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John Adams

John Adams (October 30, 1735 – July 4, 1826) was an American statesman, attorney, diplomat, writer, and Founding Father who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801. Before his presidency, he was a leader of the American Revolution that achieved independence from Great Britain. During the latter part of the Revolutionary War and in the early years of the new nation, he served the U.S. government as a senior diplomat in Europe. Adams was the first person to hold the office of vice president of the United States, serving from 1789 to 1797. He was a dedicated diarist and regularly corresponded with important contemporaries, including his wife and adviser Abigail Adams and his friend and political rival Thomas Jefferson.

John Adams
Portrait, c. 1800–1815
2nd President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1797 – March 4, 1801
Vice PresidentThomas Jefferson
Preceded byGeorge Washington
Succeeded byThomas Jefferson
1st Vice President of the United States
In office
April 21, 1789 – March 4, 1797
PresidentGeorge Washington
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byThomas Jefferson
1st United States Minister to Great Britain
In office
April 1, 1785 – February 20, 1788[1]
Appointed byCongress of the Confederation
Succeeded byThomas Pinckney
1st United States Minister to the Netherlands
In office
April 19, 1782 – March 30, 1788[1]
Appointed byCongress of the Confederation
Succeeded byCharles W. F. Dumas (acting)
United States Envoy to France
In office
November 28, 1777[2][3] – March 8, 1779
Preceded bySilas Deane
Succeeded byBenjamin Franklin
Chairman of the Marine Committee
In office
October 13, 1775 – October 28, 1779
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byFrancis Lewis (Continental Board of Admiralty)
12th Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court of Judicature
In office
October 1775 – February 1777
Appointed byProvincial Congress
Preceded byPeter Oliver
Succeeded byWilliam Cushing
Delegate from Massachusetts to the Continental Congress
In office
September 5, 1774 – November 28, 1777
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded bySamuel Holten
Personal details
BornOctober 30, 1735 [O.S. October 19, 1735]
Braintree, Massachusetts Bay, British America (now Quincy)
DiedJuly 4, 1826(1826-07-04) (aged 90)
Quincy, Massachusetts, U.S.
Resting placeUnited First Parish Church
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1764; died 1818)
Children6, including Abigail, John Quincy, Charles, and Thomas
Parents
EducationHarvard College (AB, AM)
Occupation
  • Politician
  • lawyer
Signature

A lawyer and political activist prior to the Revolution, Adams was devoted to the right to counsel and presumption of innocence. He defied anti-British sentiment and successfully defended British soldiers against murder charges arising from the Boston Massacre. Adams was a Massachusetts delegate to the Continental Congress and became a leader of the revolution. He assisted Jefferson in drafting the Declaration of Independence in 1776 and was its primary advocate in Congress. As a diplomat he helped negotiate a peace treaty with Great Britain and secured vital governmental loans. Adams was the primary author of the Massachusetts Constitution in 1780, which influenced the United States Constitution, as did his essay Thoughts on Government.

Adams was elected to two terms as vice president under President George Washington and was elected as the United States' second president in 1796. He was the only president elected under the banner of the Federalist Party. During his term, Adams encountered fierce criticism from the Jeffersonian Republicans and from some in his own party, led by his rival Alexander Hamilton. Adams signed the controversial Alien and Sedition Acts, and built up the Army and Navy in the undeclared naval war with France. He became the first president to reside in the White House.

In his bid in 1800 for reelection to the presidency, opposition from Federalists and accusations of despotism from Jeffersonians led to Adams losing to his vice president and former friend Jefferson, and he retired to Massachusetts. He eventually resumed his friendship with Jefferson by initiating a continuing correspondence. He and Abigail generated the Adams political family, including their son John Quincy Adams, the sixth president. John Adams died on July 4, 1826 – the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Adams and his son are the only presidents of the first twelve who never owned slaves. Historians and scholars have favorably ranked his administration.

Early life and education

 
Adams' birthplace in present-day Quincy, Massachusetts

John Adams was born on October 30, 1735,[a] to John Adams Sr. and Susanna Boylston. He had two younger brothers, Peter and Elihu.[6] Adams was born on the family farm in Braintree, Massachusetts.[7][b] His mother was from a leading medical family of present-day Brookline, Massachusetts. His father was a deacon in the Congregational Church, a farmer, a cordwainer, and a lieutenant in the militia.[8] Adams often praised his father and recalled their close relationship.[9] Adams's great-great-grandfather Henry Adams immigrated to Massachusetts from Braintree, Essex, England, around 1638.[8]

Adams's formal education began at age six at a dame school, conducted at a teacher's home and centered on The New England Primer. He then attended Braintree Latin School under Joseph Cleverly, where studies included Latin, rhetoric, logic, and arithmetic. Adams's early education included incidents of truancy, a dislike for his master, and a desire to become a farmer, but his father commanded that he remain in school. Deacon Adams hired a new schoolmaster named Joseph Marsh, and his son responded positively.[10] Adams later noted that "As a child I enjoyed perhaps the greatest of blessings that can be bestowed upon men – that of a mother who was anxious and capable to form the characters of her children."[11]

College education and adulthood

At age sixteen, Adams entered Harvard College in 1751, studying under Joseph Mayhew.[12] As an adult, Adams was a keen scholar, studying the works of ancient writers such as Thucydides, Plato, Cicero, and Tacitus in their original languages.[13] Though his father expected him to be a minister,[14] after his 1755 graduation with an A.B. degree, he taught school temporarily in Worcester, while pondering his permanent vocation. In the next four years, he began to seek prestige, craving "Honour or Reputation" and "more defference from [his] fellows", and was determined to be "a great Man". He decided to become a lawyer, writing his father that he found among lawyers "noble and gallant achievements" but, among the clergy, the "pretended sanctity of some absolute dunces". He had reservations about his self-described "trumpery" and failure to share the "happiness of [his] fellow men".[15]

When the French and Indian War began in 1754, Adams, aged nineteen, felt guilty he was the first in his family not to be a militia officer; he said "I longed more ardently to be a Soldier than I ever did to be a Lawyer".[16]

Law practice and marriage

In 1756, Adams began reading law under James Putnam, a leading lawyer in Worcester.[17] In 1758, he earned an A.M. from Harvard,[18] and in 1759 was admitted to the bar.[19] He developed an early habit of diary writing; this included his impressions of James Otis Jr.'s 1761 challenge to the legality of British writs of assistance, allowing the British to search a home without notice or reason. Otis's argument inspired Adams to the cause of the American colonies.[20]

In 1763, Adams explored aspects of political theory in seven essays written for Boston newspapers. Under the pen name "Humphrey Ploughjogger", he ridiculed the selfish thirst for power he perceived among the Massachusetts colonial elite.[21] Adams was initially less well known than his older cousin Samuel Adams, but his influence emerged from his work as a constitutional lawyer, his analysis of history, and his dedication to republicanism. Adams often found his own irascible nature a constraint in his political career.[14]

 
 
A pair of 1766 portraits of John and Abigail Adams by Benjamin Blyth

In the late 1750s, Adams fell in love with Hannah Quincy; he was poised to propose but was interrupted by friends, and the moment was lost. In 1759, he met 15-year-old Abigail Smith, his third cousin,[22] through his friend Richard Cranch, who was courting Abigail's older sister. Adams initially was not impressed with Abigail and her two sisters, writing that they were not "fond, nor frank, nor candid".[23] In time, he grew close to Abigail. They were married on October 25, 1764, despite the opposition of Abigail's mother. They shared a love of books and proved honest in their praise and criticism of each other. After his father's death in 1761, Adams had inherited a 9+12-acre (3.8 ha) farm and a house where they lived until 1783.[24][25]

John and Abigail had six children: Abigail (known "Nabby") in 1765,[26] John Quincy in 1767,[27] Susanna in 1768, Charles in 1770, Thomas in 1772,[28] and Elizabeth in 1777.[29] Susanna died when she was one year old,[28] while Elizabeth was stillborn.[29] All three sons became lawyers. Charles and Thomas were unsuccessful, became alcoholics, and died before old age, while John Quincy excelled and launched a political career, eventually becoming President himself.[30]

Career before the Revolution

Opponent of Stamp Act

Adams rose to prominence leading widespread opposition to the Stamp Act. The Act was imposed by the British Parliament without consulting the American legislatures. It required payment of a direct tax by the colonies for stamped documents,[31][32] and was designed to pay for the costs of Britain's war with France. Power of enforcement was given to British vice admiralty courts, rather than common law courts.[33][32] These Admiralty courts acted without juries and were greatly disliked.[31] The Act was despised for both its monetary cost and implementation without colonial consent, and encountered violent resistance, preventing its enforcement.[33] Adams authored the "Braintree Instructions" in 1765, in a letter sent to the representatives of Braintree in the Massachusetts legislature. It explained that the Act should be opposed since it denied two fundamental rights guaranteed to all Englishmen (and which all free men deserved): to be taxed only by consent and to be tried by a jury of one's peers. The instructions were a succinct and forthright defense of colonial rights and liberties, and served as a model for other towns.[34]

Adams also reprised his pen name "Humphrey Ploughjogger" in opposition to the Stamp Act in August of that year. Included were four articles to the Boston Gazette. The articles were republished in The London Chronicle in 1768 as True Sentiments of America, or A Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law. He also spoke in December before the governor and council, pronouncing the Stamp Act invalid in the absence of Massachusetts representation at Parliament.[35][36] He noted that many protests were sparked by a popular sermon of Boston minister Jonathan Mayhew, invoking Romans 13 to justify insurrection.[37] While Adams strongly opposed the Act in writing, he rebuffed attempts by Samuel Adams, a leader in the popular protest movements, to involve him in mob actions and public demonstrations.[38] In 1766, a town meeting of Braintree elected Adams as a selectman.[39]

With the repeal of the Stamp Act in early 1766, tensions with Britain temporarily eased.[40] Putting politics aside, Adams moved his family to Boston in April 1768 to focus on his law practice. The family rented a house on Brattle Street that was known locally as the "White House". He, Abigail, and the children lived there for a year, then moved to Cold Lane; later they moved again to a larger house in Brattle Square in the center of the city.[27] In 1768, Adams successfully defended the merchant John Hancock, who was accused of violating British acts of trade in the Liberty Affair.[41] With the death of Jeremiah Gridley and the mental collapse of Otis, Adams became Boston's most prominent lawyer.[39]

Counsel for the British: Boston Massacre

 
Boston Massacre of 1770, an 1878 portrait by Alonzo Chappel depicting the Boston Massacre

Britain's passage of the Townshend Acts in 1767 revived tensions, and an increase in mob violence led the British to dispatch more troops to the colonies.[42] On March 5, 1770, when a lone British sentry was accosted by a mob, eight of his fellow soldiers reinforced him, and the crowd around them grew to several hundred. The soldiers were struck with snowballs, ice, and stones, and in the chaos the soldiers opened fire, killing five civilians, in the infamous Boston Massacre. The accused soldiers were arrested on charges of murder. When no other attorneys would come to their defense, Adams was impelled to do so despite the risk to his reputation. He believed no person should be denied the right to counsel and a fair trial. The trials were delayed so that passions could cool.[43]

The week-long trial of the commander, Captain Thomas Preston, began on October 24 and ended in his acquittal, because it was impossible to prove that he had ordered his soldiers to fire.[44] The remaining soldiers were tried in December when Adams made his famed argument regarding jury decisions: "Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence."[45] Adams won an acquittal for six of the soldiers. Two, who had fired directly into the crowd, were convicted of manslaughter. Adams was paid a small sum by his clients.[24]

According to biographer John E. Ferling, during jury selection Adams "expertly exercised his right to challenge individual jurors and contrived what amounted to a packed jury. Not only were several jurors closely tied through business arrangements to the British army, but five ultimately became Loyalist exiles." While Adams's defense was helped by a weak prosecution, he "performed brilliantly."[46] Ferling surmises that Adams was encouraged to take the case in exchange for political office; one of Boston's seats opened three months later in the Massachusetts legislature, and Adams was the town's choice to fill the vacancy.[47]

The prosperity of his law practice increased from this exposure, as did the demands on his time. In 1771, Adams moved his family to Braintree, Massachusetts, but kept his office in Boston; he noted "Now my family is away, I feel no Inclination at all, no Temptation, to be any where but at my Office." After some time in the capital, he became disenchanted with the rural and "vulgar" Braintree as a home for his family – in August 1772, he moved them back to Boston. He purchased a large brick house on Queen Street, not far from his office.[48] In 1774, Adams and Abigail returned the family to the farm due to the increasingly unstable situation in Boston, and Braintree remained their permanent Massachusetts home.[49]

American Revolution

Adams, who had been among the more conservative of the Founding Fathers, persistently held that while British actions against the colonies had been wrong, open insurrection was unwarranted and peaceful petition with the view of remaining part of Great Britain was preferable.[50] His ideas began to change around 1772, as the British Crown assumed payment of the salaries of Governor Thomas Hutchinson and his judges instead of the Massachusetts legislature. Adams wrote in the Gazette that these measures would destroy judicial independence and place the colonial government in closer subjugation to the Crown. After discontent among members of the legislature, Hutchinson delivered a speech warning that Parliament's powers over the colonies were absolute and that any resistance was illegal. John Adams, Samuel, and Joseph Hawley drafted a resolution adopted by the House of Representatives threatening independence as an alternative to tyranny. The resolution argued that the colonists had never been under the sovereignty of Parliament: their charter, as well as their allegiance, was exclusive to the King.[51]

The Boston Tea Party, a demonstration against the Tea Act and the British East India Company's tea monopoly over American merchants, took place on December 16, 1773. Protestors demolished 342 chests of tea worth about ten thousand pounds on the British schooner Dartmouth, anchored in Boston harbor. The Dartmouth owners briefly retained Adams as legal counsel regarding their liability for the destroyed shipment. Adams applauded the destruction of the tea, calling it the "grandest Event" in the history of the colonial protest movement,[52] and writing in his diary that it was an "absolutely and indispensably" necessary action.[53]

Continental Congress

Member of Continental Congress

 
John Trumbull's Declaration of Independence depicting the Committee of Five presenting its draft of the Declaration to the Congress in Philadelphia; Adams appears in the center with his hand on his hip.

In 1774, at the instigation of Samuel Adams, the First Continental Congress was convened in response to the Intolerable Acts, a series of deeply unpopular measures intended to punish Massachusetts, centralize authority in Britain, and prevent rebellion in other colonies. Four delegates were chosen by the Massachusetts legislature, including John Adams, who agreed to attend,[54] despite an emotional plea from his friend, Attorney General Jonathan Sewall, not to.[55]

Shortly after he arrived in Philadelphia, Adams was placed on the 23-member Grand Committee tasked with drafting a letter of grievances to King George III. The committee soon split into conservative and radical factions.[56] Although the Massachusetts delegation was largely passive, Adams criticized conservatives such as Joseph Galloway, James Duane, and Peter Oliver who advocated a conciliatory policy towards the British or felt that the colonies had a duty to remain loyal to Britain, although his views at the time aligned with those of conservative John Dickinson. Adams sought the repeal of objectionable policies, but at this stage he continued to see benefits in maintaining the ties with Britain.[57] He renewed his push for the right to a jury trial.[58] He complained of what he considered the pretentiousness of the other delegates, writing to Abigail, "I believe if it was moved and seconded that We should come to a Resolution that Three and two make five We should be entertained with Logick and Rhetorick, Law, History, Politicks and Mathematicks, concerning the Subject for two whole Days, and then We should pass the Resolution unanimously in the Affirmative."[59] Adams ultimately helped engineer a compromise between the conservatives and the radicals.[60] The Congress disbanded in October after sending the petition to the King and showing its displeasure with the Intolerable Acts by endorsing the Suffolk Resolves.[61]

Adams's absence was hard on Abigail, who was left alone to care for the family. She still encouraged her husband in his task, writing: "You cannot be, I know, nor do I wish to see you an inactive Spectator, but if the Sword be drawn I bid adieu to all domestick felicity, and look forward to that Country where there is neither wars nor rumors of War in a firm belief that thro the mercy of its King we shall both rejoice there together."[62]

News of the opening hostilities with the British at the Battles of Lexington and Concord made Adams hope that independence would soon become a reality. Three days after the battle, he rode into a militia camp and, while reflecting positively on the high spirits of the men, was distressed by their poor condition and lack of discipline.[63] A month later, Adams returned to Philadelphia for the Second Continental Congress as the leader of the Massachusetts delegation.[64] He moved cautiously at first, noting that the Congress was divided between Loyalists, those favoring independence, and those hesitant to take any position.[65] He became convinced that Congress was moving in the proper direction – away from Great Britain. Publicly, Adams supported "reconciliation if practicable," but privately agreed with Benjamin Franklin's confidential observation that independence was inevitable.[66]

In June 1775, with a view of promoting union among the colonies against Great Britain, he nominated George Washington of Virginia as commander-in-chief of the army then assembled around Boston.[67] He praised Washington's "skill and experience" as well as his "excellent universal character."[68] Adams opposed various attempts, including the Olive Branch Petition, aimed at finding peace.[69] Invoking the already-long list of British actions against the colonies, he wrote, "In my opinion Powder and Artillery are the most efficacious, Sure, and infallibly conciliatory Measures We can adopt."[70] After his failure to prevent the petition from being enacted, he wrote a private letter derisively referring to Dickinson as a "piddling genius." The letter was intercepted and published in Loyalist newspapers. The well-respected Dickinson refused to greet Adams and he was for a time largely ostracized.[71] Ferling writes, "By the fall of 1775 no one in Congress labored more ardently than Adams to hasten the day when America would be separate from Great Britain."[66] In October 1775, Adams was appointed chief judge of the Massachusetts Superior Court, but he never served, and resigned in February 1777.[67] In response to queries from other delegates, Adams wrote the 1776 pamphlet Thoughts on Government, which laid out an influential framework for republican constitutions.[72]

Independence

 
The Assembly Room at Independence Hall in Philadelphia, where the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence

Throughout the first half of 1776, Adams grew increasingly impatient with what he perceived to be the slow pace of declaring independence.[73] In the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia, he helped push through a plan to outfit armed ships to launch raids on enemy vessels. Later in the year, he drafted the first set of regulations for the provisional navy.[74] Adams drafted the preamble to the Lee Resolution of colleague Richard Henry Lee.[75] He developed a rapport with delegate Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, who had been slower to support independence but by early 1776 agreed that it was necessary.[76] On June 7, 1776, Adams seconded the Lee Resolution, which stated that the colonies were "free and independent states."[77]

Prior to independence being declared, Adams organized a Committee of Five charged with drafting a Declaration of Independence. He chose himself, Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Robert R. Livingston and Roger Sherman.[78] Jefferson thought Adams should write the document, but Adams persuaded the committee to choose Jefferson. Many years later, Adams recorded his reasoning to Jefferson: "Reason first, you are a Virginian, and a Virginian ought to appear at the head of this business. Reason second, I am obnoxious, suspected, and unpopular. You are very much otherwise. Reason third, you can write ten times better than I can."[79] The Committee left no minutes, and the drafting process itself remains uncertain. Accounts written years later by Jefferson and Adams, although frequently cited, are often contradictory.[80] Although the first draft was written primarily by Jefferson, Adams assumed a major role.[81] On July 1, the resolution was debated in Congress. It was expected to pass, but opponents such as Dickinson made a strong effort to oppose it. Jefferson, a poor debater, remained silent while Adams argued for its adoption.[82] Many years later, Jefferson hailed Adams as "the pillar of [the Declaration's] support on the floor of Congress, [its] ablest advocate and defender against the multifarious assaults it encountered."[83] After editing the document further, Congress approved it on July 2. Twelve colonies voted in the affirmative, while New York abstained. Dickinson was absent.[84] On July 3, Adams wrote to Abigail that "yesterday was decided the greatest question which was ever debated in America, and a greater perhaps never was nor will be decided among men." He predicted that "[t]he second day of July, 1776, will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America," and would be celebrated annually.[85]

During the congress, Adams sat on ninety committees, chairing twenty-five, an unmatched workload among the congressmen. As Benjamin Rush reported, he was acknowledged "to be the first man in the House."[86] In June 1776, Adams became head of the Board of War and Ordnance, charged with recording the officers in the army and their ranks, the disposition of troops throughout the colonies, and ammunition.[87] He was referred to as a "one man war department," working up to eighteen-hour days and mastering the details of raising, equipping and fielding an army under civilian control.[88] Adams functioned as a de facto Secretary of War. He kept extensive correspondences with Continental Army officers concerning supplies, munitions, and tactics. Adams emphasized to them the role of discipline in keeping an army orderly.[89] He authored the "Plan of Treaties," laying out Congress's requirements for a treaty with France.[88] He was worn out by the rigor of his duties and longed to return home. His finances were unsteady, and the money that he received as a delegate failed to cover his expenses. However, the crisis caused by the defeat of the American soldiers kept him at his post.[90]

After defeating the Continental Army at the Battle of Long Island on August 27, 1776, British Admiral Richard Howe determined that a strategic advantage was at hand, and requested that Congress send representatives to negotiate peace. A delegation consisting of Adams, Franklin, and Edward Rutledge met with Howe at the Staten Island Peace Conference on September 11.[91][92] Howe's authority was premised on the states' submission, so the parties found no common ground. When Lord Howe stated he could view the American delegates only as British subjects, Adams replied, "Your lordship may consider me in what light you please, ... except that of a British subject."[93] Adams learned many years later that his name was on a list of people specifically excluded from Howe's pardon-granting authority.[94] Adams was unimpressed with Howe and predicted American success.[95] He was able to return home to Braintree in October before leaving in January 1777 to resume his duties in Congress.[96]

Diplomatic service

Commissioner to France

Adams advocated in Congress that independence was necessary to establish trade, and conversely, trade was essential for the attainment of independence; he specifically urged negotiation of a commercial treaty with France. He was appointed, along with Franklin, Dickinson, Benjamin Harrison from Virginia, Robert Morris from Pennsylvania, "to prepare a plan of treaties to be proposed to foreign powers." While Jefferson was writing the Declaration of Independence, Adams worked on the Model Treaty, which authorized a commercial agreement with France but contained no provisions for formal recognition or military assistance. The treaty adhered to the provision that "free ships make free goods," allowing neutral nations to trade reciprocally while exempting an agreed-upon list of contraband. By late 1777, America's finances were in tatters, and that September a British army had defeated General Washington and captured Philadelphia. More Americans came to determine that mere commercial ties between the U.S. and France would not be enough, and that military assistance would be needed. The defeat of the British at Saratoga was expected to help induce France to agree to an alliance.[97]

In November 1777, Adams learned that he was to be named commissioner to France, replacing Silas Deane and joining Franklin and Arthur Lee in Paris to negotiate an alliance with the hesitant French. James Lovell invoked Adams's "inflexible integrity" and the need to have a youthful man who could counterbalance Franklin's age. On November 27, Adams accepted, wasting no time. Abigail was left in Massachusetts to manage their home, but it was agreed that 10-year-old John Quincy would go with Adams, for the experience was "of inestimable value" to his maturation.[98] On February 17, 1778, Adams set sail aboard the frigate Boston, commanded by Captain Samuel Tucker.[99] The trip was stormy and treacherous. The ship was pursued by British vessels, with Adams personally taking up arms to help capture one. A cannon malfunction wounded several sailors and killed one. On April 1, the Boston arrived in France, where Adams learned that France had agreed to an alliance with the United States on February 6.[100] Adams was annoyed by the other two commissioners: Lee, whom he thought paranoid and cynical, and the popular and influential Franklin, whom he found lethargic and overly deferential to the French.[101] He assumed a less visible role but helped manage the delegation's finances and record-keeping.[102] Frustrated by the perceived lack of commitment on the part of the French, Adams wrote a letter to French foreign minister Vergennes in December, arguing for French naval support in North America. Franklin toned down the letter, but Vergennes ignored it.[103] In September 1778, Congress increased Franklin's powers by naming him minister plenipotentiary to France while Lee was sent to Spain. Adams received no instructions. Frustrated by the apparent slight, he departed France with John Quincy on March 8, 1779.[104] On August 2, they arrived in Braintree.[105]

 
Adams frequently clashed with Benjamin Franklin over how to manage relations with France.

