The narrow majority by which John
Adams was elected did not accurately reflect the existing
state of party strength. The electoral college
system, by its nature, was apt to distort the situation.
Originally the electors voted for two persons without
designating their preference for President. There
was no inconvenience on that account while Washington
was a candidate, since he was the first choice of
all the electors; but in 1796, with Washington out
of the field, both parties were in the dilemma that,
if they voted solidly for two candidates, the vote
of the electoral college would not determine who should
be President. To avert this situation, the adherents
of a presidential candidate would have to scatter
votes meant to have only vice-presidential significance.
This explains the wide distribution of votes that
characterized the working of the system until it was
changed by the Twelfth Amendment adopted in 1804.
In 1796, the electoral college gave
votes to thirteen candidates. The Federalist
ticket was John Adams and Thomas Pinckney of South
Carolina. Hamilton urged equal support of both
as the surest way to defeat Jefferson; but eighteen
Adams electors in New England withheld votes from
Pinckney to make sure that he should not slip in ahead
of Adams. Had they not done so, Pinckney would
have been chosen President, a possibility which Hamilton
foresaw because of Pinckney’s popularity in the
South. New York, New Jersey, and Delaware voted
solidly for Adams and Pinckney as Hamilton had recommended,
but South Carolina voted solidly for both Jefferson
and Pinckney, and moreover Pinckney received scattering
votes elsewhere in the South. The action of the
Adams electors in New England defeated Pinckney, and
gave Jefferson the vice-presidency, the vote for the
leading candidates being 71 for Adams, 68 for Jefferson,
and 59 for Pinckney. The tendency of such conditions
to inspire political feuds and to foster factional
animosity is quite obvious. This situation must
be borne in mind, in order to make intelligible the
course of Adams’s administration.
Adams had an inheritance of trouble
from the same source which had plagued Washington’s
administration, the efforts of revolutionary
France to rule the United States. In selecting
Monroe to succeed Morris, Washington knew that the
former was as friendly to the French Revolution as
Morris had been opposed to it, and hence he hoped
that Monroe would be able to impart a more friendly
feeling to the relations of the two countries.
Monroe arrived in Paris just after the fall of Robespierre.
The Committee of Public Safety then in possession
of the executive authority hesitated to receive him.
Monroe wrote to the President of the National Convention
then sitting, and a decree was at once passed that
the Minister of the United States should “be
introduced in the bosom of the Convention.”
Monroe presented himself on August 15, 1794, and made
a glowing address. He descanted upon the trials
by which America had won her independence and declared
that “France, our ally and friend, and who aided
in the contest, has now embarked in the same noble
career.” The address was received with
enthusiasm, the President of the Convention drew Monroe
to his bosom in a fraternal embrace; and it was decreed
that “the flags of the United States of America
shall be joined to those of France, and displayed in
the hall of the sittings of the Convention, in sign
of the union and eternal fraternity of the two peoples.”
In compliance with this decree Monroe soon after presented
an American flag to the Convention.
When the news of these proceedings
reached the State Department, a sharp note was sent
to Monroe “to recommend caution lest we be obliged
at some time or other to explain away or disavow an
excess of fervor, so as to reduce it down to the cool
system of neutrality.” The French Government
regarded the Jay treaty as an affront and as a violation
of our treaties with France. Many American vessels
were seized and confiscated with their cargoes, and
hundreds of American citizens were imprisoned.
Washington thought that Monroe was entirely too submissive
to such proceedings; therefore, on August 22, 1796,
Monroe was recalled and soon after Charles Cotesworth
Pinckney was appointed in his stead.
The representation of France in the
United States had been as mutable as her politics.
Fauchet, who succeeded Genet, retired in June,
1795, and was succeeded by Adet, who like his predecessors,
carried on active interference with American politics,
and even attempted to affect the presidential election
by making public a note addressed to the Secretary
of State complaining of the behavior of the Administration.
