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JOHN
ADAMS
Written by, Dr. Joseph John
Ellis
"Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute".
"But
the Day is past. The Forth Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable
Epocha, in the History of America.- I am apt to believe that it will be
celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary
Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by
Solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with
Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfire and
Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time
forward forever more."
John
Adams
Born, Oct. 30, 1735
, Braintree [now in
Quincy ],
Mass. and died. July 4, 1826 , in
Quincy , Mass.
He
was an early advocate of American independence from
Great Britain ,
major figure in the Continental Congress (1774-77), author of the
Massachusetts constitution (1780),
signer of the Treaty of Paris (1783), first American ambassador to the
Court of St. James (1785-88), first vice president (1789-97) and second
president (1797-1801) of the United
States
. Although Adams was regarded by his
contemporaries as one of the most significant statesmen of the
revolutionary era, his reputation faded in the 19th century, only to
ascend again during the last half of the 20th century. The modern
edition of his correspondence prompted a rediscovery of his bracing
honesty and pungent way with words, his importance as a political
thinker, his realistic perspective on American foreign policy, and his
patriarchal role as founder of one of the most prominent families in
American history.
Early life
Adams was the eldest of the three sons of Deacon John Adams
and Susanna Boylston of
Braintree , Massachusetts
. His father was only a farmer and shoemaker, but the
Adams family could trace its lineage back to the first
generation of Puritan settlers in New England . A
local selectman and a leader in the community, Deacon Adams encouraged
his eldest son to aspire toward a career in the ministry. In keeping
with that goal,
Adams graduated from
Harvard
College in 1755. For the next three
years, he taught grammar school in Worcester
,
Massachusetts , while contemplating his
future. He eventually chose law rather than the ministry and in 1758
moved back to Braintree ,
and then soon began practicing law in nearby Boston
.
In
1764 Adams married Abigail Smith, a minister's
daughter from neighboring Weymouth
. Intelligent, well-read, vivacious, and just as fiercely independent
as her new husband, Abigail Adams became a confidante and political
partner who helped to stabilize and sustain the ever-irascible and
highly volatile
Adams throughout his long career. The letters between
them afford an extended glimpse into their deepest thoughts and emotions
and provide modern readers with the most revealing record of personal
intimacy between husband and wife in the revolutionary era. Their first
child, Abigail Amelia, was born in 1765. Their first son, John Quincy,
arrived two years later. Two other sons, Thomas Boylston and Charles,
followed shortly thereafter.
By
then Adams 's legal career was on the rise, and
he had become a visible member of the resistance movement that
questioned Parliament's right to tax the American colonies. In 1765
Adams published A Dissertation on the Canon and Federal
Law, which justified opposition to the recently enacted Stamp Act--an
effort to raise revenue by requiring all publications and legal
documents to bear a stamp--by arguing that Parliament's intrusions into
colonial affairs exposed the inherently coercive and corrupt character
of English politics. Intensely combative, full of private doubts about
his own capacities but never about his cause, Adams became a leading
figure in the opposition to the Townshend Acts (1767), which imposed
duties on imported commodities (i.e., glass, lead, paper, paint, and
tea). Despite his hostility toward the British government, in 1770
Adams agreed to defend the British soldiers who had fired
on a Boston crowd in what
became known as the Boston Massacre. His insistence on upholding the
legal rights of the soldiers, who in fact had been provoked, made him
temporarily unpopular but also marked him as one of the most principled
radicals in the burgeoning movement for American independence. He had a
penchant for doing the right thing, most especially when it made him
unpopular.
Continental Congress
In
the summer of 1774, Adams was elected to the
Massachusetts
delegation that joined the representatives from 12 of 13 colonies in
Philadelphia at the First
Continental Congress. He and his cousin, Samuel Adams, quickly became
the leaders of the radical faction, which rejected the prospects for
reconciliation with Britain
. His "Novanglus" essays, published early in 1775, moved the
constitutional argument forward another notch, insisting that Parliament
lacked the authority not just to tax the colonies but also to legislate
for them in any way. (Less than a year earlier, Thomas Jefferson had
made a similar argument against parliamentary authority in A Summary
View of the Rights of British America.)By the time the Second
Continental Congress convened in 1775,
Adams had gained the reputation as "the Atlas of
independence." Over the course of the following year, he made several
major contributions to the patriot cause destined to ensure his place in
American history. First, he nominated George Washington to serve as
commander of the fledging Continental Army. Second, he selected
Jefferson
to draft the Declaration of Independence. (Both decisions were designed
to ensure Virginia 's
support for the revolution.) Third, he dominated the debate in the
Congress on July 2-4, 1776 , defending
Jefferson 's draft of the declaration and demanding
unanimous support for a decisive break with
Great Britain . Moreover, he had
written Thoughts on Government, which circulated throughout the colonies
as the major guidebook for the drafting of new state constitutions.