In late 1779, Adams was appointed as the sole minister charged with negotiations to establish a commercial treaty with Britain and end the war.[106] Following the Massachusetts constitutional convention, he departed for France in November,[107] accompanied by his sons John Quincy and 9-year-old Charles.[108] A leak forced the ship to land in Ferrol, Spain, and Adams and his party spent six weeks travelling overland to Paris.[109] Constant disagreement between Lee and Franklin eventually resulted in Adams assuming the role of tie-breaker in almost all votes on commission business. He increased his usefulness by mastering French. Lee was eventually recalled. Adams closely supervised his sons' education while writing to Abigail about once every ten days.[110]

In contrast to Franklin, Adams viewed the Franco-American alliance pessimistically. The French, he believed, were involved for their own self-interest, and he grew frustrated by what he saw as their sluggishness in providing substantial aid. The French, Adams wrote, meant to keep their hands "above our chin to prevent us from drowning, but not to lift our heads out of water."[111] In March 1780, Congress, trying to curb inflation, voted to devalue the dollar. Vergennes summoned Adams for a meeting. In a letter sent in June, he insisted that fluctuation of the dollar value without an exception for French merchants was unacceptable and requested that Adams write to Congress asking it to "retrace its steps." Adams bluntly defended the decision, not only claiming that the French merchants were doing better than Vergennes implied but voicing other grievances he had with the French. The alliance had been made over two years before. During that period, an army under the comte de Rochambeau had been sent to assist Washington, but it had yet to do anything of significance and America was expecting French warships. These were needed, Adams wrote, to contain the British armies in the port cities and contend with the powerful British Navy. However, the French Navy had been sent not to the United States but to the West Indies to protect French interests there. France, Adams believed, needed to commit itself more fully to the alliance. Vergennes responded that he would deal only with Franklin, who sent a letter back to Congress critical of Adams.[112] Adams then left France of his own accord.[113]

Ambassador to the Dutch Republic

In mid-1780, Adams traveled to the Dutch Republic. One of the few other republics at the time, Adams thought it might be sympathetic to the American cause. Securing a Dutch loan could increase American independence from France and pressure Britain into peace. At first, Adams had no official status, but in July he was formally given permission to negotiate for a loan and took up residence in Amsterdam in August. Adams was originally optimistic and greatly enjoyed the city, but soon became disappointed. The Dutch, fearing British retaliation, refused to meet Adams. Before he had arrived, the British found out about secret aid the Dutch had sent to the Americans and authorized reprisals against their ships, which only increased their apprehension. Word had also reached Europe of American battlefield defeats. After five months of not meeting with a single Dutch official, Adams in early 1781 pronounced Amsterdam "the capital of the reign of Mammon."[114] He was finally invited to present his credentials as ambassador to the Dutch government at The Hague on April 19, 1781, but they did not promise any assistance. In the meantime, Adams thwarted an attempt by neutral European powers to mediate the war without consulting the United States.[115] In July, Adams consented to the departure of both of his sons; John Quincy went with Adams's secretary Francis Dana to Saint Petersburg as a French interpreter, in an effort to seek recognition from Russia, and a homesick Charles returned home with Adams's friend Benjamin Waterhouse.[116] In August, shortly after being removed from his position of sole head of peace treaty negotiations, Adams had "a major nervous breakdown."[117] That November, he learned that American and French troops had decisively defeated the British at Yorktown. The victory was in large part due to the assistance of the French Navy, which vindicated Adams's stand for increased naval assistance.[118]

News of the American triumph at Yorktown convulsed Europe. In January 1782, after recovering, Adams arrived at The Hague to demand that the States General answer his petitions. His efforts stalled, and he took his cause to the people, successfully capitalizing on popular pro-American sentiment. Several provinces began recognizing American independence. On April 19, the States General formally recognized American independence and acknowledged Adams as ambassador.[119] On June 11, with the aid of the Dutch Patriotten leader Joan van der Capellen tot den Pol, Adams negotiated a loan of five million guilders. In October, he negotiated a treaty of amity and commerce.[120] The house that Adams bought during this stay in the Netherlands became the first American embassy on foreign soil.[121]

Treaty of Paris

 
Treaty of Paris, a 1783 portrait by Benjamin West with Adams in front

After negotiating the loan with the Dutch, Adams was re-appointed as the American commissioner to negotiate the war-ending treaty, the Treaty of Paris. Vergennes and France's minister to the United States, Anne-César de La Luzerne, disapproved of Adams, so Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Jay, and Henry Laurens were appointed to collaborate with Adams, although Jefferson did not initially go to Europe and Laurens was posted to the Dutch Republic following his imprisonment in the Tower of London.[122]

In the final negotiations, securing fishing rights off Newfoundland and Cape Breton Island proved both very important and very difficult. In response to very strict restrictions proposed by the British, Adams insisted that not only should American fishermen be allowed to travel as close to shore as desired, but that they should be allowed to cure their fish on the shores of Newfoundland.[123] This, and other statements, prompted Vergennes to secretly inform the British that France did not feel compelled to "sustain [these] pretentious ambitions." Overruling Franklin and distrustful of Vergennes, Jay and Adams decided not to consult with France, instead dealing directly with the British.[124] During these negotiations, Adams mentioned to the British that his proposed fishing terms were more generous than those offered by France in 1778 and that accepting would foster goodwill between Britain and the United States while putting pressure on France. Britain agreed, and the two sides worked out other provisions afterward. Vergennes was angered when he learned from Franklin of the American duplicity, but did not demand renegotiation. He was surprised at how much the Americans could extract. The independent negotiations allowed the French to plead innocence to their Spanish allies, whose demands for Gibraltar might have caused significant problems.[125] On September 3, 1783, the treaty was signed and American independence was recognized.[126]

Ambassador to Great Britain

Adams was appointed the first American ambassador to Great Britain in 1785.[127] After arriving in London from Paris, Adams had his first audience with King George III on June 1, which he meticulously recorded in a letter to Foreign Minister Jay the next day. The pair's exchange was respectful; Adams promised to do all that he could to restore friendship and cordiality "between People who, tho Seperated [sic] by an Ocean and under different Governments have the Same Language, a Similar Religion and kindred Blood," and the King agreed to "receive with Pleasure, the Assurances of the friendly Dispositions of the United States." The King added that although "he had been the last to consent" to American independence, he had always done what he thought was right. He startled Adams by commenting that "There is an Opinion, among Some People, that you are not the most attached of all Your Countrymen, to the manners of France." Adams replied, "That Opinion sir, is not mistaken... I have no Attachments but to my own Country." King George responded, "An honest Man will never have any other."[128]

 
Adams – 1785, a portrait by Mather Brown

Adams was joined by Abigail in London. Suffering the hostility of the King's courtiers, they escaped when they could by seeking out Richard Price, minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church and instigator of the debate over the Revolution within Britain.[129] Adams corresponded with his sons John Quincy and Charles, both of whom were at Harvard, cautioning the former against the "smell of the midnight lamp" while admonishing the latter to devote sufficient time to study.[130] Jefferson visited Adams in 1786 while serving as Minister to France; the two toured the countryside and saw many historical sites.[131] While in London, Adams met his old friend Jonathan Sewall, but the two discovered that they had grown too far apart to renew their friendship. Adams considered Sewall one of the war's casualties, and Sewall critiqued him as an ambassador:

His abilities are undoubtedly equal to the mechanical parts of his business as ambassador, but this is not enough. He cannot dance, drink, game, flatter, promise, dress, swear with the gentlemen, and small talk and flirt with the ladies; in short, he has none of those essential arts or ornaments which constitute a courtier. There are thousands who, with a tenth of his understanding and without a spark of his honesty, would distance him infinitely in any court in Europe.[132]

While in London Adams wrote his three-volume A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America, a response to those he had met in Europe who criticized the government systems of the American states.[133]

Adams's tenure in Britain was complicated by both countries failing to follow their treaty obligations. The American states had been delinquent in paying debts owed to British merchants, and in response, the British refused to vacate forts in the northwest as promised. Adams's attempts to resolve this dispute failed, and he was often frustrated by a lack of news of progress from home.[134] The news he received of tumult at home, such as Shays' Rebellion, heightened his anxiety. He asked Jay to be relieved;[135] in 1788, he took his leave of George III, who promised to uphold his end of the treaty once America did the same.[136] Adams then went to The Hague to take formal leave of his ambassadorship there and to secure refinancing from the Dutch, allowing the United States to meet obligations on earlier loans.[137]

Vice presidency (1789–1797)

Election

On June 17, 1788, Adams returned to a triumphant welcome in Massachusetts. He returned to farming life in the months after. The nation's first presidential election was soon to take place. Because George Washington was widely expected to win the presidency, many felt that the vice presidency should go to a northerner. Although he made no public comments on the matter, Adams was the primary contender.[138] Each state's presidential electors gathered on February 4, 1789, to cast their two votes for the president. The person with the most votes would be president and the second would become vice president.[139] Adams received 34 electoral college votes in the election, second behind Washington, who was a unanimous choice with 69 votes. As a result, Washington became the nation's first president, and Adams became its first vice president. Adams finished well ahead of all others except Washington, but was still offended by Washington receiving more than twice as many votes.[140] In an effort to ensure that Adams did not accidentally become president and that Washington would have an overwhelming victory, Alexander Hamilton convinced at least 7 of the 69 electors not to cast their vote for Adams. After finding out about the manipulation but not Hamilton's role in it, Adams wrote to Benjamin Rush that his election was "a curse rather than a blessing,"[140][141]

Although his term started on March 4, 1789, Adams did not begin serving as Vice President until April 21, because he did not arrive in New York in time.[142][143]

Tenure

 
A 1793 portrait of Adams by John Trumbull

The sole constitutionally prescribed responsibility of the vice president is to preside over the U.S. Senate, where they were empowered to cast a tie-breaking vote.[144] Early in his term, Adams became deeply involved in a lengthy Senate controversy over the official titles for the president and executive officers of the new government. Although the House agreed that the president should be addressed simply as "George Washington, President of the United States", the Senate debated the issue at some length. Adams favored the style of Highness (as well as the title of Protector of Their [the United States'] Liberties) for the president.[145] Some senators favored a variant of Highness or the lesser Excellency.[146] Anti-federalists in the Senate objected to the monarchical sound of them all; Jefferson described them as "superlatively ridiculous."[147] They argued that these "distinctions," as Adams called them, violated the Constitution's prohibition on titles of nobility. Adams said that the distinctions were necessary because the highest office of the United States must be marked with "dignity and splendor". He was widely derided for his combative nature and stubbornness, especially as he actively debated and lectured the senators. "For forty minutes he harangued us from the chair," wrote Senator William Maclay of Pennsylvania. Maclay became Adams's fiercest opponent and repeatedly expressed personal contempt for him in public and private. He likened Adams to "a monkey just put into breeches."[148] Ralph Izard suggested that Adams be referred to as "His Rotundity," a joke which soon became popular.[149] On May 14, 1789, the Senate decided that the title of "Mr. President" would be used.[150] Privately, Adams conceded that his vice presidency had begun poorly and that perhaps he had been out of the country too long to know the sentiment of the people. Washington quietly expressed his displeasure with the fuss.[151]

 
Portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart, 1795. Washington rarely consulted Vice President Adams, who often felt marginalized and overshadowed by Washington's prestige.

As vice president, Adams largely sided with the Washington administration and the emerging Federalist Party. He supported Washington's policies against opposition from anti-Federalist Republicans.[152] He cast 29 tie-breaking votes, and is one of only three vice presidents who have cast more than 20 during their tenure.[153] He voted against a bill sponsored by Maclay that would have required Senate consent for the removal of executive branch officials who had been confirmed by the Senate.[154] In 1790, Jefferson, James Madison, and Hamilton struck a bargain guaranteeing Republican support for Hamilton's debt assumption plan in exchange for the capital being temporarily moved from New York to Philadelphia, and then to a permanent site on the Potomac River to placate Southerners. In the Senate, Adams cast a tie-breaking vote against a last-minute motion to keep the capital in New York.[155]

Adams played a minor role in politics as vice president. He attended few cabinet meetings, and the President sought his counsel infrequently.[144] While Adams brought energy and dedication to the office,[156] by mid-1789 he had already found it "not quite adapted to my character ... too inactive, and mechanical."[157] He wrote, "My country has in its wisdom contrived for me the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived."[158] Adams's initial behavior in the Senate made him a target for critics of the Washington administration. Toward the end of his first term, he grew accustomed to a marginal role, and rarely intervened in debate.[159] Adams never questioned Washington's courage or patriotism, but Washington did join Franklin and others as the object of Adams's ire or envy. "The History of our Revolution will be one continued lie," Adams declared. "The essence of the whole will be that Dr. Franklin's electrical Rod smote the Earth and out sprung General Washington. That Franklin electrified him with his Rod – and henceforth these two conducted all the Policy, Negotiations, Legislatures and War."[160] Adams won reelection with little difficulty in 1792 with 77 votes. His strongest challenger, George Clinton, had 50.[161]

On July 14, 1789, the French Revolution began. Republicans were jubilant. Adams at first expressed cautious optimism, but soon began denouncing the revolutionaries as barbarous and tyrannical.[162] Washington eventually consulted Adams more often, but not until near the end of his administration, by which point distinguished cabinet members Hamilton and Jefferson had resigned.[163] The British had been raiding American trading vessels, and John Jay was sent to London to negotiate an end to hostilities. When he returned in 1795 with a peace treaty on terms unfavorable to the United States, Adams urged Washington to sign it to prevent war. Washington did so, igniting protests and riots. He was accused of surrendering American honor to a tyrannical monarchy and of turning his back on the French Republic.[164] John Adams predicted in a letter to Abigail that ratification would deeply divide the nation.[165]

Election of 1796

 
1796 presidential election results in which Adams narrowly defeated Thomas Jefferson

The 1796 election was the first contested American presidential election.[166] Twice, George Washington had been elected to office unanimously but, during his presidency, deep philosophical differences between the two leading figures in the administration – Hamilton and Jefferson – had caused a rift, leading to the founding of the Federalist and Republican parties.[167] When Washington announced that he would not stand for a third term, an intense partisan struggle for control of Congress and the presidency began.[168]

As in the previous two presidential elections, no candidates were put forward for voters to choose between in 1796. The Constitution provided for the selection of electors who would then choose a president.[169] In seven states voters chose the presidential electors. In the remaining nine states, they were chosen by the state's legislature.[170] The clear Republican favorite was Jefferson.[171] Adams was the Federalist frontrunner.[169] The Republicans held a congressional nominating caucus and named Jefferson and Aaron Burr as their presidential choices.[172] Jefferson at first declined the nomination, but he agreed to run a few weeks later. Federalist members of Congress held an informal nominating caucus and named Adams and Thomas Pinckney as their candidates.[171][173] The campaign was mostly confined to newspaper attacks, pamphlets, and political rallies;[169] of the four contenders, only Burr actively campaigned. The practice of not campaigning for office would persist for decades.[170] Adams stated that he wanted to stay out of the "silly and wicked game" of electioneering.[174]

As the campaign progressed, fears grew among Hamilton and his supporters that Adams was too vain, opinionated, unpredictable and stubborn to follow their directions.[175] Indeed, Adams did not consider himself a strong member of the Federalist Party. He had remarked that Hamilton's economic program, centered around banks, would "swindle" the poor and unleash the "gangrene of avarice."[176] Desiring "a more pliant president than Adams," Hamilton maneuvered to tip the election to Pinckney. He coerced South Carolina Federalist electors, pledged to vote for "favorite son" Pinckney, to scatter their second votes among candidates other than Adams. Hamilton's scheme was undone when several New England state electors heard of it and agreed not to vote for Pinckney.[177] Adams wrote shortly after the election that Hamilton was a "proud Spirited, conceited, aspiring Mortal always pretending to Morality, with as debauched Morals as old Franklin who is more his Model than any one I know."[178] Throughout his life, Adams made highly critical statements about Hamilton. He made derogatory references to his womanizing, real or alleged, and slurred him as the "Creole bastard."[179]

Adams won the presidency by a narrow margin, receiving 71 electoral votes to 68 for Jefferson, who became the vice president; Pinckney finished third with 59 votes, and Burr came fourth with 30. The balance of the votes were dispersed among nine other candidates.[180] This is the only election to date in which a president and vice president were elected from opposing tickets.[181]

Presidency (1797–1801)

Inauguration

 
President's House in Philadelphia, which was then the national capital; Adams occupied this Philadelphia mansion from March 1797 to May 1800.

Adams was sworn into office as the nation's second president on March 4, 1797. He followed Washington's lead in using the presidency to exemplify republican values and civic virtue, and his service was free of scandal.[182] Adams spent much of his term at his Massachusetts home Peacefield, preferring the quietness of domestic life to business at the capital. He ignored the political patronage and office-seeking which other officeholders utilized.[183]

Historians debate the wisdom of his decision to retain Washington's cabinet given its loyalty to Hamilton. The "Hamiltonians who surround him," Jefferson remarked, "are only a little less hostile to him than to me."[184] Although aware of Hamilton's influence, Adams was convinced that their retention ensured a smoother succession.[185] Adams maintained the economic programs of Hamilton, who regularly consulted with key cabinet members, especially the powerful Treasury Secretary, Oliver Wolcott Jr.[186] Adams was in other respects quite independent of his cabinet, often making decisions despite opposition from it.[187] Hamilton had grown accustomed to being regularly consulted by Washington. Shortly after Adams was inaugurated, Hamilton sent him a detailed letter with policy suggestions. Adams dismissively ignored it.[188]

Failed peace commission and XYZ affair

 
A 1798 political cartoon's depiction of the XYZ Affair with America as a female being plundered by Frenchmen

Historian Joseph Ellis writes that "[t]he Adams presidency was destined to be dominated by a single question of American policy to an extent seldom if ever encountered by any succeeding occupant of the office." That question was whether to make war with France or find peace.[189] Britain and France were at war as a result of the French Revolution. Hamilton and the Federalists strongly favored the British monarchy against what they denounced as the political radicalism and anti-religious frenzy of the French Revolution. Jefferson and the Republicans, with their firm opposition to monarchy, strongly supported the French overthrowing their king.[190] The French had supported Jefferson for president in 1796 and became belligerent at his loss.[191] Adams continued Washington's policy of staying out of the war. Because of the Jay Treaty, the French saw America as Britain's junior partner and began seizing American merchant ships that were trading with the British. Most Americans were still pro-French due to France's assistance during the Revolution, the perceived humiliation of the Jay Treaty, and their desire to support a republic against the British monarchy, and would not tolerate war with France.[192]

On May 16, 1797, Adams gave a speech to the House and Senate in which he called for increasing defense capabilities in case of war with France.[193] He announced that he would send a peace commission to France but simultaneously called for a military buildup to counter any potential French threat. The speech was well received by the Federalists. Adams was depicted as an eagle holding an olive branch in one talon and the "emblems of defense" in the other. The Republicans were outraged, for Adams not only had failed to express support for the cause of the French Republic but appeared to be calling for war against it.[194]

Sentiments changed with the XYZ Affair. The peace commission that Adams appointed consisted of John Marshall, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Elbridge Gerry.[195] Jefferson met four times with Joseph Letombe, the French consul in Philadelphia. Letombe wrote to Paris stating that Jefferson had told him that it was in France's best interest to treat the American ministers civilly but "then drag out the negotiations at length" to arrive at most favorable solution. According to Letombe, Jefferson called Adams "vain, suspicious, and stubborn."[196] When the envoys arrived in October, they were kept waiting for several days, and then granted only a 15-minute meeting with French Foreign Minister Talleyrand. The diplomats were then met by three of Talleyrand's agents (later code-named, X, Y, and Z), who refused to conduct negotiations unless the United States paid enormous bribes to France and to Talleyrand personally.[195] Supposedly this was to make up for offenses given to France by Adams in his speech.[197] The Americans refused to negotiate on such terms.[198] Marshall and Pinckney returned home, while Gerry remained.[199]

News of the disastrous peace mission arrived in a memorandum from Marshall on March 4, 1798. Adams, not wanting to incite violent impulses among the populace, announced that the mission had failed without providing details.[200] He also sent a message to Congress asking for a renewal of the nation's defenses. The Republicans frustrated the President's defense measures. Suspecting that he might be hiding material favorable to France, Republicans in the House, with the support of Federalists who had heard rumors of what was contained in the messages, voted overwhelmingly to demand that Adams release the papers. Once they were released, the Republicans, according to Abigail, were "struck dumb."[201] Benjamin Franklin Bache, editor of the Philadelphia Aurora, blamed Adams's aggression for the disaster. Among the general public, the affair substantially weakened popular American support of France. Adams reached the height of his popularity as many in the country called for full-scale war against the French.[202]

Alien and Sedition Acts

 
Thomas Jefferson, Adams's vice president, attempted to undermine many of his actions as president and eventually defeated him for reelection in the 1800 presidential election.

Despite the XYZ Affair, Republican opposition persisted. Federalists accused the French and their immigrants of provoking civil unrest. In an attempt to quell the outcry, the Federalists introduced, and the Congress passed, a series of laws collectively referred to as the Alien and Sedition Acts.[203] Passage of the Naturalization Act, the Alien Friends Act, the Alien Enemies Act and the Sedition Act all came within a period of two weeks, in what Jefferson called an "unguarded passion." The first three acts targeted immigrants, specifically French, by giving the president greater deportation authority and increasing citizenship requirements. The Sedition Act made it a crime to publish "false, scandalous, and malicious writing" against the government or its officials.[204] Adams had not promoted any of these acts, but signed them in June 1798 at the urging of his wife and cabinet.[205]

The administration initiated fourteen or more indictments under the Sedition Act, as well as suits against five of the six most prominent Republican newspapers. The majority of the legal actions began in 1798 and 1799, and went to trial on the eve of the 1800 presidential election.[206] Vocal opponents of the Federalists were imprisoned or fined under the Sedition Act for criticizing the government.[207] Among them was Congressman Matthew Lyon of Vermont, who was sentenced to four months in jail for criticizing the President.[208] The alien acts were not stringently enforced because Adams resisted Secretary of State Timothy Pickering's attempts to deport aliens, although many left on their own, largely in response to the hostile environment.[206] Republicans were outraged. Jefferson, disgusted by the acts, wrote nothing publicly but partnered with Madison to secretly draft the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. Jefferson wrote for Kentucky that states had the "natural right" to nullify any acts they deemed unconstitutional. Writing to Madison, he speculated that as a last resort the states might have to "sever ourselves from the union we so much value."[209] Federalists reacted bitterly to the resolutions, which were to have far more lasting implications for the country than the Alien and Sedition Acts. Still, the acts energized and unified the Republican Party while doing little to unite the Federalists.[210]

Quasi-War

In May 1798, a French privateer captured a merchant vessel off of New York Harbor. An increase in attacks on sea marked the beginning of the undeclared naval war known as the Quasi-War.[211] Adams knew that America would be unable to win a major conflict, both because of its internal divisions and because France at the time was dominating the fight in most of Europe. He pursued a strategy whereby America harassed French ships in an effort sufficient to stem the French assaults on American interests.[212] In May, shortly after the attack in New York, Congress created a separate Navy Department. The prospect of a French invasion led for calls to build up the army. Hamilton and other "High Federalists" were particularly adamant that a large army be called up, in spite of a common fear, particularly among Republicans, that large standing armies were subversive to liberty. In May, a provisional army of 10,000 soldiers was authorized by Congress. In July, Congress created twelve infantry regiments and provided for six cavalry companies, exceeding Adams's requests but falling short of Hamilton's.[213]

Federalists pressured Adams to appoint Hamilton, who had served as Washington's aide-de-camp during the Revolution, to command the army.[214] Distrustful of Hamilton and fearing a plot to subvert his administration, Adams chose Washington without consulting him. As a condition of his acceptance, Washington demanded that he be permitted to appoint his own subordinates. He wished to have Henry Knox as second-in-command, followed by Hamilton, and then Charles Pinckney.[215] On June 2, Hamilton wrote to Washington stating that he would not serve unless he was made Inspector General and second-in-command.[216] Washington conceded that Hamilton, despite holding a rank lower than Knox and Pinckney, had, by serving on his staff, more opportunity to comprehend the whole military scene, and should therefore outrank them. Adams sent Secretary of War James McHenry to Mount Vernon to convince Washington to accept the post. McHenry put forth his opinion that Washington would not serve unless permitted to choose his own officers.[217] Adams had intended to appoint Republicans Burr and Frederick Muhlenberg to make the army appear bipartisan. Washington's list consisted entirely of Federalists.[218] Adams relented and agreed to submit to the Senate the names of Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox, in that order, although final decisions of rank would be reserved to Adams.[217] Knox refused to serve under these conditions. Adams intended to give to Hamilton the lowest possible rank, while Washington and many other Federalists insisted that the order in which the names had been submitted to the Senate must determine seniority. On September 21, Adams received a letter from McHenry relaying a statement from Washington threatening to resign if Hamilton were not made second-in-command.[219] Fearing Federalist backlash, Adams capitulated, despite bitter resentment.[220] The illness of Abigail, whom Adams feared was near death, exacerbated his suffering.[219]

 
Alexander Hamilton's desire for high military rank and his push for war with France put him into conflict with Adams.

