November, 1820

Teleology is dangerous, and spoilers often irritating. But observant readers will have deduced that John Gallison (1788-1820) couldn’t have lived too long after his work on the Missouri Compromise memorial and the address to the Peace Society in 1819. To disclose how it all turned out, we present Gallison’s final journal entry.

This installment is a grand send-off, with notes on his social, intellectual, and professional life in both Marblehead and Boston. Extensive notes on Sunday sermons, an enthusiastic spectator’s comments on the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, and an afternoon of civilized conversation with former President Adams over lunch at Josiah Quincy’s house on Beacon Hill all come up for discussion.

Adams, of course, was quite retired from public life by this time. His anointment as president of the convention was an act of homage only, which he gratefully acknowledged before surrendering the post to a younger man.

As an additional bonus, we enclose Gallison’s index for the final volume. Along with page numbers and marginal notes, he often added these to each volume in order to make his future study more productive, even once trying a method recommended by John Locke. This is a bit simpler, and it leaves a decent overview of his other topics for the year.

We cannot know if Gallison’s terminal illness was already plaguing him. His handwriting did get increasingly erratic as the month wore on, although that may be simply be an expression of haste that his more fastidious youth would not have permitted. Regardless of when the illness struck, John Gallison died on Christmas Eve, almost exactly a year after his Peace Society address in 1819. His symptoms, as detailed in William Ellery Channing’s lengthy obituary, are consistent with viral encephalitis, although some sleuthing in his final year’s journal entries might turn up other causes. In any case, his friends and colleagues did their best to honor him. Not just Channing, but Josiah Quincy and others left generous published tributes, with the Massachusetts Supreme Court bar voting to wear crepe for the rest of their session.

Gallison had no descendants that we know of. His father lived a few more years and left a decent estate to his stepmother, which kept her comfortable in Marblehead for the rest of her life. Gallison himself left 500 law books that were auctioned off. The notable merchant, Jonathan Wren Ward, named his next son John Gallison Ward.