

John Adams  |
"The Revolution was effected before the war commenced.
The Revolution was in the minds and hearts of the
people... This radical change in the principles, opinions,
sentiments, and affections of the people was the real American
Revolution."
John Adams -- 1818 |
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In three remarkable careers--as a foe of British oppression and
champion of Independence (1761-77), as an American diplomat in
Europe (1778-88), and as the first vice-president (1789-97) and
then the second president (1797-1801) of the United States--John
Adams was a founder of the United States. Perhaps equally important,
however, was the life of his mind and spirit; in a pungent diary,
vivid letters, learned tracts, and patriotic speeches he revealed
himself as a quintessential Puritan, patriarch of an illustrious
family, tough-minded philosopher of the republic, sage, and sometimes
a vain, stubborn, and vitriolic partisan.
John Adams was born in Braintree (now Quincy), Mass.,
on Oct. 30, 1735, in a small saltbox house still standing and
open to visitors. His father, John Adams, a deacon and a fifth-generation
Massachusetts farmer, and his mother, the former Suzanna Boylston,
were, their son wrote, "both fond of reading"; so they
resolved to give bookishly inclined John a good education. He
became the first of his family to go to college when he entered
Harvard in 1751. There, and in six further years of intensive
reading while he taught school and studied law in Worcester and
Boston, he mastered the technicalities of his profession and the
literature and learning of his day. By 1762, when he began 14
years of increasingly successful legal practice, he was well informed,
ambitious, and public spirited.
His most notable good fortune, however, occurred in
1764 when he married Abigail Smith. John Adams's marriage of 54
years to this wise, learned, strong-willed, passionate, and patriotic
woman began the brilliant phase of Adams family history that produced
their son John Quincy, his son Charles Francis, his sons Henry
and Brooks, and numerous other distinguished progeny.
In 1761, John Adams began to think and write and act against British
measures that he believed infringed on colonial liberties and
the right of Massachusetts and the other colonies to self-government.
A pamphlet entitled A Dissertation on the Canon and the Feudal
Law and town instructions denouncing the Stamp
Act (1765) marked him as a vigorous, patriotic penman, and,
holding various local offices, he soon became a leader among Massachusetts
radicals. Although he never wavered in his devotion to colonial
rights and early committed himself to independence as an unwelcome
last resort, Adams's innate conservatism made him determined in
1770 that the British soldiers accused of the Boston
Massacre receive a fair hearing. He defended the soldiers
at their trial. He also spoke out repeatedly against mob violence
and other signs of social disintegration.

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In 1774-76, Adams was a Massachusetts delegate to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.
His speeches and writings (especially a newspaper series signed
"Novanglus" in 1775) articulating the colonial cause
and his brilliant championing of American rights in Congress
caused Thomas Jefferson to call him
the "Colossus of Independence." Adams helped draft
the Declaration of Independence, secured
its unanimous adoption in Congress, and wrote his wife on July
3, 1776, that "the most memorable Epoch in the History of
America has begun." |
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John Trumbull (1756-1843) Oil
on canvas, 1793. National Portrait Gallery - Smithsonian Institution
After 18 months of toil in committee and on the floor
of Congress managing the American Revolution, Adams crossed the
Atlantic to be an American commissioner to France. The termination
of this mission after less than a year in Paris allowed him to
return home long enough to take a leading role in drafting the
new Massachusetts constitution.
He sailed again for Europe, accompanied by two of his
sons, in November 1779 as a commissioner to seek peace with Britain.
After quarrels in Paris with Benjamin Franklin
and French officials, he left for the Netherlands, where he secured
Dutch recognition of American independence and a substantial loan
as well. He returned to Paris in October 1782 to insist on American
rights (especially to fish on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland)
in the negotiations that led to Britain's recognition of the independence
of the United States in the Treaty of Paris
of Sept. 3, 1783.