In Adams’s opinion this note had some adverse
effect in Pennsylvania but no other serious consequences,
since it was generally resented. Meanwhile Pinckney
arrived in France in December, 1796, and the Directory
refused to receive him. He was not even permitted
to remain in Paris; but honors were showered upon
Monroe as he took his leave. In March, 1797, Adet
withdrew, and diplomatic relations between the two
countries were entirely suspended. By a decree
made two days before Adams took office, the Directory
proclaimed as pirates, to be treated without mercy,
all Americans found serving on board British vessels,
and ordered the seizure of all American vessels not
provided with lists of their crews in proper form.
Though made under cover of the treaty of 1778, this
latter provision ran counter to its spirit and purpose.
Captures of American ships began at once. As
Joel Barlow wrote, the decree of March 2, 1797, “was
meant to be little short of a declaration of war.”
The curious situation which ensued
from the efforts made by Adams to deal with this emergency
cannot be understood without reference to his personal
peculiarities. He was vain, learned, and self-sufficient,
and he had the characteristic defect of pedantry:
he overrated intelligence and he underrated character.
Hence he was inclined to resent Washington’s
eminence as being due more to fortune than to merit,
and he had for Hamilton an active hatred compounded
of wounded vanity and a sense of positive injury.
He knew that Hamilton thought slightingly of his political
capacity and had worked against his political advancement,
and he was too lacking in magnanimity to do justice
to Hamilton’s motives. His state of mind
was well known to the Republican leaders, who hoped
to be able to use him. Jefferson wrote to Madison
suggesting that “it would be worthy of consideration
whether it would not be for the public good to come
to a good understanding with him as to his future elections.”
Jefferson himself called on Adams and showed himself
desirous of cordial relations. Mrs. Adams responded
by expressions of pleasure at the success of Jefferson,
between whom and her husband, she said, there had never
been “any public or private animosity.”
Such rejoicing over the defeat of the Federalist candidate
for Vice-President did not promote good feeling between
the President and the Federalist leaders.
The morning before the inauguration,
Adams called on Jefferson and discussed with him the
policy to be pursued toward France. The idea had
occurred to Adams that a good impression might be made
by sending out a mission of extraordinary weight and
dignity, and he wanted to know whether Jefferson himself
would not be willing to head such a mission. Without
checking Adams’s friendly overtures, Jefferson
soon brought him to agree that it would not be proper
for the Vice-President to accept such a post.
Adams then proposed that Madison should go. On
March 6, Jefferson reported to Adams that Madison
would not accept. Then for the first time, according
to Adams’s own account, he consulted a member
of his Cabinet, supposed to be Wolcott although the
name is not mentioned.
Adams took over Washington’s
Cabinet as it was finally constituted after the retirement
of Jefferson and Hamilton and the virtual expulsion
of Randolph. The process of change had made it
entirely Federalist in its political complexion, and
entirely devoted to Washington and Hamilton in its
personal sympathies. That Adams should have adopted
it as his own Cabinet has been generally regarded
as a blunder, but it was a natural step for him to
take. To get as capable men to accept the portfolios
as those then holding them would have been difficult,
so averse had prominent men become to putting themselves
in a position to be harried by Congress, with no effective
means of explaining and justifying their conduct.
Congress then had a prestige which it does not now
possess, and its utterances then received consideration
not now accorded. Whenever presidential electors
were voted for directly by the people, the poll was
small compared with the vote for members of Congress.
Moreover, there was then a feeling that the Cabinet
should be regarded as a bureaucracy, and for a long
period this conception tended to give remarkable permanence
to its composition.
When the personal attachments of the
Cabinet chiefs are considered, it is easy to imagine
the dismay and consternation produced by the dealings
of Adams with Jefferson. By the time Adams consulted
the members of his Cabinet, they had become suspicious
of his motives and distrustful of his character.
Before long they were writing to Washington and Hamilton
for advice, and were endeavoring to manage Adams by
concerted action. In this course they had the
cordial approval of leading Federalists, who would
write privately to members of the Cabinet and give
counsel as to procedure. Wolcott, a Federalist
leader in Connecticut, warned his son, the Secretary
of the Treasury, that Adams was “a man of great
vanity, pretty capricious, of a very moderate share
of prudence, and of far less real abilities than he
believes himself to possess,” so that “it
will require a deal of address to render him the service
which it will be essential for him to receive.”