It quickly became apparent that due to Washington's advanced age, Hamilton was the army's de facto commander. He exerted effective control over the War Department, taking over supplies for the army.[221] Meanwhile, Adams built up the Navy, adding six fast, powerful frigates, most notably the USS Constitution.[222]

The Quasi-War continued, but there was a decline in war fever beginning in the fall once news arrived of the French defeat at the Battle of the Nile, which many Americans hoped would make them more disposed to negotiate.[223] In October, Adams heard from Gerry in Paris that the French wanted to make peace and would properly receive an American delegation. That December in his address to Congress, Adams relayed these statements while expressing the need to maintain adequate defenses. The speech angered both Federalists, including Hamilton, many of whom had wanted a request for a declaration of war, and Republicans.[224] Hamilton secretly promoted a plan, already rejected by Adams, in which American and British troops would jointly seize Spanish Florida and Louisiana, ostensibly to deter a possible French invasion. Hamilton's critics, including Abigail, saw in his military buildups the signs of an aspiring military dictator.[225]

On February 18, 1799, Adams nominated diplomat William Vans Murray for a peace mission to France without consulting either his cabinet or Abigail, who nonetheless upon hearing of it described it as a "master stroke." To placate Republicans, he nominated Patrick Henry and Ellsworth to accompany Murray, and the Senate immediately approved them on March 3. Henry declined the nomination and Adams chose William Richardson Davie to replace him.[226] Hamilton strongly criticized the decision, as did Adams's cabinet members, who maintained frequent communication with him. Adams again questioned their loyalty but did not remove them.[187] To the annoyance of many, Adams spent March to September 1799 in Peacefield. He returned to Trenton, where the government had set up temporary quarters due to the yellow fever epidemic, after a letter arrived from Talleyrand confirming that American ministers would be received. Adams then decided to send the commissioners to France.[227] Adams arrived in Trenton on October 10.[228] Shortly after, Hamilton, in a breach of military protocol, arrived uninvited at the city to speak with the President, urging him not to send the peace commissioners but instead to ally with Britain to restore the Bourbons. "I heard him with perfect good humor, though never in my life did I hear a man talk more like a fool," Adams said. On November 15, the commissioners set sail for Paris.[229]

Fries's Rebellion

To pay for the military buildup of the Quasi-War, Adams and his Federalist allies enacted the Direct Tax of 1798. Direct taxation by the federal government was widely unpopular, and the government's revenue under Washington had mostly come from excise taxes and tariffs. Though Washington had maintained a balanced budget with the help of a growing economy, increased military expenditures threatened to cause major budget deficits, and the Federalists developed a taxation plan to meet the need for increased government revenue. The Direct Tax of 1798 instituted a progressive land value tax of up to 1% of a property's value. Taxpayers in eastern Pennsylvania resisted federal tax collectors, and in March 1799 the bloodless Fries's Rebellion broke out. Led by Revolutionary War veteran John Fries, rural German-speaking farmers protested what they saw as a threat to their liberties. They intimidated tax collectors, who often found themselves unable to go about their business.[230] The disturbance was quickly ended with Hamilton leading the army to restore peace.[231]

Fries and two other leaders were arrested, found guilty of treason, and sentenced to hang. They appealed to Adams requesting a pardon. The cabinet unanimously advised Adams to refuse, but he instead granted the pardon, arguing the men had instigated a mere riot as opposed to a rebellion.[232] In his pamphlet attacking Adams before the election, Hamilton wrote that "it was impossible to commit a greater error."[233]

Federalist divisions and peace

 
An engraved portrait of Adams as president by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing

On May 5, 1800, Adams's frustrations with the Hamilton wing of the party exploded during a meeting with McHenry, a Hamilton loyalist who was universally regarded, even by Hamilton, as an inept Secretary of War. Adams accused him of subservience to Hamilton and declared that he would rather serve as Jefferson's vice president or minister at The Hague than be beholden to Hamilton for the presidency. McHenry offered to resign at once, and Adams accepted. On May 10, he asked Pickering to resign. Pickering refused and was summarily dismissed. Adams named John Marshall as Secretary of State and Samuel Dexter as Secretary of War.[234][235] In 1799, Napoleon took over as head of the French government in the Coup of 18 Brumaire and declared the French Revolution over.[236] News of this event increased Adams's desire to disband the provisional army, which, with Washington now dead, was commanded only by Hamilton.[237] His moves to end the army after the departures of McHenry and Pickering were met with little opposition.[238] Federalists joined with Republicans in voting to disband the army in mid-1800.[237]

Napoleon, determining that further conflict was pointless, signaled his readiness for friendly relations. By the Convention of 1800, the two sides agreed to return any captured ships and to allow for the peaceful transfer of non-military goods to an enemy of the nation. On January 23, 1801, the Senate voted 16–14 in favor of the treaty, four votes short of the necessary two thirds. Some Federalists, including Hamilton, urged that the Senate vote in favor of the treaty with reservations. A new proposal was then drawn up demanding that the Treaty of Alliance of 1778 be superseded and that France pay for its damages to American property. On February 3, the treaty with the reservations passed 22–9 and was signed by Adams.[239][c] News of the peace treaty did not arrive in the United States until after the election, too late to sway the results.[241]

As president, Adams proudly avoided war, but deeply split his party in the process. Historian Ron Chernow writes that "the threat of Jacobinism" was the one thing that united the Federalist Party, and that Adams's elimination of it unwittingly contributed to the party's demise.[242]

Establishing government institutions and move to Washington

Adams's leadership on naval defense has sometimes led him to be called the "father of the American Navy."[243][244] In July 1798, he signed into law An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen, which authorized the establishment of a government-operated marine hospital service.[245] In 1800, he signed the law establishing the Library of Congress.[246]

Adams made his first official visit to the nation's new seat of government in early June 1800. Amid the "raw and unfinished" cityscape, the President found the public buildings "in a much greater forwardness of completion than expected."[247] He moved into the nearly completed President's Mansion (later known as the White House) on November 1. Abigail arrived a few weeks later. On arrival, Adams wrote to her, "Before I end my letter, I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this House and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise Men ever rule under this roof."[248] The Senate of the 7th Congress met for the first time in the new Congress House (later known as the Capitol building) on November 17, 1800. On November 22, Adams delivered his fourth State of the Union Address to a joint session of Congress.[249] This would be the last annual message any president would personally deliver to Congress for the next 113 years.[250]

Election of 1800

 
The 1800 United States presidential election results in which Adams was defeated by Thomas Jefferson

With the Federalist Party deeply split over his negotiations with France, and the opposition Republican Party enraged over the Alien and Sedition Acts and the expansion of the military, Adams faced a daunting reelection campaign in 1800.[170] The Federalist congressmen caucused in the spring of 1800 and nominated Adams and Pinckney. The Republicans nominated Jefferson and Burr, their candidates in the previous election.[251]

The campaign was bitter and characterized by malicious insults by partisan presses on both sides. Federalists claimed that the Republicans were the enemies of "all who love order, peace, virtue, and religion." They were said to be libertines and dangerous radicals who favored states' rights over the Union and would instigate anarchy and civil war. Jefferson's rumored affairs with slaves were used against him. Republicans accused Federalists of subverting republican principles through punitive federal laws and of favoring Britain and the other coalition countries in their war with France to promote aristocratic, anti-republican values. Jefferson was portrayed as an apostle of liberty and man of the people, while Adams was labelled a monarchist. He was accused of insanity and marital infidelity.[252] James T. Callender, a Republican propagandist secretly financed by Jefferson, degraded Adams's character and accused him of attempting to make war with France. Callender was arrested and jailed under the Sedition Act, which further inflamed Republican passions.[253]

Opposition from the Federalist Party was at times equally intense. Some, including Pickering, accused Adams of colluding with Jefferson so that he would end up either president or vice president.[254] Hamilton was hard at work, attempting to sabotage the President's reelection. Planning an indictment of Adams's character, he requested and received private documents from both the ousted cabinet secretaries and Wolcott.[255] The letter was intended for only a few Federalist electors. Upon seeing a draft, several Federalists urged Hamilton not to send it. Wolcott wrote that "the poor old man" could do himself in without Hamilton's assistance. Hamilton did not heed their advice.[256] On October 24, he sent a pamphlet strongly attacking Adams's policies and character. Hamilton denounced the "precipitate nomination" of Murray, the pardoning of Fries, and the firing of Pickering. He vilified the President's "disgusting egotism" and "ungovernable temper." Adams, he concluded, was "emotionally unstable, given to impulsive and irrational decisions, unable to coexist with his closest advisers, and generally unfit to be president."[233] Strangely, it ended by saying that the electors should support Adams and Pinckney equally.[257] Thanks to Burr, who had covertly obtained a copy, the pamphlet became public knowledge and was distributed throughout the country by Republicans.[258] The pamphlet ended Hamilton's political career and helped ensure Adams's already-likely defeat.[257]

When the electoral votes were counted, Adams finished third with 65 votes, and Pinckney came in fourth with 64 votes. Jefferson and Burr tied for first with 73 votes each. Because of the tie, the election devolved upon the House of Representatives, with each state having one vote and a supermajority required for victory. On February 17, 1801 – on the 36th ballot – Jefferson was elected by a vote of 10 to 4 (two states abstained).[170][180] Hamilton's scheme, although it made the Federalists appear divided and therefore helped Jefferson win, failed in its overall attempt to woo Federalist electors away from Adams.[259][d]

To compound the agony of his defeat, Adams's son Charles, a long-time alcoholic, died on November 30. Anxious to rejoin Abigail, who had already left for Massachusetts, Adams departed the White House in the predawn hours of March 4, 1801, and did not attend Jefferson's inauguration.[262][263] Including him, only five out-going presidents (having served a full term) have not attended their successors' inaugurations.[264] The complications of the 1796 and 1800 elections prompted Congress and the states to refine the process whereby the Electoral College elects a president and a vice president through the 12th Amendment, which became a part of the Constitution in 1804.[265]

Cabinet

Judicial appointments

 
John Marshall, the fourth Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, was one of Adams's few dependable allies.
Supreme Court appointments by President Adams
PositionNameTerm
Chief JusticeJohn Marshall1801–1835
Associate JusticeBushrod Washington1799–1829
Alfred Moore1800–1804

Adams appointed two U.S. Supreme Court associate justices during his term in office: Bushrod Washington, the nephew of George Washington, and Alfred Moore.[266] After Ellsworth's retirement due to ill health in 1800, it fell to Adams to appoint the Court's fourth Chief Justice. At the time, it was not yet certain whether Jefferson or Burr would win the election. Regardless, Adams believed that the choice should be someone "in the full vigor of middle age" who could counter what might be a long line of successive Republican presidents. Adams chose his Secretary of State John Marshall.[267] He, along with Stoddert, was one of Adams's few trusted cabinet members, and was among the first to greet him when he arrived at the White House.[257] Adams signed his commission on January 31 and the Senate approved it immediately.[268] Marshall's long tenure left a lasting influence on the Court. He maintained a carefully reasoned nationalistic interpretation of the Constitution and established the judicial branch as the equal of the executive and legislative branches.[269]

After the Federalists lost control of both houses of Congress along with the White House in the election of 1800, the lame-duck session of the 6th Congress in February 1801 approved a judiciary act, commonly known as the Midnight Judges Act, which created a set of federal appeals courts between the district courts and the Supreme Court. Adams filled the vacancies created in this statute by appointing a series of judges, whom his opponents called the "Midnight Judges", just days before his term expired. Most of these judges lost their posts when the 7th Congress, with a solid Republican majority, approved the Judiciary Act of 1802, abolishing the newly created courts.[270]

Post-presidency (1801–1826)

Initial years

Adams resumed farming at Peacefield in Quincy, Massachusetts, and also began work on an autobiography. The work had numerous gaps and was eventually abandoned and left unedited.[271] Most of Adams's attention was focused on farm work,[272] although he mostly left manual labor to hired hands.[273] His frugal lifestyle and presidential salary gave him a considerable fortune by 1801. In 1803, Bird, Savage & Bird, the bank holding his cash reserves of about $13,000, collapsed.[274] John Quincy resolved the crisis by buying his properties in Weymouth and Quincy, including Peacefield, for $12,800.[272] During his first four years of retirement, Adams made little effort to contact others, but eventually resumed contact with old acquaintances such as Benjamin Waterhouse and Benjamin Rush.[275]

Adams generally stayed quiet on public matters. He did not publicly denounce Jefferson's actions as president, believing that "instead of opposing Systematically any Administration, running down their Characters and opposing all their Measures right or wrong, We ought to Support every Administration as far as We can in Justice."[276][277] When a disgruntled James Callender, angry at not being appointed to an office, turned on the President by revealing the Sally Hemings affair, Adams said nothing.[278] John Quincy was elected to the Senate in 1803. Shortly thereafter, both he and his father crossed party lines to support Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase.[279] The only major political incident involving the elder Adams during the Jefferson years was a dispute with Mercy Otis Warren in 1806. Warren, an old friend, had written a history of the American Revolution attacking Adams for his "partiality for monarchy" and "pride of talents and much ambition." A tempestuous correspondence ensued between her and Adams. In time, their friendship healed.[280] Adams did privately criticize the President over his Embargo Act,[277] although John Quincy voted for it.[281] John Quincy resigned from the Senate in 1808 after the Federalist-controlled Massachusetts Senate refused to nominate him for a second term. After the Federalists denounced John Quincy as no longer being of their party, Adams wrote to him that he himself had long since "abdicated and disclaimed the name and character and attributes of that sect."[4]

After Jefferson's retirement in 1809, Adams became more vocal. He published a three-year marathon of letters in the Boston Patriot newspaper, refuting line-by-line Hamilton's 1800 pamphlet. The initial piece was written shortly after his return from Peacefield and "had gathered dust for eight years." Adams had decided to shelve it over fears that it could negatively impact John Quincy should he ever seek office. Although Hamilton had died in 1804 in a duel with Aaron Burr, Adams felt the need to vindicate his character against his charges. With his son having broken from the Federalist Party and joined the Republicans, he felt that he could safely do so without threatening John Quincy's political career.[282] Adams supported the War of 1812. Having worried over the rise of sectionalism, he celebrated the growth of a "national character" that accompanied it.[283] Adams supported James Madison for reelection to the presidency in 1812.[284]

Adams's daughter Abigail ("Nabby") was married to William Stephens Smith, but she returned to her parents' home after the failure of the marriage; she died of breast cancer in 1813.[285]

Correspondence with Jefferson

 
John Adams, a c. 1816 portrait by Samuel Morse now on display at the Brooklyn Museum of Art

In early 1801, Adams sent Thomas Jefferson a brief note wishing him a happy and prosperous presidency. Jefferson failed to respond, and they did not speak again for nearly 12 years. In 1804, Abigail, unbeknownst to her husband, wrote to Jefferson to express her condolences upon the death of his daughter Polly, who had stayed with the Adamses in London in 1787. This initiated a brief correspondence between the two which quickly descended into political rancor. Jefferson terminated it by not replying to Abigail's fourth letter. Aside from that, by 1812 there had been no communication between Monticello, the home of Jefferson, and Peacefield since Adams left office.[286]

In early 1812, Adams reconciled with Jefferson. The previous year had been tragic for Adams; his brother-in-law and friend Richard Cranch had died along with his widow Mary, and Nabby had been diagnosed with breast cancer. These events mellowed Adams and caused him to soften his outlook.[282] Their mutual friend Benjamin Rush, who had been corresponding with both, encouraged them to reach out to each other. On New Year's Day, Adams sent a brief, friendly note to Jefferson to accompany a two-volume collection of lectures on rhetoric by John Quincy Adams. Jefferson replied immediately with a cordial letter, and the two revived their friendship, which they sustained by mail. Their correspondence lasted the rest of their lives, and has been hailed as among their great legacies of American literature. Their letters represent an insight into both the period and the minds of the two revolutionary leaders and presidents. The missives lasted fourteen years, and consisted of 158 letters – 109 from Adams and 49 from Jefferson.[287]

Early on, Adams repeatedly tried to turn the correspondence to a discussion of their actions in the political arena.[288] Jefferson refused to oblige him, saying that "nothing new can be added by you or me to what has been said by others and will be said in every age."[289] Adams made one more attempt, writing that "You and I ought not to die before we have explained ourselves to each other."[290] Still, Jefferson declined to engage Adams in this sort of discussion. Adams accepted this, and the correspondence turned to other matters, particularly philosophy and their daily habits.[291][e]

As the two grew older, the letters grew fewer and farther between. There was also important information that each man kept to himself. Jefferson said nothing about his construction of a new house, domestic turmoil, slave ownership, or poor financial situation, while Adams did not mention the troublesome behavior of his son Thomas, who had failed as a lawyer and become an alcoholic, resorting afterwards to living primarily as a caretaker at Peacefield.[294]

Last years and death

 
Peacefield, John Adams's home in Quincy, Massachusetts
 
The tombs of John and Abigail Adams (far) and John Quincy and Louisa Adams (near), in the family crypt at United First Parish Church

Abigail died of typhoid on October 28, 1818, at Peacefield.[295] 1824 was filled with excitement in America, featuring a four-way presidential contest that included John Quincy. The Marquis de Lafayette toured the country and met with Adams, who greatly enjoyed Lafayette's visit to Peacefield.[296] Adams was delighted by the election of John Quincy to the presidency. The results became official in February 1825 after a deadlock was decided in the House of Representatives. He remarked, "No man who ever held the office of President would congratulate a friend on obtaining it."[297]

On July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, Adams died of a heart attack at Peacefield at approximately 6:20 pm.[298][299] His last words included an acknowledgement of his longtime friend and rival: "Thomas Jefferson survives." Adams was unaware that Jefferson had died several hours before.[300][301] At 90, Adams was the longest-lived US president until Ronald Reagan surpassed him in 2001.[302]

John and Abigail Adams's crypt at United First Parish Church in Quincy also contains the bodies of John Quincy and Louisa Adams.[303]

Political writings

Thoughts on Government

 
Thoughts on Government, a pamphlet written by Adams in 1776

During the First Continental Congress, Adams was sometimes solicited for his views on government. While recognizing its importance, Adams had privately criticized Thomas Paine's 1776 pamphlet Common Sense, which attacked all forms of monarchy, even constitutional monarchy of the sort advocated by John Locke. It supported a unicameral legislature and a weak executive elected by the legislature. According to Adams, the author had "a better hand at pulling down than building."[304] He believed that the views expressed in the pamphlet were "so democratical, without any restraint or even an attempt at any equilibrium or counter poise, that it must produce confusion and every evil work."[305] What Paine advocated was a radical democracy, incompatible with the system of checks and balances that conservatives like Adams would implement.[306] At the urging of some delegates, Adams committed his views to paper in separate letters. So impressed was Richard Henry Lee that, with Adams's consent, he had the most comprehensive letter printed. Published anonymously in April 1776, it was titled Thoughts on Government and styled as "a Letter from a Gentleman to his Friend." Many historians agree that none of Adams's other compositions rivaled the enduring influence of this pamphlet.[72]

Adams advised that the form of government should be chosen to attain the desired ends – the happiness and virtue of the greatest number of people. He wrote, "There is no good government but what is republican. That the only valuable part of the British constitution is so because the very definition of a republic is an empire of laws, and not of men." The treatise defended bicameralism, for "a single assembly is liable to all the vices, follies and frailties of an individual."[307] Adams suggested that there should be a separation of powers between the executive, the judicial and the legislative branches, and further recommended that if a continental government were to be formed then it "should sacredly be confined" to certain enumerated powers. Thoughts on Government was referenced in every state-constitution writing hall. Adams used the letter to attack opponents of independence. He claimed that John Dickinson's fear of republicanism was responsible for his refusal to support independence, and that opposition from Southern planters was rooted in fear that their aristocratic slaveholding status would be endangered.[72]

Massachusetts Constitution

After returning from his first mission to France in 1779, Adams was elected to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention with the purpose of establishing a new constitution for Massachusetts. He served on a committee of three, also including Samuel Adams and James Bowdoin, to draft the constitution. The writing fell primarily to John Adams. The resulting Constitution of Massachusetts was approved in 1780. It was the first constitution written by a special committee, then ratified by the people, and was the first to feature a bicameral legislature. Included were a distinct executive – though restrained by an executive council – with a qualified (two-thirds) veto, and an independent judicial branch. The judges were given lifetime appointments, to "hold their offices during good behavior."[308]

The Constitution affirmed the "duty" of the individual to worship the "Supreme Being," and the right to do so without molestation "in the manner most agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience."[309] It established free public education for three years to the children of all citizens.[310] Adams was a strong believer in education as a pillar of the Enlightenment. He believed that people "in a State of Ignorance" were more easily enslaved while those "enlightened with knowledge" would be better able to protect their liberties.[311]

Defence of the Constitutions

Adams's preoccupation with political and governmental affairs, which caused considerable separation from his wife and children, had a distinct familial context, which he articulated in 1780: "I must study Politicks and War that my sons may have the liberty to study Mathematicks and Philosophy. My sons ought to study Geography, natural History, Naval Architecture, navigation, Commerce and Agriculture, in order to give their children a right to study Painting, Poetry, Musick, Architecture, Statuary, Tapestry, and Porcelaine."[312]

While in London, Adams learned of a convention being planned to amend the Articles of Confederation. In January 1787, he published a work entitled A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States.[313] The pamphlet repudiated the views of Turgot and other European writers as to the viciousness of state government frameworks. He suggested that "the rich, the well-born and the able" should be set apart from other men in a senate – that would prevent them from dominating the lower house. Adams's Defence is described as an articulation of the theory of mixed government. Adams contended that social classes exist in every political society, and that a good government must accept that reality. For centuries, a mixed regime balancing monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy was required to preserve order and liberty.[314]

Historian Gordon S. Wood maintained that Adams's political philosophy had become irrelevant by the time the Federal Constitution was ratified. By then, American political thought, transformed by more than a decade of vigorous debate as well as formative experiential pressures, had abandoned the classical perception of politics as a mirror of social estates. Americans' new understanding of popular sovereignty was that the citizenry were the sole possessors of power in the nation. Representatives in the government enjoyed mere portions of the people's power and only for a limited time. Adams was thought to have overlooked this evolution and revealed his continued attachment to the older version of politics.[315] Yet Wood was accused of ignoring Adams's peculiar definition of the term "republic," and his support for a constitution ratified by the people.[316]

On separation of powers, Adams wrote that, "Power must be opposed to power, and interest to interest."[317] This sentiment was later echoed by James Madison's statement that, "[a]mbition must be made to counteract ambition," in Federalist No. 51, explaining the separation of powers established under the new Constitution.[317][318] Adams believed that humans naturally wanted to further their own ambitions, and a single democratically elected house, if left unchecked, would be subject to this error; it needed to be checked by an upper house and an executive. He wrote that a strong executive would defend the people's liberties against "aristocrats" attempting to take it away.[319]

Adams first saw the new United States Constitution in late 1787. To Jefferson, he wrote that he read it "with great satisfaction." Adams expressed regret that the president would be unable to make appointments without Senate approval and over the absence of a Bill of Rights.[320]

Political philosophy and views

Slavery

Adams never owned a slave and declined on principle to use slave labor, saying,

I have, through my whole life, held the practice of slavery in such abhorrence, that I have never owned a negro or any other slave, though I have lived for many years in times, when the practice was not disgraceful, when the best men in my vicinity thought it not inconsistent with their character, and when it has cost me thousands of dollars for the labor and subsistence of free men, which I might have saved by the purchase of negroes at times when they were very cheap.[321]