Adams remained the central figure of the Continental
Congress for the following two years. He drafted the Plan of Treaties in
July 1776, a document that provided the framework for a treaty with
France and that
almost inadvertently identified the strategic priorities that would
shape American foreign policy over the next century. He was the
unanimous choice to head the Board of War and Ordnance and was thereby
made in effect a one-man war department responsible for raising and
equipping the American army and creating from scratch an American navy.
As the prospects for a crucial wartime alliance with
France
improved late in 1777, he was chosen to join Benjamin
Franklin in Paris to conduct
the negotiations. In February 1778 he sailed for Europe
, accompanied by 10-year-old John Quincy.
Foreign Service
By
the time Adams arrived in
Paris , the treaty creating an
alliance with France
had already been concluded. He quickly returned home in the
summer of 1779, just in time to join the Massachusetts Constitutional
Convention. The other delegates, acknowledging his constitutional
expertise, simply handed him the job of drafting what became the
Massachusetts constitution (1780),
which immediately became the model for the other state constitutions
and--in its insistence on a bicameral legislature and the separation of
powers--a major influence on the United States Constitution.
The
Congress then ordered Adams to rejoin
Franklin in
Paris to lead the American
delegation responsible for negotiating an end to the war with
Britain . This
time he took along his youngest son, Charles, as well as John Quincy,
leaving Abigail to tend the farm and the other two children in
Braintree . Not until 1784, almost
five years later, was the entire family reunited in
Paris . By then
Adams had shown himself an unnatural diplomat, exhibiting
a level of candor and a confrontational style toward both English and
French negotiators that alienated Franklin
, who came to regard his colleague as slightly deranged.
Adams , for his part, thought
Franklin excessively impressed with
his own stature as the Gallic version of the American genius and
therefore inadequately attuned to the important differences between
American and French interests in the peace negotiations. The favorable
terms achieved in the Treaty of Paris (1783) can be attributed to the
effective blend of
Franklin 's discretion and
Adams 's bulldog temperament.
Adams 's reputation for emotional explosions also dates
from this period. Recent scholarly studies suggest that he might have
suffered from a hyperthyroid condition subsequently known as
Graves ' disease.
In
1784 Jefferson arrived in
Paris to replace
Franklin as the American minister at
the French court. Over the next few months, Jefferson
became an unofficial member of the Adams family,
and the bond of friendship between Adams and Jefferson was sealed, a
lifelong partnership and rivalry that made the combative New Englander
and the elegant Virginian the odd couple of the American Revolution.
Jefferson also visited the Adams
family in England
in 1785, after Adams had assumed his
new post as American ambassador in London
. The two men also joined forces, though Adams
as the senior figure assumed the lead, in negotiating a $400,000 loan
from Dutch bankers that allowed the American government to consolidate
its European debts.
Political philosophy
Because he was the official embodiment of American independence from the
British Empire ,
Adams was largely ignored and relegated to the periphery
of the court during his nearly three years in
London . Still brimming with energy,
he spent his time studying the history of European politics for patterns
and lessons that might assist the fledgling American government in its
efforts to achieve what no major European nation had managed to
produce--namely, a stable republican form of government.
The
result was a massive and motley three-volume collection of quotations,
unacknowledged citations, and personal observations entitled A Defense
of the Constitutions of Government of the
United States of America
(1787). A fourth volume, Discourses on Davila (1790), was
published soon after he returned to the
United States . Taken together, these
lengthy tomes contained Adams 's distinctive
insights as a political thinker. The lack of organization, combined with
the sprawling style of the Defense, however, made its core message
difficult to follow or fathom. When read in the context of his
voluminous correspondence on political issues, along with the extensive
marginalia he recorded in the several thousand books in his personal
library, that message became clearer with time.
Adams wished to warn his fellow Americans against all revolutionary
manifestos that envisioned a fundamental break with the past and a
fundamental transformation in human nature or society that supposedly
produced a new age. All such utopian expectations were illusions, he
believed, driven by what he called "ideology," the belief that imagined
ideals, so real and seductive in theory, were capable of being
implemented in the world. The same kind of conflict between different
classes that had bedeviled medieval
Europe would, albeit in muted forms, also afflict the
United States ,
because the seeds of such competition were planted in human nature
itself.
