Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Adams, John (1735-1826) Bio


John Adams was the third president of the United States.  He is a descendant of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins and thus a distant relative of the contributor, Richard Neal Heywood.  

  John Alden's descent from John Alden and Priscilla Mullins follows.  
John Alden and Priscilla Mullins 
Ruth Alden and John Bass
Hannah Bass and Joseph Adams
John Adams and Susanah Boylston
John Adame and Abigail Smith             President of the USA
John Quincy Adams                                President of the USA
             Richard's descent from John Alden and Priscilla Mullins follows.  
John Alden and Priscilla Mullins 
Ruth Alden and John Bass
John Bass and Hanna Neal
Hannah Bass and Josiah Rawson
Mary Polly Rawson and David Warren Leland 
Hannah Rawson Leland and Benjamin Heywood
Joseph Leland Heywood and Martha Spence
Joseph Neal Heywood and Sarah Francelle Coleman
Leland Heywood and Margaret Smurthwaite
Richard Neal Heywood and Carma Smith

Note:  Orson Wells and Marilyn Monroe were also descendants of John Alden and Priscilla 

Note:  A Priscilla Mullins Bio follows that of John.

Adams was born in the village of Braintree (Quincy), Mass., on Oct. 30 (Old Style, Oct. 19), 1735. His parents and ancestors had been honored members of the community since its founding. His father, John Adams, was influential in town business, serving as selectman and officer of the militia; his mother, Susanna Boylston Adams, was known for her devotion to family and church. The Adams clan had arrived from England about 1640 and settled on land that their descendants were still tilling in John's boyhood.