Before the war, he occasionally represented slaves in suits for their freedom.[322] Adams generally tried to keep the issue out of national politics, because of the anticipated Southern response during a time when unity was needed to achieve independence. He spoke out in 1777 against a bill to emancipate slaves in Massachusetts, saying that the issue was presently too divisive so the legislation should "sleep for a time." He was against use of black soldiers in the Revolution due to opposition from Southerners.[323] Slavery was abolished in Massachusetts about 1780, when it was forbidden by implication in the Declaration of Rights that John Adams wrote into the Massachusetts Constitution.[324] Abigail Adams vocally opposed slavery.[325]

Accusations of monarchism

 
John Adams, an 1823 portrait by Gilbert Stuart completed at the request of his son, John Quincy, was the last portrait of Adams.[326]

Adams expressed controversial and shifting views regarding the virtues of monarchical and hereditary political institutions.[327] At times he conveyed substantial support for these approaches, suggesting for example that "hereditary monarchy or aristocracy" are the "only institutions that can possibly preserve the laws and liberties of the people."[328] At other times he distanced himself from such ideas, calling himself "a mortal and irreconcilable enemy to Monarchy".[147] Such denials did not assuage his critics, and Adams was often accused of being a monarchist.[329] Historian Clinton Rossiter portrays Adams not as a monarchist but a revolutionary conservative who sought to balance republicanism with the stability of monarchy to create "ordered liberty."[330] His 1790 Discourses on Davila published in the Gazette of the United States warned once again of the dangers of unbridled democracy.[331]

Many attacks on Adams were scurrilous, including suggestions that he was planning to "crown himself king" and "grooming John Quincy as heir to the throne."[329] The allegations were totally false, he told Jefferson—he never wanted an American monarchy.[332] Adams felt that the great danger was that an oligarchy of the wealthy would take hold to the detriment of equality. To counter that danger, the power of the wealthy needed to be channeled by institutions, and checked by a strong executive.[333][319]

Religious views

Adams was raised in the Congregational church. In Quincy, the Unitarian faction was dominant and included Adams and his father. It was a new force in the colonies and denied the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus Christ. It was opposed by the Calvinist faction that was Trinitarian and emphasized Christ as the Savior. In 1825, the Unitarians split off as a separate denomination that included John Adams.[334][335]

Adams always felt pressured to live up to his heritage. His family was descended from Puritans. Strict Puritanism had profoundly shaped New England's culture, laws, and traditions. By the time of his birth, no one called themselves "Puritans" and all of the old severe practices were gone. Adams did praise the historical Puritans as "bearers of freedom, a cause that still had a holy urgency".[336] Adams recalled that his parents "held every Species of Libertinage in ... Contempt and horror", and detailed "pictures of disgrace, or baseness and of Ruin" resulting from any debauchery.[6]

According to biographer David McCullough, "Adams was both a devout Christian, and an independent thinker, and he saw no conflict in that."[337] He believed that regular church service was beneficial to man's moral sense.[338] Fielding argues that Adams's beliefs synthesized Puritan, deist, and humanist concepts. Adams at one point said that Christianity had originally been revelatory, but was being misinterpreted in the service of superstition, fraud, and unscrupulous power.[339]

Frazer notes that while he shared many perspectives with deists and often used deistic terminology, "Adams clearly was not a deist. Deism rejected any and all supernatural activity and intervention by God; consequently, deists did not believe in miracles or God's providence. ... Adams did believe in miracles, providence, and, to a certain extent, the Bible as revelation."[340] In 1796, Adams denounced Thomas Paine's deistic criticisms of Christianity in The Age of Reason, saying, "The Christian religion is, above all the religions that ever prevailed or existed in ancient or modern times, the religion of wisdom, virtue, equity and humanity, let the Blackguard Paine say what he will."[341]

Gordon S. Wood writes, "Although both Jefferson and Adams denied the miracles of the Bible and the divinity of Christ, Adams always retained a respect for the religiosity of people that Jefferson never had".[342] In his retirement years, Adams moved closer to more mainstream Enlightenment religious ideals. He blamed institutional Christianity and established churches in Britain and France for causing much suffering but insisted that religion was necessary for society.[343]

Legacy

Historical reputation

Benjamin Franklin summed up what many thought of Adams, saying "He means well for his country, is always an honest man, often a wise one, but sometimes, and in some things, absolutely out of his senses."[344] Adams strongly felt that he would be forgotten and underappreciated by history. These feelings often manifested themselves through envy and verbal attacks on other Founders.[160][345] Edmund Morgan argues, "Adams was ridiculously vain, absurdly jealous, embarrassingly hungry for compliments. But no man ever served his country more selflessly."[346]

Historian George C. Herring argued that Adams was the most independent-minded of the Founders.[347] Though he formally aligned with the Federalists, he was somewhat a party unto himself, at times disagreeing with the Federalists as much as he did the Republicans.[348] He was often described as prickly, but his tenacity was fed by decisions made in the face of universal opposition.[347] Adams was often combative, as he admitted: "[As President] I refused to suffer in silence. I sighed, sobbed, and groaned, and sometimes screeched and screamed. And I must confess to my shame and sorrow that I sometimes swore."[349] Stubbornness was seen as one of his defining traits, a fact for which Adams made no apology. "Thanks to God that he gave me stubbornness when I know I am right," he wrote.[350] His resolve to advance peace with France while maintaining a posture of defense reduced his popularity and contributed to his defeat for reelection.[351] Most historians applaud him for avoiding an all-out war with France during his presidency. His signing of the Alien and Sedition Acts is almost always condemned.[352]

According to Ferling, Adams's political philosophy fell "out of step" with national trends. The country tended further away from Adams's emphasis on order and the rule of law and towards the Jeffersonian vision of liberty and weak central government. In the years following his retirement, as first Jeffersonianism and then Jacksonian democracy grew to dominate American politics, Adams was largely forgotten.[353] In the 1840 presidential election, Whig candidate William Henry Harrison was attacked by Democrats on the false allegation that he had been a supporter of John Adams.[354] Adams was eventually subject to criticism from states' rights advocates. Edward A. Pollard, a strong supporter of the Confederacy during the American Civil War, singled out Adams, writing:

The first President from the North, John Adams, asserted and essayed to put into practice the supremacy of the "National" power over the states and the citizens thereof. He was sustained in his attempted usurpations by all the New England states and by a powerful public sentiment in each of the Middle States. The "strict constructionists" of the Constitution were not slow in raising the standard of opposition against a pernicious error.[355]

In the 21st century, Adams remains less well known than many of the Founders, in accordance with his predictions. McCullough argued that "[t]he problem with Adams is that most Americans know nothing about him." Todd Leopold of CNN wrote in 2001 that Adams is "remembered as that guy who served a single term as president between Washington and Jefferson."[356] He has always been seen, Ferling says, as "honest and dedicated", but despite his lengthy career in public service, is still overshadowed.[357] Gilbert Chinard, in his 1933 biography of Adams, described him as "staunch, honest, stubborn and somewhat narrow."[358] In his 1962 biography, Page Smith lauds Adams for his fight against radicals whose promised reforms portended anarchy and misery. Ferling, in his 1992 biography, writes that "Adams was his own worst enemy."[359] He criticizes him for his "pettiness ... jealousy, and vanity", and faults his frequent separations from his family. He praises Adams for his willingness to acknowledge his deficiencies and for striving to overcome them.[360]

 
John Adams statue in Bilbao

In 2001, McCullough published the biography John Adams, in which he lauds Adams for consistency and honesty, "plays down or explains away" his more controversial actions, and criticizes Jefferson. The book sold very well and was very favorably received and, along with the Ferling biography, contributed to a rapid resurgence in Adams's reputation.[361] In 2008, a miniseries was released based on the McCullough biography, featuring Paul Giamatti as Adams.[362]

In memoriam

Adams is commemorated as the namesake of various counties, buildings, and other items.[246][363][364] One example is the John Adams Building of the Library of Congress, an institution whose existence Adams had signed into law.[246]

Adams is honored on the Memorial to the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence in Washington D.C.[365] He does not have an individual monument dedicated to him in the city,[366] although a family Adams Memorial was authorized in 2001. According to McCullough, "Popular symbolism has not been very generous toward Adams. There is no memorial, no statue ... in his honor in our nation's capital, and to me that is absolutely inexcusable. It's long past time when we should recognize what he did, and who he was."[367]

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Contemporaneous records used the Old Style Julian calendar and the Annunciation Style of enumerating years, recording his birth as February 11, 1731. The British Calendar (New Style) Act 1750 implemented in 1752 altered the official British dating method to the Gregorian calendar with the start of the year on January 1 (it had been March 25). These changes resulted in dates being moved forward 11 days and an advance of one year for those between January 1 and March 25. For a further explanation, see Old Style and New Style dates.[5]
  2. ^ The site of the Adams house is now in Quincy, Massachusetts, which was separated from Braintree and organized as a new town in 1792.
  3. ^ Jefferson, after entering office, approved a negotiated end to the 1778 alliance, freeing the United States of foreign entanglements, while excusing France from paying indemnities.[240]
  4. ^ Ferling attributes Adams's defeat to five factors: the stronger organization of the Republicans; Federalist disunity; the controversy surrounding the Alien and Sedition Acts; the popularity of Jefferson in the South; and the effective politicking of Burr in New York.[260] Adams wrote, "No party that ever existed knew itself so little or so vainly overrated its own influence and popularity as ours. None ever understood so ill the causes of its own power, or so wantonly destroyed them."[261] Stephen G. Kurtz argues that Hamilton and his supporters were primarily responsible for the destruction of the Federalist Party. They viewed the party as a personal tool and played into the hands of the Jeffersonians by building up a large standing army and creating a feud with Adams.[221] Chernow writes that Hamilton believed that by eliminating Adams, he could eventually pick up the pieces of the ruined Federalist Party and lead it back to dominance: "Better to purge Adams and let Jefferson govern for a while than to water down the party's ideological purity with compromises."[259]
  5. ^ The two men discussed "natural aristocracy". Jefferson said, "The natural aristocracy I consider as the most precious gift of nature for the instruction, the trusts, and government of society. And indeed it would have been inconsistent in creation to have formed man for the social state, and not to have provided virtue and wisdom enough to manage the concerns of society. May we not even say that the form of government is best which provides most effectually for a pure selection of these natural [aristocrats] into the offices of government?"[292] Adams wondered if it ever would be so clear who these people were, "Your distinction between natural and artificial aristocracy does not appear to me well founded. Birth and wealth are conferred on some men as imperiously by nature, as genius, strength, or beauty. ... When aristocracies are established by human laws and honour, wealth, and power are made hereditary by municipal laws and political institutions, then I acknowledge artificial aristocracy to commence." It would always be true, Adams argued, that fate would bestow influence on some men for reasons other than wisdom and virtue. A good government had to account for that reality.[293]

References

  1. ^ a b "John Adams (1735–1826)". United States Department of State: Office of the Historian. Retrieved September 30, 2018.
  2. ^ "To John Adams from Daniel Roberdeau, 28 November 1777". Adams Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved May 10, 2020. I congratulate you or rather my Country in the choice of you this day as a Commissioner to France for the united States, in lieu of Mr. Dean who is recalled.
  3. ^ United States. Continental Congress; Ford, Worthington Chauncey; Hunt, Gaillard; Fitzpatrick, John Clement; Hill, Roscoe R.; Harris, Kenneth E.; Tilley, Steven D.; Library of Congress. Manuscript Division (1904). Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789. University of California Libraries. Washington: U.S. Govt. print off. p. 975. Retrieved May 10, 2020. Congress proceeded to the election of a commissioner to the Court of France in the room of S. Deane, Esqr. and, the ballots being taken, John Adams, a delegate in Congress from Massachusetts bay, was elected.
  4. ^ a b McCullough 2001, p. 599.
  5. ^ "The history of the calendar". BBC History. No. January 2014.
  6. ^ a b Ferling 1992, p. 11.
  7. ^ Ferling 1992, p. 317.
  8. ^ a b McCullough 2001, pp. 29–30.
  9. ^ Ferling 1992, pp. 11–14.
  10. ^ Ferling 1992, pp. 12–14.
  11. ^ Kirtley 1910, p. 366.
  12. ^ McCullough 2001, p. 35.
  13. ^ McCullough 2001, p. 13.
  14. ^ a b Ferling 1992, p. 16.
  15. ^ Ferling 1992, pp. 17–18.
  16. ^ Ferling 1992, p. 21.
  17. ^ Ferling 1992, p. 19.
  18. ^ "Obama joins list of seven presidents with Harvard degrees". The Harvard Gazette. November 6, 2008. from the original on August 1, 2016. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
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  27. ^ a b Ferling 1992, p. 57.
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  43. ^ McCullough 2001, pp. 65–66.
  44. ^ Morse 1884, p. 39.
  45. ^ Adams, John (December 1770). Argument in Defense of the Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials. Adams Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
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  • Thompson, C. Bradley (1998). John Adams and the Spirit of Liberty. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0915-4.
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Primary sources

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  • Adams, John (2001). Carey, George Wescott (ed.). The Political Writings of John Adams. Washington, D.C.: Gateway Editions.
  • Adams, John (2004). Diggins, John Patrick (ed.). The Portable John Adams. London, UK: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-243778-0.
  • Adams, John (1954). Peek, George A. Jr. (ed.). The Political Writings of John Adams: Representative Selections. New York, NY: Liberal Arts Press. ISBN 978-0-87220-699-1. OCLC 52727656.
  • Adams, John; Rush, Benjamin (1966). Schutz, John A.; Adair, Douglass (eds.). Spur of Fame, The Dialogues of John Adams and Benjamin Rush, 1805–1813. Santa Marino, CA: Huntington Library. ISBN 978-0-86597-287-2.
  • Adams, John; Tudor, William (1819). Novanglus, and Massachusettensis: Or, Political Essays, Published in the Years 1774 and 1775, on the Principal Points of Controversy, Between Great Britain and Her Colonies. Princeton, NJ: Hews & Gloss. OCLC 33610833.
  • Adams, John (1965). Wroth, L. Kinvin; Zobel, Hiller B. (eds.). The Legal Papers of John Adams. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-52250-3.
  • Butterfield, L. H. et al., eds., The Adams Papers (1961– ). Multivolume letterpress edition of all letters to and from major members of the Adams family, plus their diaries; still incomplete. "The Adams Family Papers Editorial Project". Masshist.org. Retrieved March 2, 2010.
  • Butterfield, L. H., ed. Adams Family Correspondence. Cambridge: Harvard University Press
  • Cappon, Lester J., ed. (1959). The Adams-Jefferson Letters: The Complete Correspondence Between Thomas Jefferson and Abigail and John Adams. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4230-0.
  • Foot, Michael; Kramnick, Isaac, eds. (1987). The Thomas Paine Reader. Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0-14-044496-4.
  • Hogan, Margaret; Taylor, C. James, eds. (2007). My Dearest Friend: Letters of Abigail and John Adams. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Richardson, James Daniel, ed. (1897). A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Vol. 1. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. OCLC 3144460227.
  • Taylor, Robert J. et al., eds. Papers of John Adams. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

