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David McCullough
I think that we need
history as much as we need bread or water or love.
To make the point, I want to discuss a single human
being and why we should know him. And the first thing
I want to say about him is that he is an example of
the transforming miracle of education. When he and
others wrote in the Declaration of Independence about
“life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,”
what they meant by “happiness” wasn't
longer vacations or more material goods. They were
talking about the enlargement of the human experience
through the life of the mind and the life of the spirit.
And they knew that the system of government they were
setting up wouldn't work if the people weren't educated.
“If a nation expects to be ignorant and free,
in a state of civilization,” Jefferson wrote,
“it expects what never was and never will be.”
John Adams was born into a poor farm family. He is
often imagined as a rich Boston blueblood. He was
none of those. His one great advantage, or break,
was a scholarship to college–to Harvard College,
which at that time had all of four buildings and a
faculty of seven. Adams entered Harvard when he was
15 and discovered books. After that, he later recalled,
“I read forever.”
At a young age, he began to keep a diary–it
was about the size of the palm of your hand, and his
handwriting so small you need a magnifying glass to
read it–with the idea that by reckoning day-by-day
his moral assets and liabilities, he could improve
himself: “Oh! that I could wear out of my mind
every mean and base affectation, conquer my natural
pride and conceit,” he wrote. His natural pride
and conceit would be among the things his critics
would throw at him for the rest of his life. What's
so interesting here is that he recognized this himself
so early.
On July 21, 1756, at the age of 20, he wrote this
memorable entry:
I am
resolved to rise with the sun and to study Scriptures
on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday mornings,
and to study some Latin author the other three mornings.
Noons and nights I intend to read English authors
. . . . I will rouse up my mind and fix my attention.
I will stand collected within myself and think upon
what I read and what I see. I will strive with all
my soul to be something more than persons who have
had less advantages than myself.
But the next morning
he slept until seven, and in a one-line entry the
following week he wrote: “A very rainy day.
Dreamed away the time." There was so much that
he wanted to know and do, and he would have moments
when he thought life was passing him by: “I
have no books, no time, no friends. I must therefore
be contented to live and die an ignorant, obscure
fellow.”
Adams went to Harvard with the implicit understanding
that he would become a minister, but he was never
really drawn to that calling. In August 1756, he signed
a contract with a young Worcester attorney to stay
under his inspection (as they put it) for two years.
The day after, inspired by a sermon he had heard and
also perhaps by a feeling of relief over his decision,
he walked outside and recounted that the night sky
was an “amazing concave of Heaven sprinkled
and glittering with stars” that threw him “into
a kind of transport,” such that he knew such
wonders to be gifts of God. “But all the provisions
that [God] has [made] for the gratifications of our
senses,” he continued,
are
much inferior to the provision, the wonderful provision,
that He has made for the gratification of our nobler
powers of intelligence and reason. He has given us
reason to find out the truth, and the real design
and true end of our existence.
Making It Happen
Adams quickly rose in his profession and took an interest
in politics. By the time he became president in 1796,
he had served a multitude of duties for his country.
He had been one of those who explained the philosophy
and principles of the American Revolution to the people
of the time through what he wrote in newspapers. He
had defended the hated British soldiers who were arrested
and put on trial after the so-called Boston Massacre,
when nobody else would defend them. Asked to do so,
and knowing that it might destroy his political career,
he thought it his duty in a society governed by law.
And it didn't hurt his career one bit because people
saw that he was a man of conviction. He had served
brilliantly in the Continental Congress. Among other
accomplishments, he was the man who put the name of
George Washington in nomination to become the commander-in-chief
of the Continental Army; he chose Thomas Jefferson
to write the Declaration of Independence; later on
he would put John Marshall on the Supreme Court. If
he had done nothing but these three things, he would
be someone we should know.
Adams more than anyone got the Continental Congress
to vote for the Declaration. We have no records of
what he said. Deliberations took place behind closed
doors, out of fear of spies in Philadelphia. Keep
in mind that only about a third of the country supported
the Revolution. Another third was opposed–the
Loyalists or Tories, who saw themselves as the true
patriots because they were standing by their King.
The remaining third, in the human way, were waiting
to see who won. But Adams got the Congress to vote
for the Declaration and many wrote about it afterwards.
If you've seen the musical 1776, you'll remember that
he is the central character. That's as it should be.
And there are many people in it singing, “Why
don't you be quiet, John Adams?” or “Why
are you so obnoxious, John Adams?” When I was
working on my biography, I tried to find out who called
him obnoxious, and I found only one—Adams himself.
He wrote to a friend many years later that he must
have been rather obnoxious back then, but that he
felt he had to make it happen.
