SS'Mlf"'* :)^ CLaaJL/. WS'' Qass Oli Book__ W ( 0" /; CANDID VIEW OF THE s ;- 9^ PRESIDENTIAL. QUESTION, BY A PENlVSyiiVAlVIAJV. • •'^" ^w ^T#<*^ PHILADELPHIA: PRINTED BY WII.LIAM STAVELY, Jv'o. 99, South Second Street. ,'iifg-usf, 182S. • • •\i -^ » ^ ''2- w\o '14 A CANDID VIEW OF THE PRESIDENTIAL. aUESTION. WHO OUGHT TO BE OUR NEXT PRESIDENT? Political zealots will answer this question at once, by a reference to the decision of some party tribunal: but the candid and reflecting will find it necessary to consider many things before they decide. I am merely a citizen, pledged to the dogmas of no partisan leader, with no- thing to hope from either candidate, and nothing to fear, except in com- mon with the other good people of the country. I am interested in the perpetuation of our free institutions, for I have children; I am anxious that our government should give repose at home, and protection abroad to all who support it, for I am an American by birth and in prmciple; and I am zealous for its honour : it is the part of ray patrimony, which I am most unwilling to squander. I have thought over the matter carefully; and the following pages re- cord my opinions, as they have been dispassionately formed, of the cha- racters of the two candidates, and of their claims to the public gratitude and confidence. I have offered them to the printer, because, as truth can never wear two faces, they may perhaps lead others to think as I do; or perhaps they may invite some better regulated mind to expose my errors, and thus lead me to a more correct conclusion than that which I have formed for myself. I care little for Mr. Adams or General Jackson, compared with my country and the cause of truth. What are the personal characters of the candidates ? This is with me the primary question: a reprobate at home, can make but a sorry saint abroad. To answer this question, we must look at the conduct of the two men, and at the circumstances in which they have been placed. Character can be fairly judged of in no other way. There is little merit in him, who, never being tempted, has never sinned ; and he may readily be pardoned, who, living always in obscurity, has had no opportunity of doing service to the state. Luckily for the impartial inquirer, the history of both is easily read, and the difference between them is so boldly marked, that no one ca» confound their characteristic virtues, or their peculiar faults. PERSONAL CHARACTEU. Andtevv Jackson was the son of a farmer, who died while his children were young, becjueathing to iheai little more tlian a spotless name. Be- fore he was fifteen 3'ears of age, with the enthusiasm which lias always marked his career, Jackson enrolled himseif with his two brothers, in the ranks of the Revolutionary army. His eldest brother died soon after on the field of battle; the other sunk under the effects of a neglected sabre- wound; and his mother yielding to the pressure of her sorrows, shortly followed them to the grave. Andrew Jackson was thus left at an early age without a protector, and almost without a kinsman. After a service, distinguished for its fidelity and spirit, where all were faithful and gallant, he left the camp, and applied himself assiduously to the study of the law. He had been admitted to the bar of North Carolina, when in 17S8, he took up his abode in the then wilderness of Tennessee. His strong manly sense, his integrity and warmth of heart, soon gathered a circle of friends around him, of the blunt yeomanry of that district: he imbibed their frank and generous spirit; and perhaps partook of their faults. It is said, that in early life, he was ibnd of the sports of the field, and that he so far yielded to the false notions of honour by which the western states are yet distinguished, as to take part in a duel. Years of patriotic service, and of uninterrupted regard to the obliga- tions of piety have not been sufficient, in the estimation of some among us, to wipe out this offence. Perhaps they are right; but the people among whom he lives have been more charitable. They have surely forgiven him at home. He is now the guardian, whom men select for their orphans, he is the executor of their wills, the arbiter whom neigh- bours invite to decide their disputes, the adviser of the widow and the friendless. Nor, it would seem, has the country been more severe. The State of Tennessee has showered its honours upon him; the national go- vernment has invited him to a seat in the Cabinet; the Presbyterian Church, always slow to confide in those who have erred, has named him as the head of one of her most important committees; and the people of the west, who know him better than we can, have united warmly in supporting hin) for the highest oflice in the land. Mr. Adams was the son of a rich and distinguished citizen of Massa- chusetts. From his infancy, he was surrounded by all the captivating refinement of literature and ease: his desk was covered with books, and his board with delicacies. He