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john, adams, this, article, about, second, president, united, states, sixth, president, john, quincy, adams, other, uses, disambiguation, october, 1735, july, 1826, american, statesman, attorney, diplomat, writer, founding, father, served, second, president, u. This article is about the second president of the United States For his son the sixth president see John Quincy Adams For other uses see John Adams disambiguation John Adams October 30 1735 July 4 1826 was an American statesman attorney diplomat writer and Founding Father who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801 Before his presidency he was a leader of the American Revolution that achieved independence from Great Britain During the latter part of the Revolutionary War and in the early years of the new nation he served the U S government as a senior diplomat in Europe Adams was the first person to hold the office of vice president of the United States serving from 1789 to 1797 He was a dedicated diarist and regularly corresponded with important contemporaries including his wife and adviser Abigail Adams and his friend and political rival Thomas Jefferson John AdamsPortrait c 1800 18152nd President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1797 March 4 1801Vice PresidentThomas JeffersonPreceded byGeorge WashingtonSucceeded byThomas Jefferson1st Vice President of the United StatesIn office April 21 1789 March 4 1797PresidentGeorge WashingtonPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byThomas Jefferson1st United States Minister to Great BritainIn office April 1 1785 February 20 1788 1 Appointed byCongress of the ConfederationSucceeded byThomas Pinckney1st United States Minister to the NetherlandsIn office April 19 1782 March 30 1788 1 Appointed byCongress of the ConfederationSucceeded byCharles W F Dumas acting United States Envoy to FranceIn office November 28 1777 2 3 March 8 1779Preceded bySilas DeaneSucceeded byBenjamin FranklinChairman of the Marine CommitteeIn office October 13 1775 October 28 1779Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byFrancis Lewis Continental Board of Admiralty 12th Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court of JudicatureIn office October 1775 February 1777Appointed byProvincial CongressPreceded byPeter OliverSucceeded byWilliam CushingDelegate from Massachusetts to the Continental CongressIn office September 5 1774 November 28 1777Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded bySamuel HoltenPersonal detailsBornOctober 30 1735 O S October 19 1735 Braintree Massachusetts Bay British America now Quincy DiedJuly 4 1826 1826 07 04 aged 90 Quincy Massachusetts U S Resting placeUnited First Parish ChurchPolitical partyPro Administration before 1795 Federalist 1795 c 1808 Democratic Republican from c 1808 4 SpouseAbigail Smith m 1764 died 1818 wbr Children6 including Abigail John Quincy Charles and ThomasParentsJohn Adams Sr Susanna BoylstonEducationHarvard College AB AM OccupationPoliticianlawyerSignatureA lawyer and political activist prior to the Revolution Adams was devoted to the right to counsel and presumption of innocence He defied anti British sentiment and successfully defended British soldiers against murder charges arising from the Boston Massacre Adams was a Massachusetts delegate to the Continental Congress and became a leader of the revolution He assisted Jefferson in drafting the Declaration of Independence in 1776 and was its primary advocate in Congress As a diplomat he helped negotiate a peace treaty with Great Britain and secured vital governmental loans Adams was the primary author of the Massachusetts Constitution in 1780 which influenced the United States Constitution as did his essay Thoughts on Government Adams was elected to two terms as vice president under President George Washington and was elected as the United States second president in 1796 He was the only president elected under the banner of the Federalist Party During his term Adams encountered fierce criticism from the Jeffersonian Republicans and from some in his own party led by his rival Alexander Hamilton Adams signed the controversial Alien and Sedition Acts and built up the Army and Navy in the undeclared naval war with France He became the first president to reside in the White House In his bid in 1800 for reelection to the presidency opposition from Federalists and accusations of despotism from Jeffersonians led to Adams losing to his vice president and former friend Jefferson and he retired to Massachusetts He eventually resumed his friendship with Jefferson by initiating a continuing correspondence He and Abigail generated the Adams political family including their son John Quincy Adams the sixth president John Adams died on July 4 1826 the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence Adams and his son are the only presidents of the first twelve who never owned slaves Historians and scholars have favorably ranked his administration Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 College education and adulthood 1 2 Law practice and marriage 2 Career before the Revolution 2 1 Opponent of Stamp Act 2 2 Counsel for the British Boston Massacre 2 3 American Revolution 3 Continental Congress 3 1 Member of Continental Congress 3 2 Independence 4 Diplomatic service 4 1 Commissioner to France 4 2 Ambassador to the Dutch Republic 4 3 Treaty of Paris 4 4 Ambassador to Great Britain 5 Vice presidency 1789 1797 5 1 Election 5 2 Tenure 5 3 Election of 1796 6 Presidency 1797 1801 6 1 Inauguration 6 2 Failed peace commission and XYZ affair 6 3 Alien and Sedition Acts 6 4 Quasi War 6 5 Fries s Rebellion 6 6 Federalist divisions and peace 6 7 Establishing government institutions and move to Washington 6 8 Election of 1800 6 9 Cabinet 6 10 Judicial appointments 7 Post presidency 1801 1826 7 1 Initial years 7 2 Correspondence with Jefferson 7 3 Last years and death 8 Political writings 8 1 Thoughts on Government 8 2 Massachusetts Constitution 8 3 Defence of the Constitutions 9 Political philosophy and views 9 1 Slavery 9 2 Accusations of monarchism 9 3 Religious views 10 Legacy 10 1 Historical reputation 10 2 In memoriam 11 Explanatory notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Biographies 13 2 Specialized studies 13 3 Primary sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and educationFurther information Adams political family nbsp Adams birthplace in present day Quincy MassachusettsJohn Adams was born on October 30 1735 a to John Adams Sr and Susanna Boylston He had two younger brothers Peter and Elihu 6 Adams was born on the family farm in Braintree Massachusetts 7 b His mother was from a leading medical family of present day Brookline Massachusetts His father was a deacon in the Congregational Church a farmer a cordwainer and a lieutenant in the militia 8 Adams often praised his father and recalled their close relationship 9 Adams s great great grandfather Henry Adams immigrated to Massachusetts from Braintree Essex England around 1638 8 Adams s formal education began at age six at a dame school conducted at a teacher s home and centered on The New England Primer He then attended Braintree Latin School under Joseph Cleverly where studies included Latin rhetoric logic and arithmetic Adams s early education included incidents of truancy a dislike for his master and a desire to become a farmer but his father commanded that he remain in school Deacon Adams hired a new schoolmaster named Joseph Marsh and his son responded positively 10 Adams later noted that As a child I enjoyed perhaps the greatest of blessings that can be bestowed upon men that of a mother who was anxious and capable to form the characters of her children 11 College education and adulthood At age sixteen Adams entered Harvard College in 1751 studying under Joseph Mayhew 12 As an adult Adams was a keen scholar studying the works of ancient writers such as Thucydides Plato Cicero and Tacitus in their original languages 13 Though his father expected him to be a minister 14 after his 1755 graduation with an A B degree he taught school temporarily in Worcester while pondering his permanent vocation In the next four years he began to seek prestige craving Honour or Reputation and more defference from his fellows and was determined to be a great Man He decided to become a lawyer writing his father that he found among lawyers noble and gallant achievements but among the clergy the pretended sanctity of some absolute dunces He had reservations about his self described trumpery and failure to share the happiness of his fellow men 15 When the French and Indian War began in 1754 Adams aged nineteen felt guilty he was the first in his family not to be a militia officer he said I longed more ardently to be a Soldier than I ever did to be a Lawyer 16 Law practice and marriage In 1756 Adams began reading law under James Putnam a leading lawyer in Worcester 17 In 1758 he earned an A M from Harvard 18 and in 1759 was admitted to the bar 19 He developed an early habit of diary writing this included his impressions of James Otis Jr s 1761 challenge to the legality of British writs of assistance allowing the British to search a home without notice or reason Otis s argument inspired Adams to the cause of the American colonies 20 In 1763 Adams explored aspects of political theory in seven essays written for Boston newspapers Under the pen name Humphrey Ploughjogger he ridiculed the selfish thirst for power he perceived among the Massachusetts colonial elite 21 Adams was initially less well known than his older cousin Samuel Adams but his influence emerged from his work as a constitutional lawyer his analysis of history and his dedication to republicanism Adams often found his own irascible nature a constraint in his political career 14 nbsp nbsp A pair of 1766 portraits of John and Abigail Adams by Benjamin Blyth In the late 1750s Adams fell in love with Hannah Quincy he was poised to propose but was interrupted by friends and the moment was lost In 1759 he met 15 year old Abigail Smith his third cousin 22 through his friend Richard Cranch who was courting Abigail s older sister Adams initially was not impressed with Abigail and her two sisters writing that they were not fond nor frank nor candid 23 In time he grew close to Abigail They were married on October 25 1764 despite the opposition of Abigail s mother They shared a love of books and proved honest in their praise and criticism of each other After his father s death in 1761 Adams had inherited a 9 1 2 acre 3 8 ha farm and a house where they lived until 1783 24 25 John and Abigail had six children Abigail known Nabby in 1765 26 John Quincy in 1767 27 Susanna in 1768 Charles in 1770 Thomas in 1772 28 and Elizabeth in 1777 29 Susanna died when she was one year old 28 while Elizabeth was stillborn 29 All three sons became lawyers Charles and Thomas were unsuccessful became alcoholics and died before old age while John Quincy excelled and launched a political career eventually becoming President himself 30 Career before the RevolutionOpponent of Stamp Act Further information Stamp Act Adams rose to prominence leading widespread opposition to the Stamp Act The Act was imposed by the British Parliament without consulting the American legislatures It required payment of a direct tax by the colonies for stamped documents 31 32 and was designed to pay for the costs of Britain s war with France Power of enforcement was given to British vice admiralty courts rather than common law courts 33 32 These Admiralty courts acted without juries and were greatly disliked 31 The Act was despised for both its monetary cost and implementation without colonial consent and encountered violent resistance preventing its enforcement 33 Adams authored the Braintree Instructions in 1765 in a letter sent to the representatives of Braintree in the Massachusetts legislature It explained that the Act should be opposed since it denied two fundamental rights guaranteed to all Englishmen and which all free men deserved to be taxed only by consent and to be tried by a jury of one s peers The instructions were a succinct and forthright defense of colonial rights and liberties and served as a model for other towns 34 Adams also reprised his pen name Humphrey Ploughjogger in opposition to the Stamp Act in August of that year Included were four articles to the Boston Gazette The articles were republished in The London Chronicle in 1768 as True Sentiments of America or A Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law He also spoke in December before the governor and council pronouncing the Stamp Act invalid in the absence of Massachusetts representation at Parliament 35 36 He noted that many protests were sparked by a popular sermon of Boston minister Jonathan Mayhew invoking Romans 13 to justify insurrection 37 While Adams strongly opposed the Act in writing he rebuffed attempts by Samuel Adams a leader in the popular protest movements to involve him in mob actions and public demonstrations 38 In 1766 a town meeting of Braintree elected Adams as a selectman 39 With the repeal of the Stamp Act in early 1766 tensions with Britain temporarily eased 40 Putting politics aside Adams moved his family to Boston in April 1768 to focus on his law practice The family rented a house on Brattle Street that was known locally as the White House He Abigail and the children lived there for a year then moved to Cold Lane later they moved again to a larger house in Brattle Square in the center of the city 27 In 1768 Adams successfully defended the merchant John Hancock who was accused of violating British acts of trade in the Liberty Affair 41 With the death of Jeremiah Gridley and the mental collapse of Otis Adams became Boston s most prominent lawyer 39 Counsel for the British Boston Massacre Further information Boston Massacre nbsp Boston Massacre of 1770 an 1878 portrait by Alonzo Chappel depicting the Boston MassacreBritain s passage of the Townshend Acts in 1767 revived tensions and an increase in mob violence led the British to dispatch more troops to the colonies 42 On March 5 1770 when a lone British sentry was accosted by a mob eight of his fellow soldiers reinforced him and the crowd around them grew to several hundred The soldiers were struck with snowballs ice and stones and in the chaos the soldiers opened fire killing five civilians in the infamous Boston Massacre The accused soldiers were arrested on charges of murder When no other attorneys would come to their defense Adams was impelled to do so despite the risk to his reputation He believed no person should be denied the right to counsel and a fair trial The trials were delayed so that passions could cool 43 The week long trial of the commander Captain Thomas Preston began on October 24 and ended in his acquittal because it was impossible to prove that he had ordered his soldiers to fire 44 The remaining soldiers were tried in December when Adams made his famed argument regarding jury decisions Facts are stubborn things and whatever may be our wishes our inclinations or the dictates of our passion they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence 45 Adams won an acquittal for six of the soldiers Two who had fired directly into the crowd were convicted of manslaughter Adams was paid a small sum by his clients 24 According to biographer John E Ferling during jury selection Adams expertly exercised his right to challenge individual jurors and contrived what amounted to a packed jury Not only were several jurors closely tied through business arrangements to the British army but five ultimately became Loyalist exiles While Adams s defense was helped by a weak prosecution he performed brilliantly 46 Ferling surmises that Adams was encouraged to take the case in exchange for political office one of Boston s seats opened three months later in the Massachusetts legislature and Adams was the town s choice to fill the vacancy 47 The prosperity of his law practice increased from this exposure as did the demands on his time In 1771 Adams moved his family to Braintree Massachusetts but kept his office in Boston he noted Now my family is away I feel no Inclination at all no Temptation to be any where but at my Office After some time in the capital he became disenchanted with the rural and vulgar Braintree as a home for his family in August 1772 he moved them back to Boston He purchased a large brick house on Queen Street not far from his office 48 In 1774 Adams and Abigail returned the family to the farm due to the increasingly unstable situation in Boston and Braintree remained their permanent Massachusetts home 49 American Revolution Adams who had been among the more conservative of the Founding Fathers persistently held that while British actions against the colonies had been wrong open insurrection was unwarranted and peaceful petition with the view of remaining part of Great Britain was preferable 50 His ideas began to change around 1772 as the British Crown assumed payment of the salaries of Governor Thomas Hutchinson and his judges instead of the Massachusetts legislature Adams wrote in the Gazette that these measures would destroy judicial independence and place the colonial government in closer subjugation to the Crown After discontent among members of the legislature Hutchinson delivered a speech warning that Parliament s powers over the colonies were absolute and that any resistance was illegal John Adams Samuel and Joseph Hawley drafted a resolution adopted by the House of Representatives threatening independence as an alternative to tyranny The resolution argued that the colonists had never been under the sovereignty of Parliament their charter as well as their allegiance was exclusive to the King 51 The Boston Tea Party a demonstration against the Tea Act and the British East India Company s tea monopoly over American merchants took place on December 16 1773 Protestors demolished 342 chests of tea worth about ten thousand pounds on the British schooner Dartmouth anchored in Boston harbor The Dartmouth owners briefly retained Adams as legal counsel regarding their liability for the destroyed shipment Adams applauded the destruction of the tea calling it the grandest Event in the history of the colonial protest movement 52 and writing in his diary that it was an absolutely and indispensably necessary action 53 Continental CongressMember of Continental Congress nbsp John Trumbull s Declaration of Independence depicting the Committee of Five presenting its draft of the Declaration to the Congress in Philadelphia Adams appears in the center with his hand on his hip In 1774 at the instigation of Samuel Adams the First Continental Congress was convened in response to the Intolerable Acts a series of deeply unpopular measures intended to punish Massachusetts centralize authority in Britain and prevent rebellion in other colonies Four delegates were chosen by the Massachusetts legislature including John Adams who agreed to attend 54 despite an emotional plea from his friend Attorney General Jonathan Sewall not to 55 Shortly after he arrived in Philadelphia Adams was placed on the 23 member Grand Committee tasked with drafting a letter of grievances to King George III The committee soon split into conservative and radical factions 56 Although the Massachusetts delegation was largely passive Adams criticized conservatives such as Joseph Galloway James Duane and Peter Oliver who advocated a conciliatory policy towards the British or felt that the colonies had a duty to remain loyal to Britain although his views at the time aligned with those of conservative John Dickinson Adams sought the repeal of objectionable policies but at this stage he continued to see benefits in maintaining the ties with Britain 57 He renewed his push for the right to a jury trial 58 He complained of what he considered the pretentiousness of the other delegates writing to Abigail I believe if it was moved and seconded that We should come to a Resolution that Three and two make five We should be entertained with Logick and Rhetorick Law History Politicks and Mathematicks concerning the Subject for two whole Days and then We should pass the Resolution unanimously in the Affirmative 59 Adams ultimately helped engineer a compromise between the conservatives and the radicals 60 The Congress disbanded in October after sending the petition to the King and showing its displeasure with the Intolerable Acts by endorsing the Suffolk Resolves 61 Adams s absence was hard on Abigail who was left alone to care for the family She still encouraged her husband in his task writing You cannot be I know nor do I wish to see you an inactive Spectator but if the Sword be drawn I bid adieu to all domestick felicity and look forward to that Country where there is neither wars nor rumors of War in a firm belief that thro the mercy of its King we shall both rejoice there together 62 News of the opening hostilities with the British at the Battles of Lexington and Concord made Adams hope that independence would soon become a reality Three days after the battle he rode into a militia camp and while reflecting positively on the high spirits of the men was distressed by their poor condition and lack of discipline 63 A month later Adams returned to Philadelphia for the Second Continental Congress as the leader of the Massachusetts delegation 64 He moved cautiously at first noting that the Congress was divided between Loyalists those favoring independence and those hesitant to take any position 65 He became convinced that Congress was moving in the proper direction away from Great Britain Publicly Adams supported reconciliation if practicable but privately agreed with Benjamin Franklin s confidential observation that independence was inevitable 66 In June 1775 with a view of promoting union among the colonies against Great Britain he nominated George Washington of Virginia as commander in chief of the army then assembled around Boston 67 He praised Washington s skill and experience as well as his excellent universal character 68 Adams opposed various attempts including the Olive Branch Petition aimed at finding peace 69 Invoking the already long list of British actions against the colonies he wrote In my opinion Powder and Artillery are the most efficacious Sure and infallibly conciliatory Measures We can adopt 70 After his failure to prevent the petition from being enacted he wrote a private letter derisively referring to Dickinson as a piddling genius The letter was intercepted and published in Loyalist newspapers The well respected Dickinson refused to greet Adams and he was for a time largely ostracized 71 Ferling writes By the fall of 1775 no one in Congress labored more ardently than Adams to hasten the day when America would be separate from Great Britain 66 In October 1775 Adams was appointed chief judge of the Massachusetts Superior Court but he never served and resigned in February 1777 67 In response to queries from other delegates Adams wrote the 1776 pamphlet Thoughts on Government which laid out an influential framework for republican constitutions 72 Independence nbsp The Assembly Room at Independence Hall in Philadelphia where the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of IndependenceThroughout the first half of 1776 Adams grew increasingly impatient with what he perceived to be the slow pace of declaring independence 73 In the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia he helped push through a plan to outfit armed ships to launch raids on enemy vessels Later in the year he drafted the first set of regulations for the provisional navy 74 Adams drafted the preamble to the Lee Resolution of colleague Richard Henry Lee 75 He developed a rapport with delegate Thomas Jefferson of Virginia who had been slower to support independence but by early 1776 agreed that it was necessary 76 On June 7 1776 Adams seconded the Lee Resolution which stated that the colonies were free and independent states 77 Prior to independence being declared Adams organized a Committee of Five charged with drafting a Declaration of Independence He chose himself Jefferson Benjamin Franklin Robert R Livingston and Roger Sherman 78 Jefferson thought Adams should write the document but Adams persuaded the committee to choose Jefferson Many years later Adams recorded his reasoning to Jefferson Reason first you are a Virginian and a Virginian ought to appear at the head of this business Reason second I am obnoxious suspected and unpopular You are very much otherwise Reason third you can write ten times better than I can 79 The Committee left no minutes and the drafting process itself remains uncertain Accounts written years later by Jefferson and Adams although frequently cited are often contradictory 80 Although the first draft was written primarily by Jefferson Adams assumed a major role 81 On July 1 the resolution was debated in Congress It was expected to pass but opponents such as Dickinson made a strong effort to oppose it Jefferson a poor debater remained silent while Adams argued for its adoption 82 Many years later Jefferson hailed Adams as the pillar of the Declaration s support on the floor of Congress its ablest advocate and defender against the multifarious assaults it encountered 83 After editing the document further Congress approved it on July 2 Twelve colonies voted in the affirmative while New York abstained Dickinson was absent 84 On July 3 Adams wrote to Abigail that yesterday was decided the greatest question which was ever debated in America and a greater perhaps never was nor will be decided among men He predicted that t he second day of July 1776 will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America and would be celebrated annually 85 During the congress Adams sat on ninety committees chairing twenty five an unmatched workload among the congressmen As Benjamin Rush reported he was acknowledged to be the first man in the House 86 In June 1776 Adams became head of the Board of War and Ordnance charged with recording the officers in the army and their ranks the disposition of troops throughout the colonies and ammunition 87 He was referred to as a one man war department working up to eighteen hour days and mastering the details of raising equipping and fielding an army under civilian control 88 Adams functioned as a de facto Secretary of War He kept extensive correspondences with Continental Army officers concerning supplies munitions and tactics Adams emphasized to them the role of discipline in keeping an army orderly 89 He authored the Plan of Treaties laying out Congress s requirements for a treaty with France 88 He was worn out by the rigor of his duties and longed to return home His finances were unsteady and the money that he received as a delegate failed to cover his expenses However the crisis caused by the defeat of the American soldiers kept him at his post 90 After defeating the Continental Army at the Battle of Long Island on August 27 1776 British Admiral Richard Howe determined that a strategic advantage was at hand and requested that Congress send representatives to negotiate peace A delegation consisting of Adams Franklin and Edward Rutledge met with Howe at the Staten Island Peace Conference on September 11 91 92 Howe s authority was premised on the states submission so the parties found no common ground When Lord Howe stated he could view the American delegates only as British subjects Adams replied Your lordship may consider me in what light you please except that of a British subject 93 Adams learned many years later that his name was on a list of people specifically excluded from Howe s pardon granting authority 94 Adams was unimpressed with Howe and predicted American success 95 He was able to return home to Braintree in October before leaving in January 1777 to resume his duties in Congress 96 Diplomatic serviceMain article Diplomacy of John Adams Commissioner to France Adams advocated in Congress that independence was necessary to establish trade and conversely trade was essential for the attainment of independence he specifically urged negotiation of a commercial treaty with France He was appointed along with Franklin Dickinson Benjamin Harrison from Virginia Robert Morris from Pennsylvania to prepare a plan of treaties to be proposed to foreign powers While Jefferson was writing the Declaration of Independence Adams worked on the Model Treaty which authorized a commercial agreement with France but contained no provisions for formal recognition or military assistance The treaty adhered to the provision that free ships make free goods allowing neutral nations to trade reciprocally while exempting an agreed upon list of contraband By late 1777 America s finances were in tatters and that September a British army had defeated General Washington and captured Philadelphia More Americans came to determine that mere commercial ties between the U S and France would not be enough and that military assistance would be needed The defeat of the British at Saratoga was expected to help induce France to agree to an alliance 97 In November 1777 Adams learned that he was to be named commissioner to France replacing Silas Deane and joining Franklin and Arthur Lee in Paris to negotiate an alliance with the hesitant French James Lovell invoked Adams s inflexible integrity and the need to have a youthful man who could counterbalance Franklin s age On November 27 Adams accepted wasting no time Abigail was left in Massachusetts to manage their home but it was agreed that 10 year old John Quincy would go with Adams for the experience was of inestimable value to his maturation 98 On February 17 1778 Adams set sail aboard the frigate Boston commanded by Captain Samuel Tucker 99 The trip was stormy and treacherous The ship was pursued by British vessels with Adams personally taking up arms to help capture one A cannon malfunction wounded several sailors and killed one On April 1 the Boston arrived in France where Adams learned that France had agreed to an alliance with the United States on February 6 100 Adams was annoyed by the other two commissioners Lee whom he thought paranoid and cynical and the popular and influential Franklin whom he found lethargic and overly deferential to the French 101 He assumed a less visible role but helped manage the delegation s finances and record keeping 102 Frustrated by the perceived lack of commitment on the part of the French Adams wrote a letter to French foreign minister Vergennes in December arguing for French naval support in North America Franklin toned down the letter but Vergennes ignored it 103 In September 1778 Congress increased Franklin s powers by naming him minister plenipotentiary to France while Lee was sent to Spain Adams received no instructions Frustrated by the apparent slight he departed France with John Quincy on March 8 1779 104 On August 2 they arrived in Braintree 105 nbsp Adams frequently clashed with Benjamin Franklin over how to manage relations with France In late 1779 Adams was appointed as the sole minister charged with negotiations to establish a commercial treaty with Britain and end the war 106 Following the Massachusetts constitutional convention he departed for France in November 107 accompanied by his sons John Quincy and 9 year old Charles 108 A leak forced the ship to land in Ferrol Spain and Adams and his party spent six weeks travelling overland to Paris 109 Constant disagreement between Lee and Franklin eventually resulted in Adams assuming the role of tie breaker in almost all votes on commission business He increased his usefulness by mastering French Lee was eventually recalled Adams closely supervised his sons education while writing to Abigail about once every ten days 110 In contrast to Franklin Adams viewed the Franco American alliance pessimistically The French he believed were involved for their own self interest and he grew frustrated by what he saw as their sluggishness in providing substantial aid The French Adams wrote meant to keep their hands above our chin to prevent us from drowning but not to lift our heads out of water 111 In March 1780 Congress trying to curb inflation voted to devalue the dollar Vergennes summoned Adams for a meeting In a letter sent in June he insisted that fluctuation of the dollar value without an exception for French merchants was unacceptable and requested that Adams write to Congress asking it to retrace its steps Adams bluntly defended the decision not only claiming that the French merchants were doing better than Vergennes implied but voicing other grievances he had with the French The alliance had been made over two years before During that period an army under the comte de Rochambeau had been sent to assist Washington but it had yet to do anything of significance and