Answering the Call
Adams never failed to answer the call of his country
to serve, and he was called upon again and again,
always to the detriment of his livelihood and often
with risk to his life. He was asked to go to France
during the Revolution, and set sail with his 10-year-old
son, John Quincy, in the dead of winter. British cruisers
were lying off the coast of Massachusetts, just waiting
for someone like Adams to make a run for it to try
to obtain French war support. Had he been captured,
he would have been taken to England, to the Tower
of London, and hanged. Keep in mind that everybody
who signed the Declaration was putting his head in
a noose. When our Founders pledged their lives, their
fortunes and their sacred honor, that wasn't just
rhetoric. Keep in mind, too, that they were up against
the greatest military power on earth and had very
little military experience. They had no money—there
wasn't a bank in all of America in 1776. And no colonial
people had ever successfully revolted against the
mother country. Everything was against them.
Adams and his son took a boat out to the frigate Boston
on February 13, 1777, from a place called Houghs Neck,
near Braintree. I went with my own son to that point
on February 13 at about the same time, just at dusk.
It was about 28 degrees, whereas I think it was 24
or 25 degrees in 1777. We got out of a nice warm car
to walk down to the shore wearing good down coats
and we stood there with those big, green rollers coming
in and the clouds looking very ominous and the wind
blowing, and we were freezing. We thought to ourselves,
how in the world did they have the courage to do it?
Adams had never set foot on a ship before. The crossing
would take weeks, perhaps months, if they made it.
And as it turned out, everything that could have gone
wrong went wrong. They were hit by a hurricane. They
encountered an enemy ship and fought a battle. They
were becalmed for a long period. But they eventually
made it. Adams served in France for about a year,
then was called home.
Returning, he wrote the Constitution of the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts–the oldest written constitution
still in use anywhere in the world today–which
is a rough sketch of our national Constitution ten
years later. It was complete with a bill of rights
and with a paragraph unlike anything in any previous
constitution. Listen to it, and remember that it was
written in wartime, and by a man who was the first
of his family to have an education:
Wisdom
and knowledge, as well as virtue, diffused generally
among the body of the people being necessary for the
preservation of their rights and liberties; and as
these depend on spreading the opportunities and advantages
of education in various parts of the country, and
among the different orders of the people, it shall
be the duty of legislators and magistrates in all
future periods of this commonwealth to cherish the
interests of literature and the sciences . . . .
Many people today are
saying that we should be teaching morals in our schools.
They could find support in the closing line of this
section of the Commonwealth Constitution, which speaks
of the necessity “to countenance and inculcate
the principles of humanity and general benevolence,
public and private charity, industry and frugality,
honesty and punctuality in their dealings, sincerity,
good humor, and all social affections, and generous
sentiments among the people.” Again, if Adams
had done nothing but write this remarkable document,
he would be someone whose character would deserve
our attention. And no sooner had he finished it than
he was called upon again to go to France.
No Simpler Times
Let me say a word about Abigail Adams. She probably
had better political sense than her husband, and was
a better judge of people. And she loved politics.
There is a wonderful scene in the White House after
Adams had been defeated for re-election by Jefferson.
Jefferson was invited to come over and have dinner,
as were many members of the Senate and the House.
He sat at the table beside Abigail, asking “Who's
that man over there?” and “Who's this
one over here?” And she told him everything
about them–where they came from, what their
constituency was, what their interests were. She was
as bright as can be and had a backbone of iron. She
probably didn't weigh 100 pounds, standing only about
five feet one. I think she's one of the greatest Americans
of all time. And you can discover her, too, in her
marvelous correspondence with her husband during his
long absences.
Something I always like to emphasize is that there
never was a simpler past. We hear often, “Oh,
that was a simpler time,” but it's always wrong.
Imagine Abigail's life. Up in the morning at about
5 to light the fireplace that served as the kitchen,
call to the children to come down, cook the breakfast,
tend the stock, try to keep the farm solvent during
the whole war with her husband gone and with inflation
and with shortages of everything. Schools were closed,
so she had to educate the children at home. Her day
didn't end until 9 or 10 at night when the children
would go upstairs to their bedrooms, where it could
be so cold that the water in the bowls that they used
to wash their faces was iced over. And then she would
sit down at the kitchen table with a single candle
and write some of the greatest letters ever written
by any American.
In one plaintive letter, she writes: “Posterity
who are to reap the blessings will scarcely be able
to conceive the hardships and sufferings of their
ancestors.” And we don't. We don't know what
they went through–epidemics of smallpox or dysentery,
which could take the lives of hundreds of people just
in the little town of Quincy, Massachusetts. It was
by no means a simpler time. They had to worry about
things that we don't even think about any more, and
suffer discomforts and inconveniences of a kind that
we never even imagine. We have little idea of how
tough they were. Imagine John Adams setting off in
the middle of winter to ride nearly 400 miles on horseback
to get to Congress. Try riding even 40 miles sometime.
John and Abigail were separated, in all, more than
ten years because of his service to the country.
Much is written about Adams' vice presidency under
Washington, and about his presidency. But his diplomatic
duties were as important as anything else he did.
Primarily, he got the Dutch to give us massive loans,
which really saved our Revolution–we would probably
have lost the war with England had it not been for
Holland. He went to the Netherlands on his own, knowing
nobody. He didn't speak Dutch. He didn't have authorization
from Congress because he was out of touch with Congress.
