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To Joel Barlow Feb. 24, 1806
I return you the draft of the bill for the establishment of a
National Academy & University at the city of Washington, with such
alterations as we talked over the last night. They are chiefly
verbal. I have often wished we could have a Philosophical society or
academy so organized as that while the central academy should be at
the seat of government, it's members dispersed over the states,
should constitute filiated academies in each state, publish their
communications, from which the central academy should select
unpublished what should be most choice. In this way all the members
wheresoever dispersed might be brought into action, and an useful
emulation might arise between the filiated societies. Perhaps the
great societies now existing might incorporate themselves in this way
with the National one. But time does not allow me to pursue this
idea, nor perhaps had we time at all to get it into the present bill.
I procured an Agricultural society to be established (voluntarily) on
this plan, but it has done nothing.
Friendly salutations.
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