions James Monroe twice

Autograph Letter Signed "Andrew Jackson" as U.S. Senator and candidate for President, 1p, 7.75" x 10". Nashville, Tennessee, July 12, 1824. To Major John R. Grymes. Integral leaf addressed by Jackson to "Major John R. Grimes / City of Neworleans / Mail}," soiled.Postmarked "NASH T. JUL 13." Expertly mended at folds. Fine condition.

In full, "Your letter of the 25th of May last addressed to me at the City of Washington did not reach me before last evening. I sincerely regret this, had it reached me before I left the city, it would have offered me much pleasure to have personally laid it before Mr. Monroe [James Monroe was the President], & have made known to have my knowledge of your standing & character & the confidence that ought to attach to your recommendation. I have this day adressed [sic] a letter to Mr. Monroe upon the Subject, & enclosed your letter to him, it will be a gratification to me to know that Mr. Bosque has succeeded in his application. There was no necessity for any apology for not writing me oftener - I am well aware how little time professional men have to convert to friendship. Accept assurances of my friendship & Esteem & believe me, your obnt Servt Andrew Jackson"

New Orleans attorney John R. Grymes (1786-1854) was Aide-de-Camp to General Andrew Jackson during the Battle of New Orleans. From 1811-1814, he was U. S. Attorney for Louisiana. As lawyer, among Grymes' clients were pirates Jean and Pierre Lafitte. In 1822, Grymes married Cayetana Susana "Suzette" Bosque, widow of former Louisiana Governor and U.S. Senator William C. C. Claiborne. Mrs. Grymes' father was Gen. Don Bartolome Bosque who was one of the last Spanish officials retained after the transfer of the colony back to Spain. Jackson's letter refers to Grymes' brother-in-law, Joseph Bosque, and his possible appointment as U.S. Consul at Tampico, Mexico.

On July 22, 1822, two years earlier, the legislature of Tennessee had placed Andrew Jackson in nomination for President of the United States. Although he got a plurality in both the electoral and popular vote against three major candidates (Monroe's Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and his Secretary of the Treasury William H. Crawford and Speaker of the House Henry Clay) in the 1824 presidential election, Jackson failed to get a majority and lost in the voting in the House of Representatives to J.Q. Adams.

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November 10, 2016 10:30 AM EST
Wilton, CT, US

University Archives

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