was, however, always temperate in his habits, and prided himself most on the untiring assiduity, with which he could continue to direct all his powers to a single object. He inherited the fiery and vindictive passions of his father ; but admonished by his father's errors, he was enabled at an early age, to assume the staid and still character, which from the days of tlie pilgrims has marked the out- ward demeanour of the people of New England. He had some of the virtues, and not a few of the less respected traits of the Yankee cha- racter. Like his brethren, he was industrious, frugal, cautious, and moral in his external deportment ; but liberality of temper and of purse, freedom from selfishness, and frankness of spirit, have never been cnu- merated among the points of his character, lie k<'|)t from chilrlhoocl, and still keeps, a diary, in which he has not failed to make daily registry of whatever he has said of things or persons, and whatever others have said to him ; a practice admirably fitted to provide before hand the ma- terials of future controversy^ but which makes few friendships. Mr. Adams has no personal friends. His Boston associations have protected him from the enormity of duelling; for in Massachusetts, no respectable man would bear a challenge : but the same associations have made him more correct in his conduct than in his creed ; and those of his advocates, who differ from him in religion, regret that he has been led away into the errors of the Unitarian church. He is not popular : — of the offices which it has been his fortune to fill, one only has been the gift of the people. It was his first office, that of member of the Massachusetts Senate: he was afterwards a candidate for Congress, but failed. In the transactions of private life, his honesty has never been successfully assailed; but his supporters admit, that his frugality sometimes approaches parsimony, and that his extreme accuracy might in some instances, be mistaken for meanness. Both are men of excitable temperament. General Jackson is perhaps more easily roused, but Mr. Adams' passion is more lasting. The former speaks as he feels, and when he feels: the latter reflects, and still is angry, but speaks not. As the analogies of human character would lead us to expect, General Jackson is quick to resent an injury, and as quick to forgive one : he keeps no record of his disputes. Had he such a diary as Mr. Adams has, he would find it more difficult to forget the wrongs he has received. General Jackson has warm affections, and repays kindness with cordiality: Mr. Adams, more confident perhaps in his own powers,.has a lower estimate of the value of friendship. It was a severe remark, but it came from a man who had served him often, that, " like the unfortunate head of the house of Stuart, he has never forgotten an enemy, or remem- bered a friend." It must be acknowledged too, that Mr. Adams has not always selected the most appropriate moments for the expression of his opinions and feelings. It would have been better, to assail Fisher Ames, while living and armed for defence, than to accuse his memory, however boldly. The celebration of our National festival was not honoured by his grateful reminiscences of the mental calamity, with which it pleased Heaven to visit the sovereign, from whose allegiance we had withdrawn : — besides, we were at peace with that sovereign, and the orator was our Secretary of State. Our government during the late war was doubtless enfeebled by our domestic dissensions, and endangered by foreign pressure ; yet, our minister at the court of a mediating power, should have forborne to characterize it as weak and penurious. The victory at North Point might have been freshly remembered in his flowing soul, without breath- ing a sentiment of blood upon the libation, or sneering at the obsequies of a gallant soldier. It would be easy to multiply these illustrations. But it is not necessary in an enquiry into the personal character of the candidates. 6 It should be conceded at once, that both are respectable as private citizens^ each having faults, no doubt ; but both of them known as good memoersof the family, and of the neighbourhood, and of the ivider Circle of society. Neither is wanting in apparent respect for reli- gion Mr. Adams is a constant attendant of the several churches at VVasliington, and General Jackson has long been an habitual worshipper with the congregation nearest his residence. Either of them, placed in tlJe oflice of President, will be sufficiently exemplary, as a man. PUBLIC SERVICES OF MR. ADAMS. We come to another question : what has been the character of the two candidates in public life.? .frT'''^.';T-''u'"'''"" ''^^'"■^ ^^^' P"^^'^' b°th have filled important offices: let their history be examined candidly, but freely and without fear. Ihe education of Mr. Adams was well fitted to prepare him for a poli- tical career. He pursued his collegiate studies with assiduity and suc- cess : few have graduated with more