From David HumphreysTranscription | Original 1 | 2 | 3
ALS, DLC:GW. Notes1. Richard O'Bryen (O'Brien) was the captain of the Dauphin, an American ship captured by Algerian pirates in 1785. On behalf of the American captives held at Algiers, he periodically appealed for help to GW, Thomas Jefferson, and other American officials (Mathew Irwin to GW, 9 July 1789, and source note, and O'Bryen to GW, 8 Jan. 1792, and note 1). John Bulkeley & Son was the Lisbon banking firm used by Humphreys. [back to text] 2. For American attempts to achieve a peace with Algiers, see Thomas Barclay to GW, 27 Dec. 1792, n.1. GW had recently appointed Humphreys, the U.S. minister to Portugal, as the "Commissioner Plenipotentiary" to negotiate with Algiers (GW to Dey of Algiers, 21 Mar. 1793). [back to text] 3. For the unsuccessful attempt by William Carmichael and Robert Montgomery to supply relief to the captives at Algiers, see Jefferson to GW, 26 Oct. 1792, n.1; Memorandum on Consuls and Consular Appointments, 15 Feb. 1793, Jefferson Papers, 25:203. On 16 Mar., GW had received Humphreys's letter to Jefferson of 23 Jan., which included enclosures explaining that, as a result of Carmichael's lack of communication and inability to assist the captives, Humphreys had authorized O'Bryen to obtain funds from the Bulkeleys to purchase provisions and pay debts related to the captives' subsistence (JPP, 91-92, and note 5). Carmichael's failure to write regularly was not a new habit, and GW had criticized such behavior in the past (GW to Jefferson, 23 Aug. 1792). [back to text] Transcription | Original 1 | 2 | 3 |