“Let us dare to read, think, speak
and write.” John Adams
John Adams is best
known today for a presidency cut short by the Alien and Sedition Acts. In
truth, he was the greatest expert on government in the colonies ... at least until
James Madison stepped to the forefront. Harvard educated, Adams was a
champion of the founding principles, a firm proponent of Enlightenment
teachings, and a scholar of constitutional government. He was a pious man of
honor and character. Granted, he could be argumentative and self-righteous, but
he was generally correct in his positions.
Adams was an early and
fervent advocate for independence. He opposed the Stamp Act in speeches,
articles, and a widely circulated dissertation (Essay on the Canon and Feudal
Law). He served in the first and
second Continental Congresses, where he was engaged in over ninety
committees, many of which he chaired.
Adams nominated George Washington to be commander-in-chief,
and headed the Board of War and Ordnance, which was responsible for supplying
Washington’s army. He succeeded in getting an early resolution passed for
independence that eventually led to the Declaration, and then served on the
committee that wrote the Declaration of Independence. Twice during the war he
served as an envoy in Europe. In later Years, Thomas Jefferson said that Adams
was “the pillar of [the Declaration's] support on the floor of Congress, its
ablest advocate and defender against the multifarious assaults it encountered.”
The phrase checks and balances has become so
commonplace, it is often spoken as if it were a single word, but in the
eighteen century, it was two distinctly different concepts. John Adams may have
been the first to put the words together in his, A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States,
but balances and checks is the phrase
used in The Federalist, and that is the
sequence Madison would have thought appropriate. First balance powers between
the branches of government, and then place checks on those powers so they are
not abused.
John Adams was possibly
the hardest working person during the Founding. He was everywhere, doing
everything for each and every one of the thirty-six years between the Stamp Act
and the end of his presidency. In all his activities, he always tried to keep
the best interests of his country in mind. An ardent republican, he was an
honorable man who truly believed his countrymen were up to the task of
self-government.
Character Matters
John Adams second
cousin, Sam Adams said, “Nothing is more essential to the establishment of
manners in a state than that all persons employed in places of power and trust
must be men of unexceptionable characters.”
The United States of America was indeed lucky to
have a large cadre of unexceptionable
characters during the early days of our country. Then again, perhaps luck
is not the proper word.
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