distinction. There is, however a department of education, too often neglected, which exerts a yet more im- portant influence over the character of the pupil. It is the education of example, of the household. Blr. Adams, as a politician, here too was for- tunate. _ H,s father had led in the assemblies of the people, he was pro- mment in the state and general congress of the Revolution, and in early file at least, had the reputation of a singularly popular and influential man. lo one who has studied language more than mankind, it would appear strange, that in a nation of republicans, love of country, and love of the people popularity and patriotism should have meanings so widely differ- ent. 1 he well known distinction is in the object. The politician, who seeks only his own advancement, finds it indispensable that he should se- cure popular favour:— the patriot may be, and for a time often is, un- [lopular, ' The father of Mr. Adams understood this distinction perfectly well. 1 robably, no man who has held office in our country, was more ambitious ol public applause, or more supremely selfish in his ultimate object. Go- vernor Hutchinson says, that he knew him to declare in early life, " so long as there is one man superior to me in wealth, in power, or in station, 1 cannot be happy." The father, skilled and disciplined in all the arts of the politician and the courtier, himself undertook the political education of his cluldj and before Mr. John Q. Adams had attained the age of man- hood, he himself became a politician and courtier by profession. It is scarcely possible to expose the moral firmness of a young man to a severer trial. Persuade him, that influence, and fame, and office, are the objects of life; and native ingenuousness and youthful integrity, the bud and promise of his character, wither and fade away. He becomes convinced by degrees of the truth of that apothegm of the elder Adams : in political conduct, the party, which is least scrupulous in the use of means, has the best chance of success;" and in a few years, he finds him- self prepared, like Gen. Conway, in the British Parliament, to employ every auxiliary <- which God and Nature may have put into his hands."" Yet this was the trial, to which Mr. John Q. Adaras was exposed from his very boyhood. He was little more than ten years old, when he began those circuits of the European courts, to which more than a third of his whole life has been devoted. His earliest associations were with politi- cians, among whom selfishness was the universal principle of action: — he has lived in one almost unbroken sequence of diplomatic dignities:-— his years have been spent among political negotiations, in which dissimu- lation is too often essential to success, and address is recognized as the substitute of virtue. He saw power jeoparded and lost by manly feeling and unsuspecting honour: he saw it acquired and retained by every in- triguing statesman, who had wit enough to deceive his associates, or base- ness enough to betray them. These things he saw ; and he had been taught by his father, that power was the great end of living. — Mr. Adams had been for many years a public minister, when the elec- tion of Mr. Jefterson drove his father into retirement. Apprehensive that he might be recalled, or unwilling perhaps to give his countenance to what then appeared to him an ephemeral administration, he left the Court of Berlin in 1801, and on his return to America, was at once hailed by the Federal party of Massachussetts, as one of their most favoured cham- pions. He justified their afiection by the zeal with which he entered into their views, and the devotion with which he laboured to advance them. In the grave assemblies at Faneuil Hall, he was the federal moderator:— no man was more faithful in the toils of the committee-room :— his exuberant style gave warmth and brilliancy to their addresses and reports : and the lighter productions of satire and ridicule were indebted to him for almost all their pungency. His allusion in the poem of " Dusky Sally" to Mr. Jefferson's domestic habits, has been censured as indecent ; but it was in the spirit of the day. Fessenden, and a Uibe of humbler poetasters followed in his wake, and some who could not rival his wit, were yet praised for the accuracy with which they imitated the less praiseworthy characteristics of his eflusions. JMr. John Q. Adaras was the fondling of Federal hope. The earliest opportunity was seized, to bring him upon the theatre of political life. In 1802, he was chosen a member of the Massachusetts Senate. His conduct in this office secured yet more firmly the confidence of the leading federalists; though his extreme ardour had the unhappy effect of diminishing the confidence of the people at large : At the dec- tion which followed for a Congress-man from Boston, he was a candidate again; but his democratic opponent was elected. The next winter re- paid the mortification of this defeat : a Senator of the United States