16 April 1841
adams-john10 Neal Millikan US Constitution
310 Washington Friday 16. April 1841.

16. V:45 Friday.

Whitney. Weed Reeves Robert Southard Samuel L. Thomas James

Mr Whitney and Mr Weed are two gentlemen from the interior of the State of New-York, visitors from curiosity. Mr Robert Reeves is a day watchman at the Treasury Department: a native of Ireland, who boasts that he never went to school a day in his life; and who brought for my perusal a well written manuscript of about 100 pages, containing a plan for a bank, a protecting Tariff, and a National currency and system of exchanges, original, altogether his own, and far superior to any thing ever proposed by any-one else— In this opinion he is perfectly sincere, and although conscious of the lowliness of his condition, and of the conclusion that other men may draw from this circumstance against his plan, it is to him only a source of higher self admiration, in the comparison between the greatness of his achievements and the smallness of his means— He had communicated his manuscript to the late President Van Buren who had read it, and conversed with him concerning it; but he was so taken with the sub treasury that he could approve of nothing else— I paid a visit this morning to Mr Tyler who styles himself President of the United States and not Vice-President acting as President which would be the correct style— But it is a construction of the Constitution, in direct violation both of the grammar, and context of the Constitution, which confers upon the Vice-President on the decease of the President, not the Office, but the powers and the duties of the said office— There is a dogmatical article in the National Intelligencer, asserting this false construction, which is not worth contesting, but which to a strict constructionist would warrant more than a doubt whether the Vice President has the right to occupy the President’s house or to claim his Salary without an act of Congress.— He moved into the house, two days ago, and received me in the old South-east Cabinet chamber.— He received me very kindly, and apologized for not having visited me without waiting for this call— To this I had no claim or pretension My visit was very short, as there were several persons in attendance and among them Mr Southard now President of the Senate— I then called at the Navy Department, where I found Mr Badger the Secretary, returned from North Carolina, and renewed the recommendation of Mr Kavasales for a chaplaincy in the Mediterranean squadron. Then on Stephen Pleasonton, 5th. Auditor, with a Letter from Philander Shaw, against the removal of Isaac Dunham as Light-house keeper at Nausett Point Eastham, which Mr Pleasonton enclosed with a strong recommendation of Dunham, which I took to the Secretary of the Treasury, who said it might perhaps save him— I left with him also a Letter from James Smith junr applying for the Office of Surveyor at Portsmouth New Hampshire, and one from John Otis in favour of Henry Crocker at Barnstable— Long Evening visit from Coll. James Thomas.

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