The policy to be pursued was still
unsettled when news came of the insulting rejection
of Pinckney and the domineering attitude assumed by
France. On March 25, Adams issued a call for the
meeting of Congress on May 15, and then set about
getting the advice of his Cabinet. He presented
a schedule of interrogatories to which he asked written
answers. The attitude of the Cabinet was at first
hostile to Adams’s favorite notion of a special
mission, but as Hamilton counseled deference to the
President’s views, the Cabinet finally approved
the project. Adams appointed John Marshall of
Virginia and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts to serve
in conjunction with Pinckney, who had taken refuge
in Holland.
Strong support for the Government
in taking a firm stand against France was manifested
in both Houses of Congress. Hamilton aided Secretary
Wolcott in preparing a scheme of taxation by which
the revenue could be increased to provide for national
defense. With the singular fatality that characterized
Federalist party behavior throughout Adams’s
Administration, however, all the items proposed were
abandoned except one for stamp taxes. What had
been offered as a scheme whose particulars were justifiable
by their relation to the whole was converted into
a measure which was traditionally obnoxious in itself,
and was now made freshly odious by an appearance of
discrimination and partiality. The Federalists
did improve their opportunity in the way of general
legislation: much needed laws were passed to
stop privateering, to protect the ports, and to increase
the naval armament; and Adams was placed in a much
better position to maintain neutrality than Washington
had been. Fear of another outbreak of yellow
fever accelerated the work of Congress, and the extra
session lasted only a little over three weeks.
Such was the slowness of communication
in those days that, when Congress reassembled at the
regular session in November, no decisive news had
arrived of the fate of the special mission. Adams
with proper prudence thought it would be wise to consider
what should be done in case of failure. On January
24, 1798, he addressed to the members of his Cabinet
a letter requesting their views. No record is
preserved of the replies of the Secretaries of State
and of the Treasury. Lee, the Attorney-General,
recommended a declaration of war. McHenry, the
Secretary of War, offered a series of seven propositions
to be recommended to Congress: 1. Permission
to merchant ships to arm; 2. The construction
of twenty sloops of war; 3. The completion of
frigates already authorized; 4. Grant to the President
of authority to provide ships of the line, not exceeding
ten, “by such means as he may judge best.”
5. Suspension of the treaties with France; 6.
An army of sixteen thousand men, with provision for
twenty thousand more should occasion demand; 7.
A loan and an adequate system of taxation.
These recommendations are substantially
identical with those made by Hamilton in a letter
to Pickering, and the presumption is strong that McHenry’s
paper is a product of Hamilton’s influence, and
that it had the concurrence of Pickering and Wolcott.
The suggestion that the President should be given
discretionary authority in the matter of procuring
ships of the line contemplated the possibility of
obtaining them by transfer from England, not through
formal alliance but as an incident of a cooeperation
to be arranged by negotiation, whose objects would
also include aid in placing a loan and permission
for American ships to join British convoys. This
feature of McHenry’s recommendations could not
be curried out Pickering soon informed Hamilton that
the old animosities were still so active “in
some breasts” that the plan of cooperation was
impracticable.
Meanwhile the composite mission had
accomplished nothing except to make clear the actual
character of French policy. When the envoys arrived
in France, the Directory had found in Napoleon Bonaparte
an instrument of power that was stunning Europe by
its tremendous blows. That instrument had not
yet turned to the reorganization of France herself,
and at the time it served the rapacious designs of
the Directory. Europe was looted wherever the
arms of France prevailed, and the levying of tribute
both on public and on private account was the order
of the day. Talleyrand was the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, and he treated the envoys with a mixture of
menace and cajolery. It was a part of his tactics
to sever the Republican member, Gerry, from his Federalist
colleagues. Gerry was weak enough to be caught
by Talleyrand’s snare, and he was foolish enough
to attribute the remonstrances of his colleagues to
vanity. “They were wounded,” he wrote,
“by the manner in which they had been treated
by the Government of France, and the difference which
had been used in respect to me.” Gerry’s
conduct served to weaken and delay the negotiations,
but he eventually united with his colleagues in a
detailed report to the State Department, which was
transmitted to Congress by the President on April 3,
1798. In the original the names of the French
officials concerned were written at full length in
the Department cipher. In making a copy for Congress,
Secretary Pickering substituted for the names the
terminal letters of the alphabet, and hence the report
has passed into history as the X.Y.Z. dispatches.