JOHN ADAMS

Biography

John Adams
     John Adams, 2d Prsident of the United States.  He devoted his life to politics,Boston and Philadelphia and later in the founding of the republic. He served as a Massachusetts delegate to the Continental Congress, as a diplomat in the struggle to win European recognition of American independence, and as Vice President and President of the United States during its critical, formative years, participating with distinction first in the revolutionary activities.  
     Adams' diaries, letters, and books provide invaluable information about the politics of his time. His writings reveal the mind of an astute observer and philosopher--a very human one whose warmth, wit, and playfulness captivate the reader. His reputation as an intelligent and courageous statesman endures; but his name has been overshadowed by others--perhaps because he was not uniquely connected with any single great event.
Boyhood and Education
     Adams was born in the village of Braintree (Quincy), Mass., on Oct. 30 (Old Style, Oct. 19), 1735. His parents and ancestors had been honored members of the community since its founding. His father, John Adams, was influential in town business, serving as selectman and officer of the militia; his mother, Susanna Boylston Adams, was known for her devotion to family and church. The Adams clan had arrived from England about 1640 and settled on land that their descendants were still tilling in John's boyhood.
     Besides receiving the informal instruction of village life, Adams attended dame and Latin school. In spite of his inclination to be a farmer, his schooling prepared him for college and a career in the ministry. With some special tutoring in Latin from Joseph Marsh, a local scholar, John passed his entrance examinations for Harvard College in 1751 and began four absorbing years of study that excited his imagination. "I was a mighty metaphysician, at least I thought myself such"; he was a mighty scientist, debater, and orator, too. As he examined career possibilities, the ministry soon appeared less interesting to him than law, medicine, and public service. At graduation in 1755 he was still undecided, and he accepted a teaching position in Worcester while he contemplated the future.
Early Public Career
The career of a schoolmaster was most unsatisfying for Adams. His pupils were "little runtlings" who barely knew their ABC's, and his students noted that he was preoccupied with other matters. His position, however, enabled him to meet the intellectuals of Worcester, including James Putnam, its most distinguished lawyer. Adams finally decided to make a career of the law and apprenticed himself to Putnam. Since the intense young man was not interested in being a country lawyer, he returned as soon as possible (in 1758) to Braintree, where family connections could win him introductions to the Boston bar.
     Lawyer Adams began his career in Braintree writing wills and deeds and taking an interest in town affairs. Although local matters were important to him, his law practice began to take him farther and farther from Braintree. On his way to and from Plymouth he would stop at Weymouth to visit Abigail, the young daughter of the Reverend Mr. William Smith. John and Abigail were married on Oct. 25, 1764, and he loved her deeply throughout their long marriage.
     Adams' legal practice often took him to Boston, where he became well acquainted with James Otis, Jr., and his distant cousin Samuel Adams. With them he attended the clubs of tradesmen and joined the "Sodalitas" an a founding member. This group of Boston lawyers mixed scholarly discussions of law with debates on the legality of the Stamp Act of 1765. Out of these meetings came Adams' anonymous articles for the Boston Gazette, later reprinted as A Dissertation on Canon and Feudal Law. In these he traced the origin and rise of freedom. The rights of Englishmen, he wrote, were derived from God, not from king or Parliament, and would be secured by the study of history, law, and tradition.
     Adams expressed these views in political form when he drew up for Braintree a protest against the Stamp Act that became a model for similar remonstrations elsewhere in New England. He assailed the stamp tax as an unnecessary burden upon the people and an unconstitutional levy--"no free man can be separated from his property but by his own act or fault." These ideas gave him much prominence in Massachusetts. Braintree recognized him now as a leading townsman by electing him a selectman, but legal work kept him in Boston, so he gave up his post as selectman and moved there in 1768.
Though Adams was always ready to speak out for liberty, he maintained his political independence and offered his talents to anyone in trouble. His most dramatic case occurred in 1770 when he and Josiah Quincy defended the British soldiers accused of murder in the Boston Massacre. It was an incident of justice versus unlawful authority, but the culprit this time was the Boston mob that provoked the incident. For taking the case Adams was sharply rebuked in the patriot newspapers, yet he was privately congratulated on winning this case for liberty.
     Since May 1770, Adams had been a Boston representative in the legislature (General Court). Associating daily with men deeply concerned about liberty, he was troubled by the issues confronting the colonies. These preyed upon his mind, and he decided in 1771 to leave public life. After 16 months of semiretirement, partly taken up in travel and bathing in the mineral springs of Stafford, Conn., and partly in farming, he returned to Boston.
Rise to Leadership
     The radicals were happy to have Adams available for consultation and as a writer for the newspapers. They elected him to the Governor's Council in May 1773, only to have him ejected by the governor for his partisanism. He was, indeed, involved in patriotic maneuvers, and he rejoiced when Bostonians dumped the hated tea into the harbor in the Boston Tea Party of 1773. Britain's retaliation drew him into full partnership with the radicals, and he became a delegate to the First Continental Congress in 1774.
