quoted in Jacobs,
220 “The Kentuckians are full of enterprise”: John Adair to JW, December 10, 1804, ibid.
220 “We must have a
220 “he talked as if the business was indispensable”: Lyon’s deposition to Ezekiel Bacon, congressional committee of inquiry.
220 “two or three frigates”: Adams,
222 Morally, the battle of the queues had been won in 1804 when Jefferson himself cropped his pigtail. It went with a general tidying up of the president’s style. “He has improved much in the article of dress,” wrote Senator Plumer in December 1804; “he has laid aside the old slippers, red waistcoat, and soiled corduroy small- clothes, and was dressed all in black, with clean linen and powdered hair.”
CHAPTER 22: BETRAYER BETRAYED
The sources for this chapter are those cited earlier.
225 “the gentle Aurora with lighted taper”: The quote and the reception scene come from Hay,
226 “There has been Leaves cut out of the Books”: Quoted in Linklater,
227 “From a rank Federalist to a suspected Republican”: Edward Hempstead, quoted in Jacobs,
228 “Not a single fact has appeared”: Jefferson to Samuel Smith, May 5, 1806, PTJ. 228 “an elegant barge, [with] sails, colors, ten oars”: Aaron Burr to Theodosia Alston,
228 “whose worth you know well how to estimate”: JW to Clark, June 9, 1805, Clark,
229 “many absurd and evil reports circulated here”: Clark to JW, September 7, 1805, Wilkinson,
229 “particularly of the garrison- towns between Vera Cruz and Mexico [City]”: John Graham’s deposition to the court of inquiry, January 1806.
229 “I have encouraged, and will continue to encourage”: October 10, 1804,
229 “He has often said that the Union could not last”: Claiborne quoted in Gayarre,
230 “because I do not acknowledge his superiority,” JW to Samuel Smith, November 14, 1806, quoted in Jacobs,
230 “My friend, no person was ever more mistaken!” and subsequent quotes:
231 “a Corps of 100 Artillerists, 400 Cavalry”: JW to Dearborn, September 8, 1805, American State Papers, Military Affairs, L.C.
232 “Burr is about something”:
232 “You observe to me”: Adair to JW, January 27, 1806,
235 “Aliens and Suspicious Characters mingling with the Natives”: JW to Jefferson, December 23, 1805, PTJ.
236 “You will therefore with as little delay as possible repair to the Territory of New Orleans”: Dearborn to JW, May 6, 1806, American State Papers, Military Affairs, L.C.
237 “Bruff, Lucas &c say it is done to get me out”: JW to Samuel Smith, June 17, 1806, ibid.
CHAPTER 23: THE GENERAL AT BAY
The sources for the Burr Conspiracy are those cited earlier.
238 “General Wilkinson being expressly declared”: Quoted in Crackel,
239 “Genrl Wilkinson had not left St Louis on 28th July”: Dearborn to Jefferson, September 2, 1806, PTJ.
240 The abortive approach to the naval captains: See Crackel,
241 “It is now well ascertained that you are to be displaced in the next session”: Dayton to JW, July 24, 1806,
242 “[Even] if I had no regard for my own health and constitution”: Journal entry, October 16, 1805, Zebulon M. Pike,
242 “Any number of men who may reasonably be calculated on”: October 2, 1806, Pike to JW, quoted in Hollon, “Zebulon Montgomery Pike and the Wilkinson-Burr Conspiracy.” For evidence that papers taken from Pike suggested that he expected to be taken by the Spanish, Bolton, “Papers of Zebulon M. Pike.”
243 “It must appear strange to you, friend Briggs”: Deposition of Isaac Briggs,
244 “The time looked for by many”: JW to Adair, September 27, 1806.
245 Swartwout’s arrival and transfer of the letter was described by both JW and in Cushing’s deposition at Burr’s trial. T. Carpenter,
245 Burr’s letter was, according to the modern editor of his papers, Mary-Jo Kline, probably written by Dayton. However, for all practical purposes it was Burr’s, and he did not demur when Chief Justice Marshall explicitly referred to it as Burr’s letter.
CHAPTER 24: HIS COUNTRY’S SAVIOR
The sources are those cited earlier for the Burr Conspiracy.
247 The events were described by Cushing and JW at Burr’s trial. T. Carpenter,
248 “If I had faultered [
249 “The agency of the Army”: John Randolph, February 1808, quoted in Crackel,
249 Deposition of Eaton:
250 “I have never, in my whole life”: JW to Jefferson, October 21, 1806,
251 “I had not formed a decided opinion”:
251 Donaldson’s letter: Ibid., appendix 98.
253 “a deep, dark and wide-spread conspiracy”: JW to Jefferson, November 12, 1806, ibid., appendix 100.
253 “I have made up my mind to perish”: JW to Freeman, November 12, 1806, ibid., appendix 101.
253 “you are surrounded by disaffection”: JW to Claiborne, November 12, 1806, ibid., 2:328.
253 “Integrity of the Union is menaced”: JW to Samuel Smith, November 12, 1806, quoted in Hay,
253 “spring like Leonidas”: JW to Jose de Iturrigaray, November 12, 1806, ibid.
254 “I confess I approached him with caution”: Deposition of Isaac Briggs,
CHAPTER 25: THE GENERAL REDEEMED
The sources are those cited earlier for the Burr Conspiracy. Much of the detail of JW’s “reign of terror” in New Orleans comes from Charles Gayarre’s
257 “Under circumstances so imperious”: Quoted in Gayarre,