Description:

Adams John Quincy

John Quincy Adams Goes to Bat for a Family of a Revolutionary War Veteran Who Had "service at New York in 1776"

 

Bifold autographed letter signed, 8" x 10." Penned on recto only, balance of pages blank. Dated "Washington 10. Jan 1839," and boldly signed by John Quincy Adams as "J.Q. Adams." Near fine with expected folds and faint toning commensurate with age.

 

A lovely letter penned by Adams to assist with obtaining a pension for the wife of the deceased soldier from the Revolutionary War. Her husband was not on the rolls, however a person by similar surname was, and Adams urged the Commissioner of Pensions to consider an error was made and these two names were one and the same person. Letter shown in full below:

 

"Sir,

I enclose herewith the answer of the Commissioner of Pensions to your letter of the 15th, and the papers which accompanied it, which I submitted to him in support of the claim of Mrs. Everson to a pension for the services of her husband Levi Everson in the Revolutionary War.

 

You will perceive that the service at New York in 1776 is allowed - The rest is suspended because the name of Levi Everson is not upon the rolls of the companies in which it is claimed that he served - but as the name of James Everson is upon one of the rolls, will it not be possible to show that the mistake is in the Christian name on the roll, and not the real person who served in that company was the husband of the claimant.

 

I am, very respectfully Sir, your obedt Servt.

J.Q. Adams"

 

 

A fantastic letter from Adams who was nearing the height of his post-presidential influence. In December 1839 Adams was a rallying point for Democrat and Whig alike, in April of that year he used his status as Founding Son and former president to attack one of the Democrats’ favorite arguments supporting slavery, that of “states’ rights” over the federal government. Adams viewed “states’ rights” as an insult to the principles his father fought for in the Revolution. He strove to establish a unified theory of the American Founding, one based on the idea that sovereignty in the United States, i.e., supreme power and authority, rested not in “states’ rights” over the federal government, but in the power of the people over both the states and the federal government, each of which should be looked at warily as potential usurpers of the people’s power.

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