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John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams (/ˈkwɪnzi/ ;[a] July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was an American statesman, politician, diplomat, lawyer, and diarist who served as the sixth president of the United States, from 1825 to 1829. He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825. During his long diplomatic and political career, Adams served as an ambassador and also as a member of the United States Congress representing Massachusetts in both chambers. He was the eldest son of John Adams, who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801, and First Lady Abigail Adams. Initially a Federalist like his father, he won election to the presidency as a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, and later, in the mid-1830s, became affiliated with the Whig Party.

John Quincy Adams
Portrait c. 1843–1848
6th President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1825 – March 4, 1829
Vice PresidentJohn C. Calhoun
Preceded byJames Monroe
Succeeded byAndrew Jackson
8th United States Secretary of State
In office
September 22, 1817 – March 3, 1825
PresidentJames Monroe
Preceded byJames Monroe
Succeeded byHenry Clay
14th Dean of the United States House of Representatives
In office
April 22, 1844 – February 23, 1848
Preceded byDixon Hall Lewis
Succeeded byJames Iver McKay
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts
In office
March 4, 1831 – February 23, 1848
Preceded byJoseph Richardson
Succeeded byHorace Mann
Constituency
United States Senator
from Massachusetts
In office
March 4, 1803 – June 8, 1808
Preceded byJonathan Mason
Succeeded byJames Lloyd
Member of the Massachusetts Senate
In office
April 20, 1802 – March 4, 1803
Diplomatic positions
7th United States Minister to the United Kingdom
In office
June 8, 1815 – May 14, 1817
Nominated byJames Madison
Preceded byJonathan Russell (1812)
Succeeded byRichard Rush
1st United States Minister to Russia
In office
November 5, 1809 – April 28, 1814
Nominated byJames Madison
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byJames A. Bayard
1st United States Minister to Prussia
In office
December 5, 1797 – May 5, 1801
Nominated byJohn Adams
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byHenry Wheaton (1835)
3rd United States Minister to the Netherlands
In office
November 6, 1794 – June 20, 1797
Nominated byGeorge Washington
Preceded byWilliam Short
Succeeded byWilliam Vans Murray
Personal details
Born(1767-07-11)July 11, 1767
Braintree, Massachusetts Bay, British America
DiedFebruary 23, 1848(1848-02-23) (aged 80)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeUnited First Parish Church
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1797)
Children4, including George, John II and Charles
Parents
Relatives
Education
Occupation
  • Politician
  • lawyer
Signature

Born in Braintree, Massachusetts,[3] Adams spent much of his youth in Europe, where his father served as a diplomat. After returning to the United States, Adams established a successful legal practice in Boston. In 1794, President George Washington appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, and Adams would serve in high-ranking diplomatic posts until 1801, when Thomas Jefferson took office as president. Federalist leaders in Massachusetts arranged for Adams's election to the United States Senate in 1802, but Adams broke with the Federalist Party over foreign policy and was denied re-election. In 1809, President James Madison, a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to Russia. Multilingual, Adams held diplomatic posts for the duration of Madison's presidency, and he served as part of the American delegation that negotiated an end to the War of 1812. In 1817, President James Monroe selected Adams as his secretary of state. In that role, Adams negotiated the Adams–Onís Treaty, which provided for the American acquisition of Florida. He also helped formulate the Monroe Doctrine, which became a key tenet of U.S. foreign policy. In 1818, Adams was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia.[4]

Adams, Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford, and Henry Clay—all members of the Democratic-Republican Party—competed in the 1824 presidential election. Because no candidate won a majority of electoral votes, the House of Representatives held a contingent election, which Adams won with the support of Speaker of the House Henry Clay, whom Adams would controversially appoint as his secretary of state. As president, Adams called for an ambitious agenda that included federally funded infrastructure projects, the establishment of a national university, and engagement with the countries of Latin America, but Congress refused to pass many of his initiatives. During Adams's presidency, the Democratic-Republican Party split into two major camps: the National Republican Party, which supported Adams, and Andrew Jackson's Democratic Party. The Democrats proved to be more effective political organizers than Adams and his National Republican supporters, and Jackson soundly defeated Adams in the 1828 presidential election, making Adams the second president to fail to win re-election (his father being the first).

Rather than retiring from public service, Adams won election to the House of Representatives, where he would serve from 1831 until his death in 1848. He remains the only former president to be elected to the chamber. After narrowly losing his bids for Governor of Massachusetts and Senate re-election, Adams joined the Anti-Masonic Party in the early 1830s before joining the Whig Party, which united those opposed to President Jackson. During his time in Congress, Adams became increasingly critical of slavery and of the Southern leaders whom he believed controlled the Democratic Party. He was particularly opposed to the annexation of Texas and the Mexican–American War, which he saw as a war to extend slavery and its political grip on Congress. He also led the repeal of the "gag rule", which had prevented the House of Representatives from debating petitions to abolish slavery. Historians concur that Adams was one of the greatest diplomats and secretaries of state in American history; they typically rank him as an average president, as he had an ambitious agenda but could not get it passed by Congress. By contrast, historians also view Adams in a more positive light during his post-presidency because of his vehement stance against slavery, as well as his fight for the rights of women and Native Americans.

Early life, education, and early career

John Quincy Adams was born on July 11, 1767, to John and Abigail Adams (née Smith) in a part of Braintree, Massachusetts, that is now Quincy.[5] He was named after his mother's maternal grandfather, Colonel John Quincy, after whom Quincy, Massachusetts, is also named. Colonel Quincy died two days after his great-grandson's birth.[6] Young Adams was educated by private tutors – his cousin James Thaxter and his father's law clerk, Nathan Rice.[7][page needed] He soon exhibited literary skills, and in 1779 he started a diary that he kept until just before he died in 1848.[8] Until the age of ten, Adams grew up on the family farm in Braintree, largely in the care of his mother. Though frequently absent because of his participation in the American Revolution, John Adams maintained a correspondence with his son, encouraging him to read works by authors such as Thucydides and Hugo Grotius.[9] With his father's encouragement, Adams would also translate classical authors such as Virgil, Horace, Plutarch, and Aristotle.[10]

In 1778, Adams and his father departed for Europe, where John Adams would serve as part of American diplomatic missions in France and the Netherlands.[11] During this period, Adams studied law, French, Greek, and Latin, and attended several schools, including Leiden University.[12][13] In 1781, Adams traveled to Saint Petersburg, Russia, where he served as the secretary to the American diplomat, Francis Dana.[14] He returned to the Netherlands in 1783 and accompanied his father to Great Britain in 1784.[15] Though Adams enjoyed Europe, he and his family decided he needed to return to the United States to complete his education and eventually launch a political career.[16]

Adams returned to the United States in 1785 and earned admission as a member of the junior class of Harvard College the following year. He joined Phi Beta Kappa and excelled academically, graduating second in his class in 1787.[17] After graduating from Harvard, he studied law with Theophilus Parsons in Newburyport, Massachusetts, from 1787 to 1789.[18] Adams initially opposed the ratification of the United States Constitution, but he ultimately came to accept the document, and in 1789 his father was elected as the first vice president of the United States.[19] In 1790, Adams opened his own legal practice in Boston. Despite some early struggles, he was successful as an attorney and established financial independence from his parents.[20]

Early political career (1793–1817)

Early diplomatic career and marriage

 
John Quincy Adams, age 29 by John Singleton Copley

Adams initially avoided becoming involved in politics, instead focusing on building his legal career. In 1791, he wrote a series of pseudonymously published essays arguing that Britain provided a better governmental model than France. Two years later, he published another series of essays attacking Edmond-Charles Genêt, a French diplomat who sought to undermine President George Washington's policy of neutrality in the French Revolutionary Wars.[21] In 1794, Washington appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands. Adams considered declining the role, but ultimately took the position on the advice of his father.[22] While abroad, Adams continued to urge neutrality, arguing that the United States would benefit economically by staying out of the ongoing French Revolutionary Wars.[23] His chief duty as the ambassador to the Netherlands was to secure and maintain loans essential to U.S. finances. On his way to the Netherlands, he met with John Jay, who was then negotiating the Jay Treaty with Great Britain. Adams supported the Jay Treaty, but it proved unpopular with many in the United States, contributing to a growing partisan split between the Federalist Party of Alexander Hamilton and the Democratic-Republican Party of Thomas Jefferson.[24] In 1794 he supported John Skey Eustace who wanted to return to the United States via the Netherlands.[25]

Adams spent the winter of 1795–1796 in London, where he met Louisa Catherine Johnson, the second daughter of American merchant Joshua Johnson. In April 1796, Louisa accepted Adams's proposal of marriage. Adams's parents disapproved of his decision to marry a woman who had grown up in England, but he informed his parents that he would not reconsider his decision.[26] Adams initially wanted to delay his wedding to Louisa until he returned to the United States, but they married in All Hallows-by-the-Tower on July 26, 1797.[27][b] Shortly after the wedding, Joshua Johnson fled England to escape his creditors, and Adams did not receive the dowry that Johnson had promised him, much to the embarrassment of Louisa. Adams noted in his own diary that he had no regrets about his decision to marry Louisa.[29]

In 1796, Washington appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to Portugal.[30] Later that year, John Adams defeated Jefferson in the 1796 presidential election. When the elder Adams became president, he appointed his son as the U.S. ambassador to Prussia.[31] Though concerned that his appointment would be criticized as nepotistic, Adams accepted the position and traveled to the Prussian capital of Berlin with his wife and his younger brother, Thomas Boylston Adams. The State Department tasked Adams with developing commercial relations with Prussia and Sweden, but President Adams also asked his son to write to him frequently about affairs in Europe.[32] In 1799, Adams negotiated a new trade agreement between the United States and Prussia, though he could never complete an agreement with Sweden.[33] He frequently wrote to family members in the United States, and in 1801 his letters about the Prussian region of Silesia were published in a book titled Letters on Silesia.[34] During his time in Prussia, Adams befriended the German diplomat and writer Friedrich von Gentz, whose work, The Origins and Principles of the American Revolution, Compared with the Origins and Principles of the French Revolution, Adams would translate into English in 1800. In the 1800 presidential election, Jefferson defeated John Adams, and both Adams and his son left office in early 1801.[35]

U.S. senator from Massachusetts

On his return to the United States, Adams re-established a legal practice in Boston, and in April 1802 he was elected to the Massachusetts Senate.[36] In November of that year, he ran unsuccessfully for the United States House of Representatives.[37] In February 1803, the Massachusetts legislature elected Adams to the United States Senate. Though somewhat reluctant to affiliate with any political party, Adams joined the Federalist minority in Congress.[38] Like his Federalist colleagues, he opposed the impeachment of Associate Justice Samuel Chase, an outspoken supporter of the Federalist Party.[39]

Adams had strongly opposed Jefferson's 1800 presidential candidacy, but he gradually became alienated from the Federalist Party. His disaffection was driven by the party's declining popularity, disagreements over foreign policy, and Adams's hostility to Timothy Pickering, a Federalist Party leader whom Adams viewed as overly favorable to Britain. Unlike other New England Federalists, Adams supported the Jefferson administration's Louisiana Purchase and expansionist policies.[40] Adams was the lone Federalist in Congress to vote for the Non-importation Act of 1806 that punished Britain for its attacks on American shipping during the ongoing Napoleonic Wars. Adams became increasingly frustrated with the unwillingness of other Federalists to condemn British actions, including impressment, and he moved closer to the Jefferson administration. After Adams supported the Embargo Act of 1807, the Federalist-controlled Massachusetts legislature elected Adams's successor several months before the end of his term, and Adams resigned from the Senate shortly thereafter.[41]

While a member of the Senate, Adams served as a professor of logic at Brown University[42] and as the Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard University. Adams's devotion to classical rhetoric shaped his response to public issues, and he would remain inspired by those rhetorical ideals long after the neo-classicalism and deferential politics of the founding generation were eclipsed by the commercial ethos and mass democracy of the Jacksonian Era. Many of Adams's idiosyncratic positions were rooted in his abiding devotion to the Ciceronian ideal of the citizen-orator "speaking well" to promote the welfare of the polis.[43] He was also influenced by the classical republican ideal of civic eloquence espoused by British philosopher David Hume.[44] Adams adapted these classical republican ideals of public oratory to the American debate, viewing its multilevel political structure as ripe for "the renaissance of Demosthenic eloquence". His Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory (1810) looks at the fate of ancient oratory, the necessity of liberty for it to flourish, and its importance as a unifying element for a new nation of diverse cultures and beliefs. Just as civic eloquence failed to gain popularity in Britain, in the United States interest faded in the second decade of the 19th century, as the "public spheres of heated oratory" disappeared in favor of the private sphere.[45]

Minister to Russia

 
1815 US passport issued by John Quincy Adams at London.

After resigning from the Senate, Adams was ostracized by Massachusetts Federalist leaders, but he declined Democratic-Republican entreaties to seek office.[46] In 1809, he argued before the Supreme Court of the United States in Fletcher v. Peck, and the Supreme Court ultimately agreed with Adams's argument that the Constitution's Contract Clause prevented the state of Georgia from invalidating a land sale to out-of-state companies.[47] Later that year, President James Madison appointed Adams as the first United States Minister to Russia in 1809. Though Adams had only recently broken with the Federalist Party, his support of Jefferson's foreign policy had earned him goodwill with the Madison Administration.[48] Adams was well-qualified for the role after his experiences in Europe generally and Russia specifically.[49]

After a difficult passage through the Baltic Sea, Adams arrived in the Russian capital of St. Petersburg in October 1809. He quickly established a productive working relationship with Russian official Nikolay Rumyantsev and eventually befriended Tsar Alexander I of Russia. Adams continued to favor American neutrality between France and Britain during the Napoleonic War.[50] Louisa was initially distraught at the prospect of living in Russia, but she became a popular figure at the Russian court.[51] From his diplomatic post, Adams observed the French Emperor Napoleon's invasion of Russia, which ended in defeat for the French.[52] In February 1811, President Madison nominated Adams as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.[53] The nomination was unanimously confirmed by the Senate, but Adams declined the seat, preferring a career in politics and diplomacy, so Joseph Story took the seat instead.[54]

Treaty of Ghent and ambassador to Britain

 
Adams portrait – Gilbert Stuart, 1818

Adams had long feared that the United States would enter a war it could not win against Britain, and by early 1812, he saw such a war as inevitable due to the constant British attacks on American shipping and the British practice of impressment. In mid-1812, the United States declared war against Britain, beginning the War of 1812. Tsar Alexander attempted to mediate the conflict between Britain and the United States, and President Madison appointed Adams, Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin, and Federalist Senator James A. Bayard to a delegation charged with negotiating an end to the war. Gallatin and Bayard arrived in St. Petersburg in July 1813, but the British declined Tsar Alexander's offer of mediation. Hoping to start negotiations at another venue, Adams left Russia in April 1814.[55] Negotiations finally began in mid-1814 in Ghent, where Adams, Gallatin, and Bayard were joined by two additional American delegates, Jonathan Russell and former Speaker of the House Henry Clay.[56] Adams, the nominal head of the delegation, got along well with Gallatin, Bayard, and Russell, but he occasionally clashed with Clay.[57]

The British delegation initially treated the United States as a defeated power, demanding the creation of an Indian barrier state from American territory near the Great Lakes. The American delegation unanimously rejected this offer, and their negotiating position was bolstered by the American victory in the Battle of Plattsburgh.[58] By November 1814, the government of Lord Liverpool decided to seek an end to hostilities with the U.S. on the basis of status quo ante bellum. Even though a return to the status quo would mean the continuation of the British practice of impressment, Adams and his fellow commissioners had hoped for similar terms. The treaty was signed on December 24, 1814. The United States did not gain any concessions from the treaty but could boast that it had survived a war against the strongest power in the world. Following the signing of the treaty, Adams traveled to Paris, where he witnessed first-hand the Hundred Days of Napoleon's restoration.[59]

In May 1815, Adams learned that President Madison had appointed him as the U.S. ambassador to Britain.[60] With the aid of Clay and Gallatin, Adams negotiated a limited trade agreement with Britain. Following the conclusion of the trade agreement, much of Adams's time as ambassador was spent helping stranded American sailors and prisoners of war.[61] In pursuit of national unity, newly elected president James Monroe decided a Northerner would be optimal for the position of Secretary of State, and he chose the respected and experienced Adams for the role.[62] Having spent several years in Europe, Adams returned to the United States in August 1817.[61]

Secretary of State (1817–1825)

Adams served as Secretary of State during Monroe's eight-year presidency, from 1817 to 1825. Many of his successes as secretary, such as the convention of 1818 with the United Kingdom, the Transcontinental Treaty with Spain, and the Monroe Doctrine, were not preplanned strategies but responses to unexpected events. Adams wanted to delay American recognition of the newly independent republics of Latin America to avoid the risk of war with Spain and its European allies. However, Andrew Jackson's military campaign in Florida and Henry Clay's threats in Congress forced Spain to cut a deal, which Adams negotiated successfully. Biographer James Lewis says, "He managed to play the cards that he had been dealt – cards that he very clearly had not wanted – in ways that forced the Spanish cabinet to recognize the weakness of its own hand".[63] Apart from the Monroe doctrine, his last four years as Secretary of State were less successful because he was preoccupied with his presidential campaign and refused to make compromises with other countries that might have weakened his candidacy; the result was a small-scale trade war but a successful election to the White House.