America was expecting French warships These were needed Adams wrote to contain the British armies in the port cities and contend with the powerful British Navy However the French Navy had been sent not to the United States but to the West Indies to protect French interests there France Adams believed needed to commit itself more fully to the alliance Vergennes responded that he would deal only with Franklin who sent a letter back to Congress critical of Adams 112 Adams then left France of his own accord 113 Ambassador to the Dutch Republic In mid 1780 Adams traveled to the Dutch Republic One of the few other republics at the time Adams thought it might be sympathetic to the American cause Securing a Dutch loan could increase American independence from France and pressure Britain into peace At first Adams had no official status but in July he was formally given permission to negotiate for a loan and took up residence in Amsterdam in August Adams was originally optimistic and greatly enjoyed the city but soon became disappointed The Dutch fearing British retaliation refused to meet Adams Before he had arrived the British found out about secret aid the Dutch had sent to the Americans and authorized reprisals against their ships which only increased their apprehension Word had also reached Europe of American battlefield defeats After five months of not meeting with a single Dutch official Adams in early 1781 pronounced Amsterdam the capital of the reign of Mammon 114 He was finally invited to present his credentials as ambassador to the Dutch government at The Hague on April 19 1781 but they did not promise any assistance In the meantime Adams thwarted an attempt by neutral European powers to mediate the war without consulting the United States 115 In July Adams consented to the departure of both of his sons John Quincy went with Adams s secretary Francis Dana to Saint Petersburg as a French interpreter in an effort to seek recognition from Russia and a homesick Charles returned home with Adams s friend Benjamin Waterhouse 116 In August shortly after being removed from his position of sole head of peace treaty negotiations Adams had a major nervous breakdown 117 That November he learned that American and French troops had decisively defeated the British at Yorktown The victory was in large part due to the assistance of the French Navy which vindicated Adams s stand for increased naval assistance 118 News of the American triumph at Yorktown convulsed Europe In January 1782 after recovering Adams arrived at The Hague to demand that the States General answer his petitions His efforts stalled and he took his cause to the people successfully capitalizing on popular pro American sentiment Several provinces began recognizing American independence On April 19 the States General formally recognized American independence and acknowledged Adams as ambassador 119 On June 11 with the aid of the Dutch Patriotten leader Joan van der Capellen tot den Pol Adams negotiated a loan of five million guilders In October he negotiated a treaty of amity and commerce 120 The house that Adams bought during this stay in the Netherlands became the first American embassy on foreign soil 121 Treaty of Paris nbsp Treaty of Paris a 1783 portrait by Benjamin West with Adams in frontAfter negotiating the loan with the Dutch Adams was re appointed as the American commissioner to negotiate the war ending treaty the Treaty of Paris Vergennes and France s minister to the United States Anne Cesar de La Luzerne disapproved of Adams so Franklin Thomas Jefferson John Jay and Henry Laurens were appointed to collaborate with Adams although Jefferson did not initially go to Europe and Laurens was posted to the Dutch Republic following his imprisonment in the Tower of London 122 In the final negotiations securing fishing rights off Newfoundland and Cape Breton Island proved both very important and very difficult In response to very strict restrictions proposed by the British Adams insisted that not only should American fishermen be allowed to travel as close to shore as desired but that they should be allowed to cure their fish on the shores of Newfoundland 123 This and other statements prompted Vergennes to secretly inform the British that France did not feel compelled to sustain these pretentious ambitions Overruling Franklin and distrustful of Vergennes Jay and Adams decided not to consult with France instead dealing directly with the British 124 During these negotiations Adams mentioned to the British that his proposed fishing terms were more generous than those offered by France in 1778 and that accepting would foster goodwill between Britain and the United States while putting pressure on France Britain agreed and the two sides worked out other provisions afterward Vergennes was angered when he learned from Franklin of the American duplicity but did not demand renegotiation He was surprised at how much the Americans could extract The independent negotiations allowed the French to plead innocence to their Spanish allies whose demands for Gibraltar might have caused significant problems 125 On September 3 1783 the treaty was signed and American independence was recognized 126 Ambassador to Great Britain Adams was appointed the first American ambassador to Great Britain in 1785 127 After arriving in London from Paris Adams had his first audience with King George III on June 1 which he meticulously recorded in a letter to Foreign Minister Jay the next day The pair s exchange was respectful Adams promised to do all that he could to restore friendship and cordiality between People who tho Seperated sic by an Ocean and under different Governments have the Same Language a Similar Religion and kindred Blood and the King agreed to receive with Pleasure the Assurances of the friendly Dispositions of the United States The King added that although he had been the last to consent to American independence he had always done what he thought was right He startled Adams by commenting that There is an Opinion among Some People that you are not the most attached of all Your Countrymen to the manners of France Adams replied That Opinion sir is not mistaken I have no Attachments but to my own Country King George responded An honest Man will never have any other 128 nbsp Adams 1785 a portrait by Mather BrownAdams was joined by Abigail in London Suffering the hostility of the King s courtiers they escaped when they could by seeking out Richard Price minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church and instigator of the debate over the Revolution within Britain 129 Adams corresponded with his sons John Quincy and Charles both of whom were at Harvard cautioning the former against the smell of the midnight lamp while admonishing the latter to devote sufficient time to study 130 Jefferson visited Adams in 1786 while serving as Minister to France the two toured the countryside and saw many historical sites 131 While in London Adams met his old friend Jonathan Sewall but the two discovered that they had grown too far apart to renew their friendship Adams considered Sewall one of the war s casualties and Sewall critiqued him as an ambassador His abilities are undoubtedly equal to the mechanical parts of his business as ambassador but this is not enough He cannot dance drink game flatter promise dress swear with the gentlemen and small talk and flirt with the ladies in short he has none of those essential arts or ornaments which constitute a courtier There are thousands who with a tenth of his understanding and without a spark of his honesty would distance him infinitely in any court in Europe 132 While in London Adams wrote his three volume A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America a response to those he had met in Europe who criticized the government systems of the American states 133 Adams s tenure in Britain was complicated by both countries failing to follow their treaty obligations The American states had been delinquent in paying debts owed to British merchants and in response the British refused to vacate forts in the northwest as promised Adams s attempts to resolve this dispute failed and he was often frustrated by a lack of news of progress from home 134 The news he received of tumult at home such as Shays Rebellion heightened his anxiety He asked Jay to be relieved 135 in 1788 he took his leave of George III who promised to uphold his end of the treaty once America did the same 136 Adams then went to The Hague to take formal leave of his ambassadorship there and to secure refinancing from the Dutch allowing the United States to meet obligations on earlier loans 137 Vice presidency 1789 1797 Election Main article 1788 1789 United States presidential election On June 17 1788 Adams returned to a triumphant welcome in Massachusetts He returned to farming life in the months after The nation s first presidential election was soon to take place Because George Washington was widely expected to win the presidency many felt that the vice presidency should go to a northerner Although he made no public comments on the matter Adams was the primary contender 138 Each state s presidential electors gathered on February 4 1789 to cast their two votes for the president The person with the most votes would be president and the second would become vice president 139 Adams received 34 electoral college votes in the election second behind Washington who was a unanimous choice with 69 votes As a result Washington became the nation s first president and Adams became its first vice president Adams finished well ahead of all others except Washington but was still offended by Washington receiving more than twice as many votes 140 In an effort to ensure that Adams did not accidentally become president and that Washington would have an overwhelming victory Alexander Hamilton convinced at least 7 of the 69 electors not to cast their vote for Adams After finding out about the manipulation but not Hamilton s role in it Adams wrote to Benjamin Rush that his election was a curse rather than a blessing 140 141 Although his term started on March 4 1789 Adams did not begin serving as Vice President until April 21 because he did not arrive in New York in time 142 143 Tenure nbsp A 1793 portrait of Adams by John TrumbullThe sole constitutionally prescribed responsibility of the vice president is to preside over the U S Senate where they were empowered to cast a tie breaking vote 144 Early in his term Adams became deeply involved in a lengthy Senate controversy over the official titles for the president and executive officers of the new government Although the House agreed that the president should be addressed simply as George Washington President of the United States the Senate debated the issue at some length Adams favored the style of Highness as well as the title of Protector of Their the United States Liberties for the president 145 Some senators favored a variant of Highness or the lesser Excellency 146 Anti federalists in the Senate objected to the monarchical sound of them all Jefferson described them as superlatively ridiculous 147 They argued that these distinctions as Adams called them violated the Constitution s prohibition on titles of nobility Adams said that the distinctions were necessary because the highest office of the United States must be marked with dignity and splendor He was widely derided for his combative nature and stubbornness especially as he actively debated and lectured the senators For forty minutes he harangued us from the chair wrote Senator William Maclay of Pennsylvania Maclay became Adams s fiercest opponent and repeatedly expressed personal contempt for him in public and private He likened Adams to a monkey just put into breeches 148 Ralph Izard suggested that Adams be referred to as His Rotundity a joke which soon became popular 149 On May 14 1789 the Senate decided that the title of Mr President would be used 150 Privately Adams conceded that his vice presidency had begun poorly and that perhaps he had been out of the country too long to know the sentiment of the people Washington quietly expressed his displeasure with the fuss 151 nbsp Portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart 1795 Washington rarely consulted Vice President Adams who often felt marginalized and overshadowed by Washington s prestige As vice president Adams largely sided with the Washington administration and the emerging Federalist Party He supported Washington s policies against opposition from anti Federalist Republicans 152 He cast 29 tie breaking votes and is one of only three vice presidents who have cast more than 20 during their tenure 153 He voted against a bill sponsored by Maclay that would have required Senate consent for the removal of executive branch officials who had been confirmed by the Senate 154 In 1790 Jefferson James Madison and Hamilton struck a bargain guaranteeing Republican support for Hamilton s debt assumption plan in exchange for the capital being temporarily moved from New York to Philadelphia and then to a permanent site on the Potomac River to placate Southerners In the Senate Adams cast a tie breaking vote against a last minute motion to keep the capital in New York 155 Adams played a minor role in politics as vice president He attended few cabinet meetings and the President sought his counsel infrequently 144 While Adams brought energy and dedication to the office 156 by mid 1789 he had already found it not quite adapted to my character too inactive and mechanical 157 He wrote My country has in its wisdom contrived for me the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived 158 Adams s initial behavior in the Senate made him a target for critics of the Washington administration Toward the end of his first term he grew accustomed to a marginal role and rarely intervened in debate 159 Adams never questioned Washington s courage or patriotism but Washington did join Franklin and others as the object of Adams s ire or envy The History of our Revolution will be one continued lie Adams declared The essence of the whole will be that Dr Franklin s electrical Rod smote the Earth and out sprung General Washington That Franklin electrified him with his Rod and henceforth these two conducted all the Policy Negotiations Legislatures and War 160 Adams won reelection with little difficulty in 1792 with 77 votes His strongest challenger George Clinton had 50 161 On July 14 1789 the French Revolution began Republicans were jubilant Adams at first expressed cautious optimism but soon began denouncing the revolutionaries as barbarous and tyrannical 162 Washington eventually consulted Adams more often but not until near the end of his administration by which point distinguished cabinet members Hamilton and Jefferson had resigned 163 The British had been raiding American trading vessels and John Jay was sent to London to negotiate an end to hostilities When he returned in 1795 with a peace treaty on terms unfavorable to the United States Adams urged Washington to sign it to prevent war Washington did so igniting protests and riots He was accused of surrendering American honor to a tyrannical monarchy and of turning his back on the French Republic 164 John Adams predicted in a letter to Abigail that ratification would deeply divide the nation 165 Election of 1796 Main article 1796 United States presidential election nbsp 1796 presidential election results in which Adams narrowly defeated Thomas JeffersonThe 1796 election was the first contested American presidential election 166 Twice George Washington had been elected to office unanimously but during his presidency deep philosophical differences between the two leading figures in the administration Hamilton and Jefferson had caused a rift leading to the founding of the Federalist and Republican parties 167 When Washington announced that he would not stand for a third term an intense partisan struggle for control of Congress and the presidency began 168 As in the previous two presidential elections no candidates were put forward for voters to choose between in 1796 The Constitution provided for the selection of electors who would then choose a president 169 In seven states voters chose the presidential electors In the remaining nine states they were chosen by the state s legislature 170 The clear Republican favorite was Jefferson 171 Adams was the Federalist frontrunner 169 The Republicans held a congressional nominating caucus and named Jefferson and Aaron Burr as their presidential choices 172 Jefferson at first declined the nomination but he agreed to run a few weeks later Federalist members of Congress held an informal nominating caucus and named Adams and Thomas Pinckney as their candidates 171 173 The campaign was mostly confined to newspaper attacks pamphlets and political rallies 169 of the four contenders only Burr actively campaigned The practice of not campaigning for office would persist for decades 170 Adams stated that he wanted to stay out of the silly and wicked game of electioneering 174 As the campaign progressed fears grew among Hamilton and his supporters that Adams was too vain opinionated unpredictable and stubborn to follow their directions 175 Indeed Adams did not consider himself a strong member of the Federalist Party He had remarked that Hamilton s economic program centered around banks would swindle the poor and unleash the gangrene of avarice 176 Desiring a more pliant president than Adams Hamilton maneuvered to tip the election to Pinckney He coerced South Carolina Federalist electors pledged to vote for favorite son Pinckney to scatter their second votes among candidates other than Adams Hamilton s scheme was undone when several New England state electors heard of it and agreed not to vote for Pinckney 177 Adams wrote shortly after the election that Hamilton was a proud Spirited conceited aspiring Mortal always pretending to Morality with as debauched Morals as old Franklin who is more his Model than any one I know 178 Throughout his life Adams made highly critical statements about Hamilton He made derogatory references to his womanizing real or alleged and slurred him as the Creole bastard 179 Adams won the presidency by a narrow margin receiving 71 electoral votes to 68 for Jefferson who became the vice president Pinckney finished third with 59 votes and Burr came fourth with 30 The balance of the votes were dispersed among nine other candidates 180 This is the only election to date in which a president and vice president were elected from opposing tickets 181 Presidency 1797 1801 Main articles Presidency of John Adams and Diplomacy of John Adams Inauguration nbsp President s House in Philadelphia which was then the national capital Adams occupied this Philadelphia mansion from March 1797 to May 1800 Adams was sworn into office as the nation s second president on March 4 1797 He followed Washington s lead in using the presidency to exemplify republican values and civic virtue and his service was free of scandal 182 Adams spent much of his term at his Massachusetts home Peacefield preferring the quietness of domestic life to business at the capital He ignored the political patronage and office seeking which other officeholders utilized 183 Historians debate the wisdom of his decision to retain Washington s cabinet given its loyalty to Hamilton The Hamiltonians who surround him Jefferson remarked are only a little less hostile to him than to me 184 Although aware of Hamilton s influence Adams was convinced that their retention ensured a smoother succession 185 Adams maintained the economic programs of Hamilton who regularly consulted with key cabinet members especially the powerful Treasury Secretary Oliver Wolcott Jr 186 Adams was in other respects quite independent of his cabinet often making decisions despite opposition from it 187 Hamilton had grown accustomed to being regularly consulted by Washington Shortly after Adams was inaugurated Hamilton sent him a detailed letter with policy suggestions Adams dismissively ignored it 188 Failed peace commission and XYZ affair Main article XYZ Affair nbsp A 1798 political cartoon s depiction of the XYZ Affair with America as a female being plundered by FrenchmenHistorian Joseph Ellis writes that t he Adams presidency was destined to be dominated by a single question of American policy to an extent seldom if ever encountered by any succeeding occupant of the office That question was whether to make war with France or find peace 189 Britain and France were at war as a result of the French Revolution Hamilton and the Federalists strongly favored the British monarchy against what they denounced as the political radicalism and anti religious frenzy of the French Revolution Jefferson and the Republicans with their firm opposition to monarchy strongly supported the French overthrowing their king 190 The French had supported Jefferson for president in 1796 and became belligerent at his loss 191 Adams continued Washington s policy of staying out of the war Because of the Jay Treaty the French saw America as Britain s junior partner and began seizing American merchant ships that were trading with the British Most Americans were still pro French due to France s assistance during the Revolution the perceived humiliation of the Jay Treaty and their desire to support a republic against the British monarchy and would not tolerate war with France 192 On May 16 1797 Adams gave a speech to the House and Senate in which he called for increasing defense capabilities in case of war with France 193 He announced that he would send a peace commission to France but simultaneously called for a military buildup to counter any potential French threat The speech was well received by the Federalists Adams was depicted as an eagle holding an olive branch in one talon and the emblems of defense in the other The Republicans were outraged for Adams not only had failed to express support for the cause of the French Republic but appeared to be calling for war against it 194 Sentiments changed with the XYZ Affair The peace commission that Adams appointed consisted of John Marshall Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Elbridge Gerry 195 Jefferson met four times with Joseph Letombe the French consul in Philadelphia Letombe wrote to Paris stating that Jefferson had told him that it was in France s best interest to treat the American ministers civilly but then drag out the negotiations at length to arrive at most favorable solution According to Letombe Jefferson called Adams vain suspicious and stubborn 196 When the envoys arrived in October they were kept waiting for several days and then granted only a 15 minute meeting with French Foreign Minister Talleyrand The diplomats were then met by three of Talleyrand s agents later code named X Y and Z who refused to conduct negotiations unless the United States paid enormous bribes to France and to Talleyrand personally 195 Supposedly this was to make up for offenses given to France by Adams in his speech 197 The Americans refused to negotiate on such terms 198 Marshall and Pinckney returned home while Gerry remained 199 News of the disastrous peace mission arrived in a memorandum from Marshall on March 4 1798 Adams not wanting to incite violent impulses among the populace announced that the mission had failed without providing details 200 He also sent a message to Congress asking for a renewal of the nation s defenses The Republicans frustrated the President s defense measures Suspecting that he might be hiding material favorable to France Republicans in the House with the support of Federalists who had heard rumors of what was contained in the messages voted overwhelmingly to demand that Adams release the papers Once they were released the Republicans according to Abigail were struck dumb 201 Benjamin Franklin Bache editor of the Philadelphia Aurora blamed Adams s aggression for the disaster Among the general public the affair substantially weakened popular American support of France Adams reached the height of his popularity as many in the country called for full scale war against the French 202 Alien and Sedition Acts Main article Alien and Sedition Acts nbsp Thomas Jefferson Adams s vice president attempted to undermine many of his actions as president and eventually defeated him for reelection in the 1800 presidential election Despite the XYZ Affair Republican opposition persisted Federalists accused the French and their immigrants of provoking civil unrest In an attempt to quell the outcry the Federalists introduced and the Congress passed a series of laws collectively referred to as the Alien and Sedition Acts 203 Passage of the Naturalization Act the Alien Friends Act the Alien Enemies Act and the Sedition Act all came within a period of two weeks in what Jefferson called an unguarded passion The first three acts targeted immigrants specifically French by giving the president greater deportation authority and increasing citizenship requirements The Sedition Act made it a crime to publish false scandalous and malicious writing against the government or its officials 204 Adams had not promoted any of these acts but signed them in June 1798 at the urging of his wife and cabinet 205 The administration initiated fourteen or more indictments under the Sedition Act as well as suits against five of the six most prominent Republican newspapers The majority of the legal actions began in 1798 and 1799 and went to trial on the eve of the 1800 presidential election 206 Vocal opponents of the Federalists were imprisoned or fined under the Sedition Act for criticizing the government 207 Among them was Congressman Matthew Lyon of Vermont who was sentenced to four months in jail for criticizing the President 208 The alien acts were not stringently enforced because Adams resisted Secretary of State Timothy Pickering s attempts to deport aliens although many left on their own largely in response to the hostile environment 206 Republicans were outraged Jefferson disgusted by the acts wrote nothing publicly but partnered with Madison to secretly draft the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions Jefferson wrote for Kentucky that states had the natural right to nullify any acts they deemed unconstitutional Writing to Madison he speculated that as a last resort the states might have to sever ourselves from the union we so much value 209 Federalists reacted bitterly to the resolutions which were to have far more lasting implications for the country than the Alien and Sedition Acts Still the acts energized and unified the Republican Party while doing little to unite the Federalists 210 Quasi War In May 1798 a French privateer captured a merchant vessel off of New York Harbor An increase in attacks on sea marked the beginning of the undeclared naval war known as the Quasi War 211 Adams knew that America would be unable to win a major conflict both because of its internal divisions and because France at the time was dominating the fight in most of Europe He pursued a strategy whereby America harassed French ships in an effort sufficient to stem the French assaults on American interests 212 In May shortly after the attack in New York Congress created a separate Navy Department The prospect of a French invasion led for calls to build up the army Hamilton and other High Federalists were particularly adamant that a large army be called up in spite of a common fear particularly among Republicans that large standing armies were subversive to liberty In May a provisional army of 10 000 soldiers was authorized by Congress In July Congress created twelve infantry regiments and provided for six cavalry companies exceeding Adams s requests but falling short of Hamilton s 213 Federalists pressured Adams to appoint Hamilton who had served as Washington s aide de camp during the Revolution to command the army 214 Distrustful of Hamilton and fearing a plot to subvert his administration Adams chose Washington without consulting him As a condition of his acceptance Washington demanded that he be permitted to appoint his own subordinates He wished to have Henry Knox as second in command followed by Hamilton and then Charles Pinckney 215 On June 2 Hamilton wrote to Washington stating that he would not serve unless he was made Inspector General and second in command 216 Washington conceded that Hamilton despite holding a rank lower than Knox and Pinckney had by serving on his staff more opportunity to comprehend the whole military scene and should therefore outrank them Adams sent Secretary of War James McHenry to Mount Vernon to convince Washington to accept the post McHenry put forth his opinion that Washington would not serve unless permitted to choose his own officers 217 Adams had intended to appoint Republicans Burr and Frederick Muhlenberg to make the army appear bipartisan Washington s list consisted entirely of Federalists 218 Adams relented and agreed to submit to the Senate the names of Hamilton Pinckney and Knox in that order although final decisions of rank would be reserved to Adams 217 Knox refused to serve under these conditions Adams intended to give to Hamilton the lowest possible rank while Washington and many other Federalists insisted that the order in which the names had been submitted to the Senate must determine seniority On September 21 Adams received a letter from McHenry relaying a statement from Washington threatening to resign if Hamilton were not made second in command 219 Fearing Federalist backlash Adams capitulated despite bitter resentment 220 The illness of Abigail whom Adams feared was near death exacerbated his suffering 219 nbsp Alexander Hamilton s desire for high military rank and his push for war with France put him into conflict with Adams It quickly became apparent that due to Washington s advanced age Hamilton was the army s de facto commander He exerted effective control over the War Department taking over supplies for the army 221 Meanwhile Adams built up the Navy adding six fast powerful frigates most notably the USS Constitution 222 The Quasi War continued but there was a decline in war fever beginning in the fall once news arrived of the French defeat at the Battle of the Nile which many Americans hoped would make them more disposed to negotiate 223 In October Adams heard from Gerry in Paris that the French wanted to make peace and would properly receive an American delegation That December in his address to Congress Adams relayed these statements while expressing the need to maintain adequate defenses The speech angered both Federalists including Hamilton many of whom had wanted a request for a declaration of war and Republicans 224 Hamilton secretly promoted a plan already rejected by Adams in which American and British troops would jointly seize Spanish Florida and Louisiana ostensibly to deter a possible French invasion Hamilton s critics including Abigail saw in his military buildups the signs of an aspiring military dictator 225 On February 18 1799 Adams nominated diplomat William Vans Murray for a peace mission to France without consulting either his cabinet or Abigail who nonetheless upon hearing of it described it as a master stroke To placate Republicans he nominated Patrick Henry and Ellsworth to accompany Murray and the Senate immediately approved them on March 3 Henry declined the nomination and Adams chose William Richardson Davie to replace him 226 Hamilton strongly criticized the decision as did Adams s cabinet members who maintained frequent communication with him Adams again questioned their loyalty but did not remove them 187 To the annoyance of many Adams spent March to September 1799 in Peacefield He returned to Trenton where the government had set up temporary quarters due to the yellow fever epidemic after a letter arrived from Talleyrand confirming that American ministers would be received Adams then decided to send the commissioners to France 227 Adams arrived in Trenton on October 10 228 Shortly after Hamilton in a breach of military protocol arrived uninvited at the city to speak with the President urging him not to send the peace commissioners but instead to ally with Britain to restore the Bourbons I heard him with perfect good humor though never in my life did I hear a man talk more like a fool Adams said On November 15 the commissioners set sail for Paris 229 Fries s Rebellion Main article Fries s Rebellion To pay for the military buildup of the Quasi War Adams and his Federalist allies enacted the Direct Tax of 1798 Direct taxation by the federal government was widely unpopular and the government s revenue under Washington had mostly come from excise taxes and tariffs Though Washington had maintained a balanced budget with the help of a growing economy increased military expenditures threatened to cause major budget deficits