Adams blended the psychological insights of New England
Puritanism, with its emphasis on the emotional forces throbbing inside
all creatures, and the Enlightenment belief that government must contain
and control those forces, to construct a political system capable of
balancing the ambitions of individuals and competing social classes.
His
insistence that elites were unavoidable realities in all societies,
however, made him vulnerable to the charge of endorsing aristocratic
rule in America, when in fact he was attempting to suggest that the
inevitable American elite must be controlled, its ambitions channeled
toward public purposes. He also was accused of endorsing monarchical
principles because he argued that the chief executive in the American
government, like the king in medieval European society, must possess
sufficient power to check the ravenous appetites of the propertied
classes. Although misunderstood by many of his contemporaries, the
realistic perspective Adams
proposed--and the skepticism toward utopian schemes he insisted
upon--has achieved considerable support in the wake of the failed
20th-century attempts at social transformation in the communist bloc. In
Adams 's own day, his political analysis enjoyed the
satisfaction of correctly predicting that the French Revolution would
lead to the Reign of Terror and eventual despotism by a military
dictator.
Vice
presidency and presidency
Soon
after his return to the
United States ,
Adams found himself on the ballot in the presidential
election of 1789. He finished second to Washington (69 votes to 34
votes), which signaled three political realities: first, his standing as
a leading member of the revolutionary generation was superseded only by
that of Washington himself; second, his combative style and his recent
political writings had hurt his reputation enough to preclude the kind
of overwhelming support Washington enjoyed; third, according to the
electoral rules established in the recent ratified Constitution, he was
America's first vice president.
This
meant that Adams was the first American statesman
to experience the paradox of being a heartbeat away from maximum power
while languishing in the political version of a cul-de-sac. Adams
himself described the vice presidency as "the most insignificant office
that ever the Invention of man contrived or his Imagination conceived."
His main duty was to serve as president pro tem of the Senate, casting a
vote only to break a tie. During his eight years in office, Adams cast
between 31 and 38 such votes, more than any subsequent vice president in
American history. He steadfastly supported all the major initiatives of
the Washington administration, including the financial plan of Alexander
Hamilton, the Neutrality Proclamation (1793), which effectively ended
the Franco-American Alliance of 1778, the forceful suppression of an
insurrection in western Pennsylvania called the Whiskey Rebellion
(1794), and the Jay Treaty (1795), a highly controversial effort to
avoid war with England by accepting British hegemony on the high seas.
When
Washington announced his decision
not to seek a third term in 1796, Adams was the
logical choice to succeed him.
In
the first contested presidential election in American history,
Adams won a narrow electoral majority (71-68) over
Jefferson, who thereby became vice president. Adams
made an initial effort to bring Jefferson into
the cabinet and involve him in shaping foreign policy, but
Jefferson declined the offer, preferring to retain his
independence. This burdened the Adams presidency
with a vice president who was the acknowledged head of the rival
political party, the Republicans. Additional burdens included:
inheritance of Washington's cabinet, whom Adams unwisely decided to
retain, and whose highest loyalty was to Washington's memory as embodied
in Hamilton; a raging naval conflict with the French in the Caribbean
dubbed the "quasi-war"; and the impossible task of succeeding--no one
could replace--the greatest hero of the revolutionary era.
Despite Washington
's plea for a bipartisan foreign policy in his farewell address
(1796), the "quasi-war" produced a bitter political argument between
Federalists, who preferred war with
France to
alienating Britain
, and Republicans, who viewed France as
America 's only
European ally and the French Revolution as a continuation of the
American Revolution on European soil. Adams
attempted to steer a middle course between these partisan camps, which
left him vulnerable to political attacks from both sides. In 1797 he
sent a peace delegation to
Paris to negotiate an end to
hostilities, but when the French directory demanded bribes before any
negotiations could begin, Adams ordered the
delegates home and began a naval buildup in preparation for outright
war. The Federalist-dominated Congress called for raising a 30,000-man
army, which
Adams agreed to reluctantly. If
Adams had requested a declaration of war in 1798, he
would have enjoyed widespread popularity and virtually certain
reelection two years later. Instead, he acted with characteristic
independence by sending yet another and this time successful, peace
delegation to
France against
the advice of his cabinet and his Federalist supporters. The move ruined
him politically but avoided a costly war that the infant American
republic was ill-prepared to fight. It was a vintage Adams
performance, reminiscent of his defense of British soldiers after the
Boston Massacre, which was also principled and unpopular.