 
Painting of John Quincy Adams by Thomas Sully, 1824

Taking office in the aftermath of the War of 1812, Adams thought that the country had been fortunate in avoiding territorial losses, and he prioritized avoiding another war with a European power, particularly Britain.[64] He also sought to avoid exacerbating sectional tensions, which had been a major issue for the country during the War of 1812.[65][c] One of the major challenges confronting Adams was how to respond to the power vacuum in Latin America that arose from Spain's weakness following the Peninsular War.[67] In addition to his foreign policy role, Adams held several domestic duties, including overseeing the 1820 United States census and writing an extensive report on weights and measures.[68] The weights and measures report, a particular passion of Adams', provided an extensive historical perspective on the topic and advocated for adoption of the metric system.[69]

Monroe and Adams agreed on most major foreign policy issues: both favored neutrality in Latin American independence wars, peace with the United Kingdom, rejection of a trade agreement with the French, and peaceful expansion into the Spanish Empire's North American territories.[70] The president and his secretary of state developed a strong working relationship, and while Adams often influenced Monroe's policies, he respected that Monroe made the final decisions on major issues.[71] Monroe met regularly with his five-person cabinet, which initially consisted of Adams, Secretary of the Treasury William H. Crawford, Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Crowninshield, and Attorney General William Wirt.[72] Adams developed a strong respect for Calhoun but believed that Crawford was unduly focused on succeeding Monroe in 1824.[73]

During his time as ambassador to Britain, Adams had begun negotiations over several contentious issues that had not been solved by the War of 1812 or the Treaty of Ghent. In 1817, the two countries agreed to the Rush–Bagot Treaty, which limited naval armaments on the Great Lakes. Negotiations between the two powers continued, resulting in the Treaty of 1818, which defined the Canada–United States border west of the Great Lakes. The boundary was set at the 49th parallel to the Rocky Mountains, while the territory to the west of the mountains, known as Oregon Country, would be jointly occupied. The agreement marked a watershed moment in United Kingdom–United States relations, as the United States focused on its southern and western borders and British concerns about American expansionism subsided.[74]

Adams–Onís Treaty

 
In the Adams–Onís Treaty, the United States acquired Florida and set the western border of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase.

When Adams took office, Spanish possessions bordered the United States to the south and west. To the south, Spain retained control of Florida, which the U.S. had long sought to purchase. Spain struggled to control the Indian tribes active in Florida, and some of those tribes raided United States territory. To the west, New Spain bordered the territory acquired by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase, but no clear boundary had been established between United States and Spanish territory.[64] After taking office, Adams began negotiations with Luis de Onís, the Spanish minister to the United States, for the purchase of Florida and the settlement of a border between the United States and New Spain. The negotiations were interrupted by an escalation of the Seminole War, and in December 1818, Monroe ordered General Andrew Jackson to enter Florida and retaliate against Seminoles that had raided Georgia. Exceeding his orders, Jackson captured the Spanish outposts of St. Marks and Pensacola and executed two Englishmen. While Jackson's actions outraged the rest of the cabinet, Adams defended them as necessary to the country's self-defense, and he eventually convinced Monroe and most of the cabinet to support Jackson.[75] Adams informed Spain that its failure to police its own territory had compelled Jackson to act, and he advised Spain to either secure the region or sell it to the United States.[76] The British, meanwhile, declined to risk their recent rapprochement with the United States, and did not make a major diplomatic issue out of Jackson's execution of two British nationals.[77]

Negotiations between Spain and the United States continued, and Spain agreed to cede Florida. The determination of the western boundary of the United States proved more difficult. American expansionists favored setting the border at the Rio Grande, but Spain, intent on protecting its colony of Mexico from American encroachment, insisted on setting the boundary at the Sabine River. At Monroe's direction, Adams agreed to the Sabine River boundary, but he insisted that Spain cede its claims on Oregon Country.[78] Adams was deeply interested in establishing American control over the Oregon Country, partly because he believed that control of that region would spur trade with Asia. The acquisition of Spanish claims to the Pacific Northwest also allowed the Monroe administration to pair the acquisition of Florida, which was chiefly sought by Southerners, with territorial gains favored primarily by those in the North.[79] After extended negotiations, Spain and the United States agreed to the Adams–Onís Treaty, which was ratified in February 1821.[75] Adams was deeply proud of the treaty, though he privately was concerned by the potential expansion of slavery into the newly acquired territories.[80] In 1824, the Monroe administration would strengthen US claims to Oregon by ratifying the Russo-American Treaty of 1824, which established Russian Alaska's southern border at 54°40′ north.[81]

Monroe Doctrine

As the Spanish Empire continued to fracture during Monroe's second term, Adams, Monroe and Clay became increasingly concerned that the "Holy Alliance" of Prussia, Austria, and Russia would seek to bring Spain's erstwhile colonies under their control, to the point of even contemplating a Holy Alliance of their own to defend democracy. In his 1821 Fourth of July address, Adams addressed this issue, noting a shared "chain of sympathy" between the U.S. and Latin America, but arguing for neutrality rather than a Holy Alliance.[82] In 1822, following the conclusion of the Adams–Onís Treaty, the Monroe administration recognized the independence of several Latin American countries, including Argentina and Mexico. In 1823, British Foreign Secretary George Canning suggested that the United States and Britain should work together to preserve the independence of these fledgling republics. The cabinet debated whether to accept the offer, but Adams opposed it. Instead, Adams urged Monroe to publicly declare the United States' opposition to any European attempt to colonize or re-take control of territory in the Americas, while also committing the United States to neutrality in European affairs. In his December 1823 annual message to Congress, Monroe laid out the Monroe Doctrine, which was largely built upon Adams's ideas.[83] In issuing the Monroe Doctrine, the United States displayed a new level of assertiveness in international relations, as the doctrine represented the country's first claim to a sphere of influence. It also marked the country's shift in psychological orientation away from Europe and towards the Americas. Debates over foreign policy would no longer center on relations with Britain and France, but instead focus on western expansion and relations with Native Americans.[84] The doctrine became one of the foundational principles of U.S. foreign policy.[83]

1824 presidential election

 
1824 presidential election results

Immediately upon becoming Secretary of State, Adams emerged as one of Monroe's most likely successors, as the last three presidents had all served in the role before taking office. As the 1824 election approached, Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun (who later dropped out of the race), and William H. Crawford appeared to be Adams's primary competition to succeed Monroe.[85] Crawford favored state sovereignty and a strict constructionist view of the Constitution, while Clay, Calhoun, and Adams embraced federally funded internal improvements, high tariffs, and the Second Bank of the United States, which was also known as the national bank.[86] Because the Federalist Party had all but collapsed after the War of 1812, all the major presidential candidates were members of the Democratic-Republican Party.[87] Adams felt that his own election as president would vindicate his father, while also allowing him to pursue an ambitious domestic policy. Though he lacked the charisma of his competitors, Adams was widely respected and benefited from the lack of other prominent Northern political leaders.[88]

Adams's top choice for the role of vice president was General Andrew Jackson; Adams noted that "the Vice-Presidency was a station in which [Jackson] could hang no one, and in which he would need to quarrel with no one".[89] However, as the 1824 election approached, Jackson jumped into the race for president, and Calhoun ended up receiving the Vice-presidential support of Adams supporters.[87] While the other candidates based their candidacies on their long tenure as congressmen, ambassadors, or members of the cabinet, Jackson's appeal rested on his military service, especially in the Battle of New Orleans.[90] The congressional nominating caucus had decided upon previous Democratic-Republican presidential nominees, but it had become largely discredited by 1824. Candidates were instead nominated by state legislatures or nominating conventions, and Adams received the endorsement of the New England legislatures.[91] The regional strength of each candidate played an important role in the election; Adams was popular in New England, Clay and Jackson were strong in the West, and Jackson and Crawford competed for the South.[92]

1825 contingent presidential election vote distribution
States for Adams States for Jackson States for Crawford
  • Connecticut
  • Illinois
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Missouri
  • New Hampshire
  • New York
  • Ohio
  • Rhode Island
  • Vermont
  • Alabama
  • Indiana
  • Mississippi
  • New Jersey
  • Pennsylvania
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Delaware
  • Georgia
  • North Carolina
  • Virginia
Total: 13 (54%) Total: 7 (29%) Total: 4 (17%)

In the 1824 presidential election, Jackson won a plurality in the Electoral College, taking 99 of the 261 electoral votes, while Adams won 84, Crawford won 41, and Clay took 37. Calhoun, meanwhile, won a majority of the electoral votes for vice president.[92] Adams nearly swept the electoral votes of New England and won a majority of the electoral votes in New York, but he won just six electoral votes from the slave states. Most of Jackson's support came from slave-holding states, but he also won New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and some electoral votes from the Northwest.[93] As no candidate won a majority of the electoral votes, the House was required to hold a contingent election under the terms of the Twelfth Amendment. The House would decide among the top three electoral vote winners, with each state's delegation having one vote; thus, unlike his three rivals, Clay was not eligible to be elected by the House.[92]

Adams knew that his own victory in the contingent election would require the support of Clay, who wielded immense influence in the House of Representatives.[94] Though they were quite different in temperament and had clashed in the past, Adams and Clay shared similar views on national issues. By contrast, Clay viewed Jackson as a dangerous demagogue, and he was unwilling to support Crawford due to the latter's health issues.[95] Adams and Clay met before the contingent election, and Clay agreed to support Adams in the election.[96] Adams also met with Federalists such as Daniel Webster, promising that he would not deny governmental positions to members of their party.[97] On February 9, 1825, Adams won the contingent election on the first ballot, taking 13 of the 24 state delegations. Adams won the House delegations of all the states in which he or Clay had won a majority of the electoral votes, as well as the delegations of Illinois, Louisiana, and Maryland.[96] Adams's victory made him the first child of a president to serve as president himself.[d] After the election, many of Jackson's supporters claimed that Adams and Clay had reached a "Corrupt bargain" whereby Adams promised Clay the position of Secretary of State in return for Clay's support.[96]

Presidency (1825–1829)

Inauguration

Adams was inaugurated on March 4, 1825, becoming the first son of a former United States president to himself become president, a feat only repeated 176 years later by George W. Bush, son of George H. W. Bush. As Adams took the oath of office, he departed from tradition by placing his hand on a book of constitutional law instead of on a Bible.[98] In his inaugural address, he adopted a post-partisan tone, promising to avoid party-building and politically motivated appointments. He also proposed an elaborate program of "internal improvements": roads, ports, and canals. Though some were worried about the constitutionality of such federal projects, Adams argued that the General Welfare Clause provided for broad constitutional authority. He promised that he would ask Congress to authorize many such projects.[99]

Administration

Adams presided over a harmonious and productive cabinet that he met with on a weekly basis.[100] Like Monroe, Adams sought a geographically balanced cabinet that would represent the various party factions, and he asked the members of the Monroe cabinet to remain in place for his own administration.[101] Samuel L. Southard of New Jersey stayed on as Secretary of the Navy, William Wirt kept his post of Attorney General,[102] and John McLean of Ohio continued to serve as the Postmaster General, an important position that was not part of the cabinet at that time.[103] Adams's first choices for Secretary of War and Secretary of the Treasury were Andrew Jackson and William Crawford, but each declined to serve in the administration. Adams instead selected James Barbour of Virginia, a prominent supporter of Crawford, to lead the War Department. Leadership of the Treasury Department went to Richard Rush of Pennsylvania, who would become a prominent advocate of internal improvements and protective tariffs within the administration.[104] Adams chose Henry Clay as Secretary of State, angering those who believed Clay had offered Adams his support in the 1824 election in exchange for the most prestigious position in the cabinet.[105] Clay would later regret accepting the job since it reinforced the "Corrupt Bargain" accusation. However, Clay's strength in the West and interest in foreign policy made him a natural choice for the position.[106]

Domestic affairs

Ambitious agenda

 
Medal of John Quincy Adams

In his 1825 annual message to Congress,[107] Adams presented a comprehensive and ambitious agenda. He called for major investments in internal improvements as well as the creation of a national university, a naval academy, and a national astronomical observatory. Noting the healthy status of the treasury and the possibility for more revenue via land sales, Adams argued for the completion of several projects that were in various stages of construction or planning, including a road from Washington, D.C. to New Orleans.[108] He also proposed the establishment of a Department of the Interior as a new cabinet-level department that would preside over these internal improvements.[109] Adams hoped to fund these measures primarily through Western land sales, rather than increased taxes or public debt.[86] The domestic agenda of Adams and Clay, which would come to be known as the American System, was designed to unite disparate regional interests in the promotion of a thriving national economy.[110]

Adams's programs faced opposition from various quarters. Many disagreed with his broad interpretation of the constitution and preferred that power be concentrated in state governments rather than the federal government. Others disliked interference from any level of government and were opposed to central planning.[111] Some in the South feared that Adams was secretly an abolitionist and that he sought to subordinate the states to the federal government.[112] Most of the president's proposals were defeated in Congress. Adams's ideas for a national university, a national observatory, and the establishment of a uniform system of weights and measures never received congressional votes.[113] His proposal for the creation of a naval academy won the approval of the Senate but was defeated in the House; opponents objected to the naval academy's cost and worried that the establishment of such an institution would "produce degeneracy and corruption of the public morality".[114] Adams's proposal to establish a national bankruptcy law was also defeated.[113]

Unlike other aspects of his domestic agenda, Adams won congressional approval for several ambitious infrastructure projects.[115] Between 1824 and 1828, the United States Army Corps of Engineers conducted surveys for a bevy of potential roads, canals, railroads, and improvements in river navigation. Adams presided over major repairs and further construction on the National Road, and shortly after he left office the National Road extended from Cumberland, Maryland, to Zanesville, Ohio.[116] The Adams administration also saw the beginning of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal; the construction of the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal and the Louisville and Portland Canal around the Falls of the Ohio; the connection of the Great Lakes to the Ohio River system in Ohio and Indiana; and the enlargement and rebuilding of the Dismal Swamp Canal in North Carolina.[117] Additionally, the first passenger railroad in the United States, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, was constructed during Adams's presidency. Though many of these projects were undertaken by private actors, the government often provided money or land to aid the completion of such projects.[118]

Formation of political parties

 
General Andrew Jackson, Adams's opponent in the 1824 and 1828 United States presidential elections

In the immediate aftermath of the 1825 contingent election, Jackson was gracious to Adams.[119] Nevertheless, Adams's appointment of Clay rankled Jackson, who received a flood of letters encouraging him to run. In 1825, Jackson accepted the presidential nomination of the Tennessee legislature for the 1828 election.[120] Though he had been close to Adams during Monroe's presidency, Vice President Calhoun was also politically alienated from the president by the appointment of Clay, since that appointment established Clay as the natural heir to Adams.[121] Adams's ambitious December 1825 annual message to Congress further galvanized the opposition, with important figures such as Francis Preston Blair of Kentucky and Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri breaking with the Adams administration.[122] By the end of the first session of the 19th United States Congress, an anti-Adams congressional coalition consisting of Jacksonians (led by Benton and Hugh Lawson White), Crawfordites (led by Martin Van Buren and Nathaniel Macon), and Calhounites (led by Robert Y. Hayne and George McDuffie) had emerged.[123] Aside from Clay, Adams lacked strong supporters outside of the North, and Edward Everett, John Taylor, and Daniel Webster served as his strongest advocates in Congress.[124] Supporters of Adams began calling themselves National Republicans, while supporters of Jackson began calling themselves Democrats.[125] In the press, they were often described as "Adams Men" and "Jackson Men".[126]

In the 1826 elections, Adams's opponents picked up seats throughout the country, as allies of Adams failed to coordinate among themselves.[127] Andrew Stevenson, a Jackson supporter, replaced John Taylor, an Adams supporter, as Speaker of the House.[128] As Adams himself noted, the United States had never seen a Congress that was firmly under the control of political opponents of the president.[129] After the elections, Van Buren and Calhoun agreed to throw their support behind Jackson in 1828, with Van Buren bringing along many of Crawford's supporters.[130] Though Jackson did not articulate a detailed political platform in the same way that Adams did, his coalition united in opposition to Adams's reliance on government planning.[131] Adams, meanwhile, clung to the hope of a non-partisan nation, and he refused to make full use of the power of patronage to build up his own party structure.[132]

Tariff of 1828

 
Painting of Quincy Adams by Charles Osgood, 1828

During the first half of his administration, Adams avoided taking a strong stand on tariffs, partly because he wanted to avoid alienating his allies in the South and New England.[133] After Jacksonians took power in 1827, they devised a tariff bill designed to appeal to Western states while instituting high rates on imported materials important to the economy of New England. It is unclear whether Van Buren, who shepherded the bill through Congress, meant for the bill to pass, or if he had deliberately designed it to force Adams and his allies to oppose it.[134] Regardless, Adams signed the Tariff of 1828, which became known as the "Tariff of Abominations" by opponents. Adams was denounced in the South, and he received little credit for the tariff in the North.[135]

Indian policy

Adams sought the gradual assimilation of Native Americans via consensual agreements, a priority shared by few whites in the 1820s. Yet Adams was also deeply committed to the westward expansion of the United States. Settlers on the frontier, constantly seeking to move westward, cried for a more expansionist policy that disregarded the concerns of Native Americans. Early in his term, Adams suspended the Treaty of Indian Springs after learning that the Governor of Georgia, George Troup, had forced the treaty on the Muscogee.[136] Adams signed a new treaty with the Muscogee in January 1826 that allowed the Muscogee to stay but ceded most of their land to Georgia. Troup refused to accept its terms and authorized all Georgian citizens to evict the Muscogee.[137] A showdown between Georgia and the federal government was only averted after the Muscogee agreed to a third treaty.[138] Though many saw Troup as unreasonable in his dealings with the federal government and the Native Americans, the administration's handling of the incident alienated those in the Deep South who favored immediate Indian removal.[139]

Foreign affairs

Adams famously said "America goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy".[140]