     During the next three years in Philadelphia, Adams pushed Congress into decisive action that was to separate the colonies from Britain. He urged successfully the appointment of George WASHINGTON as commander in chief of colonial forces and the creation of a naval force to challenge Britain's supremacy of the seas. In committee and on the floor of Congress, he laid down principles of foreign policy, helped write the resolutions of May 10, 1776, that declared America independent, and defended the Declaration of Independence during debate in Congress.
     As chairman of the Board of War and Ordnance for nearly a year (1776-1777), Adams attempted to equip the army. Important to the revolutionary cause also were his extensive correspondence and his published writings. His Novanglus papers (1774-75) and his Thoughts on Government (1776) outlined principles of liberty and order for the Americans.
In Diplomatic Service
     In 1778, Adams was sent to replace Silas Deane, one of the American diplomatic agents in Paris negotiating a commercial and military alliance with France. Before he arrived, however, the American commissioners there had successfully concluded the negotiations. Adams returned to Braintree in time to be chosen a member of the Massachusetts constitutional convention; he composed most of the articles of the state constitution accepted by the convention in 1780.
     Adams' work on the state charter was barely completed when he was appointed a minister plenipotentiary in anticipation of peace negotiations with Britain. In Paris, while awaiting the start of negotiations, he was expected to be patient and inconspicuous--a role unsuited to his nervous, passionate temperament. With blunt advice for all parties, Adams irritated the French officials by meddling in policy matters, and he angered Benjamin Franklin by comments on his behavior. Finally giving way to their hostility, he withdrew to the Netherlands where he secured recognition of American independence and negotiated a loan and treaty of amity and commerce.
Returning to Paris in October 1782, Adams joined John Jay and Franklin in the peace discussions. In these proceedings Adams particularly, and successfully, insisted on the rights of the United States to fish off the Canadian coast, and he also was interested in extending American territory as far west as possible. The Treaty of Paris, ending the War of Independence, was concluded on Sept. 3, 1783.
     While the peace treaty was being ratified by Congress, Adams and his son, John Quincy ADAMS, toured England. In 1783-1784, Adams negotiated loans for the United States in the Netherlands and commercial treaties in France. In 1785 he was appointed first U.S. minister to Britain. His three years in London were fruitless in winning trade concessions or putting Anglo-American relations on a friendly basis. Adams used his time to good purpose, however, by getting well acquainted with Thomas Jefferson, U.S. minister to France, and writing A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States(3 vols., 1787). Like Adams' other writings, this work was unpolished and somewhat polemical, but it contained a wealth of information on constitutional theory and was often cited in the Constitutional Convention of 1787. Adams strongly approved of balanced government and praised the British parliamentary system as the "most stupendous fabric of human invention."
     While Adams favored states' rights and reform of the Articles of Confederation, he had worried about the continuing weakness of the national government. In 1788 he welcomed the proposed Constitution as "admirably calculated to preserve the Union." As his thoughts turned homeward, he resigned his unproductive London post and returned to Braintree to study, write, and garden. Within the year, in the first ELECTION held under the CONSTITUTION, he was chosen vice president of the United States, confirming his national position as second only to President Washington.
The First Vice President
     As in all of his positions, Adams, who was reelected in 1792, accepted the responsibilities of the vice presidency with energy and seriousness. He presided over the U.S. SENATE and cast the deciding vote frequently, often for measures that would increase generally the powers of the national government or specifically those of the presidency. Always ready to offer opinions, Adams lectured the Senate on its duties. He also published a series of essays, Discourses on Davila (1791), which commented broadly on civil disorders, with special reference to the French Revolution.
     As Washington's "heir apparent," Adams discovered that even the presidency was being reduced to the level of human passions and party objectives. According to his philosophy, the position should seek the man, and knowledge as well as virtue should qualify the man, without regard to partisanship. Unlike Washington, Adams had rivals for the presidency, and he should have been more flexible. Instead, he permitted Alexander Hamilton to assume leadership of the Federalist party, while he tried to remove himself from partisan politics by associating even with his party's critics.
     Hamilton was angry over this conduct and sought another candidate to represent the Federalist party. But the party was embroiled with the Jeffersonian Republicans in fierce contests over the direction of foreign affairs. This division centered on the war between England and France, with the Federalists favoring the English, and the Republicans, the French. The climax came during the ratification of Jay's Treaty with Britain in 1794. Its pro-English character offended both the French government and the pro-French Republicans who carried on a scurrilous newspaper campaign against Jay and the administration. The bitterness, however, brought a reaction in favor of the moderates and many leaders, wishing to avoid excess, rallied to Adams, who had managed to stay out of the dispute.
     Hamilton, who had greatly influenced the treaty negotiations, was helpless but not reconciled to the choice of Adams as Federalist candidate for president. During the presidential campaign of 1796 he secretly tried to substitute Thomas Pinckney for Adams and thus divided the party. As a result, the election was extremely close: Adams won the presidency by three ELECTORAL votes (71-68) over the Republican JEFFERSON, who, under the electoral system then in use, became the vice president.