The story, in brief, was that on arriving
in Paris the envoys called on Talleyrand, who said
that he was busy at that very time on a report to the
Directory on American affairs, and in a few days would
let them know how matters stood. A few days later
they received notice through Talleyrand’s secretary
that the Directory was greatly exasperated by expressions
used in President Adams’s address to Congress,
that the envoys would probably not be received until
further conference, and that persons might be appointed
to treat with them. A few more days elapsed, and
then three persons presented themselves as coming
from Talleyrand. They were Hottinguer, Bellamy,
and Hauteval, designated as X.Y.Z. in the communication
to Congress. They said that a friendly reception
by the Directory could not be obtained unless the
United States would assist France by a loan, and that
“a sum of money was required for the pocket of
the Directory and Ministers, which would be at the
disposal of M. Talleyrand.” This “douceur
to the Directory,” amounting to approximately
$240,000, was urged with great persistence as an indispensable
condition of friendly relations. The envoys temporized
and pointed out that their Government would have to
be consulted on the matter of the loan. The wariness
of the envoys made Talleyrand’s agents the more
insistent about getting the “douceur.”
At one of the interviews Hottinguer exclaimed:
“Gentlemen, you do not speak to the point; it
is money; it is expected that you will offer money.”
The envoys replied that on this point their answer
had already been given. “‘No,’ said
he, ’you have not: what is your answer?’
We replied, ‘It is no; no; not a sixpence.’”
This part of the envoys’ report soon received
legendary embellishment, and in innumerable stump
speeches it rang out as, “Not one cent for tribute;
millions for defense!”
The publication of the X.Y.Z. dispatches
sent rolling through the country a wave of patriotic
feeling before which the Republican leaders quailed
and which swept away many of their followers.
Jefferson held that the French Government ought not
to be held responsible for “the turpitude of
swindlers,” and he steadfastly opposed any action
looking to the use of force to maintain American rights.
Some of the Republican members of Congress, however,
went over to the Federalist side, and Jefferson’s
party was presently reduced to a feeble and dispirited
minority. Loyal addresses rained upon Adams.
There appeared a new national song, Hail Columbia,
which was sung all over the land and which was established
in lasting popularity. Among its well-known lines
is an exulting stanza beginning:
“Behold the chief who now commands,
Once more to serve his country stands.”
This is an allusion to the fact that
Washington had left his retirement to take charge
of the national forces. The envoys had been threatened
that, unless they submitted to the French demands,
the American Republic might share the fate of the
Republic of Venice. The response of Congress
was to vote money to complete the frigates, the United
States, the Constitution, and the Constellation,
work on which had been suspended when the Algerine
troubles subsided; and further, to authorize the construction
or purchase of twelve additional vessels. For
the management of this force, the Navy Department
was created by the Act of April 30, 1798. By
an Act of May 28, the President was authorized to raise
a military force of ten thousand men, the commander
of which should have the services of “a suitable
number of major-generals.” On July 7, the
treaties with France that had so long vexed the United
States were abrogated.