was to be chosen; and in spite of the persevering hostility of the democratic members, the federal majority in the Legislature, of which he was a member, succeeded in appointing Mr. Adams. Massachusetts was at this period the focus of federalism, and Mr, Adams was its appropriate representative. He took his seat in the council of the nation, the same bold implacable federalist, that he had been while a candidate. His political associates from the middle and 8 soiilliern states, were startled at the fierceness of his denunciations, and the bitterness of his feeling. He had become under the constitution, one of the President's official advisers : but such were his opinions of Mr. Jefferson, that he shrunk from his approach, and withdrew even from the courtesies of the Presidential mansion. For five years he continued the unwavering, unpitying leader of the party. The political sentiments of the nation, had, however, undergone a change. The federalists in their adversity, had taken counsel rather of feeling than policy^ and adopting unconsciously the tone of Mr. Adams, whose filial reverence doubtless added severity to his party rancour, they had lost by their violence many of their more timid, and not a few of their most judicious supporters. The defeat of Mr. Adams, senior, in 1800, was followed up in 1804 by the second election of Mr. Jefferson; and one state after another, adopted the political sentiments of the gene- ral government. But in New England, the federalists still retained the ascendancy; and it was not till 1807, that the democrats triumphed in Massachusetts. This election, however, sealed the political character of the Union : the " men on the fence," as they have since been termed, no longer foand a difficulty in choosing sides; and the defeated federalists saw opponents rising round them in every district. It seemed that the rout was about to become universal, and politicians were hourly expecting the sauve qui pent to begin. But they who had elected Mr. John Adams to the presidency, and who, when at the second election he fell by his own weight, had trans- ferred their support to Mr. Burr, were men of Roman nerve. It would have been vain to nominate one of their own body, in opposition to Mr. Madison, who was already indicated by the democrats as the succes- sor to Mr. Jefferson ; but they still stood firm in their party-ranks, deter- mined to contend for their principles to the last. They could not faii to observe, that their overthrow was attributable in a great degree, to the violent counsels of Mr. John Q. Adams; but even in the vexation of de- feat, they had too much honour to forsake, and too much gallantry, even to reproach him. It was at this time, and under these circumstances, that IMr. Adams meditated his greatest political movement. The principles which he had imbibed in boyhood from his father, naturally suggested it ; but it re- quired all the philosophy which lie had gathered in his courtly circuits, to carry it into execution. Early in the winter of 1807, while attending the Senate at Washing- ton, he waited on Mr. Giles* of Virginia, the confidant of the President, •Note. — Thoug'h this account of Mr. Adams' communications with Mr. Giles and Mr. Jcficrsoa has been long bcfoi-e the public, and has never been contradicted, it may be proper to declare tht; authority on which it rests. It was first published by Governor Giles himselfin the Richmond Enquirer under his own sig-nature, in the month of February, 1828, tog'ether with a letter from Mr. Jcflerson to Governor Giles on the same subject. Governor Giles has since frc-qyicntly repeated the story, and has invited Mr. Adams to deny it, if unti-ue. Mr. John Randolph and the aged Mr. Macon, who were both in Congress in 1807 — 8, have affirmed its truth on the floor of the Senate. and announced to liim a perilous and most imporiant secret. The (cde ralists of New England, be said, had long found in l:im an associate in politics; but he could not bring himself to be their accomplice in treason. He then went on to detail the circumstances of a conspiracy, having for its object the dismemberment of the Union, and the annexation of the Eastern Slates to the Province of Canada: he declared the names of the ringleaders, men united to him by the treble ties of party friendship, and blood; and finally, he announced his determination to ally himself with that patriotic party whom he had heretofore opposed, while he absolutely declined by anticipation, any office with which they might be disposed to reward his adhesion. At Mr. Giles' invitation, as that gentleman has since informed tJie public, this singular communication was repeated by Mr. Adams to Mr. Jefferson in person, coupled with new denunciations of the men who had always been his patrons, and some of whom, by a singular misapplica- tion of loyalty, are yet found among his adherents. The President wondered and believed. How could he do otherwise? The man who had shunned him as an adder, now came