Name
Stevens, Ebenezer, 1751-1823 (Author)
Jay, John, 1745-1829 (Addressee)
Title
[Document, 1798 May 30]
Abstract
Agrees that "we ought to be united in our Councils, and uninfluenced by Considerations in which the public has little interest." Declined the command of the artillery regiment as the officers did not like being superseded. Wishes John Jay would visit New York as they are without a leader "to step forward and propose vigorous exertions." Also wishes he would write the President of the wants of the c ity, as this would be the most effective. Feels the United States ought to have an agent there and is desirous of such a post. There should be no more military stores in New York than are actually wanted as a safety measure, and also to arouse the citizens to consider their defenseless state.
Subjects
United States--History--Constitutional period, 1789-1809; Jay, John, 1745-1829
Format
correspondence
Genre
correspondence
Date
May 30, 1798
Physical Description
4 pages
Language
English
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/10.7916/94mj-ab64