and the Federalists developed a taxation plan to meet the need for increased government revenue The Direct Tax of 1798 instituted a progressive land value tax of up to 1 of a property s value Taxpayers in eastern Pennsylvania resisted federal tax collectors and in March 1799 the bloodless Fries s Rebellion broke out Led by Revolutionary War veteran John Fries rural German speaking farmers protested what they saw as a threat to their liberties They intimidated tax collectors who often found themselves unable to go about their business 230 The disturbance was quickly ended with Hamilton leading the army to restore peace 231 Fries and two other leaders were arrested found guilty of treason and sentenced to hang They appealed to Adams requesting a pardon The cabinet unanimously advised Adams to refuse but he instead granted the pardon arguing the men had instigated a mere riot as opposed to a rebellion 232 In his pamphlet attacking Adams before the election Hamilton wrote that it was impossible to commit a greater error 233 Federalist divisions and peace nbsp An engraved portrait of Adams as president by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing On May 5 1800 Adams s frustrations with the Hamilton wing of the party exploded during a meeting with McHenry a Hamilton loyalist who was universally regarded even by Hamilton as an inept Secretary of War Adams accused him of subservience to Hamilton and declared that he would rather serve as Jefferson s vice president or minister at The Hague than be beholden to Hamilton for the presidency McHenry offered to resign at once and Adams accepted On May 10 he asked Pickering to resign Pickering refused and was summarily dismissed Adams named John Marshall as Secretary of State and Samuel Dexter as Secretary of War 234 235 In 1799 Napoleon took over as head of the French government in the Coup of 18 Brumaire and declared the French Revolution over 236 News of this event increased Adams s desire to disband the provisional army which with Washington now dead was commanded only by Hamilton 237 His moves to end the army after the departures of McHenry and Pickering were met with little opposition 238 Federalists joined with Republicans in voting to disband the army in mid 1800 237 Napoleon determining that further conflict was pointless signaled his readiness for friendly relations By the Convention of 1800 the two sides agreed to return any captured ships and to allow for the peaceful transfer of non military goods to an enemy of the nation On January 23 1801 the Senate voted 16 14 in favor of the treaty four votes short of the necessary two thirds Some Federalists including Hamilton urged that the Senate vote in favor of the treaty with reservations A new proposal was then drawn up demanding that the Treaty of Alliance of 1778 be superseded and that France pay for its damages to American property On February 3 the treaty with the reservations passed 22 9 and was signed by Adams 239 c News of the peace treaty did not arrive in the United States until after the election too late to sway the results 241 As president Adams proudly avoided war but deeply split his party in the process Historian Ron Chernow writes that the threat of Jacobinism was the one thing that united the Federalist Party and that Adams s elimination of it unwittingly contributed to the party s demise 242 Establishing government institutions and move to Washington Adams s leadership on naval defense has sometimes led him to be called the father of the American Navy 243 244 In July 1798 he signed into law An Act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen which authorized the establishment of a government operated marine hospital service 245 In 1800 he signed the law establishing the Library of Congress 246 Adams made his first official visit to the nation s new seat of government in early June 1800 Amid the raw and unfinished cityscape the President found the public buildings in a much greater forwardness of completion than expected 247 He moved into the nearly completed President s Mansion later known as the White House on November 1 Abigail arrived a few weeks later On arrival Adams wrote to her Before I end my letter I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this House and all that shall hereafter inhabit it May none but honest and wise Men ever rule under this roof 248 The Senate of the 7th Congress met for the first time in the new Congress House later known as the Capitol building on November 17 1800 On November 22 Adams delivered his fourth State of the Union Address to a joint session of Congress 249 This would be the last annual message any president would personally deliver to Congress for the next 113 years 250 Election of 1800 Main article 1800 United States presidential election nbsp The 1800 United States presidential election results in which Adams was defeated by Thomas JeffersonWith the Federalist Party deeply split over his negotiations with France and the opposition Republican Party enraged over the Alien and Sedition Acts and the expansion of the military Adams faced a daunting reelection campaign in 1800 170 The Federalist congressmen caucused in the spring of 1800 and nominated Adams and Pinckney The Republicans nominated Jefferson and Burr their candidates in the previous election 251 The campaign was bitter and characterized by malicious insults by partisan presses on both sides Federalists claimed that the Republicans were the enemies of all who love order peace virtue and religion They were said to be libertines and dangerous radicals who favored states rights over the Union and would instigate anarchy and civil war Jefferson s rumored affairs with slaves were used against him Republicans accused Federalists of subverting republican principles through punitive federal laws and of favoring Britain and the other coalition countries in their war with France to promote aristocratic anti republican values Jefferson was portrayed as an apostle of liberty and man of the people while Adams was labelled a monarchist He was accused of insanity and marital infidelity 252 James T Callender a Republican propagandist secretly financed by Jefferson degraded Adams s character and accused him of attempting to make war with France Callender was arrested and jailed under the Sedition Act which further inflamed Republican passions 253 Opposition from the Federalist Party was at times equally intense Some including Pickering accused Adams of colluding with Jefferson so that he would end up either president or vice president 254 Hamilton was hard at work attempting to sabotage the President s reelection Planning an indictment of Adams s character he requested and received private documents from both the ousted cabinet secretaries and Wolcott 255 The letter was intended for only a few Federalist electors Upon seeing a draft several Federalists urged Hamilton not to send it Wolcott wrote that the poor old man could do himself in without Hamilton s assistance Hamilton did not heed their advice 256 On October 24 he sent a pamphlet strongly attacking Adams s policies and character Hamilton denounced the precipitate nomination of Murray the pardoning of Fries and the firing of Pickering He vilified the President s disgusting egotism and ungovernable temper Adams he concluded was emotionally unstable given to impulsive and irrational decisions unable to coexist with his closest advisers and generally unfit to be president 233 Strangely it ended by saying that the electors should support Adams and Pinckney equally 257 Thanks to Burr who had covertly obtained a copy the pamphlet became public knowledge and was distributed throughout the country by Republicans 258 The pamphlet ended Hamilton s political career and helped ensure Adams s already likely defeat 257 When the electoral votes were counted Adams finished third with 65 votes and Pinckney came in fourth with 64 votes Jefferson and Burr tied for first with 73 votes each Because of the tie the election devolved upon the House of Representatives with each state having one vote and a supermajority required for victory On February 17 1801 on the 36th ballot Jefferson was elected by a vote of 10 to 4 two states abstained 170 180 Hamilton s scheme although it made the Federalists appear divided and therefore helped Jefferson win failed in its overall attempt to woo Federalist electors away from Adams 259 d To compound the agony of his defeat Adams s son Charles a long time alcoholic died on November 30 Anxious to rejoin Abigail who had already left for Massachusetts Adams departed the White House in the predawn hours of March 4 1801 and did not attend Jefferson s inauguration 262 263 Including him only five out going presidents having served a full term have not attended their successors inaugurations 264 The complications of the 1796 and 1800 elections prompted Congress and the states to refine the process whereby the Electoral College elects a president and a vice president through the 12th Amendment which became a part of the Constitution in 1804 265 Cabinet The Adams cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentJohn Adams1797 1801Vice PresidentThomas Jefferson1797 1801Secretary of StateTimothy Pickering1797 1800John Marshall1800 1801Secretary of the TreasuryOliver Wolcott Jr 1797 1800Samuel Dexter1801Secretary of WarJames McHenry1797 1800Samuel Dexter1800 1801Attorney GeneralCharles Lee1797 1801Secretary of the NavyBenjamin Stoddert1798 1801Judicial appointments Main article List of federal judges appointed by John Adams nbsp John Marshall the fourth Chief Justice of the U S Supreme Court was one of Adams s few dependable allies Supreme Court appointments by President AdamsPositionNameTermChief JusticeJohn Marshall1801 1835Associate JusticeBushrod Washington1799 1829Alfred Moore1800 1804Adams appointed two U S Supreme Court associate justices during his term in office Bushrod Washington the nephew of George Washington and Alfred Moore 266 After Ellsworth s retirement due to ill health in 1800 it fell to Adams to appoint the Court s fourth Chief Justice At the time it was not yet certain whether Jefferson or Burr would win the election Regardless Adams believed that the choice should be someone in the full vigor of middle age who could counter what might be a long line of successive Republican presidents Adams chose his Secretary of State John Marshall 267 He along with Stoddert was one of Adams s few trusted cabinet members and was among the first to greet him when he arrived at the White House 257 Adams signed his commission on January 31 and the Senate approved it immediately 268 Marshall s long tenure left a lasting influence on the Court He maintained a carefully reasoned nationalistic interpretation of the Constitution and established the judicial branch as the equal of the executive and legislative branches 269 After the Federalists lost control of both houses of Congress along with the White House in the election of 1800 the lame duck session of the 6th Congress in February 1801 approved a judiciary act commonly known as the Midnight Judges Act which created a set of federal appeals courts between the district courts and the Supreme Court Adams filled the vacancies created in this statute by appointing a series of judges whom his opponents called the Midnight Judges just days before his term expired Most of these judges lost their posts when the 7th Congress with a solid Republican majority approved the Judiciary Act of 1802 abolishing the newly created courts 270 Post presidency 1801 1826 Initial years Adams resumed farming at Peacefield in Quincy Massachusetts and also began work on an autobiography The work had numerous gaps and was eventually abandoned and left unedited 271 Most of Adams s attention was focused on farm work 272 although he mostly left manual labor to hired hands 273 His frugal lifestyle and presidential salary gave him a considerable fortune by 1801 In 1803 Bird Savage amp Bird the bank holding his cash reserves of about 13 000 collapsed 274 John Quincy resolved the crisis by buying his properties in Weymouth and Quincy including Peacefield for 12 800 272 During his first four years of retirement Adams made little effort to contact others but eventually resumed contact with old acquaintances such as Benjamin Waterhouse and Benjamin Rush 275 Adams generally stayed quiet on public matters He did not publicly denounce Jefferson s actions as president believing that instead of opposing Systematically any Administration running down their Characters and opposing all their Measures right or wrong We ought to Support every Administration as far as We can in Justice 276 277 When a disgruntled James Callender angry at not being appointed to an office turned on the President by revealing the Sally Hemings affair Adams said nothing 278 John Quincy was elected to the Senate in 1803 Shortly thereafter both he and his father crossed party lines to support Jefferson s Louisiana Purchase 279 The only major political incident involving the elder Adams during the Jefferson years was a dispute with Mercy Otis Warren in 1806 Warren an old friend had written a history of the American Revolution attacking Adams for his partiality for monarchy and pride of talents and much ambition A tempestuous correspondence ensued between her and Adams In time their friendship healed 280 Adams did privately criticize the President over his Embargo Act 277 although John Quincy voted for it 281 John Quincy resigned from the Senate in 1808 after the Federalist controlled Massachusetts Senate refused to nominate him for a second term After the Federalists denounced John Quincy as no longer being of their party Adams wrote to him that he himself had long since abdicated and disclaimed the name and character and attributes of that sect 4 After Jefferson s retirement in 1809 Adams became more vocal He published a three year marathon of letters in the Boston Patriot newspaper refuting line by line Hamilton s 1800 pamphlet The initial piece was written shortly after his return from Peacefield and had gathered dust for eight years Adams had decided to shelve it over fears that it could negatively impact John Quincy should he ever seek office Although Hamilton had died in 1804 in a duel with Aaron Burr Adams felt the need to vindicate his character against his charges With his son having broken from the Federalist Party and joined the Republicans he felt that he could safely do so without threatening John Quincy s political career 282 Adams supported the War of 1812 Having worried over the rise of sectionalism he celebrated the growth of a national character that accompanied it 283 Adams supported James Madison for reelection to the presidency in 1812 284 Adams s daughter Abigail Nabby was married to William Stephens Smith but she returned to her parents home after the failure of the marriage she died of breast cancer in 1813 285 Correspondence with Jefferson nbsp John Adams a c 1816 portrait by Samuel Morse now on display at the Brooklyn Museum of ArtIn early 1801 Adams sent Thomas Jefferson a brief note wishing him a happy and prosperous presidency Jefferson failed to respond and they did not speak again for nearly 12 years In 1804 Abigail unbeknownst to her husband wrote to Jefferson to express her condolences upon the death of his daughter Polly who had stayed with the Adamses in London in 1787 This initiated a brief correspondence between the two which quickly descended into political rancor Jefferson terminated it by not replying to Abigail s fourth letter Aside from that by 1812 there had been no communication between Monticello the home of Jefferson and Peacefield since Adams left office 286 In early 1812 Adams reconciled with Jefferson The previous year had been tragic for Adams his brother in law and friend Richard Cranch had died along with his widow Mary and Nabby had been diagnosed with breast cancer These events mellowed Adams and caused him to soften his outlook 282 Their mutual friend Benjamin Rush who had been corresponding with both encouraged them to reach out to each other On New Year s Day Adams sent a brief friendly note to Jefferson to accompany a two volume collection of lectures on rhetoric by John Quincy Adams Jefferson replied immediately with a cordial letter and the two revived their friendship which they sustained by mail Their correspondence lasted the rest of their lives and has been hailed as among their great legacies of American literature Their letters represent an insight into both the period and the minds of the two revolutionary leaders and presidents The missives lasted fourteen years and consisted of 158 letters 109 from Adams and 49 from Jefferson 287 Early on Adams repeatedly tried to turn the correspondence to a discussion of their actions in the political arena 288 Jefferson refused to oblige him saying that nothing new can be added by you or me to what has been said by others and will be said in every age 289 Adams made one more attempt writing that You and I ought not to die before we have explained ourselves to each other 290 Still Jefferson declined to engage Adams in this sort of discussion Adams accepted this and the correspondence turned to other matters particularly philosophy and their daily habits 291 e As the two grew older the letters grew fewer and farther between There was also important information that each man kept to himself Jefferson said nothing about his construction of a new house domestic turmoil slave ownership or poor financial situation while Adams did not mention the troublesome behavior of his son Thomas who had failed as a lawyer and become an alcoholic resorting afterwards to living primarily as a caretaker at Peacefield 294 Last years and death nbsp Peacefield John Adams s home in Quincy Massachusetts nbsp The tombs of John and Abigail Adams far and John Quincy and Louisa Adams near in the family crypt at United First Parish ChurchAbigail died of typhoid on October 28 1818 at Peacefield 295 1824 was filled with excitement in America featuring a four way presidential contest that included John Quincy The Marquis de Lafayette toured the country and met with Adams who greatly enjoyed Lafayette s visit to Peacefield 296 Adams was delighted by the election of John Quincy to the presidency The results became official in February 1825 after a deadlock was decided in the House of Representatives He remarked No man who ever held the office of President would congratulate a friend on obtaining it 297 On July 4 1826 the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence Adams died of a heart attack at Peacefield at approximately 6 20 pm 298 299 His last words included an acknowledgement of his longtime friend and rival Thomas Jefferson survives Adams was unaware that Jefferson had died several hours before 300 301 At 90 Adams was the longest lived US president until Ronald Reagan surpassed him in 2001 302 John and Abigail Adams s crypt at United First Parish Church in Quincy also contains the bodies of John Quincy and Louisa Adams 303 Political writingsThoughts on Government nbsp Thoughts on Government a pamphlet written by Adams in 1776During the First Continental Congress Adams was sometimes solicited for his views on government While recognizing its importance Adams had privately criticized Thomas Paine s 1776 pamphlet Common Sense which attacked all forms of monarchy even constitutional monarchy of the sort advocated by John Locke It supported a unicameral legislature and a weak executive elected by the legislature According to Adams the author had a better hand at pulling down than building 304 He believed that the views expressed in the pamphlet were so democratical without any restraint or even an attempt at any equilibrium or counter poise that it must produce confusion and every evil work 305 What Paine advocated was a radical democracy incompatible with the system of checks and balances that conservatives like Adams would implement 306 At the urging of some delegates Adams committed his views to paper in separate letters So impressed was Richard Henry Lee that with Adams s consent he had the most comprehensive letter printed Published anonymously in April 1776 it was titled Thoughts on Government and styled as a Letter from a Gentleman to his Friend Many historians agree that none of Adams s other compositions rivaled the enduring influence of this pamphlet 72 Adams advised that the form of government should be chosen to attain the desired ends the happiness and virtue of the greatest number of people He wrote There is no good government but what is republican That the only valuable part of the British constitution is so because the very definition of a republic is an empire of laws and not of men The treatise defended bicameralism for a single assembly is liable to all the vices follies and frailties of an individual 307 Adams suggested that there should be a separation of powers between the executive the judicial and the legislative branches and further recommended that if a continental government were to be formed then it should sacredly be confined to certain enumerated powers Thoughts on Government was referenced in every state constitution writing hall Adams used the letter to attack opponents of independence He claimed that John Dickinson s fear of republicanism was responsible for his refusal to support independence and that opposition from Southern planters was rooted in fear that their aristocratic slaveholding status would be endangered 72 Massachusetts Constitution After returning from his first mission to France in 1779 Adams was elected to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention with the purpose of establishing a new constitution for Massachusetts He served on a committee of three also including Samuel Adams and James Bowdoin to draft the constitution The writing fell primarily to John Adams The resulting Constitution of Massachusetts was approved in 1780 It was the first constitution written by a special committee then ratified by the people and was the first to feature a bicameral legislature Included were a distinct executive though restrained by an executive council with a qualified two thirds veto and an independent judicial branch The judges were given lifetime appointments to hold their offices during good behavior 308 The Constitution affirmed the duty of the individual to worship the Supreme Being and the right to do so without molestation in the manner most agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience 309 It established free public education for three years to the children of all citizens 310 Adams was a strong believer in education as a pillar of the Enlightenment He believed that people in a State of Ignorance were more easily enslaved while those enlightened with knowledge would be better able to protect their liberties 311 Defence of the Constitutions Adams s preoccupation with political and governmental affairs which caused considerable separation from his wife and children had a distinct familial context which he articulated in 1780 I must study Politicks and War that my sons may have the liberty to study Mathematicks and Philosophy My sons ought to study Geography natural History Naval Architecture navigation Commerce and Agriculture in order to give their children a right to study Painting Poetry Musick Architecture Statuary Tapestry and Porcelaine 312 While in London Adams learned of a convention being planned to amend the Articles of Confederation In January 1787 he published a work entitled A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States 313 The pamphlet repudiated the views of Turgot and other European writers as to the viciousness of state government frameworks He suggested that the rich the well born and the able should be set apart from other men in a senate that would prevent them from dominating the lower house Adams s Defence is described as an articulation of the theory of mixed government Adams contended that social classes exist in every political society and that a good government must accept that reality For centuries a mixed regime balancing monarchy aristocracy and democracy was required to preserve order and liberty 314 Historian Gordon S Wood maintained that Adams s political philosophy had become irrelevant by the time the Federal Constitution was ratified By then American political thought transformed by more than a decade of vigorous debate as well as formative experiential pressures had abandoned the classical perception of politics as a mirror of social estates Americans new understanding of popular sovereignty was that the citizenry were the sole possessors of power in the nation Representatives in the government enjoyed mere portions of the people s power and only for a limited time Adams was thought to have overlooked this evolution and revealed his continued attachment to the older version of politics 315 Yet Wood was accused of ignoring Adams s peculiar definition of the term republic and his support for a constitution ratified by the people 316 On separation of powers Adams wrote that Power must be opposed to power and interest to interest 317 This sentiment was later echoed by James Madison s statement that a mbition must be made to counteract ambition in Federalist No 51 explaining the separation of powers established under the new Constitution 317 318 Adams believed that humans naturally wanted to further their own ambitions and a single democratically elected house if left unchecked would be subject to this error it needed to be checked by an upper house and an executive He wrote that a strong executive would defend the people s liberties against aristocrats attempting to take it away 319 Adams first saw the new United States Constitution in late 1787 To Jefferson he wrote that he read it with great satisfaction Adams expressed regret that the president would be unable to make appointments without Senate approval and over the absence of a Bill of Rights 320 Political philosophy and viewsSlaveryAdams never owned a slave and declined on principle to use slave labor saying I have through my whole life held the practice of slavery in such abhorrence that I have never owned a negro or any other slave though I have lived for many years in times when the practice was not disgraceful when the best men in my vicinity thought it not inconsistent with their character and when it has cost me thousands of dollars for the labor and subsistence of free men which I might have saved by the purchase of negroes at times when they were very cheap 321 Before the war he occasionally represented slaves in suits for their freedom 322 Adams generally tried to keep the issue out of national politics because of the anticipated Southern response during a time when unity was needed to achieve independence He spoke out in 1777 against a bill to emancipate slaves in Massachusetts saying that the issue was presently too divisive so the legislation should sleep for a time He was against use of black soldiers in the Revolution due to opposition from Southerners 323 Slavery was abolished in Massachusetts about 1780 when it was forbidden by implication in the Declaration of Rights that John Adams wrote into the Massachusetts Constitution 324 Abigail Adams vocally opposed slavery 325 Accusations of monarchism nbsp John Adams an 1823 portrait by Gilbert Stuart completed at the request of his son John Quincy was the last portrait of Adams 326 Adams expressed controversial and shifting views regarding the virtues of monarchical and hereditary political institutions 327 At times he conveyed substantial support for these approaches suggesting for example that hereditary monarchy or aristocracy are the only institutions that can possibly preserve the laws and liberties of the people 328 At other times he distanced himself from such ideas calling himself a mortal and irreconcilable enemy to Monarchy 147 Such denials did not assuage his critics and Adams was often accused of being a monarchist 329 Historian Clinton Rossiter portrays Adams not as a monarchist but a revolutionary conservative who sought to balance republicanism with the stability of monarchy to create ordered liberty 330 His 1790 Discourses on Davila published in the Gazette of the United States warned once again of the dangers of unbridled democracy 331 Many attacks on Adams were scurrilous including suggestions that he was planning to crown himself king and grooming John Quincy as heir to the throne 329 The allegations were totally false he told Jefferson he never wanted an American monarchy 332 Adams felt that the great danger was that an oligarchy of the wealthy would take hold to the detriment of equality To counter that danger the power of the wealthy needed to be channeled by institutions and checked by a strong executive 333 319 Religious views Adams was raised in the Congregational church In Quincy the Unitarian faction was dominant and included Adams and his father It was a new force in the colonies and denied the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus Christ It was opposed by the Calvinist faction that was Trinitarian and emphasized Christ as the Savior In 1825 the Unitarians split off as a separate denomination that included John Adams 334 335 Adams always felt pressured to live up to his heritage His family was descended from Puritans Strict Puritanism had profoundly shaped New England s culture laws and traditions By the time of his birth no one called themselves Puritans and all of the old severe practices were gone Adams did praise the historical Puritans as bearers of freedom a cause that still had a holy urgency 336 Adams recalled that his parents held every Species of Libertinage in Contempt and horror and detailed pictures of disgrace or baseness and of Ruin resulting from any debauchery 6 According to biographer David McCullough Adams was both a devout Christian and an independent thinker and he saw no conflict in that 337 He believed that regular church service was beneficial to man s moral sense 338 Fielding argues that Adams s beliefs synthesized Puritan deist and humanist concepts Adams at one point said that Christianity had originally been revelatory but was being misinterpreted in the service of superstition fraud and unscrupulous power 339 Frazer notes that while he shared many perspectives with deists and often used deistic terminology Adams clearly was not a deist Deism rejected any and all supernatural activity and intervention by God consequently deists did not believe in miracles or God s providence Adams did believe in miracles providence and to a certain extent the Bible as revelation 340 In 1796 Adams denounced Thomas Paine s deistic criticisms of Christianity in The Age of Reason saying The Christian religion is above all the religions that ever prevailed or existed in ancient or modern times the religion of wisdom virtue equity and humanity let the Blackguard Paine say what he will 341 Gordon S Wood writes Although both Jefferson and Adams denied the miracles of the Bible and the divinity of Christ Adams always retained a respect for the religiosity of people that Jefferson never had 342 In his retirement years Adams moved closer to more mainstream Enlightenment religious ideals He blamed institutional Christianity and established churches in Britain and France for causing much suffering but insisted that religion was necessary for society 343 LegacyHistorical reputation See also Bibliography of John Adams Benjamin Franklin summed up what many thought of Adams saying He means well for his country is always an honest man often a wise one but sometimes and in some things absolutely out of his senses 344 Adams strongly felt that he would be forgotten and underappreciated by history These feelings often manifested themselves through envy and verbal attacks on other Founders 160 345 Edmund Morgan argues Adams was ridiculously vain absurdly jealous embarrassingly hungry for compliments But no man ever served his country more selflessly 346 Historian George C Herring argued that Adams was the most independent minded of the Founders 347 Though he formally aligned with the Federalists he was somewhat a party unto himself at times disagreeing with the Federalists as much as he did the Republicans 348 He was often described as prickly but his tenacity was fed by decisions made in the face of universal opposition 347 Adams was often combative as he admitted As President I refused to suffer in silence I sighed sobbed and groaned and sometimes screeched and screamed And I must confess to my shame and sorrow that I sometimes swore 349 Stubbornness was seen as one of his defining traits a fact for which Adams made no apology Thanks to God that he gave me stubbornness when I know I am right he wrote 350 His resolve to advance peace with France while maintaining a posture of defense