frankly into hi"; cabinet, as one who sacrifices personal antipathies to public duty: it was the chief of the federalists who came to reveal the secrets of their nefa- rious counsels : it was the son of old Mr. Adams, denouncing men who were his father's advisers while in office, and who had shared his defeat. How could he doubt ? Even Mr. Madison, with all his characteristic wa- riness, was unable to resist the well told story: he too believed it ; and a few years afterwards, when President, he applied a large sum of public money, to purchase from the notorious John Henry, a packet of evidence in support of the charge. It has been said, that new converts are the most zealous : a few weeks enabled Mr. Adams to prove that he had transferred his zeal, as well as his confidence, to the democratic administration. On the 18th of De- cember, Mr. Jefferson by a secret message, recommended the imposition of further restrictions on our foreign commerce. A bill was immediately introduced into the Senate, laying an embargo on all vessels in our ports, and at three o'clock in the at"ternoon, little more than two hours after th'* message was presented, the bill had passed the Senate, and v/as before the House of Representatives, Such pressing haste in a matter that went to the annihilation of our trade, was deprecated by the federal Senators, and by several gentlemen of the other party. Mr. Macon and Mr. Crawford, solicited a postponement of the question, till the following morning: they wished time, they said, to deliberate ; perhaps the rea- sons in favour of the measure might be sufficient; but they doubted. Mr. Adams was the immediate representative of a district, whose inte- rests were to be most affected by the proposed law: one fifth ot all the exports of the United States were at that time from the ports of Massa- chusetts. He rose, and in reply to Mr Crawford, made the wonderfu! declaration: '• I would not deliberate — I would not hesitate — I would act: Doubtless the President, who has recommended this measure, has such further reasons as will justify it." The bill was passed: and to this B 10 hour, very manj ul his toiistituents refor the ruin of their fortunes to this so suddenly imbibed confidence in the discretion of the executive. The public mind had, up to the time of the embargo, been engrossed with the alleged conspiracy of Aaron Burr. Among the many who had been accused as his associates, was Mr. John Smith, then a Senator from Ohio; — but Mr. Burr having been acquitted, the prosecution against the others had been at once abandoned. It was well known that Mr. Jeffer- son was strongly persuaded of the existence of the plot, whatever might have been its object, and that he was anxious to procure the conviction and punishment of at least some one of the parties. This was the next subject on which Mr. Adams disclosed his plenary reliance on executive wisdom. Nine days after the passage of the embargo law, he presented a report to the Senate on the case of Mr. Smith. He declared in this document, that the conspiracy was fully proved, not indeed by legal evidence, but by evidence derived from the executive files that should be deemed suffi- cient; and that Mr. Smith was no doubt guilty, though he had not been tried, and if tried, could not in the opinion of the committee, have been convicted: — he spoke of justice as a cripple, to whom the crutches of the law could never give the necessary vigour and speed: — he said, that Mr. Smith " had asked a hearing and had offered evidence, and had required to be confronted with liis accusers, as if," continued the report, " the committee were a Circuit Court of the United States;" — all which the committee had at once refused; and thereupon they recommended to the Senate, to declare by resolution, that Mr. Smith had been " guilty of par- ticipating in the conspiracy of Aaron Burr against the peace, liberties, and union of the people," and forthwith to expel him from the Senate. This report, be it remarked, was presented after a jury of the country had on their oaths declared that Mr. Burr, himself, was not guilty of that con- spiracy, and after the law officer of the United States had entered a nolle prosequi in the case of Mr, Smitli. On the eighth of January, 1808, a letter was read from Mr. Smith, re- newing to the Senate, tlie requests which he had unsuccessfully made to the committee. He solicited (I copy from the National Intelligencer ol that day,) " 1. to be informed specifically of the charges against him: 2. to be allowed process to compel the attendance of witnesses: and 3. to be allowed the privilege of counsel." Strange as it may appear, (I copy uerfiaffm from the Intelligencer,) " Mr. Adams concisely assigned his reasons against a compliance with the two first of these requests." That is to say, he would refuse to his brother Senator, whom he had ac- cused, the privileges guaranteed to the basest felon in the lowest courts, that of knowing the charges against him, and that