December 6, 1778

John Adams

Background

John Adams sent this letter from Passy (near Paris), where he was serving as commissioner to France, during the Revolutionary War. He reported to the Continental Congress about a speech in British Parliament that “opens the Intentions of the Enemy, and warns us to be prepared, for all the Evils, which are in their Power to inflict and not in our Power to prevent.”

Background Courtesy: “Letter From John Adams to the President of Congress” from the National Archives, Original License CC 4.0 BY NC SA

 

Passy Decr 6. 1778 [29 in upper right corner]

Sir

I have had the Honour to inclose to Congress, the speech at the opening of the British Parliament, by several opportunities: But as it opens the Intentions of the Enemy, and warns us to be prepared, for all the Evils, which are in their Power to inflict and not in our Power to prevent, I inclose it again in another form. I have the Honour to be, with the highest Respect Sir your most obedient, and most humble servant

[signed] John Adams.
President of Congress.[1]


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Open Anthology of The American Revolution Copyright © 2021 by Laura Lyons McLemore and Sarah Mazur is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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