Name
Livingston, Robert R. (Author)
Jay, John, 1745-1829 (Addressee)
Title
Document, 1780 July 06
Abstract
Livingston has just received John Jay's letter from Cadiz. He hopes that Jay will have already received a number of letters from him. Jay will undoubtedly have heard of "poor Morris misfortune in the loss of his leg. . . . I feel for him and yet am led to hope that it may turn out to his advantage, and tend to fix his desultory genius to a point in wh ich case it can not fail to go far." Jay's mother-in-law, Mrs. William Livingston, has received two visits from British troops, but they were prevented from burning her house. The militia has been successful in confining the enemy to New York. Livingston hopes that a French fleet will arrive, and that Jay will be able to obtain financial assistance from the court of Spain. Other news concerns Livingston's happiness upon the birth of a daughter, Jay's son, who is "a fine healthy boy and the Idol of his grandmother," and the fact that Livingston has read Mrs. Jay's journal.
Subjects
United States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783; Jay, John, 1745-1829
Format
correspondence
Genre
letters (correspondence)
Date
1780 July 06
Physical Description
0 pages
Note
The entire content of the original has been digitized.
Library Location
Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University
Browse Location’s Digital Content
Also In
The papers of John Jay
Persistent URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/vzhj-gb15