Mark Puls’ Samuel Adams: Father of the American Revolution brought to light one of the most undervalued yet highly influential founding fathers of the American revolutionary era. Adams is widely regarded as one of the first fervent idealists of American independence.…
11. John Quincy Adams (July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was the sixth President of the United States from 1825 to 1829. He was also an American diplomat and served in both the Senate and House of Representatives. He was a member of the Federalist, Democratic-Republican, National Republican, and later Anti-Masonic and Whig parties.…
On July 11, 1767, in Braintree, Massachusetts. John Quincy Adams was born. His father, the second president of US, and his mother, the first lady of the White House. He traveled to France with his father when he was 10. At the age of 14, he received training in the diplomatic divisions and went to school . Adams traveled with the lawyer, Francis Dana, to Russia, working as his secretary and translator. He went to school in Europe and became really fluent in French, Dutch, and German. Then he returned home and joined Harvard College in 1785 and graduated two years later.…
During the Revolutionary War, Jay represented New York in the Continental Congress in 1774. Jay was pushing the congress to keep ties with Britain, but later on realized that independence for America was best. In 1778 John became the president of the Continental Congress and helped better the nation. In effort to end…
Abigail Adams married John Adams on October 25, 1764. John Adams was a lawyer at the time and was away most of the time. Soon after, John Adams worked his way up serving time in Congress to becoming vice president and then to be president of the United State. They had six children, but one died after a year and one that was stillborn. Abigail Adams had the responsibility of raising and teaching her children, plus working on the farm.…
John Adams believes that a strong economy will make America successful. First, he needs to get rid of the debt as fast as possible. He has a plan to get rid of the debt we owe. One of the ways is by promoting business and trade. Not only will this help pay debt, but it will increase…
Once a king named George ruled Britain and had done awful things. George was crowned the king in 1751 and was the king there for about 60 years. He's done a lot to the colonist for wars he was in. He imposed many taxes such as Sugar act, Stamp act, and the Townshend act. George was in a war known as the revolutionary war and played an unknown role in that war. George had lost the war and it came to an end by the Treaty of Paris. King George iii was a vital role in the American Revolution.…
Home to Abigail would always be Braintree, Massachusetts where she and John retired for seventeen years after his presidency. Both John and Abigail were Unitarians and Abigail often said, “ True religion is from the heart, not from a person’s good deeds.”…
In the story "John Adams and the Coming of the Revolution”, author David McCullough discusses how John Adams was asked to defend the British soldiers in court of the soldier’s accusation of man slaughter, following the Boston Massacre. Being such a problematic case that could ruin his reputation, John Adams accepted to defend the soldiers because of his experience in difficult cases, and his strong principles and beliefs. John Adam’s reputation did not even tarnish because of how skillfully he handled the case gaining the respect of the people of Boston.…
When John become president in 1797, Abigail arrived in Philadelphia in early May and held a reception as first lady. John Adams discussed nearly every important problem with her and most often would follow her advice. During this time Abigail would write letter to friends and they would ask her to be their voice. In addition, Abigail would help her husband to support what they were going through and send letters about managing the farm to her sister Mary Cranch. At the bottom is an illustration of one of the letters. Credit image to…
He wants his readers to gain a sense of the realness of these people, who worked so hard for it to be free. He says, "We call them the Founding Fathers, in tribute, but tend to see them as distant and a bit unreal, like figures in a costume pageant. Yet very real they were, real as all that stirred their hearts and minds,' and it as meaning in our time as never before." The reason he may have chosen John Adams to write about as opposed to Adams' co-revolutionaries, is the number of primary sources relating to Adams. Many of the letters were found at the Massachusetts Historical Society, there were letters between John and Abigail Adams, Abigail and her sister, and numerous others. John's diary entries also made a nice addition to the story, building up to the realness of this man. This book was first published in 2001, in New York. Though probably released before the September 11 attacks, it is assurable that if it had been released after, the direct correlation of the American hero would be made of John Adams. I think that the author's goal, in writing this book, is to present the reality of this particular co-revolutionary, which through all the primary documents especially, he was very successful in doing. The single most memorable thing that I learned about were the relationships that Adams had, with other familiar names. This book had really helped me to understand the happenings that went on in the life period of Adams, but also really just how all these historical co-revolutionaries and Founding Fathers were all…
Samuel's father, Samuel, was a deacon for the church near their house. His father was also quite wealthy for the time, so the Adams house was next to the harbor and was very large for just an everyday family. Across the street from the Adam’s house…
Abigail Adams married a man destined to be a major leader of the American Revolution and the second President of the United States. Although she married and raised men that become such significant figures during their time, her herself was played an important role in the American society. The events that happened in her life, starting from childhood and ending in her adult years, led her to be a Revolutionary woman. Three main reasons behind her becoming such a strong, independent woman was the fact that she married a man who had an important role in politics, growing up with no education, and raising a family basically by herself.…
Even though Henry Adams was already influential in him, having been raised with an enormously intellectual and eye-opening family, he had his own struggles other than the ones that were presented to him by his family about the country on its own. He was able to learn on his own that education is much more than memorizing anything, to him; it was about living it and being an example of how to make history. He knew that the only way to be as influential as he really wanted to be was by broadening his own mind as much as he possibly could. He had grown up with a president grandfather and another influential grandfather, so to him it was important that…
Cited: Alexander, John K. Samuel Adams: America 's Revolutionary Politician. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. Print.…