If
ending the "quasi-war" with
France was
Adams 's major foreign policy triumph, his chief domestic
failure was passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts (1798), which
permitted the government to deport foreign-born residents and indict
newspaper editors or writers who published "false, scandalous, and
malicious writing or writings against the government of the
United States ." A total of 14
indictments were brought against the Republican press under the sedition
act, but the crudely partisan prosecutions quickly became infamous
persecutions that backfired on the Federalists. Although
Adams had signed the Alien and Sedition Acts under pressure
from the Federalists in Congress, he shouldered most of the blame both
at the time and in the history books. He came to regard the sedition act
as the biggest political blunder of his life.
The
election of 1800 again pitted
Adams against Jefferson .
Adams ran ahead of the Federalist candidates for
Congress, who were swept from office in a Republican landslide. However,
thanks to the deft maneuvering of Aaron Burr, all 12 of
New York 's electoral votes went to
Jefferson , giving the tandem of Jefferson and Burr the
electoral victory (73-65). Jefferson was
eventually elected president by the House of Representatives, which
chose him over Burr on the 36th ballot. In his last weeks in office,
Adams made several Federalist appointments to the judiciary,
including John Marshall as chief justice of the
United States
. These " midnight
judges" offended Jefferson, who resented the encroachment on his own
presidential prerogatives. Adams, the first president to reside in the
presidential mansion in Washington ,
D.C. , was also the first--and one of the
very few--presidents not to attend the inauguration of his successor. On
March 4, 1801 , he was
already on the road back to Quincy
.
Retirement
At
age 65 Adams did not anticipate a long
retirement. The fates proved more generous than he expected, providing
him with another quarter century to brood about his career and life, add
to the extensive marginalia in his books, settle old scores in his
memoirs, watch with pride when John Quincy assumed the presidency, and
add to his already vast and voluminous correspondence. In an extensive
exchange of letters with Benjamin Rush, the
Philadelphia physician and patriotic gadfly,
Adams revealed his preoccupation with fame and developed his
own theory of the role ambition plays in motivating man to public
service. Along the way he placed on the record his own candid and often
critical portraits of the other vanguard members of the revolutionary
generation.
In
1812, thanks in part to prodding from Rush, he overcame his bitterness
toward Jefferson and initiated a correspondence
with his former friend and rival that totaled 158 letters. Generally
regarded as the most intellectually impressive correspondence between
American statesmen in all of American history, the dialogue between
Adams and Jefferson touched on a host of timely and timeless subjects:
the role of religion in history, the aging process, the emergence of an
American language, the French Revolution, and the party battles of the
1790s.
Adams put it most poignantly to
Jefferson : "You and I ought not to die, before We have
explained ourselves to each other."
More
than the elegiac tone of the letters, the correspondence dramatized the
contradictory impulses generated by the American Revolution and
symbolized by the two aging patriarchs. Adams was
the realist, the skeptic, the principled pessimist. Jefferson
was the idealist, the romantic, the pragmatic optimist. As if according
to a script written by providence, the "Sage of Quincy" and the "Sage of
Mantillas" died within hours of each other on
July 4, 1826 , the 50th anniversary to the day of the
Declaration of Independence.
Adams 's writings
The
definitive edition of the Adams
papers has been published in separate installments. L.H. Butterfield et
al. (eds.), Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, 4 vol. (1961,
reissued 1964); Adams Family Correspondence, 6 vol. (1963-93); and The
Book of Abigail and John: Selected Letters of the Adams Family,
1762-1784 (1975, reissued 1997), launched the project, which continued
with Robert J. Taylor et al. (eds.), Papers of John Adams (1977- ).
Adams's legal career is handled separately in L. Kinvin Wroth and Hiller
B. Zobel (eds.), Legal Papers of John Adams, 3 vol. (1965, reprinted
1968). Because the definitive edition remains a work in progress, the
only comprehensive edition in print is Charles Francis Adams (ed.), The
Works of John Adams, 10 vol. (1850-56, reprinted 1971).Other pieces of
the massive Adams correspondence include: Charles Francis Adams (ed.),
Letters of John Adams, Addressed to His Wife, 2 vol. (1841, reissued
1965); Alexander Biddle et al., Old Family Letters, 2 vol. (1892);
Worthington Chauncey Ford (ed.), Statesman and Friend: Correspondence of
John Adams with Benjamin Waterhouse, 1784-1822 (1927); Lester J. Cappon
(ed.), The Adams-Jefferson Letters, 2 vol. (1959, reprinted in 1 vol.,
1988); John A. Schutz and Douglass Adair (eds.), The Spur of Fame:
Dialogues of John Adams and Benjamin Rush, 1805-1813 (1966, reissued
1980).
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