The operations of the Navy Department
soon showed that American sailors were quite able
and willing to defend the nation if they were allowed
the opportunity. In December, 1798, the Navy
Department worked out a plan of operations in the
enemy’s waters. To repress the depredations
of the French privateers in the West Indies, a squadron
commanded by Captain John Barry was sent to cruise
to the windward of St. Kitts as far south as Barbados,
and it made numerous captures. A squadron under
Captain Thomas Truxtun cruised in the vicinity of
Porto Rico. The flagship was the frigate Constellation,
which on February 9, 1799, encountered the French
frigate, L’Insurgente, and made it strike
its flag after an action lasting only an hour and
seventeen minutes. The French captain fought
well, but he was put at a disadvantage by losing his
topmast at the opening of the engagement, so that
Captain Truxtun was able to take a raking position.
The American loss was only one killed and three wounded,
while L’Insurgente had twenty-nine killed
and forty-one wounded. On February 1, 1800, the
Constellation fought the heavy French frigate
Vengeance from about eight o’clock in
the evening until after midnight, when the Vengeance
lay completely silenced and apparently helpless.
But the rigging and spars of the Constellation
had been so badly cut up that the mainmast fell, and
before the wreck could be cleared away the Vengeance
was able to make her escape. During the two years
and a half in which hostilities continued, the little
navy of the United States captured eighty-five armed
French vessels, nearly all privateers. Only one
American war vessel was taken by the enemy, and that
one had been originally a captured French vessel.
The value of the protection thus extended to American
trade is attested by the increase of exports from
$57,000,000 in 1797 to $78,665,528 in 1799. Revenue
from imports increased from $6,000,000 in 1797 to
$9,080,932 in 1800.
The creation of an army, however,
was attended by personal disagreements that eventually
wrecked the Administration. Without waiting to
hear from Washington as to his views, Adams nominated
him for the command and then tried to overrule his
arrangements. The notion that Washington could
be hustled into a false position was a strange blunder
to be made by anyone who knew him. He set forth
his views and made his stipulations with his customary
precision, in letters to Secretary McHenry, who had
been instructed by Adams to obtain Washington’s
advice as to the list of officers. Washington
recommended as major-generals, Hamilton, C.C.
Pinckney, and Knox, in that order of rank. Adams
made some demur to the preference shown for Hamilton,
but McHenry showed him Washington’s letter and
argued the matter so persistently that Adams finally
sent the nominations to the Senate in the same order
as Washington had requested. Confirmation promptly
followed, and a few days later Adams departed for
his home at Quincy, Massachusetts, without notice to
his Cabinet. It soon appeared that he was in
the sulks. When McHenry wrote to him about proceeding
with the organization of the army, he replied that
he was willing provided Knox’s precedence was
acknowledged, and he added that the five New England
States would not patiently submit to the humiliation
of having Knox’s claim disregarded.
From August 4 to October 13, wrangling
over this matter went on. The members of the
Cabinet were in a difficult position. It was their
understanding that Washington’s stipulations
had been accepted, but the President now proposed
a different arrangement. Pickering and McHenry
wrote to Washington explaining the situation in detail.
News of the differences between Adams and Washington
of course soon got about and caused a great buzz in
political circles. Adams became angry over the
opposition he was meeting, and on August 29 he wrote
to McHenry that “there has been too much intrigue
in this business, both with General Washington and
with me”; that it might as well be understood
that in any event he would have the last say, “and
I shall then determine it exactly as I should now,
Knox, Pinckney, and Hamilton.” Washington
stood firm and, on September 25, wrote to the President
demanding “that he might know at once and precisely
what he had to expect.” In reply Adams said
that he had signed the three commissions on the same
day in the hope “that an amicable adjustment
or acquiescence might take place among the gentlemen
themselves.” But should this hope be disappointed,
“and controversies shall arise, they will of
course be submitted to you as commander-in-chief.”