The Presidency
     Adams entered office on March 4, 1797. Fully aware of his slender victory, he sought political harmony. His inaugural address, tracing the progress of the nation, declared his faith in republicanism and called upon the people to end partisan politics. He tried to reach an accord with Jefferson, conciliate the Hamiltonians, and steer a peaceful course through the controversy with France over Jay's Treaty. But he encountered supreme difficulties.
As the first president to succeed another, Adams had no guidelines to follow on cabinet appointments, patronage, and policy enunciations. He decided to keep Washington's mediocre cabinet, partly because he wanted to reconcile the Federalists and partly because he knew how difficult is was to get good men to serve. The cabinet was Federalist--and more, Hamiltonian--in loyalty. Adams did not fully realize the inherent dangers of this situation until 1799, when the cabinet violated its trust by working against his policies.
     With Federalists about him, Adams found partisan politics impossible to avoid, though he favored Republicans Benjamin Rush and Elbridge GERRY with appointments. As relations with France worsened, he had to recommend preparations for defensive warfare while negotiations for peace continued. These measures irritated the Republicans, but Adams was not deterred. He held to his policy of peace and preparedness even after the French Directory insulted American envoys and began detaining American vessels. In January 1798 he proposed the creation of a navy department and asked for funds to put the military on a war footing.
     Four bills to control subversion, the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, were also passed. One of the acts imposed severe penalties on those who criticized the government. These harsh measures, formulated in a time of fright, were approved by Adams. Although a score of journalists were punished for their attacks on the administration, the laws were not ruthlessly applied. The opposition, however, made them appear cruel and turned them into symbols of Federalism.
     Adams' reprisals against French seizures of American shipping were popular for a time, and the Federalists won the 1798 congressional elections. Though Congress did not declare war, Adams pushed ahead with military preparations, selecting Washington, Henry Knox, Charles C. Pinckney, and Hamilton, in that order, to be the ranking generals of the army. But while Adams was visiting in Quincy (which had been set off from Braintree in 1792), the cabinet secured Washington's backing to move Hamilton ahead of his colleagues and make him second in command (actually, commander since Washington was not expected to take the field). Adams grasped the significance of this maneuver. He saw lawful control of the army shifted to Hamilton and, more, the naked specter of militarism. Hamilton and the cabinet wanted to prolong the crisis with France and use the opportunity to consolidate the Federalist party and spread the war into Spanish America.
     By the time Adams fully realized what was happening, he had advice from Europe that France would resume negotiations. In February 1799 he abruptly nominated William Vans Murray as a special envoy, to the amazement of the Hamiltonians. Debate over the action was bitter, and Adams compromised by agreeing to name a commission instead of a single delegate, but he withstood the pressure of Hamilton, the British minister, and some members of his cabinet. The commission finally concluded a treaty with France on Sept. 30, 1800. Adams had succeeded in preventing a war with France and preserving his country's neutrality.
     The treaty negotiations had split the party, and the Federalists now openly considered the effect of this division on the 1800 election. When two cabinet members, Secretary of State Pickering and Secretary of War McHenry, revealed their disloyalty to Adams, he forced their resignations without any political finesse. His abrasive action infuriated the Hamiltonians, who vented their feelings in public, matching the president's undiplomatic conduct. The Republicans, led by Jefferson and Aaron BURR, enjoyed the Federalist predicament. Adams was temperamentally unable to assume the responsibilities of a party boss or to dramatize the achievements of his administration. The election results reflected this weakness. The Federalists lost the presidency to Jefferson and the Republicans by eight electoral votes (73 to 65) and also lost Congress.
Later Years
     Adams left the presidency in 1801 for the private life of Quincy. Though he remained bitter toward Hamilton and the Federalists, he regained his sense of humor and served his country in a different way. He became president of the Massachusetts Society of Arts and Sciences, of the Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agriculture, and of other societies.
     Adams also wrote articles for the Boston Patriot reviewing events of his administration, and he corresponded with many people in the spirit of Cicero's Letters. His correspondence on politics, history, national affairs, religion, and philosophy was designed to guide posterity in maintaining the principles of 1776. His letters to Jefferson and Benjamin Rush are monuments of erudition, revealing a charming personality that could be crusty, petty, and lovable within the space of dozen lively lines.
     John Adams died in Quincy, Mass., on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson died the same day.
John A. Schultz
University
of Southern California
For Further Reading
The Adams Papers, edited by Lyman H. Butterfield and others, includes diaries, family and general correspondence, and state papers of John Adams and other members of the family. Begun by the Massachusetts Historical Society (Harvard University Press) in 1961, and expected to comprise 100 or more volumes, the project includes: The Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, 4 vols. (1961); Legal Papers of John Adams, 3 vols. (1966); and The Earliest Diary of John Adams (1966).

