[Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams by William H. Seward]@TWC D-Link book
Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams

CHAPTER III
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I most humbly thank you for your kind condescension, Messieurs Transchesapeakes.
"Witness my hand, "JOHN ADAMS." Another allusion to his son while abroad, is made by the elder Adams, in a letter dated Philadelphia, March 25,1796.
"The President told me he had that day received three or four letters from his new Minister in London, one of them as late as the 29th of December.
Mr.Pickering informs me that Mr.Adams [Footnote: John Quincy Adams] modestly declined a presentation at court, but it was insisted on by Lord Grenville; and, accordingly, he was presented to the King, and I think the Queen, and made his harangues and received his answers.

By the papers I find that Mr.Pinckney appeared at court on the 28th of January, after which, I presume, Mr.Adams had nothing to do but return to Holland." During his residence as Minister at the Hague, Mr.Adams had occasion to visit London, to exchange the ratifications of the treaty recently formed with Great Britain, and to take measures for carrying its provisions into effect.

(Alluded to in the above letter from John Adams.) It was at this time that he formed an acquaintance with Miss Louisa Catharine Johnson, daughter of Joshua Johnson, Esq., of Maryland, Consular Agent of the United States at London, and niece of Governor Johnson of Maryland, a Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

The friendship they formed for each other, soon ripened into a mutual attachment and an engagement.

They were married on the 26th of July, 1797.


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