Adams, of course, knew quite well
that such matters did not settle themselves, but he
seems to have imagined that all he had to do was to
sit tight and that matters would have to come his
way. The tricky and shuffling behavior to which
he descended would be unbelievable of a man of his
standing were there not an authentic record made by
himself. The suspense finally became so intolerable
that the Cabinet acted without consulting the President
any longer on the point. The Secretary of War
submitted to his colleagues all the correspondence
in the case and asked their advice. The Secretaries
of State, of the Treasury, and of the Navy made a
joint reply declaring “the only inference which
we can draw from the facts before stated, is, that
the President consents to the arrangement of rank
as proposed by General Washington,” and that
therefore “the Secretary of War ought to transmit
the commissions, and inform the generals that in his
opinion the rank is definitely settled according to
the original arrangement.” This was done;
but Knox declined an appointment ranking him below
Hamilton and Pinckney. Thus, Adams despite his
obstinacy, was completely baffled, and a bitter feud
between him and his Cabinet was added to the causes
now at work to destroy the Federalist party.
The Federalist military measures were
sound and judicious, and the expense, although a subject
of bitter denunciation, was really trivial in comparison
with the national value of the enhanced respect and
consideration obtained for American interests.
But these measures were followed by imprudent acts
for regulating domestic politics. By the Act of
June 18,1798, the period of residence required before
an alien could be admitted to American citizenship
was raised from five years to fourteen. By the
Act of June 25, 1798, the efficacy of which was limited
to two years, the President might send out of the
country “such aliens as he shall judge dangerous
to the peace and safety of the United States, or shall
have reasonable grounds to suspect are concerned in
any treasonable or secret machinations against the
government thereof.” The state of public
opinion might then have sanctioned these measures had
they stood alone, but they were connected with another
which proved to be the weight that pulled them all
down. By the Act of July 14, 1798, it was made
a crime to write or publish “any false, scandalous,
and malicious” statements about the President
or either House of Congress, to bring them “into
contempt or disrepute,” or to “stir up
sedition within the United States.”
There were plenty of precedents in
English history for legislation of such character.
Robust examples of it were supplied in England at that
very time. There were also strong colonial precedents.
According to Secretary Wolcott, the sedition law was
“merely a copy from a statute of Virginia in
October, 1776.” But a revolutionary Whig
measure aimed at Tories was a very different thing
in its practical aspect from the same measure used
by a national party against a constitutional opposition.
Hamilton regarded such legislation as impolitic, and,
on hearing of the sedition bill, he wrote a protesting
letter, saying, “Let us not establish tyranny.
Energy is a very different thing from violence.”
But in general the Federalist leaders
were so carried away by the excitement of the times
that they could not practice moderation. Their
zealotry was sustained by political theories which
made no distinction between partisanship and sedition.
The constitutional function of partisanship was discerned
and stated by Burke in 1770, but his definition of
it, as a joint endeavor to promote the national interest
upon some particular principle, was scouted at the
time and was not allowed until long after. The
prevailing idea in Washington’s time, both in
England and America, was that partisanship was inherently
pernicious and ought to be suppressed. Washington’s
Farewell Address warned the people “in
the most solemn manner against the baneful effects
of the spirit of party.” The idea then
was that government was wholly the affair of constituted
authority, and that it was improper for political activity
to surpass the appointed bounds. Newspaper criticism
and partisan oratory were among the things in Washington’s
mind when he censured all attempts “to direct,
control, counteract, or awe the regular deliberation
and action of the constituted authorities.”
Hence judges thought it within their province to denounce
political agitators when charging a grand jury.
Chief Justice Ellsworth, in a charge delivered in
Massachusetts, denounced “the French system-mongers,
from the quintumvirate at Paris to the Vice-President
and minority in Congress, as apostles of atheism and
anarchy, bloodshed, and plunder.” In charges
delivered in western Pennsylvania, Judge Addison dealt
with such subjects as Jealousy of Administration and
Government, and the Horrors of Revolution. Washington,
then in private life, was so pleased with the series
that he sent a copy to friends for circulation.
Convictions under the sedition law
were few, but there were enough of them to cause great
alarm. A Jerseyman, who had expressed a wish that
the wad of a cannon, fired as a salute to the President,
had hit him on the rear bulge of his breeches, was
fined $100. Matthew Lyon of Vermont, while canvassing
for reelection to Congress, charged the President with
“unbounded thirst for ridiculous pomp, foolish
adulation, and a selfish avarice.” This
language cost him four months in jail and a fine of
$1000. But in general the law did not repress
the tendencies at which it was aimed but merely increased
them.
