| John
Adams
2nd President of the United States of America
(1735–1826)
Biographical
President of the United States of America 1797–1801
Vice-president of the United States 1789–97
Quincy Representative at the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention
1820
Massachusetts Delegate to the Continental Congress 1788
Minister to the Court of St James’ 1785
Minister to the Netherlands 1781
Minister Plenipotentiary to the Netherlands 1780
Minister Plenipotentiary to Great Britain 1779
Braintree Representative at the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention
1779
Commissioner to France 1778
Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Massachusetts 1775
Massachusetts Delegate to the First Continental Congress 1774–78 (Head
Board of War and Ordnance 1776)
Member of the Revolutionary Congress of Massachusetts 1774
Boston Representative of the Massachusetts General Court 1770
Member of the Massachusetts Legislature 1768
Surveyor of Highways, Braintree 1761
John Adams was born in what is now the town of Quincy, Massachusetts.
His father, a farmer, was of the fourth generation in descent from Henry
Adams, who emigrated from Devonshire, England, to Massachusetts about
1636. John Adams graduated from Harvard College in 1755, and for a time
taught school at Worcester and studied law in the office of Rufus Putnam.
In 1758, he was admitted to the bar. From an early age he developed the
habit of writing descriptions of events and impressions of men. The earliest
of these is his report of the argument of James Otis in the superior court
of Massachusetts as to the constitutionality of writs of assistance. This
was in 1761, and the argument inspired him with zeal for the cause of
the American colonies. Years afterwards, when an old man, Adams undertook
to write out at length his recollections of this scene; it is instructive
to compare the two accounts. John Adams had none of the qualities of popular
leadership which were so marked a characteristic of his second cousin,
Samuel Adams; it was rather as a constitutional lawyer that he influenced
the course of events. He was impetuous, intense and often vehement, unflinchingly
courageous, devoted with his whole soul to the cause he had espoused;
but his vanity, his pride of opinion and his inborn contentiousness were
serious handicaps to him in his political career. These qualities were
particularly manifested at a later period—as, for example, during
his term as president. He first made his influence widely felt and became
conspicuous as a leader of the Massachusetts Whigs during the discussions
with regard to the Stamp Act of 1765. In that year he drafted the instructions
which were sent by the town of Braintree to its representatives in the
Massachusetts legislature, and which served as a model for other towns
in drawing up instructions to their representatives; in August 1765 he
contributed anonymously four notable articles to the Boston Gazette
(republished separately in London in 1768 as A Dissertation on the
Canon and Feudal Law), in which he argued that the opposition of the
colonies to the Stamp Act was a part of the never-ending struggle between
individualism and corporate authority; and in December 1765 he delivered
a speech before the governor and council in which he pronounced the Stamp
Act invalid on the ground that Massachusetts being without representation
in parliament, had not assented to it. In 1768, he removed to Boston. Two
years later, with that degree of moral courage which was one of his distinguishing
characteristics, as it has been of his descendants, he, aided by Josiah
Quincy, Jr, defended the British soldiers who were arrested after the
'Boston Massacre', charged with causing the death of four persons, inhabitants
of the colony. The trial resulted in an acquittal of the officer who commanded
the detachment, and most of the soldiers; but two soldiers were found
guilty of manslaughter. These claimed benefit of clergy and were branded
in the hand and released. Adams’s upright and patriotic conduct
in taking the unpopular side in this case met with its just reward in
the following year, in the shape of his election to the Massachusetts
House of Representatives by a vote of 418 to 118.
Adams was a member of the Continental Congress from 1774 to 1778. In June
1775, with a view to promoting the union of the colonies, he seconded
the nomination of Washington as commander-in-chief of the army. His influence
in congress was great, and almost from the beginning he was impatient
for a separation of the colonies from Great Britain. On the 7th of June
1776 he seconded the famous resolution introduced by Richard Henry Lee
that 'these colonies are, and of a right ought to be, free and independent
states', and no man championed these resolutions (adopted on the 2nd of
July) so eloquently and effectively before the congress. On the 8th of
June he was appointed on a committee with Jefferson, Franklin, Livingston
and Sherman to draft a Declaration of Independence; and although that
document was by the request of the committee written by Thomas Jefferson,
it was John Adams who occupied the foremost place in the debate on its
adoption. Before this question had been disposed of, Adams was placed
at the head of the Board of War and Ordnance, and he also served on many
other important committees.