Trade and claims

 
Quincy Adams appointed Henry Clay as Secretary of State

One of the major foreign policy goals of the Adams administration was the expansion of American trade.[141] His administration reached reciprocity treaties with a number of nations, including Denmark, Prussia, and the Federal Republic of Central America. The administration also reached commercial agreements with the Kingdom of Hawaii and the Kingdom of Tahiti.[142] Agreements with Denmark and Sweden opened their colonies to American trade, but Adams was especially focused on opening trade with the British West Indies. The United States had reached a commercial agreement with Britain in 1815, but that agreement excluded British possessions in the Western Hemisphere. In response to United States pressure, the British had begun to allow a limited amount of American imports to the West Indies in 1823, but United States leaders continued to seek an end to Britain's protective Imperial Preference system.[143] In 1825, Britain banned United States trade with the British West Indies, dealing a blow to Adams's prestige.[144] The Adams administration negotiated extensively with the British to lift this ban, but the two sides could not reach an agreement.[145] Despite the loss of trade with the British West Indies, the other commercial agreements secured by Adams helped expand the overall volume of United States exports.[146]

Latin America

Aside from an unsuccessful attempt to purchase Texas from Mexico, President Adams did not seek to expand into Latin America or North America.[147] Adams and Clay instead sought engagement with Latin America to prevent it from falling under the British Empire's economic influence.[148] As part of this goal, the administration favored sending a United States delegation to the Congress of Panama, an 1826 conference of New World republics organized by Simón Bolívar.[149] Clay and Adams hoped that the conference would inaugurate a "Good Neighborhood Policy" among the independent states of the Americas.[150] However, the funding for a delegation and the confirmation of delegation nominees became entangled in a political battle over Adams's domestic policies, with opponents such as Van Buren impeding the confirmation of a delegation.[111] While Van Buren saw the Panama Congress as an unwelcome deviation from the more isolationist foreign policy established by President Washington,[150] many Southerners opposed involvement with any conference attended by delegates from Haiti, a republic that had been established through a slave revolt.[151] Though the United States delegation finally won confirmation from the Senate, it never reached the Congress of Panama due to the Senate's delay.[152]

1828 presidential election

 
1828 presidential election results

The Jacksonians formed an effective party apparatus that adopted many modern campaign techniques. Rather than focusing on issues, they emphasized Jackson's popularity and the supposed corruption of Adams and the federal government. Jackson himself described the campaign as a "struggle between the virtue of the people and executive patronage".[153] Adams, meanwhile, refused to adapt to the new reality of political campaigns, and he avoided public functions and refused to invest in pro-administration tools such as newspapers.[154] In early 1827, Jackson was publicly accused of having encouraged his wife, Rachel, to desert her first husband.[155] In response, followers of Jackson attacked Adams's personal life, and the campaign turned increasingly nasty.[156] The Jacksonian press portrayed Adams as an out-of-touch elitist,[157] while pro-Adams newspapers attacked Jackson's past involvement in various duels and scuffles, portraying him as too emotional and impetuous for the presidency. Though Adams and Clay had hoped that the campaign would focus on the American System, it was instead dominated by the personalities of Jackson and Adams.[158]

Vice President Calhoun joined Jackson's ticket, while Adams turned to Secretary of the Treasury Richard Rush as his running mate.[159] The 1828 election thus marked the first time in United States history that a presidential ticket composed of two Northerners faced off against a presidential ticket composed of two Southerners.[160] In the election, Jackson won 178 of the 261 electoral votes and just under 56% of the popular vote.[161] Jackson won 50.3% of the popular vote in the free states, but 72.6% of the vote in the slave states.[162] No future presidential candidate would match Jackson's proportion of the popular vote until Theodore Roosevelt's 1904 campaign, while Adams's loss made him the second one-term president, after his own father.[161] By 1828, only two states did not hold a popular vote for president, and the number of votes in the 1828 election was triple that in the 1824 election. This increase in votes was due not only to the recent wave of democratization, but also because of increased interest in elections and the growing ability of the parties to mobilize voters.[163] Adams did not attend Jackson's inauguration, making him one of only four presidents who finished their terms but skipped the event.[164]

Later congressional career (1830–1848)

Jackson administration, 1830–1836

 
Daguerreotype of Quincy Adams by Philip Haas, 1843

Adams considered permanently retiring from public life after his 1828 defeat, and he was deeply hurt by the suicide of his son, George Washington Adams, in 1829.[165] He was appalled by many of the Jackson administration's actions, including its embrace of the spoils system[166] and the prosecution of his close friend, Treasury Auditor Tobias Watkins, for embezzlement.[167] Though they had once maintained a cordial relationship, Adams and Jackson each came to loathe the other in the decades after the 1828 election.[168] Adams grew bored with his retirement and still felt that his career was unfinished, so he ran for and won a seat in the United States House of Representatives in the 1830 elections.[169] His election went against the generally held opinion, shared by his own wife and youngest son, that former presidents should not run for public office.[170] Nonetheless, he would win election to nine terms, serving from 1831 until his death in 1848.[1] Adams and Andrew Johnson are the only former presidents to serve in Congress.[171] After winning election, Adams became affiliated with the Anti-Masonic Party, partly because the National Republican Party's leadership in Massachusetts included many of the former Federalists that Adams had clashed with earlier in his career. The Anti-Masonic Party originated as a movement against Freemasonry, but it developed into the country's first third party and embraced a general program of anti-elitism.[172]

Adams expected a light workload when he returned to Washington at 64 years old, but Speaker Andrew Stevenson selected Adams chair of the Committee on Commerce and Manufactures.[173] Though he identified as a member of the Anti-Masonic Party, Congress was broadly polarized into allies of Jackson and opponents of Jackson, and Adams generally aligned with the latter camp.[174] Stevenson, an ally of Jackson, expected that the committee chairmanship would keep Adams busy defending the tariff even while the Jacksonian majority on the committee would prevent Adams from accruing any real power.[175] As chair of the committee charged with writing tariff laws, Adams became an important player in the nullification crisis, which stemmed largely from Southern objections to the high rates imposed by the Tariff of 1828. South Carolina leaders argued that states could nullify federal laws, and they announced that they would bar the federal government from enforcing the tariff in their state.[176] Adams helped pass the Tariff of 1832, which lowered rates, but not enough to mollify the South Carolina nullifiers. The crisis ended when Clay and Calhoun agreed to another tariff bill, the Tariff of 1833, that furthered lower tariff rates. Adams was appalled by the Nullification Crisis's outcome, as he felt that the Southern states had unfairly benefited from challenging federal law.[177] After the crisis, Adams was convinced that Southerners exercised undue influence over the federal government through their control of Jackson's Democratic Party.[178]

In the 1833 Massachusetts gubernatorial election, the Anti-Masonic Party nominated Adams in a four-way race between Adams, the National Republican candidate, the Democratic candidate, and a candidate of the Working Men's Party. The National Republican candidate, John Davis, won 40% of the vote, while Adams finished in second place with 29%. Because no candidate won a majority of the vote, the state legislature decided the election. Rather than seek election by the legislature, Adams withdrew his name from contention, and the legislature selected Davis.[179] Adams was nearly elected to the Senate in 1835 by a coalition of Anti-Masons and National Republicans, but his support for Jackson in a minor foreign policy matter annoyed National Republican leaders enough that they dropped their support for his candidacy.[180] After 1835, Adams never again sought higher office, focusing instead on his service in the House of Representatives.[181]

Van Buren, Harrison and Tyler administrations, 1837–1843

 
Portrait of Quincy Adams by William Hudson, 1844

In the mid-1830s, the Anti-Masonic Party, the National Republicans, and other groups opposed to Jackson coalesced into the Whig Party.[182] In the 1836 presidential election Democrats put forward Martin Van Buren, while the Whigs fielded multiple presidential candidates. Because he disdained all the major party contenders for president, Adams did not take part in the campaign; Van Buren won the election.[183] Nonetheless, Adams became aligned with the Whig Party in Congress.[184] Adams generally opposed the initiatives of President Van Buren, long a political adversary, though they maintained a cordial public relationship.[185]

The Republic of Texas won its independence from Mexico in the Texas Revolution of 1835–1836. Texas had largely been settled by Americans from the Southern United States, and many of those settlers owned slaves despite an 1829 Mexican law that abolished slavery. Many in the United States and Texas thus favored the admission of Texas into the union as a slave state. Adams considered the issue of Texas to be "a question of far deeper root and more overshadowing branches than any or all others that agitate the country", and he emerged as one of the leading congressional opponents of annexation. When he served as secretary of state, Adams had sought to acquire Texas, but he argued that, because Mexico had abolished slavery, the acquisition of Texas would transform the region from a free territory into a slave state. He also feared that the annexation of Texas would encourage Southern expansionists to pursue other potential slave states, including Cuba. Adams's firm stance may have played a role in discouraging Van Buren from pushing for the annexation of Texas during his presidency.[186]

Whig nominee William Henry Harrison defeated Van Buren in the 1840 presidential election, and the Whigs gained control of both houses of Congress for the first time. Despite his low regard for Harrison as a person, Adams was enthusiastic about the new Whig administration and the end of the long-standing Democratic dominance of the federal government.[187] However, Harrison died in April 1841 and was succeeded by Vice President John Tyler, a Southerner who, unlike Adams, Henry Clay, and many other prominent Whigs, did not embrace the American System. Adams saw Tyler as an agent of "the slave-driving, Virginia, Jeffersonian school, principled against all improvement". After Tyler vetoed a bill to restore the national bank, Whig congressmen expelled Tyler from the party. Adams was appointed chairman of a special committee that explored impeaching Tyler, and Adams presented a scathing report of Tyler that argued that his actions warranted impeachment. The impeachment process did not move forward, though, because the Whigs did not believe that the Senate would vote to remove Tyler from office.[188]

Opposition to the Mexican-American War, 1844–1848

 
John Quincy Adams, c. 1840s, Unknown author

Tyler made the annexation of Texas the main foreign policy priority of the later stages of his administration.[189] He attempted to win ratification of an annexation treaty in 1844, but, to Adams's surprise and relief, the Senate rejected the treaty.[190] The annexation of Texas became the central issue of the 1844 presidential election, and Southerners blocked the nomination of Van Buren at the 1844 Democratic National Convention due to the latter's opposition to annexation; the party instead nominated James K. Polk, an acolyte of Andrew Jackson.[191] Though he once again did not take part in the campaigning, Adams was deeply disappointed that Polk defeated his old ally, Henry Clay, in the 1844 election. He attributed the outcome of the election partly to the Liberty Party, a small, abolitionist third party that may have siphoned votes from Clay in the crucial state of New York.[192] After the election, Tyler, whose term would end in March 1845, once again submitted an annexation treaty to Congress.[e] Adams strongly attacked the treaty, arguing that the annexation of Texas would involve the United States in "a war for slavery". Despite Adams's opposition, both houses of Congress approved the treaty, with most Democrats voting for annexation and most Whigs voting against it. Texas thus joined the United States as a slave state in 1845.[194]

Adams had served with James K. Polk in the House of Representatives, and Adams loathed the new president, seeing him as another expansionist, pro-slavery Southern Democrat.[195] Adams favored the annexation of the entirety of Oregon Country, a disputed region occupied by both the United States and Britain, and was disappointed when President Polk signed the Oregon Treaty, which divided the land between the two claimants at the 49th parallel.[196] Polk's expansionist aims centered instead on the Mexican province of Alta California, and he attempted to buy the province from Mexico. The Mexican government refused to sell California or recognize the independence and subsequent American annexation of Texas. Polk deployed a military detachment led by General Zachary Taylor to back up his assertion that the Rio Grande constituted the Southern border of both Texas and the United States. After Taylor's forces clashed with Mexican soldiers north of the Rio Grande, Polk asked for a declaration of war in early 1846, asserting that Mexico had invaded American territory. Though some Whigs questioned whether Mexico had started an aggressive war, both houses of Congress declared war, with the House voting 174-to-14 to approve the declaration. One of the 14 dissenting votes was Adams, who believed that Polk was seeking to wage an offensive to expand slavery.[197] After the start of the war, he supported the Wilmot Proviso, an unsuccessful legislative proposal that would have banned slavery in any territory ceded by Mexico.[198] After 1846, ill health increasingly affected Adams, but he continued to oppose the Mexican–American War until his death in 1848.[199]

Anti-slavery movement

 
BEP engraved portrait of Adams as president

In the 1830s, slavery emerged as an increasingly polarizing issue in the United States.[200] A longtime opponent of slavery, Adams used his new role in Congress to fight it, and he became the most prominent national leader opposing slavery.[201] After one of his reelection victories, he said that he must "bring about a day prophesied when slavery and war shall be banished from the face of the Earth". He wrote in his private journal in 1820:[202]

The discussion of this Missouri question has betrayed the secret of their souls. In the abstract they admit that slavery is an evil, they disclaim it, and cast it all upon the shoulder of Great Britain. But when probed to the quick upon it, they show at the bottom of their souls pride and vainglory in their condition of masterdom. They look down upon the simplicity of a Yankee's manners, because he has no habits of overbearing like theirs and cannot treat negroes like dogs. It is among the evils of slavery that it taints the very sources of moral principle. It establishes false estimates of virtue and vice: for what can be more false and heartless than this doctrine which makes the first and holiest rights of humanity to depend upon the color of the skin?

In 1836, partially in response to Adams's consistent presentation of citizen petitions requesting the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, the U.S. House of Representatives imposed a gag rule that immediately tabled any petitions about slavery. Democrats and Southern Whigs favored the rule, but Northern Whigs, like Adams, opposed it.[203] In late 1836, Adams began a campaign to ridicule slave owners and the gag rule. He frequently attempted to present anti-slavery petitions, often in ways that provoked strong reactions from Southern representatives.[204] Though the gag rule remained in place,[205] the discussion ignited by his actions and the attempts of others to quiet him raised questions of the right to petition, the right to legislative debate, and the morality of slavery. Adams fought actively against the gag rule for another seven years, eventually moving the resolution that led to its repeal in 1844.[206]

In 1841, at the request of Lewis Tappan and Ellis Gray Loring, Adams joined the case of United States v. The Amistad. Adams went before the Supreme Court on behalf of African slaves who had revolted and seized the Spanish ship Amistad. Adams appeared on February 24, 1841, and spoke for four hours. His argument succeeded: the Court ruled that the Africans were free and they returned to their homes.[207]

Smithsonian Institution

 
Adams's portrait at the U.S. National Portrait Gallery by George Bingham c. 1850 copy of an 1844 original

Adams also became a leading force for the promotion of science. In 1829, British scientist James Smithson died, and he left his fortune for the "increase and diffusion of knowledge". In Smithson's will, he stated that should his nephew, Henry James Hungerford, die without heirs, the Smithson estate would go to the government of the United States to create an "Establishment for the increase and diffusion of Knowledge among men". After the nephew died without heirs in 1835, President Andrew Jackson informed Congress of the bequest, which amounted to about US$500,000 (US$18 million in 2024 dollars after inflation). Adams realized that this might allow the United States to realize his dream of building a national institution of science and learning. Adams thus became Congress's primary supporter of the future Smithsonian Institution.[208]

The money was invested in shaky state bonds, which quickly defaulted. After heated debate in Congress, Adams successfully argued to restore the lost funds with interest.[209] Though Congress wanted to use the money for other purposes, Adams successfully persuaded Congress to preserve the money for an institution of science and learning. Congress also debated whether the federal government had the authority to accept the gift, though with Adams leading the initiative, Congress accepted the legacy bequeathed to the nation and pledged the faith of the United States to the charitable trust on July 1, 1836.[210] Partly due to Adams's efforts, Congress voted to establish the Smithsonian Institution in 1846. A nonpolitical board of regents was established to lead the institution, which included a museum, art gallery, library, and laboratory.[211]

Death

 
Adams's cenotaph at the Congressional Cemetery

In 1846, the 78-year-old former president suffered a stroke that left him partially paralyzed. After a few months of rest, he made a full recovery and resumed his duties in Congress. When Adams entered the House chamber on February 13, 1847, everyone "stood up and applauded".[212]

 
John Quincy Adams during his final hours of life after his collapse in the Capitol. Drawing in pencil by Arthur Joseph Stansbury, digitally restored.