The Republicans, too weak to make
an effective stand in Congress, tried to interpose
state authority. Jefferson drafted the Kentucky
Resolutions, adopted by the state legislature in November,
1798. They hold that the Constitution is a compact
to which the States are parties, and that “each
party has an equal right to judge for itself as well
of infractions as of the mode and measure of redress.”
The alien and sedition laws were denounced, and steps
were proposed by which protesting States “will
concur in declaring these Acts void and of no force,
and will each take measures of its own for providing
that neither these Acts, nor any others of the general
Government, not plainly and intentionally authorized
by the Constitution, shall be exercised within their
respective territories.” The Virginia Resolutions,
adopted in December, 1798, were drafted by Madison.
They view “the powers of the federal Government
as resulting from the compact to which the States
are parties,” and declare that, if those powers
are exceeded, the States “have the right and
are in duty bound to interpose.” This doctrine
was a vial of woe to American politics until it was
cast down and shattered on the battlefield of civil
war. It was invented for a partisan purpose,
and yet was entirely unnecessary for that purpose.
The Federalist party as then conducted
was the exponent of a theory of government that was
everywhere decaying. The alien and sedition laws
were condemned and discarded by the forces of national
politics, and state action was as futile in effect
as it was mischievous in principle. It diverted
the issue in a way that might have ultimately turned
to the advantage of the Federalist party, had it possessed
the usual power of adaptation to circumstances.
After all, there was no reason inherent in the nature
of that party why it should not have perpetuated its
organization and repaired its fortunes by learning
how to derive authority from public opinion.
The needed transformation of character would have
been no greater than has often been accomplished in
party history. Indeed, there is something abnormal
in the complete prostration and eventual extinction
of the Federalist party; and the explanation is to
be found in the extraordinary character of Adams’s
administration. It gave such prominence and energy
to individual aims and interests that the party was
rent to pieces by them.
In communicating the X.Y.Z. dispatches
to Congress, Adams declared: “I will never
send another Minister to France without assurance that
he will be received, respected, and honored, as the
representative of a great, free, powerful, and independent
nation.” But on receiving an authentic
though roundabout intimation that a new mission would
have a friendly reception, he concluded to dispense
with direct assurances, and, without consulting his
Cabinet, sent a message to the Senate on February 18,
1799, nominating Murray, then American Minister to
Holland, to be Minister to France. This unexpected
action stunned the Federalists and delighted the Republicans
as it endorsed the position they had always taken that
war talk was folly and that France was ready to be
friendly if America would treat her fairly. “Had
the foulest heart and the ablest head in the world,”
wrote Senator Sedgwick to Hamilton, “been permitted
to select the most embarrassing and ruinous measure,
perhaps it would have been precisely the one which
has been adopted.” Hamilton advised that
“the measure must go into effect with the additional
idea of a commission of three.” The committee
of the Senate to whom the nomination was referred
made a call upon Adams to inquire his reasons.
According to Adams’s own account, they informed
him that a commission would be more satisfactory to
the Senate and to the public. According to Secretary
Pickering, Adams was asked to withdraw the nomination
and refused, but a few days later, on hearing that
the committee intended to report against confirmation,
he sent in a message nominating Chief Justice Ellsworth
and Patrick Henry, together with Murray, as envoys
extraordinary. The Senate, much to Adams’s
satisfaction, promptly confirmed the nominations, but
this was because Hamilton’s influence had smoothed
the way. Patrick Henry declined, and Governor
Davie of North Carolina was substituted. By the
time this mission reached France, Napoleon Bonaparte
was in power and the envoys were able to make an acceptable
settlement of the questions at issue between the two
countries. The event came too late to be of service
to Adams in his campaign for reelection, but it was
intensely gratifying to his self-esteem.