reduced his popularity and contributed to his defeat for reelection 351 Most historians applaud him for avoiding an all out war with France during his presidency His signing of the Alien and Sedition Acts is almost always condemned 352 According to Ferling Adams s political philosophy fell out of step with national trends The country tended further away from Adams s emphasis on order and the rule of law and towards the Jeffersonian vision of liberty and weak central government In the years following his retirement as first Jeffersonianism and then Jacksonian democracy grew to dominate American politics Adams was largely forgotten 353 In the 1840 presidential election Whig candidate William Henry Harrison was attacked by Democrats on the false allegation that he had been a supporter of John Adams 354 Adams was eventually subject to criticism from states rights advocates Edward A Pollard a strong supporter of the Confederacy during the American Civil War singled out Adams writing The first President from the North John Adams asserted and essayed to put into practice the supremacy of the National power over the states and the citizens thereof He was sustained in his attempted usurpations by all the New England states and by a powerful public sentiment in each of the Middle States The strict constructionists of the Constitution were not slow in raising the standard of opposition against a pernicious error 355 In the 21st century Adams remains less well known than many of the Founders in accordance with his predictions McCullough argued that t he problem with Adams is that most Americans know nothing about him Todd Leopold of CNN wrote in 2001 that Adams is remembered as that guy who served a single term as president between Washington and Jefferson 356 He has always been seen Ferling says as honest and dedicated but despite his lengthy career in public service is still overshadowed 357 Gilbert Chinard in his 1933 biography of Adams described him as staunch honest stubborn and somewhat narrow 358 In his 1962 biography Page Smith lauds Adams for his fight against radicals whose promised reforms portended anarchy and misery Ferling in his 1992 biography writes that Adams was his own worst enemy 359 He criticizes him for his pettiness jealousy and vanity and faults his frequent separations from his family He praises Adams for his willingness to acknowledge his deficiencies and for striving to overcome them 360 nbsp John Adams statue in BilbaoIn 2001 McCullough published the biography John Adams in which he lauds Adams for consistency and honesty plays down or explains away his more controversial actions and criticizes Jefferson The book sold very well and was very favorably received and along with the Ferling biography contributed to a rapid resurgence in Adams s reputation 361 In 2008 a miniseries was released based on the McCullough biography featuring Paul Giamatti as Adams 362 In memoriam Main article List of memorials to John Adams Adams is commemorated as the namesake of various counties buildings and other items 246 363 364 One example is the John Adams Building of the Library of Congress an institution whose existence Adams had signed into law 246 Adams is honored on the Memorial to the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence in Washington D C 365 He does not have an individual monument dedicated to him in the city 366 although a family Adams Memorial was authorized in 2001 According to McCullough Popular symbolism has not been very generous toward Adams There is no memorial no statue in his honor in our nation s capital and to me that is absolutely inexcusable It s long past time when we should recognize what he did and who he was 367 Explanatory notes Contemporaneous records used the Old Style Julian calendar and the Annunciation Style of enumerating years recording his birth as February 11 1731 The British Calendar New Style Act 1750 implemented in 1752 altered the official British dating method to the Gregorian calendar with the start of the year on January 1 it had been March 25 These changes resulted in dates being moved forward 11 days and an advance of one year for those between January 1 and March 25 For a further explanation see Old Style and New Style dates 5 The site of the Adams house is now in Quincy Massachusetts which was separated from Braintree and organized as a new town in 1792 Jefferson after entering office approved a negotiated end to the 1778 alliance freeing the United States of foreign entanglements while excusing France from paying indemnities 240 Ferling attributes Adams s defeat to five factors the stronger organization of the Republicans Federalist disunity the controversy surrounding the Alien and Sedition Acts the popularity of Jefferson in the South and the effective politicking of Burr in New York 260 Adams wrote No party that ever existed knew itself so little or so vainly overrated its own influence and popularity as ours None ever understood so ill the causes of its own power or so wantonly destroyed them 261 Stephen G Kurtz argues that Hamilton and his supporters were primarily responsible for the destruction of the Federalist Party They viewed the party as a personal tool and played into the hands of the Jeffersonians by building up a large standing army and creating a feud with Adams 221 Chernow writes that Hamilton believed that by eliminating Adams he could eventually pick up the pieces of the ruined Federalist Party and lead it back to dominance Better to purge Adams and let Jefferson govern for a while than to water down the party s ideological purity with compromises 259 The two men discussed natural aristocracy Jefferson said The natural aristocracy I consider as the most precious gift of nature for the instruction the trusts and government of society And indeed it would have been inconsistent in creation to have formed man for the social state and not to have provided virtue and wisdom enough to manage the concerns of society May we not even say that the form of government is best which provides most effectually for a pure selection of these natural aristocrats into the offices of government 292 Adams wondered if it ever would be so clear who these people were Your distinction between natural and artificial aristocracy does not appear to me well founded Birth and wealth are conferred on some men as imperiously by nature as genius strength or beauty When aristocracies are established by human laws and honour wealth and power are made hereditary by municipal laws and political institutions then I acknowledge artificial aristocracy to commence It would always be true Adams argued that fate would bestow influence on some men for reasons other than wisdom and virtue A good government had to account for that reality 293 References a b John Adams 1735 1826 United States Department of State Office of the Historian Retrieved September 30 2018 To John Adams from Daniel Roberdeau 28 November 1777 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved May 10 2020 I congratulate you or rather my Country in the choice of you this day as a Commissioner to France for the united States in lieu of Mr Dean who is recalled United States Continental Congress Ford Worthington Chauncey Hunt Gaillard Fitzpatrick John Clement Hill Roscoe R Harris Kenneth E Tilley Steven D Library of Congress Manuscript Division 1904 Journals of the Continental Congress 1774 1789 University of California Libraries Washington U S Govt print off p 975 Retrieved May 10 2020 Congress proceeded to the election of a commissioner to the Court of France in the room of S Deane Esqr and the ballots being taken John Adams a delegate in Congress from Massachusetts bay was elected a b McCullough 2001 p 599 The history of the calendar BBC History No January 2014 a b Ferling 1992 p 11 Ferling 1992 p 317 a b McCullough 2001 pp 29 30 Ferling 1992 pp 11 14 Ferling 1992 pp 12 14 Kirtley 1910 p 366 McCullough 2001 p 35 McCullough 2001 p 13 a b Ferling 1992 p 16 Ferling 1992 pp 17 18 Ferling 1992 p 21 Ferling 1992 p 19 Obama joins list of seven presidents with Harvard degrees The Harvard Gazette November 6 2008 Archived from the original on August 1 2016 Retrieved December 5 2011 McCullough 2001 p 44 Ferling 1992 p 46 Ferling 1992 pp 36 39 They Did What 15 Famous People Who Actually Married Their Cousins Retrieved August 24 2019 McCullough 2001 pp 51 52 a b Private Thoughts of a Founding Father Life June 30 1961 p 82 Archived from the original on April 7 2015 Retrieved June 7 2015 McCullough 2001 pp 55 56 McCullough 2001 p 58 a b Ferling 1992 p 57 a b Ferling 1992 p 71 a b McCullough 2001 pp 171 172 McCullough 2001 pp 634 635 a b Declaration of Independence A Transcription United States National Archives November 2015 Retrieved October 1 2018 a b Stamp Act and the beginning of political activism John Adams Historical Society April 3 2012 Archived from the original on June 14 2016 Retrieved July 5 2016 a b Smith 1962a pp 72 76 Ferling 1992 pp 55 56 Ferling 1992 p 39 McCullough 2001 pp 59 61 Mayhew Rev Jonathan 1750 Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and Non resistance to the Higher Powers Ashbrook Center Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved August 22 2015 Ferling 1992 pp 47 49 a b McCullough 2001 p 63 McCullough 2001 pp 62 63 Ferling 1992 p 59 Ferling 1992 pp 57 59 McCullough 2001 pp 65 66 Morse 1884 p 39 Adams John December 1770 Argument in Defense of the Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved July 29 2018 Ferling 1992 p 69 Ferling 1992 pp 67 68 Ferling 1992 p 74 American Experience John amp Abigail Adams Timeline PBS Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved September 7 2015 Ferling 1992 pp 72 73 Ferling 1992 pp 78 80 Ferling 1992 pp 92 94 1773 Decr 17th from the Diary of John Adams Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved November 15 2017 Ferling 1992 pp 95 97 McCullough 2001 p 71 Ferling 1992 pp 107 108 Ferling 1992 pp 128 130 Elrod Jennifer 2011 W h ither the Jury The Diminishing Role of the Jury Trial in Our Legal System PDF 68 Wash amp Lee L Rev 3 8 Archived PDF from the original on August 6 2016 Retrieved July 5 2016 quoting Thomas J Methvin 2001 Alabama The Arbitration State 62 Ala Law 48 49 John Adams to Abigail Adams 9 October 1774 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved October 8 2017 Ferling 1992 p 112 The First Continental Congress John Adams Historical Society accessed 2016 First Continental Congress John Adams Historical Society April 23 2012 Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved July 5 2016 Abigail Adams to John Adams 16 October 1774 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved September 22 2017 Smith 1962a p 196 McCullough 2001 pp 87 88 McCullough 2001 p 90 a b Ferling 1992 p 136 a b Adams Time Line Massachusetts Historical Society Archived from the original on March 24 2009 Retrieved August 22 2015 Ferling 1992 p 124 McCullough 2001 pp 94 95 From John Adams to Moses Gill 10 June 1775 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved October 11 2017 McCullough 2001 pp 95 96 a b c Ferling 1992 pp 155 157 Smith 1962a p 263 McCullough 2001 pp 99 100 Maier 1998 p 37 McCullough 2001 pp 113 117 Ferling 1992 p 146 Boyd amp Gawalt 1999 p 21 McCullough 2001 p 119 Maier 1998 pp 97 105 McCullough 2001 pp 130 135 Morse 1884 pp 127 128 Jefferson Thomas To William P Gardner The Works of Thomas Jefferson Federal Edition New York and London G P Putnam s Sons 1904 05 Vol 11 McCullough 2001 p 136 Morse 1884 p 128 McCullough 2001 p 163 Smith 1962a pp 266 267 a b Ellis 1993 pp 41 42 Smith 1962a pp 298 305 Smith 1962a p 298 McCullough 2001 pp 153 157 Smith 1962a p 301 McCullough 2001 p 157 McCullough 2001 p 158 Ferling 1992 pp 164 165 Smith 1962a pp 308 312 Ferling 1992 pp 189 190 McCullough 2001 pp 174 176 McCullough 2001 pp 177 179 McCullough 2001 pp 186 187 McCullough 2001 pp 198 209 Ferling 1992 p 199 McCullough 2001 p 210 McCullough 2001 pp 210 213 McCullough 2001 p 218 Ferling 1992 p 221 Smith 1962a p 451 Ferling 1992 p 218 Smith 1962a pp 452 459 Ferling 1992 pp 219 222 McCullough 2001 p 233 McCullough 2001 pp 239 241 McCullough 2001 p 242 Ferling 1992 pp 228 230 McCullough 2001 pp 254 255 McCullough 2001 p 262 Ferling 1992 p 236 Ferling 1992 pp 239 240 McCullough 2001 pp 268 270 McCullough 2001 pp 171 173 Dutch American Friendship Day Heritage Day U S Embassy The Hague Netherlands U S Embassy November 16 1991 Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved March 2 2010 Ferling 1992 pp 185 242 Smith 1962a pp 545 546 McCullough 2001 pp 281 284 Smith 1962a pp 546 547 McCullough 2001 p 285 Adams amp Adams 1851 p 392 From John Adams to John Jay 2 June 1785 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved September 18 2017 McCullough 2001 pp 343 344 McCullough 2001 pp 364 365 McCullough 2001 pp 354 357 McCullough 2001 pp 348 350 Chinard 1933 p 203 Smith 1962b p 655 Smith 1962b p 702 Smith 1962b p 729 McCullough 2001 p 382 McCullough 2001 pp 389 392 Ferling 2009 pp 270 274 a b McCullough 2001 pp 393 394 Chernow 2004 pp 272 273 Smith 1962b pp 742 745 McCullough 2001 pp 398 401 a b nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Vice President of the United States President of the Senate United States Senate Retrieved July 23 2017 Hutson 1968 pp 30 39 McCullough 2001 pp 404 405 a b McCullough 2001 p 410 McCullough 2001 pp 406 408 McCullough 2001 p 408 Wood 2006 p 54 McCullough 2001 pp 408 409 McCullough 2001 p 460 Tie breaking votes cast by vice presidents in the Senate ballotpedia org Retrieved April 25 2023 McCullough 2001 pp 413 414 McCullough 2001 pp 425 426 Smith 1962b p 769 John Adams to John Quincy Adams 9 July 1789 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved December 24 2019 John Adams to Abigail Adams 19 December 1793 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved September 1 2020 McCullough 2001 p 434 a b Ferling 1992 p 310 McCullough 2001 p 439 McCullough 2001 pp 416 417 Smith 1962b p 878 McCullough 2001 pp 456 457 John Adams to Abigail Adams 16 April 1796 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved July 5 2018 Bomboy Scott October 22 2012 Inside America s first dirty presidential campaign 1796 style Constitution Daily Philadelphia PA National Constitution Center Archived from the original on August 21 2017 Retrieved August 18 2017 Ferling John February 15 2016 How the Rivalry Between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton Changed History Time Magazine Retrieved March 11 2017 Flexner 1974 pp 360 361 a b c Smith 1962b pp 898 899 a b c d Taylor C James October 4 2016 John Adams Campaigns and Elections Charlottesville VA Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia Retrieved August 3 2017 a b McDonald 1974 pp 178 181 Diggins 2003 pp 83 88 Hoadley 1986 p 54 John Adams to Abigail Adams 10 February 1796 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved November 13 2017 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 pp 513 537 Chernow 2004 p 521 Smith 1962b p 902 John Adams to Abigail Adams 9 January 1797 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved September 26 2017 Chernow 2004 p 522 a b Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 College Park MD Office of the Federal Register National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved August 20 2017 Amar Vikram David October 22 2008 Vice president a split ticket vote The New York Times Retrieved October 17 2017 The 3rd Presidential Inauguration John Adams March 04 1797 Washington DC U S Senate Retrieved August 23 2017 Herring 2008 p 91 Ferling 1992 p 333 McCullough 2001 p 471 Kurtz 1957 p 272 a b Chernow 2004 pp 593 594 Chernow 2004 p 524 Ellis 1993 p 28 Wood 2009 pp 174 177 240 Herring 2008 p 82 Ferling 1992 pp 342 345 John Adams Special Message to the Senate and the House May 16 1797 Avalon Project Yale Law School Retrieved September 22 2017 McCullough 2001 pp 484 485 a b McCullough 2001 p 495 Chernow 2004 p 547 Epitomy and Remarks on Actions of Ministers at Paris 22 October 1797 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Archived from the original on December 24 2019 Retrieved December 24 2019 This is an Early Access document from The Adams Papers It is not an authoritative final version McCullough 2001 pp 495 496 McCullough 2001 p 502 Chernow 2004 p 550 Smith 1962b pp 957 960 McCullough 2001 p 498 Ferling 1992 pp 365 368 Ferling 1992 p 365 Ferling 1992 p 366 a b Ferling 1992 p 367 Chernow 2004 pp 574 575 Chernow 2004 p 575 McCullough 2001 pp 520 521 Chernow 2004 pp 573 575 Chernow 2004 p 553 Ferling 1992 pp 356 357 Chernow 2004 pp 552 553 Flexner 1974 p 376 Flexner 1974 pp 376 377 Chernow 2004 p 555 a b Flexner 1974 p 378 Smith 1962b p 978 a b Flexner 1974 pp 380 381 Smith 1962b pp 982 983 a b Kurtz 1957 p 331 McCullough 2001 p 507 McCullough 2001 pp 516 517 Chernow 2004 pp 592 593 McCullough 2001 p 518 McCullough 2001 pp 523 525 McCullough 2001 pp 526 529 Morse 1884 p 304 McCullough 2001 pp 530 531 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 pp 696 700 Diggins 2003 pp 129 130 McCullough 2001 pp 540 541 a b Hamilton Alexander Letter from Alexander Hamilton Concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams Esq President of the United States 24 October 1800 National Archives Retrieved June 5 2018 McCullough 2001 pp 538 539 Smith 1962b pp 1028 1029 McCullough 2001 p 534 a b McCullough 2001 pp 539 540 Ferling 1992 p 395 McCullough 2001 p 150 Ferling 1992 p 423 Chernow 2004 p 631 Chernow 2004 p 594 John Adams I Frigate 1799 1867 Naval History and Heritage Command Archived from the original on September 9 2015 Retrieved August 22 2015 Miller 1997 p 9 Congress Passes Socialized Medicine and Mandates Health Insurance In 1798 Forbes Archived from the original on August 12 2015 Retrieved August 23 2015 a b c The John Adams Building Library of Congress Retrieved June 29 2018 Smith 1962b p 1036 Smith 1962b p 1049 Smith 1962b p 1050 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The Senate Moves to Washington United States Senate Retrieved August 15 2017 Ferling 1992 pp 396 397 McCullough 2001 pp 543 545 McCullough 2001 pp 536 537 McCullough 2001 p 544 Chernow 2004 pp 619 620 McCullough 2001 p 549 a b c McCullough 2001 p 550 Morse 1884 pp 320 321 a b Chernow 2004 p 626 Ferling 1992 pp 404 405 Smith 1962b p 1053 Balcerski Opinion by Thomas November 11 2020 Opinion A history lesson on presidents who snub their successors inaugurations CNN Retrieved November 12 2020 The Revolutionary Inauguration of Thomas Jefferson WHHA en US Retrieved November 12 2020 D Angelo Bob January 9 2021 Here is a history of presidents who refused to attend successor s inauguration Boston 25 News Cox Media Group National Content Desk Retrieved March 1 2022 Levinson Sanford V Election of President and Vice President Constitution Center Retrieved September 26 2017 Perry 1986 pp 371 410 Smith 1962b pp 1063 1064 McCullough 2001 p 560 Ferling 1992 p 411 Ferling 1992 pp 408 410 Ferling 1992 pp 421 423 a b Ferling 1992 p 435 Smith 1962b p 1075 Holton 2010 p 340 Ferling 1992 p 426 McCullough 2001 p 595 a b From John Adams to Benjamin Rush 18 April 1808 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved October 7 2017 McCullough 2001 pp 579 585 McCullough 2001 p 586 McCullough 2001 pp 594 596 McCullough 2001 pp 598 599 a b Ferling 1992 pp 429 430 Ferling 1992 pp 425 426 Smith 1962b pp 1107 1108 Ferling 1992 p 430 Ferling 1992 p 431 Ferling 1992 pp 431 432 McCullough 2001 p 607 Thomas Jefferson to John Adams June 27 1813 Cappon p 338 John Adams to Thomas Jefferson July 15 1813 Cappon p 358 McCullough 2001 p 608 Thomas Jefferson to John Adams October 28 1813 Cappon p 388 John Adams to Thomas Jefferson November 15 1813 Cappon p 400 McCullough 2001 p 634 Ferling 1992 p 437 McCullough 2001 p 637 McCullough 2001 p 639 Etehad Melissa July 4 2017 When three presidents died on the Fourth of July Americans saw the work of God The Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 1 2023 McCullough 2001 pp 646 647 McCullough 2001 p 646 Ellis 2003 p 248 Reagan Celebrates 90th CBS News February 5 2001 Retrieved January 29 2018 History United First Parish Church Archived from the original on September 11 2015 Retrieved September 25 2015 McCullough 2001 p 97 Foot amp Kramnick 1987 p 11 Gimbel 1956 p 21 Papers of Adams Vol IV p 195 Thoughts on Government Ferling 1992 pp 214 216 McCullough 2001 p 222 Ferling 1992 p 272 Burns 2013 p 76 Ferling 1992 pp 174 175 John Adams Defence of the Constitutions 1787 Constitution org Archived from the original on January 25 2010 Retrieved March 2 2010 Adams 1954 p xvii Wood 2006 pp 173 202 Thompson 1998 p 317 a b Works of John Adams IV 557 Madison James The Federalist No 51 a b Ralston Shane J American Enlightenment Thought Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved July 6 2018 McCullough 2001 p 379 From John Adams to Robert J Evans 8 June 1819 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved May 17 2022 Ferling 1992 p 77 Wiencek 2004 p 215 Moore 1866 pp 200 203 McCullough 2001 p 26 McCullough 2001 p 638 Hatfield Mark O 1997 Vice Presidents of the United States PDF U S Government Printing Office pp 3 11 Archived PDF from the original on December 19 2012 Adams 1892 p 38 a b John amp Abigail Adams PBS online Archived from the original on July 30 2013 Retrieved July 17 2013 Rossiter 1955 p 114 McCullough 2001 p 421 Adams 2004 p 466 Mayville 2016 pp 11 14 David Waldstreicher ed A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams 2013 pp 23 39 David L Holmes The Faiths of the Founding Fathers Oxford UP 2006 ch 7 The Religious Views of John Adams pp 73 108 also pp 117 121 on Abigail Adams Brookhiser 2002 p 13 McCullough 2001 p 18 Everett 1966 pp 49 57 Fielding 1940 pp 33 46 Frazer Gregg L 2004 The Political Theology of the American Founding PhD dissertation Claremont Graduate University p 46 July 26 1796 Tuesday from the Diary of John Adams Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved September 29 2018 Wood 2017 p 16 Ferling 1992 pp 433 434 Chernow 2004 p 518 Chernow 2004 p 520 Edmund S Morgan John Adams and the Puritan Tradition New England Quarterly 34 4 1961 p 522 a b Herring 2008 p 89 Chernow 2004 p 647 Ellis 1993 p 57 McCullough 2001 p 272 Herring 2008 pp 90 91 Taylor C James October 4 2016 John Adams Impact and Legacy Charlottesville VA Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia Retrieved October 30 2016 Ferling 1992 p 4 Shafer 2016 pp 128 129 Pollard 1862 p 12 Leopold Todd June 7 2006 David McCullough brings John Adams to life CNN Retrieved October 30 2016 Ferling 1992 pp 2 3 Chinard 1933 p vi Ferling 1992 p 3 Ferling 1992 pp 3 4 Maier Pauline May 27 2001 Plain Speaking In David McCullough s telling the second president is reminiscent of the 33rd Harry Truman The New York Times Retrieved November 7 2017 Lieberman Paul April 13 2008 Paul Giamatti is so imperfect for the role Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 10 2018 County Facts Adams County PA Archived from the original on June 29 2018 Retrieved June 29 2018 Naming the Cascade Range Volcanoes Mount Adams Washington U S Geological Survey Retrieved June 29 2018 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence Memorial National Park Service Retrieved March 3 2022 Heffner Alexander July 1 2011 Why doesn t John Adams have a memorial in Washington The Washington Post Retrieved November 7 2017 Cunningham Lillian January 17 2016 The case of the missing John Adams monument The Washington Post Retrieved November 7 2017 BibliographyBiographies Chinard Gilbert 1933 Honest John Adams Boston MA Little Brown and Company OCLC 988108386 Diggins John P 2003 Schlesinger Arthur M Jr ed John Adams The American Presidents New York NY Time Books ISBN 978 0 8050 6937 2 Ellis Joseph J 1993 Passionate Sage The Character and Legacy of John Adams New York NY W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 31133 4 Ferling John E 1992 John Adams A Life Knoxville TN University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 0 87049 730 8 McCullough David 2001 John Adams New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 7588 7 Morse John Torey 1884 John Adams Boston MA Houghton Mifflin and Company OCLC 926779205 Smith Page 1962a John Adams Vol I 1735 1784 New York NY Doubleday amp Company Inc ISBN 9780837123486 OCLC 852986601 Smith Page 1962b John Adams Vol II 1784 1826 New York NY Doubleday amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 8371 2348 6 OCLC 852986620 Specialized studies Boyd Julian Parks Gawalt Gerard W 1999 The Declaration of Independence the evolution of the text Library of Congress in association with the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation ISBN 978 0 8444 0980 1 Brookhiser Richard 2002 America s First Dynasty The Adamses 1735 1918 New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 4209 7 Burns James MacGregor 2013 Fire and Light How the Enlightenment Transformed Our World New York NY St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 250 02490 9 Chernow Ron 2004 Alexander Hamilton London UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 1 101 20085 8 Elkins Stanley M McKitrick Eric 1993 The Age of Federalism Oxford NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 506890 0 Ellis Joseph J 2003 Founding Brothers The Revolutionary Generation New York NY Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 4000 7768 7 Everett Robert B 1966 The Mature Religious Thought of John Adams PDF Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association ISSN 0361 6207 Fea John John Adams and religion in A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams 2013 pp 184 198 online Ferling John 2009 The Ascent of George Washington The Hidden Political Genius of an American Icon New York NY Bloomsbury Press ISBN 978 1 59691 465 0 Fielding Howard 1940 John Adams Puritan Deist Humanist Journal of Religion 20 1 33 46 doi 10 1086 482479 JSTOR 1198647 S2CID 170183234 Flexner James Thomas 1974 Washington The Indispensable Man Boston MA Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 28605 3 Georgini Sara Household Gods The Religious Lives of the Adams Family Oxford University Press 2019 excerptGimbel Richard 1956 A Bibliographical Check List of Common Sense With an Account of Its Publication New Haven CT Yale University Press Herring George C 2008 From colony to superpower U S foreign relations since 1776 Oxford NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974377 3 Hoadley John F 1986 Origins of American Political Parties 1789 1803 Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 5320 9 Holdzkom Marianne Remembering John Adams The Second President in History Memory and Popular Culture McFarland 2023 online Holmes David L The Faiths of the Founding Fathers Oxford University Press 2006 ch 7 The Religious Views of John Adams pp 73 108 also pp 117 121 on Abigail Adams Holton Woody 2010 Abigail Adams A Life New York NY Atria ISBN 9781451607369 Hutson James H 1968 John Adams Title Campaign March 1968 The New England Quarterly 41 1 30 39 doi 10 2307 363331 JSTOR 363331 Kirtley James Samuel 1910 Half Hour Talks on Character Building By Self made Men and Women A Hamming OCLC 13927429 Kurtz Stephen G 1957 The Presidency of John Adams The Collapse of Federalism 1795 1800 Philadelphia PA University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 7101 0 OCLC 979781538 Maier Pauline 1998 American Scripture Making the Declaration of Independence New York NY Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 77908 7 Mayville Luke 2016 John Adams and the Fear of American Oligarchy Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 8369 1 McDonald Forrest 1974 The Presidency of George Washington American Presidency Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0359 6 Miller Nathan 1997 The U S Navy A History Third Edition Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 61251 892 3 Moore George 1866 Notes on the history of slavery in Massachusetts New York NY D Appleton amp Co ISBN 978 0 608 41018 0 OCLC 419266287 Perry James R 1986 Supreme Court Appointments 1789 1801 Criteria Presidential Style and the Press of Events Journal of the Early Republic 6 4 371 410 doi 10 2307 3122645 JSTOR 3122645 Pollard Edward A 1862 The First Year of the War Richmond VA West amp Johnson OCLC 79953002 Rossiter Clinton 1955 Conservatism in America New York NY Knopf OCLC 440025153 Scherr Arthur 2018 John Adams Slavery and Race Ideas Politics and Diplomacy in an Age of Crisis Santa Barbara CA Praeger Shafer Ronald G 2016 Carnival Campaign How the Rollicking 1840 Campaign of Tippecanoe and Tyler Too Changed Presidential Politics Forever Chicago IL Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 61373 543 5 Thompson C Bradley 1998 John Adams and the Spirit of Liberty Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0915 4 Wiencek Henry 2004 An Imperfect God George Washington His Slaves and the Creation of America Waterville ME Thorndike Press p 215 ISBN 978 0 7862 6129 1 Wood Gordon S 2006 Revolutionary Characters What Made the Founders Different London UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 1 59420 093 9 Wood Gordon S 2009 Empire of Liberty A history of the Early Republic 1789 1815 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974109 0 Wood Gordon S 2017 Friends Divided John Adams and Thomas Jefferson New York US Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 7352 2473 5 Primary sources Adams John Adams Charles Francis 1851 The Works of John Adams Second President of the United States Autobiography continued Diary Essays and controversial papers of the Revolution Vol 3 Little Brown Adams John 1892 Biddle Alexander ed Old Family Letters Philadelphia PA Press of J B Lippincott Company p 38 Adams John 2001 Carey George Wescott ed The Political Writings of John Adams Washington D C Gateway Editions Adams John 2004 Diggins John Patrick ed The Portable John Adams London UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 243778 0 Adams John 1954 Peek George A Jr ed The Political Writings of John Adams Representative Selections New York NY Liberal Arts Press ISBN 978 0 87220 699 1 OCLC 52727656 Adams John Rush Benjamin 1966 Schutz John A Adair Douglass eds Spur of Fame The Dialogues of John Adams and Benjamin Rush 1805 1813 Santa Marino CA Huntington Library ISBN 978 0 86597 287 2 Adams John Tudor William 1819 Novanglus and Massachusettensis Or Political Essays Published in the Years 1774 and 1775 on the Principal Points of Controversy Between Great Britain and Her Colonies Princeton NJ Hews amp Gloss OCLC 33610833 Adams John 1965 Wroth L Kinvin Zobel Hiller B eds The Legal Papers of John Adams Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 52250 3 Butterfield L H et al eds The Adams Papers 1961 Multivolume letterpress edition of all letters to and from major members of the Adams family plus their diaries still incomplete The Adams Family Papers Editorial Project Masshist org Retrieved March 2 2010 Butterfield L H ed Adams Family Correspondence Cambridge Harvard University Press Cappon Lester J ed 1959 The Adams Jefferson Letters The Complete Correspondence Between Thomas Jefferson and Abigail and John Adams Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4230 0 Foot Michael Kramnick Isaac eds 1987 The Thomas Paine Reader Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0 14 044496 4 Hogan Margaret Taylor C James eds 2007 My Dearest Friend Letters of Abigail and John Adams Cambridge Harvard University Press Richardson James Daniel ed 1897 A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents Vol 1 Cambridge MA Harvard University OCLC 3144460227 Taylor Robert J et al eds Papers of John Adams Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Further readingMain article Bibliography of John AdamsExternal linksListen to this article 2 hours and 0 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 23 February 2019 2019 02 23 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles The Papers of John Adams subset of Founders Online from the National Archives John Adams A Resource Guide at the Library of Congress The John Adams Library at the Boston Public Library Adams Family Papers An Electronic Archive at the Massachusetts Historical Society Works by John Adams at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Adams at Internet Archive Works by John Adams at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp John Adams on C SPAN Scholarly coverage of Adams permanent dead link at the Miller Center University of Virginia Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Law nbsp Politics nbsp American Revolution nbsp Massachusetts nbsp United States John Adams at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Adams amp oldid 1178987672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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