On February 21, 1848, the House of Representatives was discussing the matter of honoring United States Army officers who served in the Mexican–American War. Adams had been a vehement critic of the war, and as Congressmen rose up to say, "Aye!" in favor of the measure, he instead yelled, "No!"[213] He rose to answer a question put forth by Speaker of the House Robert Charles Winthrop.[214] Immediately thereafter, Adams collapsed, having suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage.[215] Two days later, on February 23, he died at 7:20 p.m. with his wife at his side in the Speaker's Room inside the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.; his only living child, Charles Francis, did not arrive in time to see his father alive. His last words were "This is the last of Earth. I am content".[214] Among those present for his death was future president Abraham Lincoln, then a freshman representative from Illinois.[216]

 
John Quincy Adams's original tomb at Hancock Cemetery, across the street from United First Parish Church

His original interment was temporary, in the public vault at the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. Later, he was interred in the family burial ground in Quincy, Massachusetts, across from the (Unitarian) United First Parish Church, called Hancock Cemetery. After Louisa's death in 1852, his son had his parents re-interred in the expanded family crypt in the United First Parish Church across the street, next to John and Abigail. Both tombs are viewable by the public. Adams's original tomb at Hancock Cemetery is still there and marked simply "J.Q. Adams".[217]

Personal life

Adams and Louisa had three sons and a daughter. Their daughter, Louisa, was born in 1811 but died in 1812.[218] They named their first son George Washington Adams (1801–1829) after the first president. This decision upset Adams's mother, and, by her account, his father as well.[219] Both George and their second son, John (1803–1834), led troubled lives and died in early adulthood.[220][221] George, who had long suffered from alcoholism, died in 1829 after going overboard on a steamboat; it is not clear whether he fell or purposely jumped from the boat.[222] John, who ran an unprofitable flour and grist mill owned by his father, died of an unknown illness in 1834.[223] Adams's youngest son, Charles Francis Adams Sr., was an important leader of the "Conscience Whigs", a Northern, anti-slavery faction of the Whig Party.[199] Charles served as the Free Soil Party's vice presidential candidate in the 1848 presidential election and later became a prominent member of the Republican Party, serving as United States Minister to England during the American Civil War.[224]

Personality

 
Presidential Dollar of John Quincy Adams

Adams's personality and political beliefs were much like his father's.[225] He always preferred solitary reading to social engagements, and he was repeatedly persuaded to stay in public service by others. Historian Paul Nagel states that, like Abraham Lincoln after him, Adams often suffered from depression, for which he sought treatment in early years. Adams thought his depression was due to the high expectations demanded of him by his father and mother. Throughout his life, he felt inadequate and socially awkward because of his depression, and was constantly bothered by his physical appearance.[225] He was closer to his father, with whom he spent much of his early life while abroad, than he was to his mother. In his youth, while the American Revolution raged on, Adams heard from his mother about his father's work and the substantial risks he took to support it. As a result, he developed a deep respect for his father.[225] In contrast, Adams had a rocky relationship with his mother, due to her high expectations of him, and her fear that her children would follow in the footsteps of her brother, who died of alcoholism.[225] His biographer, Nagel, concludes that his mother's disapproval of Louisa Johnson motivated him to marry Johnson in 1797, despite Adams's reservations that Johnson, like his mother, had a forceful personality.[225]

Though Adams wore a powdered wig tied in a queue in his youth, he abandoned this fashion while serving as the U.S. Minister to Russia (1809–1814)[226] and became the first president to adopt a short haircut instead of long hair tied in a queue and to regularly wear long trousers instead of knee breeches according to the fashion of the 19th century.[227][228] It has been suggested that John Quincy Adams had the highest I.Q. of any U.S. president.[229][230] Dean Simonton, a professor of psychology at UC Davis, estimated his I.Q. score at 165.[231] He reportedly spoke eight foreign languages (Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Russian, and Spanish), more than any other U.S. president. He remains the only U.S. president who could converse in Russian.[232]

Legacy

Historical reputation

 
Official portrait of Adams by George Peter Alexander Healy, c. 1858

Adams is widely regarded as one of the most effective diplomats and secretaries of state in American history,[233][234] but scholars generally rank him as an average president.[235][236] Adams is remembered as a man eminently qualified for the presidency, yet hopelessly weakened in his presidential leadership potential because of the 1824 election. Most importantly, Adams is remembered as a poor politician in an era when politics had begun to matter more. He spoke of trying to serve as a man above the "baneful weed of party strife" at the precise moment in history when the Second Party System was emerging with nearly revolutionary force.[171] Biographer and historian William J. Cooper Jr. comments that Adams "does not loom large in the American imagination", but that he has received more public attention since the late 20th century due to his anti-slavery stances. Cooper writes that Adams was the first "major public figure" to publicly question whether the United States could remain united so long as the institution of slavery persisted.[233] Historian Daniel Walker Howe writes that Adams's "intellectual ability and courage were above reproach, and his wisdom in perceiving the national interest has stood the test of time".[237] He has also been praised as a strong prose stylist, with James Parker describing him as one of the "three authentically muddy-eyed and pained-by-subjectivity writers" that the White House has harbored, along with Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama.[238]

Memorials

 
Peacefield – John Quincy Adams's Home

John Quincy Adams Birthplace is now part of Adams National Historical Park and open to the public. Adams House, one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University, is named for John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and other members of the Adams family associated with Harvard.[239] John Quincy Adams tower, located in the Southwest residential area of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, is named for the president.[240] In 1870, Charles Francis built the first presidential library in the United States, to honor his father. The Stone Library includes over 14,000 books written in twelve languages. The library is located at Peacefield (the "Old House") at Adams National Historical Park in Quincy, Massachusetts.

 
Tombs of Presidents John Adams (far left) and John Quincy Adams (right) and their wives Abigail and Louisa, in a family crypt beneath the United First Parish Church.

An Adams Memorial has been proposed in Washington, D.C., honoring Adams and his wife, son, father, mother, and other members of their family.

Adams's middle name of Quincy has been used by several locations in the United States, including the town of Quincy, Illinois. Adams County, Illinois and Adams County, Indiana are also named after Adams. Adams County, Iowa, and Adams County, Wisconsin, were each named for either John Adams or John Quincy Adams.

Some sources contend that in 1843 Adams sat for the earliest confirmed photograph of a United States president, although others maintain that William Henry Harrison had posed even earlier for his portrait, in 1841.[241] The original daguerreotype is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution.[242]

Film and television

Adams occasionally is featured in the mass media. In the PBS miniseries The Adams Chronicles (1976), he was portrayed by David Birney, William Daniels, Marcel Trenchard, Steven Grover and Mark Winkworth. He was also portrayed by Anthony Hopkins in the 1997 film Amistad, and again by Ebon Moss-Bachrach and Steven Hinkle in the 2008 HBO television miniseries John Adams.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Quincy family name was pronounced /ˈkwɪnzi/, as in the name of Quincy, Massachusetts (then called Braintree), where Adams was born. All of the other Quincy place names are locally /ˈkwɪnsi/. Though not accurate, this pronunciation is also commonly used for Adams's middle name.[2]
  2. ^ When Adams took office as president in 1825, Louisa became the first First Lady born outside of the United States. In 2017, Melania Trump became the second First Lady born outside of the United States.[28]
  3. ^ Adams had been especially concerned by the Hartford Convention, which had been called by anti-war Federalists to discuss their grievances against the Madison administration.[66]
  4. ^ In 2001, George W. Bush would become the second child of a president to serve as president.
  5. ^ Tyler had initially sent the treaty to the Senate; the Constitution provides that a two-thirds vote of the Senate is required to ratify any treaty. After the 1844 election, Tyler asked Congress to approve the treaty via joint resolution, which would require a simple majority vote in both houses of Congress.[193]

References

  1. ^ a b   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: "John Quincy Adams; Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress". Bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  2. ^ Wead, Doug (2005). The Raising of a President. New York: Atria Books. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7434-9726-8.
  3. ^   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Quincy, Mailing Address: 135 Adams Street. "John Quincy Adams Birthplace – Adams National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)". nps.gov. Retrieved March 4, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 5, 2021.
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Works cited

  • Abraham, Henry Julian (2008). Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Bush II. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5895-3.
  • Allgor, Catherine (1997). "'A Republican in a Monarchy': Louisa Catherine Adams in Russia". Diplomatic History. 21 (1): 15–43. doi:10.1111/1467-7709.00049. ISSN 0145-2096. JSTOR 24913402.
  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg (1981) [1949]. John Quincy Adams and the Foundations of American Foreign Policy. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-22636-6.
  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg (1956). John Quincy Adams and the Union. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-41413-3.
  • Cooper, William J. (2017). The Lost Founding Father: John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics. Liveright Publishing. ISBN 978-1-63149-389-8.
  • Edel, Charles N. (2014). Nation Builder: John Quincy Adams and the Grand Strategy of the Republic. Harvard Univ. Press.
  • Georgini, Sara. Household Gods: The Religious Lives of the Adams Family (Oxford University Press, 2019).
  • Hargreaves, Mary W.M. (1985). The Presidency of John Quincy Adams. Univ. Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700602728.
  • Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974379-7.
  • Kaplan, Fred (2014). John Quincy Adams: American Visionary. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-219932-4.
  • Lewis Jr, James E. John Quincy Adams: Policymaker for the Union (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2001).[ISBN missing]
  • Mattie, Sean (2003). "John Quincy Adams and American Conservatism" (PDF). Modern Age. 45 (4): 305–314. ISSN 0026-7457.
  • McCullough, David (2001). John Adams. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 144. ISBN 978-1-4165-7588-7.
  • Miller, William Lee (1996). Arguing About Slavery: The Great Battle in the United States Congress. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-56922-2.
  • Nagel, Paul C. (1983). Descent from Glory: Four Generations of the John Adams Family. Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503172-0.
  • Nagel, Paul (1999). John Quincy Adams: A Public Life, a Private Life. Harvard Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-674-47940-1.
  • Parsons, Lynn H. (2009). The Birth of Modern Politics: Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, and the Election of 1828. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-983754-0. excerpt and text search
  • Parsons, Lynn H. (1998). John Quincy Adams. Rowman and LittleField. ISBN 978-1-4422-0288-7.
  • Potkay, Adam S. (1999). "Theorizing Civic Eloquence in the Early Republic: the Road from David Hume to John Quincy Adams". Early American Literature. 34 (2): 147–170. ISSN 0012-8163.
  • Rathbun, Lyon (2000). "The Ciceronian Rhetoric of John Quincy Adams". Rhetorica. 18 (2): 175–215. doi:10.1525/rh.2000.18.2.175. ISSN 0734-8584. S2CID 144055057.
  • Remini, Robert V. (2002). John Quincy Adams. New York: Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-6939-6.
  • Thompson, Robert R. (1991). "John Quincy Adams, Apostate: From "Outrageous Federalist" to "Republican Exile," 1801- 1809". Journal of the Early Republic. 11 (2): 161–183. doi:10.2307/3123239. JSTOR 3123239.
  • Traub, James (2016). John Quincy Adams: Militant Spirit. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-09879-8.

Further reading

Secondary sources

  • Holt, Michael F. (1999). The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-977203-2.
  • McMillan, Richard (2001). "Election of 1824: Corrupt Bargain or the Birth of Modern Politics?". New England Journal of History. 58 (2): 24–37.
  • Morgan, William G. "Henry Clay's Biographers and the 'Corrupt Bargain' Charge." Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 66#3 (1968), pp. 242–58. online
  • Morgan, William G. "John Quincy Adams Versus Andrew Jackson: Their Biographers And The 'Corrupt Bargain' Charge." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 26#1 (1967), pp. 43–58. online
  • Nagel, Paul C. (1983). Descent from Glory: Four Generations of the John Adams Family. New York: Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503172-0.
  • Parsons, Lynn Hudson (2003). "In Which the Political Becomes Personal, and Vice Versa: the Last Ten Years of John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson". Journal of the Early Republic. 23 (3): 421–443. doi:10.2307/3595046. ISSN 0275-1275. JSTOR 3595046.
  • Pessen, Edward. "John Quincy Adams" in Henry Graff, ed. The Presidents: A Reference History (3rd ed. 2002) online
  • Unger, Harlow Giles (2012). John Quincy Adams. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-82130-1.
  • Waldstreicher, David (2013). A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-52429-9. excerpt and text search
  • Wood, Gary V. (2004). Heir to the Fathers: John Quincy Adams and the Spirit of Constitutional Government. Ladham, Maryland: Lexington. ISBN 978-0-7391-0601-3.

Primary sources

  • Waldstreicher, David, ed. The Diaries of John Quincy Adams, 1779–1821 (Library of America, 20170. xiv, 727 pp.)
  • Adams, John Quincy (1874–1877). Adams, Charles Francis (ed.). Memoirs of John Quincy Adams: Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795 to 1848. 12 v. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co. ISBN 978-0-8369-5021-2. OCLC 559230698.
  • Adams, John Quincy (1913–1917). Ford, Worthington C (ed.). Writings of John Quincy Adams. 7 v. New York: The Macmillan Company. OCLC 564019879.
  • Butterfield, L. H.; Taylor, Robert J.; Ryerson, Richard A., eds. (1961). The Adams Papers. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. OCLC 56354007. Founders Online, searchable edition

External links

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  • Scholarly coverage of Adams at Miller Center, U of Virginia

