Boston, 1792-1826 1049 
(Boston); no. 1; French and English in parallel columns; 
first article is "Summary of the French Revolution." 
1793, Mar. 24. Mercure Universel (Paris) ; vol. XXV, 
no. 754. 
Apr. 3. Columbian Centinel (Boston) ; vol. XIX, 
no. 7. 
[n.d. ] . The Independent Chronicle and the Universal 
Advertiser (Boston) ; no. 1285. 
2522 (Boston, 1796-1826) [Carton] 
Despatches of Mozard: 
1796. Treaty between U.S. and Spain for free navi- 
gation of Mississippi; importance to France of recovery 
of La.; urges effort to exchange Santo Domingo for La.; 
difficulty of correspondence; vexatious treatment of 
American vessels and commerce by English; proposal that 
American debt to Holland should be assigned to France, 
and views of James Swan on this subject; recall of Mozard; 
correspondence with Benjamin Lincoln [copies enclosed], 
collector of port of Boston, relating to refusal to permit 
entry and sale of four English vessels captured by French 
privateer. 
1797. Washington's "Farewell Address," which Hamilton 
is said to have worked on for five months; English capture 
of American vessels; message of President Adams to Congress, 
May 15; attitude of American people towards France; success 
of English propaganda; application of law of 10 Brum. V 
prohibiting importation of English goods into France; re- 
ports that French prize crews on American-captured vessels 
are overcome by means of opium and the vessels retaken; 
yellow fever at Philadelphia; address by Academy of Arts 
and Sciences of Boston to President Adams at Braintree; 
insignificance of Academy; fatalistic character of Americans 
1799. Return of Gerry; public opinion; elections; 
American naval forces. 
Despatches of Giraud: 
1800. Capture of the Sandwich of Nantes by the 
Constitution . 
1801. Resumption of commercial intercourse between 
France and U.S.; hostility towards France in Boston. 
1802. Conversation with one of Nantucket whalers who 
settled at Dunkirk in 1792, and who would now like to 
return to France, preferably to Port Louis near Lorient. 
1807. Account of a winter spent in Kentucky; Burr's 
conspiracy; culture of grapevines. 
1810. Political parties in Massachusetts; Essex 
junto; American commerce; inventive genius of Americans; 
replies to queries relating to licenses, wheat, importation 
of manufactured articles, obstacles to importation of 
French manufactures. 
1811. Notifications of delivery of certificates of 
origin. 
1812. Consular agents in New England; American 
manufactures. 