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For two more years Adams helped Franklin and Jefferson
negotiate treaties of friendship and commerce with numerous foreign
powers. Then, appointed the first American minister to Britain,
Adams presented his credentials to George III in 1785, noting
his pride in "having the distinguished honor to be the first
{ex-colonial subject} to stand in your Majesty's royal presence
in a diplomatic character." |
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The king, aware of the poignancy of the occasion, returned Adams's
compliments and hoped that the "language, religion, and blood"
shared by the two nations would "have their natural and full
effect," but the British ministry obstructed Adams's efforts
to restore equitable commerce between the two nations.
When he returned to the United States in 1788, Adams
was greeted by his countrymen as one of the heroes of independence
and was promptly elected vice-president under the new Constitution.
This post, regarded by Adams as "the most insignificant office
that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived,"
left him time to work out his increasingly sober views of republican
government.
In Europe he had been impressed with both the unsuitability
of self-government for masses of destitute, ignorant people, and
the usefulness, in evoking patriotism and in maintaining order,
of the pomp and ceremony of monarchy. He was thus appalled, but
not surprised, at the riotous French Revolution and emphasized
the need for dignity, ritual, and authority in a republic like
the United States. He also supported the efforts of George
Washington to give the presidency an almost regal quality
and to extend executive power, and he agreed with Alexander Hamilton
on most of the latter's fiscal plans. He never accepted, however,
the "high" Federalist biases toward commercial growth
and government by "the rich, the well-born, and the able."
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Although his own presidency (1797-1801) was a troubled
one, Adams made uniquely important contributions during his term
as chief executive. He managed orderly transitions of power at
both the beginning and the end of his administration, and he
gave the government stability by continuing most of the practices
established under Washington. |
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The major crisis he faced, however, arose from strained
relations with revolutionary France. When, in the so-called XYZ
Affair (1797-98), American peace commissioners returned from Paris
with lurid stories of deceit and bribery, Adams called for an
assertion of national pride, built up the armed forces, and even
accepted the Alien and Sedition Acts as emergency national security
measures. With his opponents (led by Jefferson) charging oppression
and some of his own Federalist Party (led by Hamilton) urging
war and conquest, Adams kept his nerve and, when the opportunity
arose, dispatched another peace commission to France. This defused
the crisis and led in 1800 to an agreement with France that ended
the so-called Quasi-War. Nonetheless, deserted by Hamilton and
other Federalists who disapproved of his independent course, and
attacked by the Jeffersonian Republicans as a vain monarchist,
Adams was forced out of office after one term.
When he and Abigail returned to Massachusetts, they moved into
a comfortable but unpretentious house in Quincy (it is known today
and open to visitors as the Adams National Historic Site) they
had bought 12 years before. There, tending to his fields, visiting
with neighbors, and enjoying his family, John Adams lived for
25 years as a sage and national patriarch. Of his numerous correspondences,
the cherished 14-year (1812-26) one with Jefferson became a literary
legacy to the nation. Although the debilitations of old age and
the death of his beloved Abigail in 1818 troubled his last years,
his mind remained sharp and his spirit buoyant until the end.
Like Jefferson, he died on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary
of the Declaration of Independence. Ninety years old at his death,
Adams was revered by his countrymen not only as one of the founding
fathers but also as a plain, honest man who personified the best
of what the nation could hope of its citizens and leaders.
(See Bibliography below)
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©
Author: Ralph Ketcham
Portrait: Stuart, Gilbert (1755 - 1828). John Adams,
c. 1821. Oil on wood, National Gallery of Art.
Bibliography: Adams, John, The Adams Papers, 13 vols.,
ed. by Lyman H. Butterfield et al. (1961-77); Ellis, Joseph J.,
Passionate Sage: The Character and Legacy of John Adams (1993);
Ferling, John, John Adams: A Life (1992); Handler, Edward,
America and Europe in the Political Thought of John Adams
(1964); Howe, John R., and Tebbenhoff, Edward H., John Adams,
2 vols. (1987); Kurtz, Stephen G., The Presidency of John
Adams (1957); Peterson, Merrill D., Adams and Jefferson:
A Revolutionary Dialogue (1976); Shaw, Peter, The Character
of John Adams (1976); Smith, Page, John Adams, 2 vols.
(1962).
Facts About John Adams
2d President of the United States (1797-1801)
Nickname: "Atlas of Independence"
Born: Oct. 30, 1735, Braintree (now Quincy), Mass.
Education: Harvard College (graduated 1755).
Profession: Lawyer
Religious Affiliation: Unitarian
Marriage: Oct. 25, 1764, to Abigail Smith (1744-1818).
Children: Abigail Amelia Adams (1765-1813); John Quincy Adams
(1767-1848); Susanna Adams (1768-70); Charles Adams (1770-1800);
Thomas Boylston Adams (1772-1832).
Political Affiliation: Federalist
Writings: The Life and Works of John Adams (10 vols.,
1856); The Adams' Papers (13 vols., 1961-77).
Died: July 4, 1826, Quincy, Mass.
Buried: First Unitarian Church, Quincy, Mass.
Vice-President: Thomas Jefferson
CABINET MEMBERS
Secretary of State: Timothy Pickering (1797-1800); John Marshall
(1800-01).
Secretary of the Treasury: Oliver Wolcott, Jr. (1797-1801); Samuel
Dexter (1801).
Secretary of War: James McHenry (1797-1800); Samuel Dexter (1800-01).
Attorney General: Charles Lee.
Secretary of the Navy: Benjamin Stoddert
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