john, quincy, adams, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, july, 1767, february, 1848, american, statesman, politician, diplomat, lawyer, diarist, served, sixth, president, united, states, from, 1825, 1829, previously, served, eighth, u. JQA redirects here For other uses see John Quincy Adams disambiguation and JQA disambiguation John Quincy Adams ˈ k w ɪ n z i a July 11 1767 February 23 1848 was an American statesman politician diplomat lawyer and diarist who served as the sixth president of the United States from 1825 to 1829 He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825 During his long diplomatic and political career Adams served as an ambassador and also as a member of the United States Congress representing Massachusetts in both chambers He was the eldest son of John Adams who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801 and First Lady Abigail Adams Initially a Federalist like his father he won election to the presidency as a member of the Democratic Republican Party and later in the mid 1830s became affiliated with the Whig Party John Quincy AdamsPortrait c 1843 18486th President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1825 March 4 1829Vice PresidentJohn C CalhounPreceded byJames MonroeSucceeded byAndrew Jackson8th United States Secretary of StateIn office September 22 1817 March 3 1825PresidentJames MonroePreceded byJames MonroeSucceeded byHenry Clay14th Dean of the United States House of RepresentativesIn office April 22 1844 February 23 1848Preceded byDixon Hall LewisSucceeded byJames Iver McKayMember of the U S House of Representatives from MassachusettsIn office March 4 1831 February 23 1848Preceded byJoseph RichardsonSucceeded byHorace MannConstituency11th district 1831 1833 12th district 1833 1843 8th district 1843 1848 United States Senatorfrom MassachusettsIn office March 4 1803 June 8 1808Preceded byJonathan MasonSucceeded byJames LloydMember of the Massachusetts SenateIn office April 20 1802 March 4 1803Diplomatic positions7th United States Minister to the United KingdomIn office June 8 1815 May 14 1817Nominated byJames MadisonPreceded byJonathan Russell 1812 Succeeded byRichard Rush1st United States Minister to RussiaIn office November 5 1809 April 28 1814Nominated byJames MadisonPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byJames A Bayard1st United States Minister to PrussiaIn office December 5 1797 May 5 1801Nominated byJohn AdamsPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byHenry Wheaton 1835 3rd United States Minister to the NetherlandsIn office November 6 1794 June 20 1797Nominated byGeorge WashingtonPreceded byWilliam ShortSucceeded byWilliam Vans MurrayPersonal detailsBorn 1767 07 11 July 11 1767Braintree Massachusetts Bay British AmericaDiedFebruary 23 1848 1848 02 23 aged 80 Washington D C U S Resting placeUnited First Parish ChurchPolitical partyFederalist 1792 1808 Democratic Republican 1809 1828 National Republican 1828 1830 Anti Masonic 1830 1834 Whig 1834 1848 1 SpouseLouisa Johnson m 1797 wbr Children4 including George John II and CharlesParentsJohn Adams Abigail SmithRelativesAdams political family Quincy political familyEducationHarvard University AB AM OccupationPoliticianlawyerSignatureBorn in Braintree Massachusetts 3 Adams spent much of his youth in Europe where his father served as a diplomat After returning to the United States Adams established a successful legal practice in Boston In 1794 President George Washington appointed Adams as the U S ambassador to the Netherlands and Adams would serve in high ranking diplomatic posts until 1801 when Thomas Jefferson took office as president Federalist leaders in Massachusetts arranged for Adams s election to the United States Senate in 1802 but Adams broke with the Federalist Party over foreign policy and was denied re election In 1809 President James Madison a member of the Democratic Republican Party appointed Adams as the U S ambassador to Russia Multilingual Adams held diplomatic posts for the duration of Madison s presidency and he served as part of the American delegation that negotiated an end to the War of 1812 In 1817 President James Monroe selected Adams as his secretary of state In that role Adams negotiated the Adams Onis Treaty which provided for the American acquisition of Florida He also helped formulate the Monroe Doctrine which became a key tenet of U S foreign policy In 1818 Adams was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia 4 Adams Andrew Jackson William H Crawford and Henry Clay all members of the Democratic Republican Party competed in the 1824 presidential election Because no candidate won a majority of electoral votes the House of Representatives held a contingent election which Adams won with the support of Speaker of the House Henry Clay whom Adams would controversially appoint as his secretary of state As president Adams called for an ambitious agenda that included federally funded infrastructure projects the establishment of a national university and engagement with the countries of Latin America but Congress refused to pass many of his initiatives During Adams s presidency the Democratic Republican Party split into two major camps the National Republican Party which supported Adams and Andrew Jackson s Democratic Party The Democrats proved to be more effective political organizers than Adams and his National Republican supporters and Jackson soundly defeated Adams in the 1828 presidential election making Adams the second president to fail to win re election his father being the first Rather than retiring from public service Adams won election to the House of Representatives where he would serve from 1831 until his death in 1848 He remains the only former president to be elected to the chamber After narrowly losing his bids for Governor of Massachusetts and Senate re election Adams joined the Anti Masonic Party in the early 1830s before joining the Whig Party which united those opposed to President Jackson During his time in Congress Adams became increasingly critical of slavery and of the Southern leaders whom he believed controlled the Democratic Party He was particularly opposed to the annexation of Texas and the Mexican American War which he saw as a war to extend slavery and its political grip on Congress He also led the repeal of the gag rule which had prevented the House of Representatives from debating petitions to abolish slavery Historians concur that Adams was one of the greatest diplomats and secretaries of state in American history they typically rank him as an average president as he had an ambitious agenda but could not get it passed by Congress By contrast historians also view Adams in a more positive light during his post presidency because of his vehement stance against slavery as well as his fight for the rights of women and Native Americans Contents 1 Early life education and early career 2 Early political career 1793 1817 2 1 Early diplomatic career and marriage 2 2 U S senator from Massachusetts 2 3 Minister to Russia 2 4 Treaty of Ghent and ambassador to Britain 3 Secretary of State 1817 1825 3 1 Adams Onis Treaty 3 2 Monroe Doctrine 4 1824 presidential election 5 Presidency 1825 1829 5 1 Inauguration 5 2 Administration 5 3 Domestic affairs 5 3 1 Ambitious agenda 5 4 Formation of political parties 5 4 1 Tariff of 1828 5 4 2 Indian policy 5 5 Foreign affairs 5 5 1 Trade and claims 5 5 2 Latin America 5 6 1828 presidential election 6 Later congressional career 1830 1848 6 1 Jackson administration 1830 1836 6 2 Van Buren Harrison and Tyler administrations 1837 1843 6 3 Opposition to the Mexican American War 1844 1848 6 4 Anti slavery movement 6 5 Smithsonian Institution 6 6 Death 7 Personal life 7 1 Personality 8 Legacy 8 1 Historical reputation 8 2 Memorials 8 3 Film and television 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Works cited 12 Further reading 12 1 Secondary sources 12 2 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly life education and early careerJohn Quincy Adams was born on July 11 1767 to John and Abigail Adams nee Smith in a part of Braintree Massachusetts that is now Quincy 5 He was named after his mother s maternal grandfather Colonel John Quincy after whom Quincy Massachusetts is also named Colonel Quincy died two days after his great grandson s birth 6 Young Adams was educated by private tutors his cousin James Thaxter and his father s law clerk Nathan Rice 7 page needed He soon exhibited literary skills and in 1779 he started a diary that he kept until just before he died in 1848 8 Until the age of ten Adams grew up on the family farm in Braintree largely in the care of his mother Though frequently absent because of his participation in the American Revolution John Adams maintained a correspondence with his son encouraging him to read works by authors such as Thucydides and Hugo Grotius 9 With his father s encouragement Adams would also translate classical authors such as Virgil Horace Plutarch and Aristotle 10 In 1778 Adams and his father departed for Europe where John Adams would serve as part of American diplomatic missions in France and the Netherlands 11 During this period Adams studied law French Greek and Latin and attended several schools including Leiden University 12 13 In 1781 Adams traveled to Saint Petersburg Russia where he served as the secretary to the American diplomat Francis Dana 14 He returned to the Netherlands in 1783 and accompanied his father to Great Britain in 1784 15 Though Adams enjoyed Europe he and his family decided he needed to return to the United States to complete his education and eventually launch a political career 16 Adams returned to the United States in 1785 and earned admission as a member of the junior class of Harvard College the following year He joined Phi Beta Kappa and excelled academically graduating second in his class in 1787 17 After graduating from Harvard he studied law with Theophilus Parsons in Newburyport Massachusetts from 1787 to 1789 18 Adams initially opposed the ratification of the United States Constitution but he ultimately came to accept the document and in 1789 his father was elected as the first vice president of the United States 19 In 1790 Adams opened his own legal practice in Boston Despite some early struggles he was successful as an attorney and established financial independence from his parents 20 Early political career 1793 1817 Main article Electoral history of John Quincy Adams Early diplomatic career and marriage nbsp John Quincy Adams age 29 by John Singleton Copley nbsp Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams by Gilbert Stuart 1821 26 Adams initially avoided becoming involved in politics instead focusing on building his legal career In 1791 he wrote a series of pseudonymously published essays arguing that Britain provided a better governmental model than France Two years later he published another series of essays attacking Edmond Charles Genet a French diplomat who sought to undermine President George Washington s policy of neutrality in the French Revolutionary Wars 21 In 1794 Washington appointed Adams as the U S ambassador to the Netherlands Adams considered declining the role but ultimately took the position on the advice of his father 22 While abroad Adams continued to urge neutrality arguing that the United States would benefit economically by staying out of the ongoing French Revolutionary Wars 23 His chief duty as the ambassador to the Netherlands was to secure and maintain loans essential to U S finances On his way to the Netherlands he met with John Jay who was then negotiating the Jay Treaty with Great Britain Adams supported the Jay Treaty but it proved unpopular with many in the United States contributing to a growing partisan split between the Federalist Party of Alexander Hamilton and the Democratic Republican Party of Thomas Jefferson 24 In 1794 he supported John Skey Eustace who wanted to return to the United States via the Netherlands 25 Adams spent the winter of 1795 1796 in London where he met Louisa Catherine Johnson the second daughter of American merchant Joshua Johnson In April 1796 Louisa accepted Adams s proposal of marriage Adams s parents disapproved of his decision to marry a woman who had grown up in England but he informed his parents that he would not reconsider his decision 26 Adams initially wanted to delay his wedding to Louisa until he returned to the United States but they married in All Hallows by the Tower on July 26 1797 27 b Shortly after the wedding Joshua Johnson fled England to escape his creditors and Adams did not receive the dowry that Johnson had promised him much to the embarrassment of Louisa Adams noted in his own diary that he had no regrets about his decision to marry Louisa 29 In 1796 Washington appointed Adams as the U S ambassador to Portugal 30 Later that year John Adams defeated Jefferson in the 1796 presidential election When the elder Adams became president he appointed his son as the U S ambassador to Prussia 31 Though concerned that his appointment would be criticized as nepotistic Adams accepted the position and traveled to the Prussian capital of Berlin with his wife and his younger brother Thomas Boylston Adams The State Department tasked Adams with developing commercial relations with Prussia and Sweden but President Adams also asked his son to write to him frequently about affairs in Europe 32 In 1799 Adams negotiated a new trade agreement between the United States and Prussia though he could never complete an agreement with Sweden 33 He frequently wrote to family members in the United States and in 1801 his letters about the Prussian region of Silesia were published in a book titled Letters on Silesia 34 During his time in Prussia Adams befriended the German diplomat and writer Friedrich von Gentz whose work The Origins and Principles of the American Revolution Compared with the Origins and Principles of the French Revolution Adams would translate into English in 1800 In the 1800 presidential election Jefferson defeated John Adams and both Adams and his son left office in early 1801 35 U S senator from Massachusetts On his return to the United States Adams re established a legal practice in Boston and in April 1802 he was elected to the Massachusetts Senate 36 In November of that year he ran unsuccessfully for the United States House of Representatives 37 In February 1803 the Massachusetts legislature elected Adams to the United States Senate Though somewhat reluctant to affiliate with any political party Adams joined the Federalist minority in Congress 38 Like his Federalist colleagues he opposed the impeachment of Associate Justice Samuel Chase an outspoken supporter of the Federalist Party 39 Adams had strongly opposed Jefferson s 1800 presidential candidacy but he gradually became alienated from the Federalist Party His disaffection was driven by the party s declining popularity disagreements over foreign policy and Adams s hostility to Timothy Pickering a Federalist Party leader whom Adams viewed as overly favorable to Britain Unlike other New England Federalists Adams supported the Jefferson administration s Louisiana Purchase and expansionist policies 40 Adams was the lone Federalist in Congress to vote for the Non importation Act of 1806 that punished Britain for its attacks on American shipping during the ongoing Napoleonic Wars Adams became increasingly frustrated with the unwillingness of other Federalists to condemn British actions including impressment and he moved closer to the Jefferson administration After Adams supported the Embargo Act of 1807 the Federalist controlled Massachusetts legislature elected Adams s successor several months before the end of his term and Adams resigned from the Senate shortly thereafter 41 While a member of the Senate Adams served as a professor of logic at Brown University 42 and as the Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard University Adams s devotion to classical rhetoric shaped his response to public issues and he would remain inspired by those rhetorical ideals long after the neo classicalism and deferential politics of the founding generation were eclipsed by the commercial ethos and mass democracy of the Jacksonian Era Many of Adams s idiosyncratic positions were rooted in his abiding devotion to the Ciceronian ideal of the citizen orator speaking well to promote the welfare of the polis 43 He was also influenced by the classical republican ideal of civic eloquence espoused by British philosopher David Hume 44 Adams adapted these classical republican ideals of public oratory to the American debate viewing its multilevel political structure as ripe for the renaissance of Demosthenic eloquence His Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory 1810 looks at the fate of ancient oratory the necessity of liberty for it to flourish and its importance as a unifying element for a new nation of diverse cultures and beliefs Just as civic eloquence failed to gain popularity in Britain in the United States interest faded in the second decade of the 19th century as the public spheres of heated oratory disappeared in favor of the private sphere 45 Minister to Russia nbsp 1815 US passport issued by John Quincy Adams at London After resigning from the Senate Adams was ostracized by Massachusetts Federalist leaders but he declined Democratic Republican entreaties to seek office 46 In 1809 he argued before the Supreme Court of the United States in Fletcher v Peck and the Supreme Court ultimately agreed with Adams s argument that the Constitution s Contract Clause prevented the state of Georgia from invalidating a land sale to out of state companies 47 Later that year President James Madison appointed Adams as the first United States Minister to Russia in 1809 Though Adams had only recently broken with the Federalist Party his support of Jefferson s foreign policy had earned him goodwill with the Madison Administration 48 Adams was well qualified for the role after his experiences in Europe generally and Russia specifically 49 After a difficult passage through the Baltic Sea Adams arrived in the Russian capital of St Petersburg in October 1809 He quickly established a productive working relationship with Russian official Nikolay Rumyantsev and eventually befriended Tsar Alexander I of Russia Adams continued to favor American neutrality between France and Britain during the Napoleonic War 50 Louisa was initially distraught at the prospect of living in Russia but she became a popular figure at the Russian court 51 From his diplomatic post Adams observed the French Emperor Napoleon s invasion of Russia which ended in defeat for the French 52 In February 1811 President Madison nominated Adams as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court 53 The nomination was unanimously confirmed by the Senate but Adams declined the seat preferring a career in politics and diplomacy so Joseph Story took the seat instead 54 Treaty of Ghent and ambassador to Britain nbsp Adams portrait Gilbert Stuart 1818Adams had long feared that the United States would enter a war it could not win against Britain and by early 1812 he saw such a war as inevitable due to the constant British attacks on American shipping and the British practice of impressment In mid 1812 the United States declared war against Britain beginning the War of 1812 Tsar Alexander attempted to mediate the conflict between Britain and the United States and President Madison appointed Adams Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin and Federalist Senator James A Bayard to a delegation charged with negotiating an end to the war Gallatin and Bayard arrived in St Petersburg in July 1813 but the British declined Tsar Alexander s offer of mediation Hoping to start negotiations at another venue Adams left Russia in April 1814 55 Negotiations finally began in mid 1814 in Ghent where Adams Gallatin and Bayard were joined by two additional American delegates Jonathan Russell and former Speaker of the House Henry Clay 56 Adams the nominal head of the delegation got along well with Gallatin Bayard and Russell but he occasionally clashed with Clay 57 The British delegation initially treated the United States as a defeated power demanding the creation of an Indian barrier state from American territory near the Great Lakes The American delegation unanimously rejected this offer and their negotiating position was bolstered by the American victory in the Battle of Plattsburgh 58 By November 1814 the government of Lord Liverpool decided to seek an end to hostilities with the U S on the basis of status quo ante bellum Even though a return to the status quo would mean the continuation of the British practice of impressment Adams and his fellow commissioners had hoped for similar terms The treaty was signed on December 24 1814 The United States did not gain any concessions from the treaty but could boast that it had survived a war against the strongest power in the world Following the signing of the treaty Adams traveled to Paris where he witnessed first hand the Hundred Days of Napoleon s restoration 59 In May 1815 Adams learned that President Madison had appointed him as the U S ambassador to Britain 60 With the aid of Clay and Gallatin Adams negotiated a limited trade agreement with Britain Following the conclusion of the trade agreement much of Adams s time as ambassador was spent helping stranded American sailors and prisoners of war 61 In pursuit of national unity newly elected president James Monroe decided a Northerner would be optimal for the position of Secretary of State and he chose the respected and experienced Adams for the role 62 Having spent several years in Europe Adams returned to the United States in August 1817 61 Secretary of State 1817 1825 See also Presidency of James Monroe Adams served as Secretary of State during Monroe s eight year presidency from 1817 to 1825 Many of his successes as secretary such as the convention of 1818 with the United Kingdom the Transcontinental Treaty with Spain and the Monroe Doctrine were not preplanned strategies but responses to unexpected events Adams wanted to delay American recognition of the newly independent republics of Latin America to avoid the risk of war with Spain and its European allies However Andrew Jackson s military campaign in Florida and Henry Clay s threats in Congress forced Spain to cut a deal which Adams negotiated successfully Biographer James Lewis says He managed to play the cards that he had been dealt cards that he very clearly had not wanted in ways that forced the Spanish cabinet to recognize the weakness of its own hand 63 Apart from the Monroe doctrine his last four years as Secretary of State were less successful because he was preoccupied with his presidential campaign and refused to make compromises with other countries that might have weakened his candidacy the result was a small scale trade war but a successful election to the White House nbsp Painting of John Quincy Adams by Thomas Sully 1824Taking office in the aftermath of the War of 1812 Adams thought that the country had been fortunate in avoiding territorial losses and he prioritized avoiding another war with a European power particularly Britain 64 He also sought to avoid exacerbating sectional tensions which had been a major issue for the country during the War