Other Editions of Adams' Writings Cappon, Lester J., ed., The Adams-Jefferson Letters, 2 vols. (Univ. of N.C. Press 1959).
Gibbs, George, Memoirs of the Administrations of Washington and John Adams (1846; reprint, B. Franklin 1971).
Peterson, Merrill D., Adams and Jefferson: A Revolutionary Dialogue (Oxford 1978).
Taylor, Robert J., and others, eds., Papers of John Adams: vols. 1 and 2, September 1755-April 1775 (Harvard Univ. Press 1972)
Adams, James, The Adams Family (1930; reprint, Greenwood Press 1974).
Brown, Ralph A., The Presidency of John Adams (Univ. Press of Kan. 1975).
Handler, Edward, America and Europe in the Political Thought of John Adams (Harvard Univ. Press 1964)
Haraszti, Zoltan, John Adams and the Prophets of Progress (Harvard Univ. Press 1952)
Howe, John, and Tebbenhoff, Edward H., John Adams, ed. by Carol Fitzgerald, 2 vols. (Meckler Pub. 1987)
Morse, John T., Jr., John Adams (1898; reprint, AMS Press 1979).
Nagel, Paul C., Descent from Glory: Four Generations of the John Adams Family (Oxford 1983).
Schutz, John A., and Adair, Douglass, eds., The Spur of Fame: Dialogues of John Adams and Benjamin Rush, 1805-1813 (1906; Huntington Lib. & Art Gallery 1980).
Shaw, Peter, The Character of John Adams (Norton 1977)
Walsh, Correa M., Political Science of John Adams (1915; reprint, Ayer 1970)


