16 February 1778 A.D. John Adams & John Quincy Adam Prepare to Sail for France
16 February 1778 A.D. John Adams & John Quincy
Adam Prepare to Sail for France
Editors. “John Adams prepares
to sail for France.” History.com. N.d.
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/john-adams-prepares-to-sail-for-france. Accessed 14 Feb 2015.
John Adams
prepares to sail for France
On this day in 1778, two
future presidents of the United States,
John Adams
and his son, 10-year-old John
Quincy Adams, sit in Marblehead
Harbor, off the coast of Massachusetts, on board the frigate, Boston, which is
to take them to France, where John Adams will replace Silas Deane in Congress'
commission to negotiate a treaty of alliance.
Silas Deane's son, Jesse
Deane, who was 11 or 12 years old, was also on board and bore a letter from his
uncle requesting that Adams take care of the child, whose Youth and
Helplessness among such bad company would require "some friendly Montior
(sic) to caution, and keep him from associating with the common hands on
board."
Adam's newfound role as pater
familias expanded further with the delivery of a letter from William
Vernon, Esquire, a member of the Continental Navy Board in Boston. Vernon's
son, a recent college graduate, was also on board the Boston. His father
asked John Adams to find a merchant whom he could trust to educate his son in
the business. Although sending him to a Catholic nation, the elder Vernon
wished to see his son installed with a Protestant family of extensive Business
in hopes that he
"would hereafter be usefull (sic) to Society, and in particular to these
American States." He entrusted Adams not only with his son, but also with
his money, asking Adams to negotiate a price of approximately £100 sterling for
room and board with an eminent merchant to train his son for two to three
years.
Once in France, Jesse Deane
joined John Quincy Adams and Benjamin
Franklin's grandson, Benjamin Franklin
Bache, at a pension in Passy, outside Paris; Vernon remained in Bordeaux. Two
of the boys in Passy grew to be among the leaders of the next American
generation. Benjamin Franklin Bache inherited his grandfather's skills as a
journalist and founded The Aurora, a newspaper in which he attacked
first George Washington's presidency and then John Adams'. Under the
notoriously unconstitutional Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, Bache was
imprisoned for his opposition to Federalist Party policy. John Quincy Adams
followed in his father's footsteps, serving as a foreign diplomat,
Massachusetts state senator and president of the United States. Jesse Deane,
like his father, faded into the backdrop of history.
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