John Adams.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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the British authorities.
The royal governor, aware of Adams's ability and growing influence, offered him the post of advocate general in the admiralty court.
Adams declined the appointment,recognizing it as a bribe to bring him over to the side of the British government.
A3 Adams and the Boston Massacre
Adams generally supported the popular resistance to the British government, but he did not condone violence or mob action.
Adams was greatly disturbed by theBoston Massacre of 1770, an incident in which five men were killed after unruly demonstrators provoked British troops into firing into the crowd.
When Adams wasasked to defend the British soldiers who were charged with murder as a result of this clash, he promptly accepted.
With the help of two other lawyers he won acquittalfor all but two of the men.
His reputation as a patriot was such, however, that his defense of the British soldiers seems not to have damaged his political career.
In June1770 while he was preparing for the trial, the Boston town meeting elected him to the Massachusetts legislature.
A4 Temporary Retirement
Adams served in the legislature for only a few months.
That winter, illness forced him to leave politics.
After nearly three years in Boston, Adams returned with hisfamily to Braintree.
He was determined to “throw off a great part of the load of business both public and private.” He returned to Boston late in 1772 to look after hislaw business but still intended to remain “disengaged from public affairs with a fixed resolution not to meddle with them.”
Political events, however, soon brought Adams back into public life.
In a series of articles in the Boston Gazette, Adams fought Britain's plan to place Massachusetts judges in the pay of the king.
He also opposed the royal governor, who challenged the power of colonial legislatures.
As always, his arguments were founded on his sureknowledge of the law, and they were still aimed at reconciliation with Britain.
However, in December 1773, Adams supported what became known as the Boston TeaParty, where patriots dumped British tea into Boston Harbor to protest tea tax and the monopoly on the importation of tea that Britain had given to the East IndiaCompany.
Thereafter he firmly supported the patriotic measures that led step by step to American independence.
A5 First Continental Congress
In 1774 Adams attended the First Continental Congress, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as a member of the Massachusetts delegation.
Twelve of the thirteen Britishcolonies from Massachusetts to Georgia were represented in the Congress.
They met to respond to the British laws known as the Intolerable Acts, which placed evengreater restrictions on colonial life.
Like most members of Congress, Adams was there to uphold the rights of the colonies but not to propose independence.
Even themost radical of the delegates, like his cousin Samuel Adams, were not ready for a complete break.
“There is no man among us,” John Adams told Congress, “that wouldnot be happy to see accommodation with Britain.” Nevertheless, he urged Congress to take a strong stand in view of Britain's violations of citizens' rights in the colonies.
Although Congress made a united protest against British misrule, Adams was not satisfied.
Congress had, by one vote, rejected a proposal known as the Galloway Plan,which would have provided for a union of the colonies under one government.
Adams returned to Braintree, still insisting that “an American Legislature should be set upwithout delay.”
A6 Second Continental Congress
When John Adams set out in May 1775 for Philadelphia and the opening of the Second Continental Congress, the American Revolution had begun with the battles atLexington and Concord, Massachusetts.
Adams, John Hancock, Samuel Adams, and other New England delegates arrived in Philadelphia ready to press for actionagainst Britain.
They wanted the colonies to mobilize for war and to set up a confederation of independent colonies.
Finding many delegates hesitant to act, Adams, whowas always intolerant of delay, became impatient and irritable.
Trying to remain calm, he observed philosophically: “America is a great unwieldy body.
Its progress mustbe slow.
It is like a large fleet sailing under convoy.
The fleetest sailors must wait for the dullest and the slowest.”
After two weeks, when nothing had been accomplished, Adams could hold back no longer.
He addressed Congress in blunt terms.
Before talking of peace with Britain,he said, Congress should adopt a program to set up an independent government in each colony.
It should use the New England militiamen, who were then blockadingthe British in Boston, as the basis for a Continental Army, and should name a commander-in-chief who would be responsible to Congress.
Finally, Adams proposed,Britain should be told of these steps.
Then, if the war continued, the colonies should seek alliances and support in France, Spain, and the Netherlands.
Only one of Adams's proposals was adopted.
A Continental Army was authorized, and Colonel George Washington of Virginia was named commanding general.
Adamshad recommended Washington not only because he had military training, but also because he was from the South.
Adams felt that, to form a national army, the Southas well as the North should be represented in it.
Therefore the New England troops had to have a Southern commander.
Early in 1776, Adams saw another of his proposals enacted.
On May 6, he and his allies in Congress presented a resolution urging all the colonies to form independentgovernments.
The resolution, which to Adams was the most important of his proposals, was passed on May 15.
A7 Declaration of Independence
In June 1776 Richard Henry Lee, a delegate from Virginia, moved that Congress declare “that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independentStates.” The resolution was referred to a committee consisting of Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, Robert R.
Livingston, and John Adams.
Jefferson wrote the declaration and Adams was spokesman for it when it was presented to Congress.
A great debate preceded the final vote.
There were manyreluctant delegates who still hoped for reconciliation with Britain, but Adams won most of them over.
On July 4, 1776, Congress adopted the Declaration ofIndependence.
In a letter to his wife written on July 3, the day after Lee's resolution was approved, Adams wrote that 'The second day of July…will be celebrated bysucceeding generations, as the great anniversary festival.
It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance…with pomp and parade, with…guns, bells, bonfires,and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the other…”
At the Second Continental Congress, Adams also served as chairman of the Board of War and Ordnance.
It was charged with supplying troops, raising money for theirpay, and naming officers of the army.
Responsible for the actual conduct of the war, this committee took most of Adams's time until 1777.
B American Diplomat
Late in 1777 Congress elected Adams commissioner to France.
When he joined the other members of the diplomatic mission, however, he learned that their importantwork had been completed.
France had extended recognition to the United States, and treaties of friendship and commerce had been signed.
Adams remained in Parisfor a year, studying European political affairs and sending detailed reports to Congress.
Because he was also minister plenipotentiary (diplomat with broad powers) to.
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