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Adams Family Correspondence

Adams Family

March 1787 – December 1789

Barcode 9780674022782
Hardback

Original price £114.59 - Original price £114.59
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£114.59
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Release Date: 01/02/2007

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: History of the Americas
Label: The Belknap Press
Series: Adams Papers
Contributors: Margaret A. Hogan (Edited by), C. James Taylor (Edited by), Jessie May Rodrique (Edited by), Hobson Woodward (Edited by), Gregg L. Lint (Edited by), Mary T. Claffey (Edited by)
Language: English
Publisher: Harvard University Press

March 1787 – December 1789
By early 1787, John and Abigail Adams, anticipating a quiet retirement from government in Massachusetts, were quickly pulled back into the public sphere by John's election as first vice president under the Constitution. The Adamses thoughtfully observe the world around them, from English court manners to the politics of the new federal government.

By early 1787, as this latest volume of the award-winning series Adams Family Correspondence opens, John and Abigail Adams were eagerly planning their return home to Massachusetts from Great Britain, frustrated by John's lack of progress in his diplomatic mission and anxious for a reunion with family and friends. Arriving in Massachusetts in mid-1788, they anticipated a quiet retirement from government service as they returned to running their farm. But they barely had time to settle in before they were pulled back into the public sphere by John's election as the first vice president under the new Constitution. Moving to New York City in 1789 with their daughter Nabby, and her family, John and Abigail found themselves once again center stage in American political life.

The Adamses serve as prescient and thoughtful observers of the world around them, from the manners and mores of English court life to the political intrigues of the new federal government in New York. Beyond that wider world, however, these letters observe the more intimate domestic concerns of a New England family. With more of the forthright candor that marks the Adamses' correspondence, this volume offers a unique perspective on a crucial period in American history.