of subpoenas for his witnesses. This time, however, Mr. Adams found the majority of the Senate, disposed to " deliberate" before they would " act :" Mr. Smith was permitted to bring forward his witnesses, and the accusation, like the indictment, ended in smoke. But the gre.t object of Mr. Adams was attained : he had evinced his unlimited devotion to the principles of his new allies; and from this 11 time forward, he was as zealous in supporting Mr. Jefferson's administra- tion, as he had before been fierce in opposing it. Old republicans, whose ideas of liberty had been formed at home, were unable to equal the self- surrendering confidence, which he lavished on the President whenever opportunity presented. They smiled sometimes at the anxious zeal with which he manifested his conversion to the " Islamism of demo- cracy," and sometimes ihey were obliged to control it. They enjoyed perhaps his vituperation of Mr. Ames and Mr. Pickering ; but they nega- tived his proposition to suspend the habeas corpus act. Under Mr. Adams' direction, the federal party in Massachusetts had sunk into a minority: his apostacy was the signal of its restoration to power. The restrictive system was borne impatiently by a community of merchants : the Legislature reflected the popular sentiment ; and in the month of May, 1808, they appointed a federal successor to Mr. Adams. He had but one short session more to serve; and a new administration was then to begin at Washington. He secured to himself the character and future hopes of a martyr, by a voluntary surrender of his remnant of Senatorial life. He resigned in June, 1808. He waited not long for his reward. One of the first acts of Mr. Madi son was to nominate him for a mission to Russia ; and in August, 1809, he assumed again the diplomatic vesture. A succession of additional ap- pointments and outfits carried him the third time from court to court over the continent of Europe. He was now at St. Petersburg, and now at Ghent, and then in St. Petersburg again, and then at London; or at least if he did not make all these peregrinations, he was authorised to do so, and was paid accordingly. Some of these constructive journeys have lately been the subject of obnoxious remark. But probably there was no other way in which the splendid services of Mr. Adams could be ade- quately paid, and the times are past and gone when statesmen were wont to consider a nation's gratitude as their best reward. He returned from Europe in 1817, and immediately entered upon the duties of Secretary of State. Few men could have been found so well fitted by their education and habits for this laborious and responsible post. A master of international law, conversant with the negotiations of the day, and familiar with all the secret machinery of the courts of the conti- nent, he was peculiarly qualified lo conduct the correspondence of the American government with foreign powers. Habituated as a minister abroad, to act under the direction, and advocate the opinion of others, there was no fear of his transcending the instructions of the President, or venturing too far upon the suggestions of his own judgment. He was, withal, a man accustomed to work, whose manners precluded him from entering into the fascinations of gay society, and who, however ambitious to introduce the regulations of official etiquette, might be approached by the rudest backwoodsman with the assurance that the secretary was not more favoured by the graces than himself. His style of writing, and his temper, were almost the only objections to the choice of Mr. Adams. The secretary of state has been called the heir presumptive of the pre- sidency. Mr. Adams was not the man to relinquish his right to the sue- 12 cession. At the close, therefore, of Mr. Afonroe's administration, he of- fered himself wiih the Secretary at War, and tl)e Speaker of tiie House of Representatives, ^. candidate for popular favours. The secretary of the treasury had also been named by a caucus of members of Congress; and a fifth candidate was spontaneously nominated by the people themselves. As the choice in the result was between Mr. Adams and the candidate last referred to, let us consider fur a few minutes what stations he had filled, and how he had conducted himself in them. PUBLIC CAREER OF GENERAL JACKSON. The history of General Jackson's public services is so interwoven with Jlie history of our country's glory, that it is difficult to speak of what he has done, without transcending the proper limits of a sketch like this. It IS, hs ^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ,,,„,h upon the prerogative overcharged wUh -["^TJ^^^-^J^^he^n hey assail the construction of h.s of the grammatica Mr Grout, when in y .^ ^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^ sentences, as violating the rules of syn ax bu t P ^^^^^.^^ when they say that h.s figures ot speecl ar 4 ^^ ^^ .