of 1812 65 c One of the major challenges confronting Adams was how to respond to the power vacuum in Latin America that arose from Spain s weakness following the Peninsular War 67 In addition to his foreign policy role Adams held several domestic duties including overseeing the 1820 United States census and writing an extensive report on weights and measures 68 The weights and measures report a particular passion of Adams provided an extensive historical perspective on the topic and advocated for adoption of the metric system 69 Monroe and Adams agreed on most major foreign policy issues both favored neutrality in Latin American independence wars peace with the United Kingdom rejection of a trade agreement with the French and peaceful expansion into the Spanish Empire s North American territories 70 The president and his secretary of state developed a strong working relationship and while Adams often influenced Monroe s policies he respected that Monroe made the final decisions on major issues 71 Monroe met regularly with his five person cabinet which initially consisted of Adams Secretary of the Treasury William H Crawford Secretary of War John C Calhoun Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Crowninshield and Attorney General William Wirt 72 Adams developed a strong respect for Calhoun but believed that Crawford was unduly focused on succeeding Monroe in 1824 73 During his time as ambassador to Britain Adams had begun negotiations over several contentious issues that had not been solved by the War of 1812 or the Treaty of Ghent In 1817 the two countries agreed to the Rush Bagot Treaty which limited naval armaments on the Great Lakes Negotiations between the two powers continued resulting in the Treaty of 1818 which defined the Canada United States border west of the Great Lakes The boundary was set at the 49th parallel to the Rocky Mountains while the territory to the west of the mountains known as Oregon Country would be jointly occupied The agreement marked a watershed moment in United Kingdom United States relations as the United States focused on its southern and western borders and British concerns about American expansionism subsided 74 Adams Onis Treaty nbsp In the Adams Onis Treaty the United States acquired Florida and set the western border of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase When Adams took office Spanish possessions bordered the United States to the south and west To the south Spain retained control of Florida which the U S had long sought to purchase Spain struggled to control the Indian tribes active in Florida and some of those tribes raided United States territory To the west New Spain bordered the territory acquired by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase but no clear boundary had been established between United States and Spanish territory 64 After taking office Adams began negotiations with Luis de Onis the Spanish minister to the United States for the purchase of Florida and the settlement of a border between the United States and New Spain The negotiations were interrupted by an escalation of the Seminole War and in December 1818 Monroe ordered General Andrew Jackson to enter Florida and retaliate against Seminoles that had raided Georgia Exceeding his orders Jackson captured the Spanish outposts of St Marks and Pensacola and executed two Englishmen While Jackson s actions outraged the rest of the cabinet Adams defended them as necessary to the country s self defense and he eventually convinced Monroe and most of the cabinet to support Jackson 75 Adams informed Spain that its failure to police its own territory had compelled Jackson to act and he advised Spain to either secure the region or sell it to the United States 76 The British meanwhile declined to risk their recent rapprochement with the United States and did not make a major diplomatic issue out of Jackson s execution of two British nationals 77 Negotiations between Spain and the United States continued and Spain agreed to cede Florida The determination of the western boundary of the United States proved more difficult American expansionists favored setting the border at the Rio Grande but Spain intent on protecting its colony of Mexico from American encroachment insisted on setting the boundary at the Sabine River At Monroe s direction Adams agreed to the Sabine River boundary but he insisted that Spain cede its claims on Oregon Country 78 Adams was deeply interested in establishing American control over the Oregon Country partly because he believed that control of that region would spur trade with Asia The acquisition of Spanish claims to the Pacific Northwest also allowed the Monroe administration to pair the acquisition of Florida which was chiefly sought by Southerners with territorial gains favored primarily by those in the North 79 After extended negotiations Spain and the United States agreed to the Adams Onis Treaty which was ratified in February 1821 75 Adams was deeply proud of the treaty though he privately was concerned by the potential expansion of slavery into the newly acquired territories 80 In 1824 the Monroe administration would strengthen US claims to Oregon by ratifying the Russo American Treaty of 1824 which established Russian Alaska s southern border at 54 40 north 81 Monroe Doctrine Main article Monroe Doctrine As the Spanish Empire continued to fracture during Monroe s second term Adams Monroe and Clay became increasingly concerned that the Holy Alliance of Prussia Austria and Russia would seek to bring Spain s erstwhile colonies under their control to the point of even contemplating a Holy Alliance of their own to defend democracy In his 1821 Fourth of July address Adams addressed this issue noting a shared chain of sympathy between the U S and Latin America but arguing for neutrality rather than a Holy Alliance 82 In 1822 following the conclusion of the Adams Onis Treaty the Monroe administration recognized the independence of several Latin American countries including Argentina and Mexico In 1823 British Foreign Secretary George Canning suggested that the United States and Britain should work together to preserve the independence of these fledgling republics The cabinet debated whether to accept the offer but Adams opposed it Instead Adams urged Monroe to publicly declare the United States opposition to any European attempt to colonize or re take control of territory in the Americas while also committing the United States to neutrality in European affairs In his December 1823 annual message to Congress Monroe laid out the Monroe Doctrine which was largely built upon Adams s ideas 83 In issuing the Monroe Doctrine the United States displayed a new level of assertiveness in international relations as the doctrine represented the country s first claim to a sphere of influence It also marked the country s shift in psychological orientation away from Europe and towards the Americas Debates over foreign policy would no longer center on relations with Britain and France but instead focus on western expansion and relations with Native Americans 84 The doctrine became one of the foundational principles of U S foreign policy 83 1824 presidential electionMain article 1824 United States presidential election nbsp 1824 presidential election resultsImmediately upon becoming Secretary of State Adams emerged as one of Monroe s most likely successors as the last three presidents had all served in the role before taking office As the 1824 election approached Henry Clay John C Calhoun who later dropped out of the race and William H Crawford appeared to be Adams s primary competition to succeed Monroe 85 Crawford favored state sovereignty and a strict constructionist view of the Constitution while Clay Calhoun and Adams embraced federally funded internal improvements high tariffs and the Second Bank of the United States which was also known as the national bank 86 Because the Federalist Party had all but collapsed after the War of 1812 all the major presidential candidates were members of the Democratic Republican Party 87 Adams felt that his own election as president would vindicate his father while also allowing him to pursue an ambitious domestic policy Though he lacked the charisma of his competitors Adams was widely respected and benefited from the lack of other prominent Northern political leaders 88 Adams s top choice for the role of vice president was General Andrew Jackson Adams noted that the Vice Presidency was a station in which Jackson could hang no one and in which he would need to quarrel with no one 89 However as the 1824 election approached Jackson jumped into the race for president and Calhoun ended up receiving the Vice presidential support of Adams supporters 87 While the other candidates based their candidacies on their long tenure as congressmen ambassadors or members of the cabinet Jackson s appeal rested on his military service especially in the Battle of New Orleans 90 The congressional nominating caucus had decided upon previous Democratic Republican presidential nominees but it had become largely discredited by 1824 Candidates were instead nominated by state legislatures or nominating conventions and Adams received the endorsement of the New England legislatures 91 The regional strength of each candidate played an important role in the election Adams was popular in New England Clay and Jackson were strong in the West and Jackson and Crawford competed for the South 92 1825 contingent presidential election vote distributionStates for Adams States for Jackson States for CrawfordConnecticut Illinois Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Missouri New Hampshire New York Ohio Rhode Island Vermont Alabama Indiana Mississippi New Jersey Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee Delaware Georgia North Carolina VirginiaTotal 13 54 Total 7 29 Total 4 17 In the 1824 presidential election Jackson won a plurality in the Electoral College taking 99 of the 261 electoral votes while Adams won 84 Crawford won 41 and Clay took 37 Calhoun meanwhile won a majority of the electoral votes for vice president 92 Adams nearly swept the electoral votes of New England and won a majority of the electoral votes in New York but he won just six electoral votes from the slave states Most of Jackson s support came from slave holding states but he also won New Jersey Pennsylvania and some electoral votes from the Northwest 93 As no candidate won a majority of the electoral votes the House was required to hold a contingent election under the terms of the Twelfth Amendment The House would decide among the top three electoral vote winners with each state s delegation having one vote thus unlike his three rivals Clay was not eligible to be elected by the House 92 Adams knew that his own victory in the contingent election would require the support of Clay who wielded immense influence in the House of Representatives 94 Though they were quite different in temperament and had clashed in the past Adams and Clay shared similar views on national issues By contrast Clay viewed Jackson as a dangerous demagogue and he was unwilling to support Crawford due to the latter s health issues 95 Adams and Clay met before the contingent election and Clay agreed to support Adams in the election 96 Adams also met with Federalists such as Daniel Webster promising that he would not deny governmental positions to members of their party 97 On February 9 1825 Adams won the contingent election on the first ballot taking 13 of the 24 state delegations Adams won the House delegations of all the states in which he or Clay had won a majority of the electoral votes as well as the delegations of Illinois Louisiana and Maryland 96 Adams s victory made him the first child of a president to serve as president himself d After the election many of Jackson s supporters claimed that Adams and Clay had reached a Corrupt bargain whereby Adams promised Clay the position of Secretary of State in return for Clay s support 96 Presidency 1825 1829 Main article Presidency of John Quincy Adams Inauguration Adams was inaugurated on March 4 1825 becoming the first son of a former United States president to himself become president a feat only repeated 176 years later by George W Bush son of George H W Bush As Adams took the oath of office he departed from tradition by placing his hand on a book of constitutional law instead of on a Bible 98 In his inaugural address he adopted a post partisan tone promising to avoid party building and politically motivated appointments He also proposed an elaborate program of internal improvements roads ports and canals Though some were worried about the constitutionality of such federal projects Adams argued that the General Welfare Clause provided for broad constitutional authority He promised that he would ask Congress to authorize many such projects 99 Administration The Adams cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentJohn Quincy Adams1825 1829Vice PresidentJohn C Calhoun1825 1829Secretary of StateHenry Clay1825 1829Secretary of the TreasuryRichard Rush1825 1829Secretary of WarJames Barbour1825 1828Peter Buell Porter1828 1829Attorney GeneralWilliam Wirt1825 1829Secretary of the NavySamuel L Southard1825 1829Adams presided over a harmonious and productive cabinet that he met with on a weekly basis 100 Like Monroe Adams sought a geographically balanced cabinet that would represent the various party factions and he asked the members of the Monroe cabinet to remain in place for his own administration 101 Samuel L Southard of New Jersey stayed on as Secretary of the Navy William Wirt kept his post of Attorney General 102 and John McLean of Ohio continued to serve as the Postmaster General an important position that was not part of the cabinet at that time 103 Adams s first choices for Secretary of War and Secretary of the Treasury were Andrew Jackson and William Crawford but each declined to serve in the administration Adams instead selected James Barbour of Virginia a prominent supporter of Crawford to lead the War Department Leadership of the Treasury Department went to Richard Rush of Pennsylvania who would become a prominent advocate of internal improvements and protective tariffs within the administration 104 Adams chose Henry Clay as Secretary of State angering those who believed Clay had offered Adams his support in the 1824 election in exchange for the most prestigious position in the cabinet 105 Clay would later regret accepting the job since it reinforced the Corrupt Bargain accusation However Clay s strength in the West and interest in foreign policy made him a natural choice for the position 106 Domestic affairs Ambitious agenda nbsp Medal of John Quincy AdamsIn his 1825 annual message to Congress 107 Adams presented a comprehensive and ambitious agenda He called for major investments in internal improvements as well as the creation of a national university a naval academy and a national astronomical observatory Noting the healthy status of the treasury and the possibility for more revenue via land sales Adams argued for the completion of several projects that were in various stages of construction or planning including a road from Washington D C to New Orleans 108 He also proposed the establishment of a Department of the Interior as a new cabinet level department that would preside over these internal improvements 109 Adams hoped to fund these measures primarily through Western land sales rather than increased taxes or public debt 86 The domestic agenda of Adams and Clay which would come to be known as the American System was designed to unite disparate regional interests in the promotion of a thriving national economy 110 Adams s programs faced opposition from various quarters Many disagreed with his broad interpretation of the constitution and preferred that power be concentrated in state governments rather than the federal government Others disliked interference from any level of government and were opposed to central planning 111 Some in the South feared that Adams was secretly an abolitionist and that he sought to subordinate the states to the federal government 112 Most of the president s proposals were defeated in Congress Adams s ideas for a national university a national observatory and the establishment of a uniform system of weights and measures never received congressional votes 113 His proposal for the creation of a naval academy won the approval of the Senate but was defeated in the House opponents objected to the naval academy s cost and worried that the establishment of such an institution would produce degeneracy and corruption of the public morality 114 Adams s proposal to establish a national bankruptcy law was also defeated 113 Unlike other aspects of his domestic agenda Adams won congressional approval for several ambitious infrastructure projects 115 Between 1824 and 1828 the United States Army Corps of Engineers conducted surveys for a bevy of potential roads canals railroads and improvements in river navigation Adams presided over major repairs and further construction on the National Road and shortly after he left office the National Road extended from Cumberland Maryland to Zanesville Ohio 116 The Adams administration also saw the beginning of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal the construction of the Chesapeake amp Delaware Canal and the Louisville and Portland Canal around the Falls of the Ohio the connection of the Great Lakes to the Ohio River system in Ohio and Indiana and the enlargement and rebuilding of the Dismal Swamp Canal in North Carolina 117 Additionally the first passenger railroad in the United States the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was constructed during Adams s presidency Though many of these projects were undertaken by private actors the government often provided money or land to aid the completion of such projects 118 Formation of political parties See also First Party System and Second Party System nbsp General Andrew Jackson Adams s opponent in the 1824 and 1828 United States presidential electionsIn the immediate aftermath of the 1825 contingent election Jackson was gracious to Adams 119 Nevertheless Adams s appointment of Clay rankled Jackson who received a flood of letters encouraging him to run In 1825 Jackson accepted the presidential nomination of the Tennessee legislature for the 1828 election 120 Though he had been close to Adams during Monroe s presidency Vice President Calhoun was also politically alienated from the president by the appointment of Clay since that appointment established Clay as the natural heir to Adams 121 Adams s ambitious December 1825 annual message to Congress further galvanized the opposition with important figures such as Francis Preston Blair of Kentucky and Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri breaking with the Adams administration 122 By the end of the first session of the 19th United States Congress an anti Adams congressional coalition consisting of Jacksonians led by Benton and Hugh Lawson White Crawfordites led by Martin Van Buren and Nathaniel Macon and Calhounites led by Robert Y Hayne and George McDuffie had emerged 123 Aside from Clay Adams lacked strong supporters outside of the North and Edward Everett John Taylor and Daniel Webster served as his strongest advocates in Congress 124 Supporters of Adams began calling themselves National Republicans while supporters of Jackson began calling themselves Democrats 125 In the press they were often described as Adams Men and Jackson Men 126 In the 1826 elections Adams s opponents picked up seats throughout the country as allies of Adams failed to coordinate among themselves 127 Andrew Stevenson a Jackson supporter replaced John Taylor an Adams supporter as Speaker of the House 128 As Adams himself noted the United States had never seen a Congress that was firmly under the control of political opponents of the president 129 After the elections Van Buren and Calhoun agreed to throw their support behind Jackson in 1828 with Van Buren bringing along many of Crawford s supporters 130 Though Jackson did not articulate a detailed political platform in the same way that Adams did his coalition united in opposition to Adams s reliance on government planning 131 Adams meanwhile clung to the hope of a non partisan nation and he refused to make full use of the power of patronage to build up his own party structure 132 Tariff of 1828 nbsp Painting of Quincy Adams by Charles Osgood 1828During the first half of his administration Adams avoided taking a strong stand on tariffs partly because he wanted to avoid alienating his allies in the South and New England 133 After Jacksonians took power in 1827 they devised a tariff bill designed to appeal to Western states while instituting high rates on imported materials important to the economy of New England It is unclear whether Van Buren who shepherded the bill through Congress meant for the bill to pass or if he had deliberately designed it to force Adams and his allies to oppose it 134 Regardless Adams signed the Tariff of 1828 which became known as the Tariff of Abominations by opponents Adams was denounced in the South and he received little credit for the tariff in the North 135 Indian policy See also Federal Indian Policy Adams sought the gradual assimilation of Native Americans via consensual agreements a priority shared by few whites in the 1820s Yet Adams was also deeply committed to the westward expansion of the United States Settlers on the frontier constantly seeking to move westward cried for a more expansionist policy that disregarded the concerns of Native Americans Early in his term Adams suspended the Treaty of Indian Springs after learning that the Governor of Georgia George Troup had forced the treaty on the Muscogee 136 Adams signed a new treaty with the Muscogee in January 1826 that allowed the Muscogee to stay but ceded most of their land to Georgia Troup refused to accept its terms and authorized all Georgian citizens to evict the Muscogee 137 A showdown between Georgia and the federal government was only averted after the Muscogee agreed to a third treaty 138 Though many saw Troup as unreasonable in his dealings with the federal government and the Native Americans the administration s handling of the incident alienated those in the Deep South who favored immediate Indian removal 139 Foreign affairs Adams famously said America goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy 140 Trade and claims nbsp Quincy Adams appointed Henry Clay as Secretary of StateOne of the major foreign policy goals of the Adams administration was the expansion of American trade 141 His administration reached reciprocity treaties with a number of nations including Denmark Prussia and the Federal Republic of Central America The administration also reached commercial agreements with the Kingdom of Hawaii and the Kingdom of Tahiti 142 Agreements with Denmark and Sweden opened their colonies to American trade but Adams was especially focused on opening trade with the British West Indies The United States had reached a commercial agreement with Britain in 1815 but that agreement excluded British possessions in the Western Hemisphere In response to United States pressure the British had begun to allow a limited amount of American imports