Some feelers were put forth to ascertain
whether Washington could not be induced to be a candidate
again, but the idea had hardly developed before all
hopes in that quarter were abruptly dashed by his death
on December 14, 1799, from a badly treated attack
of quinsy. Efforts to substitute some other candidate
for Adams proved unavailing, as New England still
clung to him on sectional grounds. News of these
efforts of course reached Adams and increased his
bitterness against Hamilton, whom he regarded as chiefly
responsible for them. Adams had a deep spite against
members of his Cabinet for the way in which they had
foiled him about Hamilton’s commission, but
for his own convenience in routine matters he had retained
them, although debarring them from his confidence.
In the spring of 1800 he decided to rid himself of
men whom he regarded as “Hamilton’s spies.”
The first to fall was McHenry, whose resignation was
demanded on May 5, 1800, after an interview in which according
to McHenry Adams reproached him with having
“biased General Washington to place Hamilton
in his list of major-generals before Knox.”
Pickering refused to resign, and he was dismissed
from office on May 12. John Marshall became the
Secretary of State, and Samuel Dexter of Massachusetts,
Secretary of War. Wolcott retained the Treasury
portfolio until the end of the year, when he resigned
of his own motion.
The events of the summer of 1800 completed
the ruin of the Federalist party. That Adams
should have been so indifferent to the good will of
his party at a time when he was a candidate for reelection
is a remarkable circumstance. A common report
among the Federalists was that he was no longer entirely
sane. A more likely supposition was that he was
influenced by some of the Republican leaders and counted
on their political support. In biographies of
Gerry it is claimed that he was able to accomplish
important results through his influence with Adams.
At any rate, Adams gave unrestrained expression to
his feelings against Hamilton, and finally Hamilton
was aroused to action. On August 1, 1800, he wrote
to Adams demanding whether it was true that Adams
had “asserted the existence of a British faction
in this country” of which Hamilton himself was
said to be a leader. Adams did not reply.
Hamilton waited until October 1, and then wrote again,
affirming “that by whomsoever a charge of the
kind mentioned in my former letter, may, at any time,
have been made or insinuated against me, it is a base,
wicked, and cruel calumny; destitute even of a plausible
pretext, to excuse the folly, or mask the depravity
which must have dictated it.”
Hamilton, always sensitive to imputations
upon his honor, was not satisfied to allow the matter
to rest there. He wrote a detailed account of
his relations with Adams, involving an examination
of Adams’s public conduct and character, which
he privately circulated among leading Federalists.
It is an able paper, fully displaying Hamilton’s
power of combining force of argument with dignity
of language, but although exhibiting Adams as unfit
for his office it advised support of his candidacy.
Burr obtained a copy and made such use of parts of
it that Hamilton himself had to publish it in full.
In this election the candidate associated
with Adams by the Federalists was Charles Cotesworth
Pinckney of South Carolina. Though one Adams
elector in Rhode Island cut Pinckney, he would still
have been elected had the electoral votes of his own
State been cast for him as they had been for Thomas
Pinckney, four years before; but South Carolina now
voted solidly for both Republican candidates.
The result of the election was a tie between Jefferson
and Burr, each receiving 73 votes, while Adams received
65 and Pinckney 64. The election was thus thrown
into the House, where some of the Federalists entered
into an intrigue to give Burr the Presidency instead
of Jefferson, but this scheme was defeated largely
through Hamilton’s influence. He wrote:
“If there be a man in this world I ought to
hate, it is Jefferson. With Burr I have always
been personally well. But the public good must
be paramount to every private consideration.”
The result of the election was a terrible
blow to Adams. His vanity was so hurt that he
could not bear to be present at the installation of
his successor, and after working almost to the stroke
of midnight signing appointments to office for the
defeated Federalists, he drove away from Washington
in the early morning before the inauguration ceremonies
began. Eventually he soothed his self-esteem
by associating his own trials and misfortunes with
those endured by classical heroes. He wrote that
Washington, Hamilton, and Pinckney formed a triumvirate
like that of Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus, and “that
Cicero was not sacrificed to the vengeance of Antony
more egregiously than John Adams was to the unbridled
and unbounded ambition of Alexander Hamilton in the
American triumvirate.”