Papers of John Adams, volume 7

John Paul Jones to the Commissioners, 9 December 1778 Jones, John Paul Franklin, Benjamin Lee, Arthur JA First Joint Commission at Paris John Paul Jones to the Commissioners, 9 December 1778 Jones, John Paul Franklin, Benjamin Lee, Arthur Adams, John First Joint Commission at Paris
John Paul Jones to the Commissioners
Gentlemen L'Orient Decr. 9th. 1778

It is my duty to forward to you the within Memorial of Facts1 from Gentlemen whom the fortune of War made Prisoners to the American 271Arms under my command. In their application to me they observe that “I am well acquainted with their situation.”2 The late treatment which these unfortunate Men have met with appears to me to carry with it a degree of severity which cannot be Justified by reason nor by Law, and which is by no means compatible with the dignified Humanity of our Imperial Republic. It is my duty to inform you that out of two hundred Prisoners there now remains only an hundred and thirty one on board the Patience. It is pretended that the rest have been disposed of agreeable to your Orders—but this I cannot believe. I cannot believe that you have Ordered any of these Prisoners to be carried away in the continental Ships or Privateers after having returned their Names and Rank for exchange to the Court of London, and after their having cost America a very considerable expence in Victuals for several Months. Far less can I believe that you have Ordered some Prisoners to be set at liberty without a Parole—While others, who have subscribed the within Memorial, being exactly of the same Rank and then in the same Situation, are held Prisoners. One of the Men who have been thus set at liberty, I myself detected communicating intelligence to the Enemy. When even the Cables of the Prison Ship could not escape the Rapine at Brest, it is not strange that these poor prisoners should complain. The Fellow who now holds the Rod over their wretched Heads, has menaced them if they “dared to complain”3—And would have intercepted their Memorial had I not prevented it. This Riou4 is the Scoundrel who by his falsehoods promoted discord in the Ranger and got the deluded People to appoint him thier particular Agent. Before that time he never could call Twenty Louis his own—and he is now too Rich for his former profession of Kings Interpreter. He does not denay that he is a Scoundrel, for as I have called him Oftener than once before Witnesses—and so every Person of Sense thinks him at Brest.

If the exchange of Prisoners does not take place immediately I conceive it would be the most eligable Method to have the people on board the Patience Landed. They are convinced that if you should think fit to return them an Answer it will never come to their hands thro' the Means of any person who calls himself Agent at Brest—and they, having full confidence in the honor and humanity of the Revd. Father John professor of English and Chaplain to Comte D'Orvilliers at Brest, have desired me to inform you that, thro' that Gentleman, they beg you to favor them with an Answer. In granting their request you will confer a very singular Obligation on, Gentlemen, Your most Obedient and very humble Servant

Jno. P Jones
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RC (PPAmP: Franklin Papers); docketed, not by JA: “P. Jones L'Orient 9e Xbre. 1778.”

1.

John Walshe and others to the Commissioners, 20 Nov. (above).

2.

An accurate paraphrase of John Walshe and others to Jones, 20 Nov. (PCC, No. 168, I, f. 163).

3.

Jones may be quoting from a personal conversation with the prisoners because these words do not appear in either their memorial or their letter to Jones.

4.

D'Albert de Riou wrote to the Commissioners on 23 Oct. regarding the privateer Hampden and its prize the Constance and there described himself as a Brest merchant and interpreter to the King. For that letter, see the Commissioners to Sartine, 7 Jan. 1779 (below). Jones' criticism of Riou's treatment of the prisoners apparently brought no response from the Commissioners.

John Paul Jones to Benjamin Franklin and John Adams, 9 December 1778 Jones, John Paul JA Franklin, Benjamin John Paul Jones to Benjamin Franklin and John Adams, 9 December 1778 Jones, John Paul Adams, John Franklin, Benjamin
John Paul Jones to Benjamin Franklin and John Adams
Gentlemen L'Orient Decr. 9th 1778

I have the honor to inform you that this day Arrived here a Virginia Pilot boat from Boston in 23 days.1 The master reports—that Comte Destaing had saild from thence a fortnight before on a Secret destination—that the Summerset was lost on Cape Cod, the materials saved and the Crew Prisoners2—that the Providence, Boston, and Ranger were Arrived having taken two or three Merchant Vessels—That the Enemy were embarking their Stores and provision at N. York—That the Raleigh was chaced ashore to the Eastward of Boston, the Crew made Prisoners and the Ship got off by the Enemy3—that it was reported that three of Byrons Fleet were ashore on Nantucket Shoals,4 and that Barbados and Granadoes &ca. were taken.5

I have the honor to be, with due esteem & respect Gentlemen, your most Obedient and very humble Servant

Jno P Jones

RC (NhD: Ticknor Autograph Coll.).

1.

This was the schooner Dauphin, which had left Boston on 16 Nov.; it was identified in another letter to the Commissioners of 9 Dec. from the Lorient mercantile firm of Gourlade & Moylan. That letter contained the same information as this one from Jones (PPAmP: Franklin Papers), adding only that the Dauphin had brought no letters for the Commissioners.

2.

The 64-gun ship of the line Somerset was driven aground during a storm on 2 Nov. An account of the wreck appeared in the Boston Gazette of 9 Nov. and is reprinted in Adams Family Correspondence , 3:118.

3.

For the Raleigh, see William Vernon Sr. to JA, 22 Oct., and note 1 (above).

4.

Sightings of two overturned vessels and the masts of a third were reported in the Boston Gazette of 16 Nov.

5.

On the day that the Dauphin left Boston the Boston Gazette printed the erroneous report that the French had captured three or four West Indian islands in addition to Dominica, taken in September. According to the Boston Independent Chronicle of 19 Nov., the islands were Montserrat, Nevis, St. Christopher, and Antigua.

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