to the West Indies in 1823 but United States leaders continued to seek an end to Britain s protective Imperial Preference system 143 In 1825 Britain banned United States trade with the British West Indies dealing a blow to Adams s prestige 144 The Adams administration negotiated extensively with the British to lift this ban but the two sides could not reach an agreement 145 Despite the loss of trade with the British West Indies the other commercial agreements secured by Adams helped expand the overall volume of United States exports 146 Latin America Aside from an unsuccessful attempt to purchase Texas from Mexico President Adams did not seek to expand into Latin America or North America 147 Adams and Clay instead sought engagement with Latin America to prevent it from falling under the British Empire s economic influence 148 As part of this goal the administration favored sending a United States delegation to the Congress of Panama an 1826 conference of New World republics organized by Simon Bolivar 149 Clay and Adams hoped that the conference would inaugurate a Good Neighborhood Policy among the independent states of the Americas 150 However the funding for a delegation and the confirmation of delegation nominees became entangled in a political battle over Adams s domestic policies with opponents such as Van Buren impeding the confirmation of a delegation 111 While Van Buren saw the Panama Congress as an unwelcome deviation from the more isolationist foreign policy established by President Washington 150 many Southerners opposed involvement with any conference attended by delegates from Haiti a republic that had been established through a slave revolt 151 Though the United States delegation finally won confirmation from the Senate it never reached the Congress of Panama due to the Senate s delay 152 1828 presidential election Main article 1828 United States presidential election nbsp 1828 presidential election resultsThe Jacksonians formed an effective party apparatus that adopted many modern campaign techniques Rather than focusing on issues they emphasized Jackson s popularity and the supposed corruption of Adams and the federal government Jackson himself described the campaign as a struggle between the virtue of the people and executive patronage 153 Adams meanwhile refused to adapt to the new reality of political campaigns and he avoided public functions and refused to invest in pro administration tools such as newspapers 154 In early 1827 Jackson was publicly accused of having encouraged his wife Rachel to desert her first husband 155 In response followers of Jackson attacked Adams s personal life and the campaign turned increasingly nasty 156 The Jacksonian press portrayed Adams as an out of touch elitist 157 while pro Adams newspapers attacked Jackson s past involvement in various duels and scuffles portraying him as too emotional and impetuous for the presidency Though Adams and Clay had hoped that the campaign would focus on the American System it was instead dominated by the personalities of Jackson and Adams 158 Vice President Calhoun joined Jackson s ticket while Adams turned to Secretary of the Treasury Richard Rush as his running mate 159 The 1828 election thus marked the first time in United States history that a presidential ticket composed of two Northerners faced off against a presidential ticket composed of two Southerners 160 In the election Jackson won 178 of the 261 electoral votes and just under 56 of the popular vote 161 Jackson won 50 3 of the popular vote in the free states but 72 6 of the vote in the slave states 162 No future presidential candidate would match Jackson s proportion of the popular vote until Theodore Roosevelt s 1904 campaign while Adams s loss made him the second one term president after his own father 161 By 1828 only two states did not hold a popular vote for president and the number of votes in the 1828 election was triple that in the 1824 election This increase in votes was due not only to the recent wave of democratization but also because of increased interest in elections and the growing ability of the parties to mobilize voters 163 Adams did not attend Jackson s inauguration making him one of only four presidents who finished their terms but skipped the event 164 Later congressional career 1830 1848 Jackson administration 1830 1836 nbsp Daguerreotype of Quincy Adams by Philip Haas 1843Adams considered permanently retiring from public life after his 1828 defeat and he was deeply hurt by the suicide of his son George Washington Adams in 1829 165 He was appalled by many of the Jackson administration s actions including its embrace of the spoils system 166 and the prosecution of his close friend Treasury Auditor Tobias Watkins for embezzlement 167 Though they had once maintained a cordial relationship Adams and Jackson each came to loathe the other in the decades after the 1828 election 168 Adams grew bored with his retirement and still felt that his career was unfinished so he ran for and won a seat in the United States House of Representatives in the 1830 elections 169 His election went against the generally held opinion shared by his own wife and youngest son that former presidents should not run for public office 170 Nonetheless he would win election to nine terms serving from 1831 until his death in 1848 1 Adams and Andrew Johnson are the only former presidents to serve in Congress 171 After winning election Adams became affiliated with the Anti Masonic Party partly because the National Republican Party s leadership in Massachusetts included many of the former Federalists that Adams had clashed with earlier in his career The Anti Masonic Party originated as a movement against Freemasonry but it developed into the country s first third party and embraced a general program of anti elitism 172 Adams expected a light workload when he returned to Washington at 64 years old but Speaker Andrew Stevenson selected Adams chair of the Committee on Commerce and Manufactures 173 Though he identified as a member of the Anti Masonic Party Congress was broadly polarized into allies of Jackson and opponents of Jackson and Adams generally aligned with the latter camp 174 Stevenson an ally of Jackson expected that the committee chairmanship would keep Adams busy defending the tariff even while the Jacksonian majority on the committee would prevent Adams from accruing any real power 175 As chair of the committee charged with writing tariff laws Adams became an important player in the nullification crisis which stemmed largely from Southern objections to the high rates imposed by the Tariff of 1828 South Carolina leaders argued that states could nullify federal laws and they announced that they would bar the federal government from enforcing the tariff in their state 176 Adams helped pass the Tariff of 1832 which lowered rates but not enough to mollify the South Carolina nullifiers The crisis ended when Clay and Calhoun agreed to another tariff bill the Tariff of 1833 that furthered lower tariff rates Adams was appalled by the Nullification Crisis s outcome as he felt that the Southern states had unfairly benefited from challenging federal law 177 After the crisis Adams was convinced that Southerners exercised undue influence over the federal government through their control of Jackson s Democratic Party 178 In the 1833 Massachusetts gubernatorial election the Anti Masonic Party nominated Adams in a four way race between Adams the National Republican candidate the Democratic candidate and a candidate of the Working Men s Party The National Republican candidate John Davis won 40 of the vote while Adams finished in second place with 29 Because no candidate won a majority of the vote the state legislature decided the election Rather than seek election by the legislature Adams withdrew his name from contention and the legislature selected Davis 179 Adams was nearly elected to the Senate in 1835 by a coalition of Anti Masons and National Republicans but his support for Jackson in a minor foreign policy matter annoyed National Republican leaders enough that they dropped their support for his candidacy 180 After 1835 Adams never again sought higher office focusing instead on his service in the House of Representatives 181 Van Buren Harrison and Tyler administrations 1837 1843 nbsp Portrait of Quincy Adams by William Hudson 1844In the mid 1830s the Anti Masonic Party the National Republicans and other groups opposed to Jackson coalesced into the Whig Party 182 In the 1836 presidential election Democrats put forward Martin Van Buren while the Whigs fielded multiple presidential candidates Because he disdained all the major party contenders for president Adams did not take part in the campaign Van Buren won the election 183 Nonetheless Adams became aligned with the Whig Party in Congress 184 Adams generally opposed the initiatives of President Van Buren long a political adversary though they maintained a cordial public relationship 185 The Republic of Texas won its independence from Mexico in the Texas Revolution of 1835 1836 Texas had largely been settled by Americans from the Southern United States and many of those settlers owned slaves despite an 1829 Mexican law that abolished slavery Many in the United States and Texas thus favored the admission of Texas into the union as a slave state Adams considered the issue of Texas to be a question of far deeper root and more overshadowing branches than any or all others that agitate the country and he emerged as one of the leading congressional opponents of annexation When he served as secretary of state Adams had sought to acquire Texas but he argued that because Mexico had abolished slavery the acquisition of Texas would transform the region from a free territory into a slave state He also feared that the annexation of Texas would encourage Southern expansionists to pursue other potential slave states including Cuba Adams s firm stance may have played a role in discouraging Van Buren from pushing for the annexation of Texas during his presidency 186 Whig nominee William Henry Harrison defeated Van Buren in the 1840 presidential election and the Whigs gained control of both houses of Congress for the first time Despite his low regard for Harrison as a person Adams was enthusiastic about the new Whig administration and the end of the long standing Democratic dominance of the federal government 187 However Harrison died in April 1841 and was succeeded by Vice President John Tyler a Southerner who unlike Adams Henry Clay and many other prominent Whigs did not embrace the American System Adams saw Tyler as an agent of the slave driving Virginia Jeffersonian school principled against all improvement After Tyler vetoed a bill to restore the national bank Whig congressmen expelled Tyler from the party Adams was appointed chairman of a special committee that explored impeaching Tyler and Adams presented a scathing report of Tyler that argued that his actions warranted impeachment The impeachment process did not move forward though because the Whigs did not believe that the Senate would vote to remove Tyler from office 188 Opposition to the Mexican American War 1844 1848 nbsp John Quincy Adams c 1840s Unknown authorTyler made the annexation of Texas the main foreign policy priority of the later stages of his administration 189 He attempted to win ratification of an annexation treaty in 1844 but to Adams s surprise and relief the Senate rejected the treaty 190 The annexation of Texas became the central issue of the 1844 presidential election and Southerners blocked the nomination of Van Buren at the 1844 Democratic National Convention due to the latter s opposition to annexation the party instead nominated James K Polk an acolyte of Andrew Jackson 191 Though he once again did not take part in the campaigning Adams was deeply disappointed that Polk defeated his old ally Henry Clay in the 1844 election He attributed the outcome of the election partly to the Liberty Party a small abolitionist third party that may have siphoned votes from Clay in the crucial state of New York 192 After the election Tyler whose term would end in March 1845 once again submitted an annexation treaty to Congress e Adams strongly attacked the treaty arguing that the annexation of Texas would involve the United States in a war for slavery Despite Adams s opposition both houses of Congress approved the treaty with most Democrats voting for annexation and most Whigs voting against it Texas thus joined the United States as a slave state in 1845 194 Adams had served with James K Polk in the House of Representatives and Adams loathed the new president seeing him as another expansionist pro slavery Southern Democrat 195 Adams favored the annexation of the entirety of Oregon Country a disputed region occupied by both the United States and Britain and was disappointed when President Polk signed the Oregon Treaty which divided the land between the two claimants at the 49th parallel 196 Polk s expansionist aims centered instead on the Mexican province of Alta California and he attempted to buy the province from Mexico The Mexican government refused to sell California or recognize the independence and subsequent American annexation of Texas Polk deployed a military detachment led by General Zachary Taylor to back up his assertion that the Rio Grande constituted the Southern border of both Texas and the United States After Taylor s forces clashed with Mexican soldiers north of the Rio Grande Polk asked for a declaration of war in early 1846 asserting that Mexico had invaded American territory Though some Whigs questioned whether Mexico had started an aggressive war both houses of Congress declared war with the House voting 174 to 14 to approve the declaration One of the 14 dissenting votes was Adams who believed that Polk was seeking to wage an offensive to expand slavery 197 After the start of the war he supported the Wilmot Proviso an unsuccessful legislative proposal that would have banned slavery in any territory ceded by Mexico 198 After 1846 ill health increasingly affected Adams but he continued to oppose the Mexican American War until his death in 1848 199 Anti slavery movement Main article John Quincy Adams and abolitionism nbsp BEP engraved portrait of Adams as presidentIn the 1830s slavery emerged as an increasingly polarizing issue in the United States 200 A longtime opponent of slavery Adams used his new role in Congress to fight it and he became the most prominent national leader opposing slavery 201 After one of his reelection victories he said that he must bring about a day prophesied when slavery and war shall be banished from the face of the Earth He wrote in his private journal in 1820 202 The discussion of this Missouri question has betrayed the secret of their souls In the abstract they admit that slavery is an evil they disclaim it and cast it all upon the shoulder of Great Britain But when probed to the quick upon it they show at the bottom of their souls pride and vainglory in their condition of masterdom They look down upon the simplicity of a Yankee s manners because he has no habits of overbearing like theirs and cannot treat negroes like dogs It is among the evils of slavery that it taints the very sources of moral principle It establishes false estimates of virtue and vice for what can be more false and heartless than this doctrine which makes the first and holiest rights of humanity to depend upon the color of the skin In 1836 partially in response to Adams s consistent presentation of citizen petitions requesting the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia the U S House of Representatives imposed a gag rule that immediately tabled any petitions about slavery Democrats and Southern Whigs favored the rule but Northern Whigs like Adams opposed it 203 In late 1836 Adams began a campaign to ridicule slave owners and the gag rule He frequently attempted to present anti slavery petitions often in ways that provoked strong reactions from Southern representatives 204 Though the gag rule remained in place 205 the discussion ignited by his actions and the attempts of others to quiet him raised questions of the right to petition the right to legislative debate and the morality of slavery Adams fought actively against the gag rule for another seven years eventually moving the resolution that led to its repeal in 1844 206 In 1841 at the request of Lewis Tappan and Ellis Gray Loring Adams joined the case of United States v The Amistad Adams went before the Supreme Court on behalf of African slaves who had revolted and seized the Spanish ship Amistad Adams appeared on February 24 1841 and spoke for four hours His argument succeeded the Court ruled that the Africans were free and they returned to their homes 207 Smithsonian Institution nbsp Adams s portrait at the U S National Portrait Gallery by George Bingham c 1850 copy of an 1844 originalAdams also became a leading force for the promotion of science In 1829 British scientist James Smithson died and he left his fortune for the increase and diffusion of knowledge In Smithson s will he stated that should his nephew Henry James Hungerford die without heirs the Smithson estate would go to the government of the United States to create an Establishment for the increase and diffusion of Knowledge among men After the nephew died without heirs in 1835 President Andrew Jackson informed Congress of the bequest which amounted to about US 500 000 US 18 million in 2024 dollars after inflation Adams realized that this might allow the United States to realize his dream of building a national institution of science and learning Adams thus became Congress s primary supporter of the future Smithsonian Institution 208 The money was invested in shaky state bonds which quickly defaulted After heated debate in Congress Adams successfully argued to restore the lost funds with interest 209 Though Congress wanted to use the money for other purposes Adams successfully persuaded Congress to preserve the money for an institution of science and learning Congress also debated whether the federal government had the authority to accept the gift though with Adams leading the initiative Congress accepted the legacy bequeathed to the nation and pledged the faith of the United States to the charitable trust on July 1 1836 210 Partly due to Adams s efforts Congress voted to establish the Smithsonian Institution in 1846 A nonpolitical board of regents was established to lead the institution which included a museum art gallery library and laboratory 211 Death nbsp Adams s cenotaph at the Congressional CemeteryIn 1846 the 78 year old former president suffered a stroke that left him partially paralyzed After a few months of rest he made a full recovery and resumed his duties in Congress When Adams entered the House chamber on February 13 1847 everyone stood up and applauded 212 nbsp John Quincy Adams during his final hours of life after his collapse in the Capitol Drawing in pencil by Arthur Joseph Stansbury digitally restored On February 21 1848 the House of Representatives was discussing the matter of honoring United States Army officers who served in the Mexican American War Adams had been a vehement critic of the war and as Congressmen rose up to say Aye in favor of the measure he instead yelled No 213 He rose to answer a question put forth by Speaker of the House Robert Charles Winthrop 214 Immediately thereafter Adams collapsed having suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage 215 Two days later on February 23 he died at 7 20 p m with his wife at his side in the Speaker s Room inside the Capitol Building in Washington D C his only living child Charles Francis did not arrive in time to see his father alive His last words were This is the last of Earth I am content 214 Among those present for his death was future president Abraham Lincoln then a freshman representative from Illinois 216 nbsp John Quincy Adams s original tomb at Hancock Cemetery across the street from United First Parish ChurchHis original interment was temporary in the public vault at the Congressional Cemetery in Washington D C Later he was interred in the family burial ground in Quincy Massachusetts across from the Unitarian United First Parish Church called Hancock Cemetery After Louisa s death in 1852 his son had his parents re interred in the expanded family crypt in the United First Parish Church across the street next to John and Abigail Both tombs are viewable by the public Adams s original tomb at Hancock Cemetery is still there and marked simply J Q Adams 217 Personal lifeSee also Adams political family Adams and Louisa had three sons and a daughter Their daughter Louisa was born in 1811 but died in 1812 218 They named their first son George Washington Adams 1801 1829 after the first president This decision upset Adams s mother and by her account his father as well 219 Both George and their second son John 1803 1834 led troubled lives and died in early adulthood 220 221 George who had long suffered from alcoholism died in 1829 after going overboard on a steamboat it is not clear whether he fell or purposely jumped from the boat 222 John who ran an unprofitable flour and grist mill owned by his father died of an unknown illness in 1834 223 Adams s youngest son Charles Francis Adams Sr was an important leader of the Conscience Whigs a Northern anti slavery faction of the Whig Party 199 Charles served as the Free Soil Party s vice presidential candidate in the 1848 presidential election and later became a prominent member of the Republican Party serving as United States Minister to England during the American Civil War 224 Personality nbsp Presidential Dollar of John Quincy AdamsAdams s personality and political beliefs were much like his father s 225 He always preferred solitary reading to social engagements and he was repeatedly persuaded to stay in public service by others Historian Paul Nagel states that like Abraham Lincoln after him Adams often suffered from depression for which he sought treatment in early years Adams thought his depression was due to the high expectations demanded of him by his father and mother Throughout his life he felt inadequate and socially awkward because of his depression and was constantly bothered by his physical appearance 225 He was closer to his father with whom he spent much of his early life while abroad than he was to his mother In his youth while the American Revolution raged on Adams heard from his mother about his father s work and the substantial risks he took to support it As a result he developed a deep respect for his father 225 In contrast Adams had a rocky relationship with his mother due to her high expectations of him and her fear that her children would follow in the footsteps of her brother who died of alcoholism 225 His biographer Nagel concludes that his mother s disapproval of Louisa Johnson motivated him to marry Johnson in 1797 despite Adams s reservations that Johnson like his mother had a forceful personality 225 Though Adams wore a powdered wig tied in a queue in his youth he abandoned this fashion while serving as the U S Minister to Russia 1809 1814 226 and became the first president to adopt a short haircut instead of long hair tied in a queue and to regularly wear long trousers instead of knee breeches