In 1778, Adams sailed for France to supersede Silas Deane in the American
commission there. But just as he embarked that commission concluded the
desired treaty of alliance, and soon after his arrival he advised that
the number of commissioners be reduced to one. His advice was followed,
and he returned home in time to be elected a member of the convention
which framed the Massachusetts constitution of 1780, still the organic
law of that commonwealth. With James Bowdoin and Samuel Adams, he formed
a sub-committee which drew up the first draft of that instrument, and
most of it probably came from John Adams’s pen. Before this work
had been completed he was again sent to Europe, having been chosen on
the 27th of September 1779 as minister plenipotentiary for negotiating
a treaty of peace and a treaty of commerce with Great Britain. Conditions
were not then favourable for peace, however; the French government, moreover,
did not approve of the choice, inasmuch as Adams was not sufficiently
pliant and tractable and was from the first suspicious of Vergennes; and
subsequently Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Jay and Henry Laurens
were appointed to co-operate with Adams. Jefferson, however, did not cross
the Atlantic, and Laurens took little part in the negotiations. This left
the management of the business to the other three. Jay and Adams distrusted
the good faith of the French government. Outvoting Franklin, they decided
to break their instructions, which required them to 'make the most candid
confidential communications on all subjects to the ministers of our generous
ally, the king of France; to undertake nothing in the negotiations for
peace or truce without their knowledge or concurrence; and ultimately
to govern yourself by their advice and opinion'; and, instead, they dealt
directly with the British commissioners, without consulting the French
ministers. Throughout the negotiations Adams was especially determined
that the right of the United States to the fisheries along the British-American
coast should be recognised. Political conditions in Great Britain, at
the moment, made the conclusion of peace almost a necessity with the British
ministry, and eventually the American negotiators were able to secure
a peculiarly favourable treaty. This preliminary treaty was signed on
the 30th of November 1782. Before these negotiations began, Adams had
spent some time in the Netherlands. In July 1780 he had been authorised
to execute the duties previously assigned to Henry Laurens, and at The
Hague was eminently successful, securing there recognition of the United
States as an independent government on the 19 of April 1782, and
negotiating both a loan and, in October that year, a treaty of amity and
commerce, the first of such treaties between the United States and foreign
powers after that of February 1778 with France.
In 1785 Adams was appointed the first of a long line of able and distinguished
American ministers to the court of St James’s. When he was presented
to his former sovereign, George III intimated that he was aware of Mr
Adams’s lack of confidence in the French government. Replying, Mr
Adams admitted it, closing with the outspoken sentiment: 'I must avow
to your Majesty that I have no attachment but to my own country'—a
phrase which must have jarred upon the monarch’s sensibilities.
While in London in 1787 Adams published a work entitled A Defence of
the Constitution of Government of the United States. In this work
he ably combated the views of Turgot and other European writers as to
the viciousness of the framework of the state governments. Unfortunately,
in so doing, he used phrases savouring of aristocracy which offended many
of his countrymen—as in the sentence in which he suggested that
'the rich, the well-born and the able' should be set apart from other
men in a senate. Partly for this reason, while Washington had the vote
of every elector in the first presidential election of 1789, Adams received
only thirty-four out of sixty-nine. As this was the second largest number
he was declared vice-president, but he began his eight years in that office
with a sense of grievance and of suspicion of many of the leading men.
Differences of opinion with regard to the policies to be pursued by the
new government gradually led to the formation of two well-defined political
groups—the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans—and
Adams became recognised as one of the leaders, second only to Alexander
Hamilton, of the former.
In 1796, on the refusal of Washington to accept another election, Adams
was chosen president, defeating Thomas Jefferson; though Alexander Hamilton
and other Federalists had asked that an equal vote should be cast for
Adams and Thomas Pinckney, the other Federalist in the contest, partly
in order that Jefferson, who was elected vice-president, might be excluded
altogether, and partly, it seems, in the hope that Pinckney should in
fact receive more votes than Adams, and thus, in accordance with the system
then obtaining, be elected president, though he was intended for the second
place on the Federalist ticket. Adams’s four years were marked by
a succession of intrigues which embittered all his later life; they were
marked, also, by events, such as the passage of the Alien and Sedition
Acts, which brought discredit on the Federalist party. Moreover, factional
strife broke out within the party itself; Adams and Hamilton became alienated,
and members of Adams’s own cabinet virtually looked to Hamilton
rather than to the president as their political chief. The United States
was, at this time, drawn into the vortex of European complications, and
Adams, instead of taking advantage of the militant spirit which was aroused,
patriotically devoted himself to securing peace with France, much against
the wishes of Hamilton and of Hamilton’s adherents in the cabinet.
In 1800, Adams was again the Federalist candidate for the presidency,
but the distrust of him in his own party, the popular disapproval of the
Alien and Sedition Acts and the popularity of his opponent, Thomas Jefferson,
combined to cause his defeat. He then retired into private life. On the
4th of July 1826, on the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration
of Independence, he died at Quincy. Jefferson died on the same day. In
1764, Adams had married Miss Abigail Smith (1744–1818), the daughter
of a Congregational minister at Weymouth, Massachusetts. She was a woman
of much ability, and her letters, written in an excellent English style,
are of great value to students of the period in which she lived. President
John Quincy Adams was their eldest son.
Place of birth: Braintree, Mass.
Place of marriage: Weymouth, Mass.
Place of death: Quincy, Mass.
Place of burial: Quincy Congregational Church
Son of John Adams and Susanna Boylston. He married Abigail Smith in 1764,
and had issue.
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