Source:  http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/ea/bios/02pjohn.html (This link is broken)

John Adams.  Related Boyhood and Education


Adams was born in the village of Braintree (Quincy), Mass., on Oct. 30 (Old Style, Oct. 19), 1735. His parents and ancestors had been honored members of the community since its founding. His father, John Adams, was influential in town business, serving as selectman and officer of the militia; his mother, Susanna Boylston Adams, was known for her devotion to family and church. The Adams clan had arrived from England about 1640 and settled on land that their descendants were still tilling in John's boyhood.

Wife:  Abigail Adams


Abigail Adams Abigail Smith Adams, 1744-1818 Prolific Writer, Patriot, Abolitionist, and Early Feminist Inheriting New England's strongest traditions, Abigail Smith was born on November 11, 1744 at WeymouthMassachusetts. It was a coastal town south of Boston. She was the second child of
[http://www.umkc.edu/imc/adamsa.htm]


Abigail Smith Adams, 1744-1818

Prolific Writer, Patriot, Abolitionist, and Early Feminist


We have too many high sounding words, and too few actions that correspond with them.
--Abigail Adams

     Inheriting New England's strongest traditions, Abigail Smith was born on November 11, 1744 at Weymouth, Massachusetts. It was a coastal town south of Boston. She was the second child of Elizabeth Quincy Smith and her husband, Reverend William Smith. On her mother's side she was descended from the 17th-century Puritan preacher Thomas Shepard of Cambridge--a family of great prestige in the colony; her father and other forebears were Congregational ministers, leaders in a society that held its clergy in high esteem.
     One of Weymouth's most prosperous and best-educated citizens, Reverend Smith was easygoing and friendly. Abigail later recalled that he often advised her to speak kindly, both to people and about them, teaching her "to say all the handsome things she could of persons, but not evil." Abigail often went with her mother to visit the sick and to take food, clothing, and fuel to needy families. She learned that it was the duty of the fortunate to help those who were less fortunate--a lesson she remembered all of her life.
     As most New England schools admitted only boys, girls were taught at home. Few people believed that girls needed much learning. So Abigail lacked formal education; but her curiosity spurred her keen intelligence, and she read avidly the books at hand, including the Bible, history, sermons, philosophy, essays, and poetry. She would become one of the most well-read women in America, and among the most influential women of her day.
Reading created a bond between "Abby" and young John Adams, a Harvard graduate launched on a career in law. She was a lovely young lady, but rather frail. They read and talked together. Then one evening in the middle of a thunderstorm, John proposed and she accepted. They were married in 1764. Abigail was 19. Their marriage proved to be a pairing of the mind and of the heart, enduring for more than half a century, enriched by time.
     The young couple lived on John's small farm at Braintree and later in Boston as his practice expanded. In 10 years she bore 3 sons and 2 daughters. 4 of them were named Abigail, John Quincy, Charles, and Thomas. She looked after their family and home when John went traveling as a circuit judge. "Alas!" she wrote in December of 1773, "How many snow banks divide thee and me...." Long separations them apart while he was off designing a new nation. She resolutely supported him in his insistence upon the Declaration of Independence and aided him and his cause with loyal zeal. He served the country they both loved as a delegate to the Continental Congress, envoy abroad, and an elected officer under the Constitution.
Intelligent and broad-minded, Abigail wrote hundreds of letters in an excellent English style that recorded the history of our young country and the many perils it faced on the road to independence. A terse and vigorous letter writer, she fearlessly expressed her opinions in private and in public. Her letters--pungent, witty, and vivid, spelled just as she spoke--detail her life in times of revolution. They tell the story of the woman who stayed at home to struggle with wartime shortages and inflation, to run the farm with a minimum of help, and to teach their children when formal education was interrupted. Most of all, they tell of her loneliness without her "dearest Friend." The "one single expression," she said, "dwelt upon my mind and played about my Heart...."
    She became a trusted and influential political adviser to her husband. She was ahead of her time with many of her ideas.

"...remember the ladies, and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors.
Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands....
If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion,
and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation."

     She opposed slavery and believed in equal education for boys and girls, making sure that her own daughter received a good education.
In 1784, she joined John at his diplomatic post in Paris, while he was engaged in writing the treaty of peace. She observed with interest the manners of the French. In 1785 she accompanied him to England. After his signing the Treaty of Paris, Abigail accompanied him in his role as the first minister of the U.S. to the court of George III--she filled her difficult role with dignity and tact, meeting with social discourtesies she long resented. Son John Quincy was doing a man's work at 14 as secretary and translator for the U.S. envoy to Russia. Later he became John's secretary in London. The couple returned happily in 1788 to Massachusetts and the handsome house they had just acquired in Braintree, later called Quincy, the home for the rest of their lives.
     From 1789 to 1801, she lived in a simple manner as her husband was successively vice president and then president. As wife of the first vice president, Abigail became a good friend to Mrs. Washington and a valued help in official entertaining, drawing on her experience of courts and society abroad. After 1791, however, poor health forced her to spend as much time as possible in Quincy. Illness or trouble found her resolute, declaring that she would "not forget the blessings which sweeten life." When John was elected president, she continued a formal pattern of entertaining--even in the primitive conditions she found at the new capital in November 1800. The city was wilderness, the President's House far from completion. Her private complaints to her family provide blunt accounts of both, but for her 3 months in Washington in the partially completed President's House, she duly held her dinners and receptions.
     The Adamses retired to Quincy in 1801 after John was defeated in his reelection bid by his former friend and then enemy, Thomas Jefferson. For 17 years they enjoyed the companionship that public life had long denied them. Abigail died on October 28, 1818, in Quincy, leaving her husband a lonely man. She is buried beside him (who died 8 years later on July 4, 1826) in the United First Parish Church.
     Their grandson, Charles Francis Adams, published his book, The Familiar Letters of John Adams and His Wife Abigail During the Revolution, in 1875. It increased interest in her career.
     Many of Abigail Adams' letters still exist, informing and delighting readers today while providing rich clues to the past. Reading them, we learn about customs, habits, and day-to-day family life of colonial times. In addition, her letters detail events of the American Revolution. Her words helps us better understand the history of our nation. She left her country a most remarkable record as patriot, First Lady, wife of one President, and mother of another.

Resources on Abigail Adams:
Butterfield, L.H., ed. The Book of Abigail and John : Selected Letters of the Adams Family, 1762-1784

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