^^^^p^^^ than intelligible. To this ^ay no "^"j^f "^^^j, ,„d the explanations the closing sentence of h.s Fourth fJ^^otS '.,j^^,^,,, his -Ebony which have been dev.sed f y hj^-^^^ J^^^ instructions, returned .n and Topaz" toast have, like Macbettis j ^^^ ^^^^ ^^.^^^^ every case « to plague the 'n^^"^°'- ^/"'T'' speeches and writings not happened to occupy a high offic.al station. . ^ A ctnff " S1V they, " this madrigal would be, "What wretched stuft, say tney, ,_ In some poor starving sonnetteer, or me. But let J^lord once own the h W hne^. How the wit brightens, how the .t>.e rehnes. /-I. is, however, of small moment -.^J^eA-ncan people, w^^ the character of Mr. Adams' or G-^-j J^^^^'^';;^'^^, f,, ,he Anthology, will never inquire whether he ^^"^^^^P^^'^^^fthe American Quarter- or criticise his own administration in the V^f"^^' ^ ,^it_a „,an ly. They ask that the President ^"'^"^'^.^.^"^ J''', Ses and if unused S clear perception, sound judgment and fixed pn„^^^^^^^^^ a d ^^^ ^^^^^^ to the -y-^tifications of d.pbmac>, as e spe.^ ^^^^ ^ is termed they will like h.m all the better .^^ ^^^ ^^^.^^^^ ^^ pie who have -/;^[f ^ ^j^ el^' „terfLnce in their own. He is not other nations, and will toleiaienu • republics, to improve elected to be the mediator of the South Amer can P ^, . 1 ^^^ the Catholicism of their fa.th, or gathe, them to etl P^^^^^ ^^^^^ dangerous combinations^ He i-a^^^^^^^^^^^^ country alone, and to guara wiui ca ^^-^^^ ^,- inditing a protocol. ^nd this he may do without P°'"'^"?;",„^P'S\hi compfrison of the ^~ I have neither leisure nor inclination to extend tins co i _ personal qualifications of the two ,f "/^'da es Jsooi^e can be „ ble of its imperfections than myselt; but, 1 1 u , .t has the m ^ l,onest; and, as times g"> ^;-;-XTa te^JGenla^^^^^^^^^^^^ bu't it to disguise my preference for ^^ /hai^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^.^^ has been my aim, in all cases, truly to narrate tne . ^ ference is founded. In a future number ^^yj^\'l'^l^'ZLe myself duct of Mr. Adams since his election: at ^^^''^'l^X\Z^\ecUon\-^^ to a few simple reminiscences of the mannei in wh.ch effected. 20 Whatever may be the oninions nf (i>r>c» i it can hardly be ioubted il^^e ITl^nr '^'"^ '"'^ ^'' ^'"'"^^d, bleia 1824 to the election ofGe:::^^S^''''^'^^-^-^^f^^our^ termine ivhat would have been the votP in th ' "°^ ^^'3^ to de- dential electors were chosen by t e lell u e"h' d T ",'"" ^'" P*--'" the people directly; b.t it is m/c,uestion' le h^^,'h ! tt;'"" ,'"" '^^ was expressed by a public election, Gener ?Ack' n I'l ^"P"'''* ^"'^^ ty n. his favour. Of the votes pivP^T.^ i . xt'' ^ '''"""^ '"^jori- ral electoral tickets about T-'mo "^' "/'§'!?"' "'« Union for the seve- Adams had little m^/e ttn lof OOoT C.' ^7^;^'/-^-"' -'^i'e Mr. about 600 less than Mr. Cravviurd ' Of ulfl ^^'°°^' ^"'^ ^'•- day ner, General Jackson had 99 Mr rdams frT^r"''' '" '"^^ '"«"- Mr. Clay 37. Mr. Calhounf'a i.l^d tfrtL'nll".,?''"'"' '^' '"' which .t was evident he would receive f.Lt^ "nanunous support had withdrawn from the pre demid.n /^ Z'^''! "^ Vice-president, Clay, having the smallest vote "i-f '^'T '^'' ^'^^^'""5 nnd Mr the field, was of cou e not ret^ rn H , .1 ''if ^'^"^ "''^^ ^^™^-'"^d in From the three others tha ^odv a in'" ^ !^"T ^^ P-P'-^^entatives. a president of the United s'S '^"""''' '^^ ^'^^ constitutioTl-to elect In the electoral vote whirli uit\ *. i i • ,^ known that Mr. AdaL h^d n't ';'" '. "'' '" ^-^"^ber, J 824, it was college, south of Ne?v England "r',^ "'T'""^ '' ^"^ °"^ ^'-'«-' York. As the question b2el'e H us 'of"p'""^ "'"P""" "^" ^"^^^ decided by states, each bavin J,! . ^^H^iesentatives was to be geographical limhrL\„p^ortl' '/' •'"'. 7''"^'"' '^'^' '' ^^e same out of 'the thirteen J Z^rlnfZT"'"'' '" '°"" '"^" ^"^ «^^^" The friends of Mr. ChyZiZ^JZ"-""? "''''^^""^ ^" '^'^ ^'^^'i""- -rt; and before the ^^Jt::^t^::J:::z:TT '■" ^°"- was universally understood t'laf .ho;/ t- . ' *'• Bremer, it secure for the count,T' n son fc^i tin.n? l'''' i '" '" f'""^ ^"^ether was'to intentions were tl^ sulct o . • ' "' "" '''^>""'8'^t ^^lect, his classes of expectants. "^ """"' ^""J^^'"-"^ «'"0"g the several co^:^,Trw:"srh!s::^;'''r'^ ^^ ^'^^ hi^i-st distinction in ,he didatef^nd tirrumour of 1^^! ' ^ ^''''"' '^'' '^'''''' '^'"^ ^-'^•^■^» ^-^'n- gained currenc;:':b:t";i!:: 'z::T7:^z^7Ti^''"''' '-'"' "X^'K ;i::t;nrnr'"t- ^'^ ---"-''■ ^'^. Aims a part of the rumour '''";"/'^V',u° ''"'''''>■ ^^'^'>'^' «'''i^'' ''«'™^d eady historv of Mr 'a '^"^^^^ '^d ^v somej but those who knew the '^"11^ nisiory Of ivjr. Adams, and the stern rcftifn,!,. ,.r n i r i son's principles, remembered the avowal o IV c!',- ^"T'^ i^')' W'tted that the story mi-^ht be trn^ Tb. I ^^ J^^'^'', ^""^ '''^■ way wa^ fnnnrl In ♦! ■ ^^ ''^ ""'>' seeming difficn ty in the t^rms of doubtful fr.endsh.p, and had but a short time before been 21 marking out the ring for a newspaper combat. They were tyros in poli- tics who imagined a difficulty in this. The votes of Mr. Clay's immediate friends, added to those of New England, would give Mr. Adams but nine votes : four more were to be sought. Missouri had voted for Mr. Clay in the electoral college; but Mr. Adams' ticket had received in that state only three hundred votes, while General Jackson's received nearly a thousand: — considerations which even now can only be guessed at, determined Mr. Scott, the re- presentative from that state, to give Mr. Adams her support. Illinois had in the electoral college given a majority of votes for Gene- ral Jackson j motives as inexplicable for the time as those which swayed Mr. Scott, had their influence on the representative of this state, Mr. Cook. He, too, became the supporter of Mr. Adams. Still there were two votes wanting. New York was divided : seven- teen of her representatives were for Mr. Adams, two were for General Jackson, fifteen for Mr. Crawford: Mr. Crawford's ill health, however, had induced one of his friends to doubt as to the policy of electing him. That friend was General Van Rensselaer; but he was a high-minded federalist, who had known Mr. Adams through all his changes: — Could he be persuaded to trust him again ? The Representatives of Maryland were also divided between Mr. Adams, General Jackson, and Mr. Crawford. But Mr. Warfield had some thoughts of changing his candidate ; and his vote would give Mr. Adams a majority: he too was a federalist, and was not indifferent to the interests of his old party-friends. To control the votes of New York and Maryland, was the business of the much talked of Webster pledge, — a pledge which, announced at first with a variety of erroneous but unimportant details, was afierwards con- tradicted somewhat too broadly by the over zealous friends of Mr. Adams in the city of New York, yet is now substantially proved by evidence, that Mr. Webster himself does not venture to gainsay. The real story, and a part of the authority on which it rests, are thus stated in a leading newspaper of the day. The gentlemen who are named as the witnesses, are above suspicion; and their declaration has never been, and never will be contradicted by a responsible person. "Some time in the month of July or August, 1827, the Commissioners of New Jersey for settling the boundary line with New York, met at Newark, and afterwards at Hoboken; and Mr. Richard Stockton, Theo- dore Frelinghuysen, Lucius Q. C. Elmer, and James Parker, were four of the Jersey Commissioners. Mr. Stockton, in the course of the session, in a conversation with the other three above named gentlemen, stated that Mr. Webster had told him that ' he had in his possession a paper purporting to be the substance of a conversation he had held with Mr. Adams, previous to his election to the Presidency ; and which was in- duced by his (Webster's) wish to know from Mr. Adams the policy he would, in the event of his election, pursue towards the old federal party, as it might have some bearing on the then pending question. That Mr. 23 Adams professed great regard for the federal party, and thought them en- titled to a participation in office, in common with the whole nation, and promised, or avowed it to be his intention, if elected, to give them a fair participation accordingly.' Mr. Webster further said, that in order that no mistake might afterwards occur, or that he might not be brought into collision with Mr. Adams on the score of a misunderstanding, < he had, on going away, reduced the subtance of the conversation to writing, and afterwards showed it to Mr. Adams, who, after reading it, took up a pen and corrected it in one or two points, by erasing some words, and inter- lining others, and then returned it to him.' This paper he offered to show to Mr. Stockton; but it is believed that Mr. Stockton did not see it, because he had full confidence in Mr. Webster's word." The paper referred to, was, however, communicated to Mr. Van Ren's- selaer and Mr, Warfield: — it was too definite, they thought, to be evaded: and they became the friends, as that word is used, of Mr. Adams. On the 9th of February, 1825, the House of Representatives proceeded to the election of the President. At the first ballotting, the votes of the six New England States, — of the states of Kentucky, Ohio, and Loui- sianna, which were supposed to be under the influence of Mr. Clay, — and of the States of Missouri^ Illinois, New York and Maryland^ were given to Mr. Adams; — and he was elected ' The sequel is told in a few words. The first act of Mr. Adams was to appoint Mr. Clay Secretary of State. The people of Missouri, at the earliest opportunity, indignantly dis- missed Mr. Scott: — Mr. Adams forthwith appointed him Inspector of land offices, with a salary of ^5000. The people of Illinois dismissed Mr. Cook: — he was sent at once on a secret mission, with a salary from the contingent fund of ^4500 a year. The pledge to the federalists alone was found too costly and hazardous to keep. It is to be renewed and regarded, when Mr. Adams obtains his re-election. A PENNSYLVANIAN. rUladelphia, August, 1828. LI SaRY of CONbHbSS 011895 469 5