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.…
John Quincy Adams was born on July 11, 1767, in Braintree, Massachusetts. He is the oldest son of all the children that John Adams, the second United States President, and Abigail Adams had. He traveled to France with his father at the age of 10. He received training in the diplomatic corps and went to school when he was 14 years old. Adams accompanied diplomat Francis Dana to Russia, serving as his secretary and translator in the year of 1781. He then traveled to Paris as his father’s secretary, debating the Treaty of Paris in 1783. At the same time, he attended school in Europe and became really fluent with French, Dutch, and German. He returned home and entered Harvard College in 1785 and graduated in 1787.…
The election between Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams was full of controversy. John Quincy Adams’ presidential term was full of in-house problems because of his race being allegedly being helped by Henry Clay which made his constitutional agenda not being pushed in. But if I were to choose a president, I choose John Quincy Adams because he’s very intelligent and is already with good relations with other countries in Europe.…
John Adams was our second president serving from 1797-1801. John Adams was educated at Harvard College studying law after his graduation. John Adams made good decisions like creating are Navy and bad decisions like the Alien and Sedition Act. Thing he helped with and did more with include XYZ Affair, Foreign Affairs, and more. The XYZ Affair is a mistake that occurred between the U.S. and France in 1797. Foreign Affairs are matters having to do with international relationships. John Adams was the six best president because he was against slavery, an outstanding wise political person and faced America’s first problems.…
John Adams was the leader of the American revolution.He was also the second president of the United States and the first vice president.He served as president from 1797 to 1801,Thomas Jefferson being his vice president. He was born on October 30 1735 and died at the age of ninety on his bed at July 4 1826 during independence day.…
John Adams, born on October 30, 1735, in Braintree, Massachusetts, was the first vice-president and the second president of the United States. He was also a very influential person in America. Although he wasn’t really the most famous president, he contributed to many aspects throughout his presidency and political career. Most of his contribution includes his writings, speeches and essays, his part in the office, and his role in the signing of important documents.…
“Our contest is not only whether we ourselves shall be free, but whether there shall be left to mankind an asylum on earth for civil and religious liberty.” Samuel Adams wasn’t just any ordinary representative whom signed the Declaration of Independence, but probably the most important of the men people know nothing about. From growing up in a wealthy household to Legislature of Massachusetts to founder of the Boston Committee of Correspondences, he never stepped aside and allowed a tyrant to control his life, making him one of the most influential founding fathers.…
John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were two historical men who had their own ideas about politics fundamentally, including different views on both the American and the French Revolution.…
John Adams was born in Massachusetts in October 30, 1735. Educated at Harvard University, he wanted the colonies to been independent from England. After two terms as vice president, Adams became president[.] He was the first president to live in the White House. On his first night there Adams wrote, "May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof." John Adams served 1 term.…
John Adams is the person I admire the most. Since I am on this American Revolution kick, I going to shout out for the Forgotten Patriot. John Adams, without him there might not have been an American Revolution, not that it was an effort by a single man but several singular men held the Revolution together. John Adams endured. People actively disliked him for his intellect, his supposed coldness, and prickly nature. They poked fun at a man who was pudgy and bald before age thirty. A man later dubbed as 'His Redundancy,' Adams was frequently accused of being an aristocrat who lined his purse at other’s expense and despite Adams invaluable service to the Revolution and the Peace, the multi-headed beast first called Anti-Federalist and later Democratic-Republicans.…
A patriot by some accounts, a tyrant by others, John Adams makes it to the top of a list of the most controversial presidents in American history. John Adams, born on October 30, 1735, in Braintree, Massachusetts was the vice president to George Washington and then later became the second president and the first and only Federalist president of the United States of America from March 4, 1797, to March 4, 1801. Before his presidency, he served as America's first minister to Great Britain from 1785 to 1788. He served in Congress from 1774 to 1777 and served in ninety committees and chaired twenty of them while in Congress. Constantly separated from his wife and children, John Adams was one of the most involved congressmen. He was also elected as part of the Constitutional Convention in Massachusetts. He is considered to be one of the Founding Fathers and also helped write the Declaration of Independence.When Adams was elected President in 1726, the Federalists controlled the two houses of Congress, the judiciary, which included the supreme court, and the Presidency. What we now consider as “conservative” ideology first began with John Adams and a fellow Federalist Alexander Hamilton, who both believed that America could achieve stability only if it were ruled by an aristocracy.…
We have had 43 presidents and each one has been an important part of our history. Our presidents are elected every four years on the first Tuesday in November. To run for presidency you have to be born in the United States, be over 35 years old, and have lived in the United States for 14 years or more. After being elected the president is sworn in on January 20 in Washington, D.C. and recites an oath. You can only be president for eight years. The president picks his cabinet members after the inauguration and he and his family move into the White House. I have chosen to research our 6th president, John Quincy Adams.…
Throughout many years of political debate and policy, John Adams established himself as a key leader in the creation and upholding of America in the 1700's. Harvard-educated, John Adams was a very intelligent man who displayed this intelligence on many different platforms (Massachusetts historical society). With Adam's political skill and whit it would be thought that he was taught this at an early age but, John Adam's father was very opposed to a life of law and politics (biography.com). John Adams was a direct descendent of Henry Adams, a pioneer puritan from England (biography.com). This caused inner turmoil in Adams as he felt a moral duty to follow his family's prominent religious past (biography.com).…
The relationship between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson was one of the most iconic and symbolic relationships in American history not only for its many ups and downs, but also for its great effects on the founding and governing of America.…
John Adams, one of the American Revolution 's central figures, recalled in his later writings that Americans were committed to independence in their hearts long before war broke out in America in 1775. This suggests that American independence was inevitable; however, this was not the case. Just twelve year earlier in 1763, Americans cheerfully celebrated the British victory in the Seven Years ' War, taking great pleasure in their identity as Britons and jealously guarding their much-celebrated rights which they believed they possessed by virtue of membership in what they saw as the world 's greatest empire. Seeing this, few would have predicted that by 1776, a revolution would be developing in British America. On the surface, the recipe for discontent seemed lacking. There was no economic crisis among the colonies; in fact, they were relatively prosperous.…