according to the fashion of the 19th century 227 228 It has been suggested that John Quincy Adams had the highest I Q of any U S president 229 230 Dean Simonton a professor of psychology at UC Davis estimated his I Q score at 165 231 He reportedly spoke eight foreign languages Dutch French German Greek Italian Latin Russian and Spanish more than any other U S president He remains the only U S president who could converse in Russian 232 LegacyHistorical reputation nbsp Official portrait of Adams by George Peter Alexander Healy c 1858Adams is widely regarded as one of the most effective diplomats and secretaries of state in American history 233 234 but scholars generally rank him as an average president 235 236 Adams is remembered as a man eminently qualified for the presidency yet hopelessly weakened in his presidential leadership potential because of the 1824 election Most importantly Adams is remembered as a poor politician in an era when politics had begun to matter more He spoke of trying to serve as a man above the baneful weed of party strife at the precise moment in history when the Second Party System was emerging with nearly revolutionary force 171 Biographer and historian William J Cooper Jr comments that Adams does not loom large in the American imagination but that he has received more public attention since the late 20th century due to his anti slavery stances Cooper writes that Adams was the first major public figure to publicly question whether the United States could remain united so long as the institution of slavery persisted 233 Historian Daniel Walker Howe writes that Adams s intellectual ability and courage were above reproach and his wisdom in perceiving the national interest has stood the test of time 237 He has also been praised as a strong prose stylist with James Parker describing him as one of the three authentically muddy eyed and pained by subjectivity writers that the White House has harbored along with Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama 238 Memorials nbsp Peacefield John Quincy Adams s HomeJohn Quincy Adams Birthplace is now part of Adams National Historical Park and open to the public Adams House one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University is named for John Adams John Quincy Adams and other members of the Adams family associated with Harvard 239 John Quincy Adams tower located in the Southwest residential area of the University of Massachusetts Amherst is named for the president 240 In 1870 Charles Francis built the first presidential library in the United States to honor his father The Stone Library includes over 14 000 books written in twelve languages The library is located at Peacefield the Old House at Adams National Historical Park in Quincy Massachusetts nbsp Tombs of Presidents John Adams far left and John Quincy Adams right and their wives Abigail and Louisa in a family crypt beneath the United First Parish Church An Adams Memorial has been proposed in Washington D C honoring Adams and his wife son father mother and other members of their family Adams s middle name of Quincy has been used by several locations in the United States including the town of Quincy Illinois Adams County Illinois and Adams County Indiana are also named after Adams Adams County Iowa and Adams County Wisconsin were each named for either John Adams or John Quincy Adams Some sources contend that in 1843 Adams sat for the earliest confirmed photograph of a United States president although others maintain that William Henry Harrison had posed even earlier for his portrait in 1841 241 The original daguerreotype is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution 242 Film and television Adams occasionally is featured in the mass media In the PBS miniseries The Adams Chronicles 1976 he was portrayed by David Birney William Daniels Marcel Trenchard Steven Grover and Mark Winkworth He was also portrayed by Anthony Hopkins in the 1997 film Amistad and again by Ebon Moss Bachrach and Steven Hinkle in the 2008 HBO television miniseries John Adams See alsoAdams s method for apportionment List of abolitionists List of United States political appointments across party lines List of presidents of the United States by previous experience List of United States Congress members who died in office 1790 1899 Mendi Bible Quincy Institute for Responsible StatecraftNotes The Quincy family name was pronounced ˈ k w ɪ n z i as in the name of Quincy Massachusetts then called Braintree where Adams was born All of the other Quincy place names are locally ˈ k w ɪ n s i Though not accurate this pronunciation is also commonly used for Adams s middle name 2 When Adams took office as president in 1825 Louisa became the first First Lady born outside of the United States In 2017 Melania Trump became the second First Lady born outside of the United States 28 Adams had been especially concerned by the Hartford Convention which had been called by anti war Federalists to discuss their grievances against the Madison administration 66 In 2001 George W Bush would become the second child of a president to serve as president Tyler had initially sent the treaty to the Senate the Constitution provides that a two thirds vote of the Senate is required to ratify any treaty After the 1844 election Tyler asked Congress to approve the treaty via joint resolution which would require a simple majority vote in both houses of Congress 193 References a b nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain John Quincy Adams Biographical Directory of the U S Congress Bioguide congress gov Retrieved March 15 2017 Wead Doug 2005 The Raising of a President New York Atria Books p 59 ISBN 978 0 7434 9726 8 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Quincy Mailing Address 135 Adams Street John Quincy Adams Birthplace Adams National Historical Park U S National Park Service nps gov Retrieved March 4 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 5 2021 Rettig Polly M April 3 1978 John Quincy Adams Birthplace National Park Service Retrieved November 1 2011 Herring James Longacre James Barton 1853 The National Portrait Gallery of Distinguished Americans D Rice amp A N Hart p 1 ISBN 978 0 405 02500 6 Remini 2002 The Diaries of John Quincy Adams A Digital Collection Massachusetts Historical Society Archived from the original on February 18 2012 Retrieved October 30 2011 Cooper 2017 pp 5 8 Richard Carl 2009 The Golden Age of the Classics in America Greece Rome and the Antebellum United States Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 23 ISBN 978 0 674 03264 4 Cooper 2017 pp 8 9 16 Cooper 2017 pp 9 14 16 American presidents and their special relationship with Leiden universiteitleiden nl January 11 2017 Retrieved October 4 2020 Cooper 2017 pp 17 18 Cooper 2017 pp 21 22 Edel 2014 pp 36 37 Cooper 2017 pp 24 27 Musto David F April 20 1968 The Youth of John Quincy Adams Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Philadelphia Pennsylvania American Philosophical Society 113 273 PMID 11615552 Cooper 2017 pp 29 30 Cooper 2017 pp 32 33 Cooper 2017 pp 35 36 Cooper 2017 p 38 Edel 2014 pp 83 86 Cooper 2017 pp 34 40 41 Online Adams Catalogue Massachusetts Historical Society Cooper 2017 pp 45 48 Cooper 2017 pp 48 53 Black Allida 2009 The First Ladies of the United States of America The White House Historical Assoc Cooper 2017 pp 54 55 Cooper 2017 pp 48 49 Edel 2014 p 83 Cooper 2017 pp 53 56 Cooper 2017 pp 59 60 Cooper 2017 pp 60 61 Edel 2014 p 89 Cooper 2017 pp 64 66 McCullough 2001 pp 575 76 Cooper 2017 pp 67 68 Cooper 2017 pp 70 71 John Quincy Adams Isn t Who You Think He Is Bloomberg com February 8 2020 Retrieved March 14 2020 Thompson 1991 pp 165 181 McCullough 2001 p 587 Rathbun Lyon 2000 The Ciceronian Rhetoric of John Quincy Adams Rhetorica 18 2 175 215 doi 10 1525 rh 2000 18 2 175 S2CID 144055057 Hume David 1742 Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects London T Cadell pp 99 110 Potkay Adam S 1999 Theorizing Civic Eloquence in the Early Republic the Road from David Hume to John Quincy Adams Early American Literature 34 2 147 70 Cooper 2017 p 85 Cooper 2017 pp 87 88 Edel 2014 pp 96 97 Cooper 2017 pp 88 89 Cooper 2017 pp 91 92 Cooper 2017 pp 90 94 95 Cooper 2017 pp 92 93 McMillion Barry J Rutkus Denis Steven July 6 2018 Supreme Court Nominations 1789 to 2017 Actions by the Senate the Judiciary Committee and the President PDF Washington D C Congressional Research Service Retrieved August 26 2018 Cooper 2017 pp 106 107 Cooper 2017 pp 109 110 Cooper 2017 pp 112 113 Cooper 2017 pp 112 114 115 119 Cooper 2017 pp 116 118 Kaplan 2014 pp 289 302 Cooper 2017 pp 127 128 a b Kaplan 2014 pp 307 11 318 20 Edel 2014 pp 116 17 James E Lewis Jr John Quincy Adams Policymaker for the Union 2001 p 56 a b Kaplan 2014 pp 321 22 Cooper 2017 pp 143 145 Cooper 2017 pp 145 146 Edel 2014 pp 107 09 Cooper 2017 pp 147 148 Traub James 2016 John Quincy Adams Militant Spirit New York Basic Books pp 169 170 253 255 ISBN 978 0 465 02827 6 Kaplan 2014 pp 327 28 Cooper 2017 pp 151 152 Cooper 2017 pp 153 154 Cooper 2017 pp 154 155 Remini 2002 pp 48 51 53 a b Kaplan 2014 pp 333 37 348 Cooper 2017 pp 163 164 Howe 2007 p 106 Cooper 2017 pp 164 166 Howe 2007 pp 108 109 Cooper 2017 pp 167 168 Howe 2007 pp 112 115 Traub 256 258 a b Kaplan 2014 pp 380 385 Howe 2007 pp 115 116 Kaplan 2014 pp 364 367 a b Howe 2007 pp 203 204 a b Parsons 2009 pp 70 72 Hargreaves 1985 p 24 Cooper 2017 pp 208 209 Hargreaves 1985 pp 20 21 Parsons 2009 pp 79 86 a b c Kaplan 2014 pp 386 389 Cooper 2017 p 213 John Quincy Adams Campaigns and Elections Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia October 4 2016 Retrieved March 28 2017 Hargreaves 1985 pp 33 34 36 38 a b c Kaplan 2014 pp 391 393 398 Cooper 2017 p 217 John Quincy Adams Takes the Oath of Office Wearing Pants New England Historical Society March 4 2015 Retrieved March 9 2017 Kaplan 2014 pp 394 396 Hargreaves 1985 p 62 64 Hargreaves 1985 pp 47 48 Hargreaves 1985 pp 49 50 Parsons 2009 pp 106 107 Hargreaves 1985 pp 48 49 Kaplan 2014 pp 396 397 Howe 2007 pp 247 248 First Annual Message John Quincy Adams speech transcript 1825 via Peters Gerhard and Woolley John T The American Presidency Project online University of California Santa Barbara accessed January 2020 Kaplan 2014 pp 402 403 Remini 2002 pp 80 81 Hargreaves 1985 pp 311 314 a b Kaplan 2014 pp 404 405 Kaplan 2014 pp 397 398 a b Remini 2002 pp 84 86 Hargreaves 1985 p 167 Hargreaves 1985 p 173 Hargreaves 1985 pp 173 174 Hargreaves 1985 pp 176 177 Remini 2002 pp 85 86 Parsons 2009 pp 105 106 Parsons 2009 pp 110 111 Howe 2007 pp 249 250 Parsons 2009 pp 114 115 Parsons 2009 pp 119 120 Parsons 2009 pp 138 139 Remini 2002 pp 84 85 Howe 2007 p 251 Parsons 2009 pp 125 126 Parsons 2009 pp 146 147 Remini 2002 pp 110 111 Parsons 2009 pp 127 128 Howe 2007 pp 279 280 Parsons 2009 pp 141 142 Hargreaves 1985 pp 189 191 Remini Robert V July 1958 Martin Van Buren and the Tariff of Abominations The American Historical Review 63 4 903 917 doi 10 2307 1848947 JSTOR 1848947 Parsons 2009 pp 157 158 Edel 2014 pp 225 226 Kaplan 2014 pp 398 400 Howe 2007 p 256 Hargreaves 1985 pp 101 101 Edel 2014 p 300 Hargreaves 1985 pp 67 68 Hargreaves 1985 pp 76 85 Hargreaves 1985 pp 91 95 Kaplan 2014 pp 400 401 Hargreaves 1985 pp 102 107 Hargreaves 1985 pp 110 112 Cooper 2017 pp 240 241 Howe 2007 p 257 Kaplan 2014 pp 401 402 a b Remini 2002 pp 82 83 Cooper 2017 p 229 Kaplan 2014 pp 408 410 Howe 2007 pp 275 277 Parsons 2009 pp 152 154 Parsons 2009 pp 142 143 Parsons 2009 pp 143 144 Parsons 2009 pp 166 167 Howe 2007 pp 278 279 Hargreaves 1985 pp 283 284 Parsons 2009 pp 171 172 a b Parsons 2009 pp 181 183 Howe 2007 pp 281 283 Howe 2007 pp 276 280 281 Balcerski Opinion by Thomas November 11 2020 Opinion A history lesson on presidents who snub their successors inaugurations CNN Retrieved November 12 2020 Edel 2014 pp 254 56 Kaplan 2014 pp 445 446 Cain Marvin R Spring 1984 Claims Contracts and Customs Public Accountability and a Department of Law 1789 1849 Journal of the Early Republic 4 1 27 45 doi 10 2307 3122853 JSTOR 3122853 Cooper 2017 pp 288 289 345 346 Edel 2014 pp 258 59 Kaplan 2014 pp 450 52 a b John Quincy Adams Impact and Legacy Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia October 4 2016 Retrieved March 23 2017 Cooper 2017 pp 280 283 Kaplan 2014 pp 454 458 59 Cooper 2017 pp 286 287 Kaplan 2014 pp 458 64 Cooper 2017 pp 298 299 Cooper 2017 pp 300 303 Cooper 2017 pp 309 401 Cooper 2017 pp 284 285 Cooper 2017 pp 311 312 Cooper 2017 p 315 Cooper 2017 pp 309 310 Cooper 2017 p 316 Cooper 2017 p 330 Cooper 2017 pp 345 346 Cooper 2017 pp 371 375 Cooper 2017 pp 377 379 Cooper 2017 pp 379 381 Cooper 2017 pp 401 403 Cooper 2017 pp 404 405 Cooper 2017 pp 405 406 Cooper 2017 pp 407 408 Cooper 2017 p 410 Cooper 2017 pp 410 413 Cooper 2017 p 414 Kaplan 2014 pp 555 556 Cooper 2017 pp 421 423 Cooper 2017 pp 424 425 a b Cooper 2017 pp 430 431 Cooper 2017 pp 323 324 Parsons 1998 p 224 Miller 1996 p 189 Cooper 2017 pp 331 332 Cooper 2017 pp 337 338 Miller 1996 p 270 Cooper 2017 pp 354 356 409 Rodriguez Junius ed 2007 Encyclopedia of Emancipation and Abolition in the Transatlantic World M E Sharpe pp 9 11 Teed Paul E 2006 John Quincy Adams Yankee nationalist New York Nova Science Publishers pp 159 160 ISBN 978 1 59454 797 3 Smithsonian Information Brochure Smithsonian Visitor Information and Associates Reception Center May 2009 James Smithson Biographical Information PDF newsdesk si edu January 2008 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 21 2016 Cooper 2017 pp 350 351 President John Q Adams Health and Medical History doctorzebra com Retrieved February 8 2014 Parker Theodore 1848 A discourse occasioned by the death of John Quincy Adams Boston Published by Bela Marsh 25 Cornhill p 26 OCLC 6354870 Retrieved August 2 2009 a b Donaldson Norman and Betty 1980 How Did They Die Greenwich House ISBN 978 0 517 40302 0 Widmer Edward L 2008 Ark of the liberties America and the world New York Hill and Wang p 120 ISBN 978 0 8090 2735 4 OCLC 191882004 Retrieved August 2 2009 Traub p 446 Quincy s Historic Hancock Cemetery Quincy Historical Society 2002 Archived from the original on July 3 2018 Retrieved July 11 2018 Louisa Adams Biography National First Ladies Library www firstladies org Archived from the original on May 9 2012 Retrieved January 18 2018 From Abigail Smith Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams 12 July 1801 Adams Papers Massachusetts Historical Society Archived from the original on December 24 2019 Retrieved January 13 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link This is an Early Access document from The Adams Papers It is not an authoritative final version Also available from Internet Archive as archived on December 24 2019 Brief Biographies of Jackson Era Characters A Jmisc net Retrieved September 16 2008 Shepherd Jack Cannibals of the Heart A Personal Biography of Louisa Catherine and John Quincy Adams New York McGraw Hill 1980 Cooper 2017 pp 264 265 Cooper 2017 pp 313 314 ADAMS Charles Francis 1807 1886 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Retrieved October 4 2018 a b c d e Nagel 1999 page needed Hewson Martha S Cronkite Walter January 1 2009 John Quincy Adams Google Knihy Infobase ISBN 978 0 7910 7599 9 Retrieved November 4 2018 Digital History Steven Mintz Digital History Digitalhistory uh edu Archived from the original on July 23 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 John Quincy Adams Takes the Oath of Office Wearing Pants March 4 2015 Retrieved November 4 2018 Poindexter in Chief Presidential IQs and Success in the Oval Office U S News amp World Report Simonton Dean Keith 1986 Presidential Greatness The Historical Consensus and Its Psychological Significance Political Psychology 7 2 259 283 doi 10 2307 3791125 JSTOR 3791125 Simonton Dean Keith August 2006 Presidential IQ Openness Intellectual Brilliance and Leadership Estimates and Correlations for 42 U S Chief Executives PDF Political Psychology 27 4 511 526 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9221 2006 00524 x Summers Robert S Foreign Languages Presidents of the United States POTUS Retrieved October 24 2022 a b Cooper 2017 pp xiii xiv Herring George 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford Univ Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Historians Survey Results John Quincy Adams Presidential Historians Survey 2017 National Cable Satellite Corporation 2017 Retrieved March 23 2017 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 Howe 2007 pp 244 245 Parker James February 13 2020 Three Authentic Writers Have Occupied the Oval Office The Atlantic Retrieved September 5 2020 House History Adams House Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2016 Residence Halls University of Massachusetts Amherst Krainik Clifford Face the Lens Mr President A Gallery of Photographic Portraits of 19th Century U S Presidents PDF The White House Historical Association Retrieved September 4 2009 John Quincy Adams 1843 daguerreotype National Portrait Gallery August 21 2015 Retrieved March 18 2017 Works cited Abraham Henry Julian 2008 Justices Presidents and Senators A History of the U S Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Bush II Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5895 3 Allgor Catherine 1997 A Republican in a Monarchy Louisa Catherine Adams in Russia Diplomatic History 21 1 15 43 doi 10 1111 1467 7709 00049 ISSN 0145 2096 JSTOR 24913402 Bemis Samuel Flagg 1981 1949 John Quincy Adams and the Foundations of American Foreign Policy Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 22636 6 Bemis Samuel Flagg 1956 John Quincy Adams and the Union Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 41413 3 Cooper William J 2017 The Lost Founding Father John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics Liveright Publishing ISBN 978 1 63149 389 8 Edel Charles N 2014 Nation Builder John Quincy Adams and the Grand Strategy of the Republic Harvard Univ Press Georgini Sara Household Gods The Religious Lives of the Adams Family Oxford University Press 2019 Hargreaves Mary W M 1985 The Presidency of John Quincy Adams Univ Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700602728 Howe Daniel Walker 2007 What Hath God Wrought The Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974379 7 Kaplan Fred 2014 John Quincy Adams American Visionary HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 219932 4 Lewis Jr James E John Quincy Adams Policymaker for the Union Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 2001 ISBN missing Mattie Sean 2003 John Quincy Adams and American Conservatism PDF Modern Age 45 4 305 314 ISSN 0026 7457 McCullough David 2001 John Adams New York Simon amp Schuster p 144 ISBN 978 1 4165 7588 7 Miller William Lee 1996 Arguing About Slavery The Great Battle in the United States Congress Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 56922 2 Nagel Paul C 1983 Descent from Glory Four Generations of the John Adams Family Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0 19 503172 0 Nagel Paul 1999 John Quincy Adams A Public Life a Private Life Harvard Univ Press ISBN 978 0 674 47940 1 Parsons Lynn H 2009 The Birth of Modern Politics Andrew Jackson John Quincy Adams and the Election of 1828 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983754 0 excerpt and text search Parsons Lynn H 1998 John Quincy Adams Rowman and LittleField ISBN 978 1 4422 0288 7 Potkay Adam S 1999 Theorizing Civic Eloquence in the Early Republic the Road from David Hume to John Quincy Adams Early American Literature 34 2 147 170 ISSN 0012 8163 Rathbun Lyon 2000 The Ciceronian Rhetoric of John Quincy Adams Rhetorica 18 2 175 215 doi 10 1525 rh 2000 18 2 175 ISSN 0734 8584 S2CID 144055057 Remini Robert V 2002 John Quincy Adams New York Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 6939 6 Thompson Robert R 1991 John Quincy Adams Apostate From Outrageous Federalist to Republican Exile 1801 1809 Journal of the Early Republic 11 2 161 183 doi 10 2307 3123239 JSTOR 3123239 Traub James 2016 John Quincy Adams Militant Spirit Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 09879 8 Further readingMain article Bibliography of John Quincy Adams Secondary sources Holt Michael F 1999 The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977203 2 McMillan Richard 2001 Election of 1824 Corrupt Bargain or the Birth of Modern Politics New England Journal of History 58 2 24 37 Morgan William G Henry Clay s Biographers and the Corrupt Bargain Charge Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 66 3 1968 pp 242 58 online Morgan William G John Quincy Adams Versus Andrew Jackson Their Biographers And The Corrupt Bargain Charge Tennessee Historical Quarterly 26 1 1967 pp 43 58 online Nagel Paul C 1983 Descent from Glory Four Generations of the John Adams Family New York Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0 19 503172 0 Parsons Lynn Hudson 2003 In Which the Political Becomes Personal and Vice Versa the Last Ten Years of John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson Journal of the Early Republic 23 3 421 443 doi 10 2307 3595046 ISSN 0275 1275 JSTOR 3595046 Pessen Edward John Quincy Adams in Henry Graff ed The Presidents A Reference History 3rd ed 2002 online Unger Harlow Giles 2012 John Quincy Adams Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82130 1 Waldstreicher David 2013 A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 52429 9 excerpt and text search Wood Gary V 2004 Heir to the Fathers John Quincy Adams and the Spirit of Constitutional Government Ladham Maryland Lexington ISBN 978 0 7391 0601 3 Primary sources Waldstreicher David ed The Diaries of John Quincy Adams 1779 1821 Library of America 20170 xiv 727 pp Adams John Quincy 1874 1877 Adams Charles Francis ed Memoirs of John Quincy Adams Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795 to 1848 12 v Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co ISBN 978 0 8369 5021 2 OCLC 559230698 Adams John Quincy 1913 1917 Ford Worthington C ed Writings of John Quincy Adams 7 v New York The Macmillan Company OCLC 564019879 Butterfield L H Taylor Robert J Ryerson Richard A eds 1961 The Adams Papers Cambridge Mass Belknap Press of Harvard University Press OCLC 56354007 Founders Online searchable editionExternal linksListen to this article 1 hour and 11 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 13 March 2019 2019 03 13 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Scholarly coverage of Adams at Miller Center U of VirginiaUnited States Congress John Quincy Adams id A000041 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress The Diaries of John Quincy Adams A Digital Collection Archived February 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine at the Massachusetts Historical Society Life Portrait of John Quincy Adams from C SPAN s American Presidents Life Portraits April 18 1999 Works by John Quincy Adams at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Quincy Adams at Internet Archive Works by John Quincy Adams at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Portals nbsp Biography nbsp United States nbsp Politics nbsp LawJohn Quincy Adams at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Quincy Adams amp oldid 1207073479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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