
John Adams was born October 30, 1735, in Braintree, MA. He secured a
scholarship to Harvard & graduated at the age of 20. Later he to a lawyer in
Worchester and was admitted to the Bar in 1761. Adams became a prominent
public figure in his activities against the Stamp Act, in response to which he
wrote and published a popular article, Essay on the Canon and Feudal Law.
Adams married in 1766 and moved to Boston, assuming a prominent position in
the patriot movement. He was elected to the Massachusetts Assembly in 1770, and
was chosen one of five to represent the colony at the First Continental Congress
in 1774. He signed the Declaration of Independence, 1776 and then left for
France as the appointed Diplomat to France from 1776 to 1779. He
participated with Franklin, Jay, and Laurens in development of the Treaty of
Peace with Great Britain and was a signer of that treaty, which in 1783 ended
the Revolutionary War. He then was the U.S. Minister to the British court from
1783 to 1788.
When the United States of America Constitution was adopted, he was elected
Vice President of the United States under Geo. Washington in 1789, and was
elected President in 1796. Adams was a Federalist & this made him an arch-rival
of Thos. Jefferson and his Republican party. The discord between Adams and
Jefferson surfaced many times during Adams' (and, later, Jefferson's)
presidency. This was not a mere party contest. The struggle was over the nature
of the office and on the limits of Federal power over the state governments and
individual citizens.
He died on July 4, 1826 (incidentally, within hours of the death of Thos.
Jefferson.) His final toast to the Fourth of July was "Independence Forever!"
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