But he succeeded. He once said that if anything were
written on his tombstone, it should be that he was
the man who got the Dutch to provide the loans to
win the war. Yet this fact is little known or understood
by most Americans.
Later on, Adams would say the same thing about being
the president who kept us out of war with France.
His presidency is often associated with the war frenzy
that led to the Alien and Sedition Acts, which Adams
signed and which would always stand, appropriately,
as a black mark against him. Adams was not a great
president. But he was a very good one and I think
he should be judged as more presidents should be judged–not
just by what he did, but what he didn't do. He didn't
go to war with France. Had he done so, he would have
been re-elected, and he knew it. As it was, the 1800
election was extremely close. A change in about 300
votes in New York City would have re-elected him.
And let us not forget that one of the most important
turning points in our country, even in the world,
was that election, because there was a peaceful transition,
following a bitter election, from one party to another.
It was not contested by armed opposition, which was
the historical norm. Adams went home to Quincy–having
traveled more in the service of his country than any
other American of that time–and never went anywhere
ever again, although he lived for 25 more years.
The Inward Journey
Writing a biography and realizing that your subject
is going to stay at home his final 25 years, you wonder
how you are going to sustain the rest of the book.
But there are all kinds of surprises in life, and
to me the great surprise of the last part of Adams'
life is that in many ways it's the most interesting.
It's at this point that the inward journey begins.
He suffers as he has never suffered before. He loses
not only Abigail, but their beloved daughter of the
same name. Those who say that people then lived in
a simpler time should imagine their daughter having
a mastectomy in a bedroom of their house with no anesthetic.
Adams lost his wife and daughter, he lost a son to
alcoholism, he lost his teeth and hair, he lost friends,
he lost all of his power, his prestige, his influence.
But he kept going. In fact, curiously, having in many
ways been seen as a pessimist, he became increasingly
an optimist. It's in this last part of his life especially
that you feel his real fiber.
John Adams, a farm boy, became the most widely and
deeply read of any American of that bookish time–more
so even than Jefferson. At the age of 80, he launched
into a 16-volume history of France in French, which
he had taught himself on his Atlantic crossings. And
he pours out his innermost feelings to a few remaining
friends and to some of his family, including John
Quincy. Let me read you two excerpts. The first deals
with his growing sense of wonder:
I never
delighted much in contemplating commas and colons,
or in spelling or measuring syllables; but now?if
I attempt to look at these little objects, I find
my imagination, in spite of all my exertions, roaming
in the Milky Way, among the nebulae, those mighty
orbs, and stupendous orbits of suns, planets, satellites,
and comets, which compose the incomprehensible universe;
and if I do not sink into nothing in my own estimation,
I feel an irresistible impulse to fall on my knees,
in adoration of the power that moves, the wisdom that
directs, the benevolence that sanctifies this wonderful
whole.
One of the few things
that Adams had left that he adored in his last years
were his fruit trees. But then came one March night
a terrible ice storm, and he woke up the next morning
to see all of his trees shattered. This could have
broken him, but it didn't. Listen to what he wrote:
A rain
had fallen from some warmer region in the skies when
the cold here below was intense to an extreme. Every
drop was frozen wherever it fell in the trees, and
clung to the limbs and sprigs as if it had been fastened
by hooks of steel. The earth was never more universally
covered with snow, and the rain had frozen upon a
crust on the surface which shone with the brightness
of burnished silver. The icicles on every sprig glowed
in all the luster of diamonds. Every tree was a chandelier
of cut glass. I have seen a queen of France with 18
millions of livres of diamonds upon her person and
I declare that all the charms of her face and figure
added to all the glitter of her jewels did not make
an impression on me equal to that presented by every
shrub. The whole world was glittering with precious
stones.
Adams died, as many of
you know, the same day Jefferson died. Jefferson had
been his closest friend, then his political rival,
then his political enemy. After twelve years of neither
speaking to each other, Adams initiated the first
letter of what was to be one of the great reconciliations
in our history. The correspondence between these former
presidents lasted until their deaths, and is some
of the most wonderful letters in the English language.
And then they died on the same day, each in his own
bed, surrounded by his books. And it wasn't just any
day. It was the 4th of July, 50 years after the Declaration
of Independence. People at the time saw it as the
clearest sign imaginable that the hand of God was
involved with the destiny of the United Statesand
who could blame them?
Citizen and Leader
In ending, I'd like to go back to an incident that
took place while Adams was in the White House, after
he had been defeated for re-election. On the night
of January 20, 1801, a fire broke out across the lawn
at the old Treasury Building. Adams saw the fire from
his window and was immediately out the door and across
the way to lend a hand in a bucket brigade. Think
about that. He obviously didn't do it because it might
look good and help him to get re-elected. And he wasn't
doing it because it was in the job description of
the president. He did it because he was a good citizen.
He had grown up in a community where people helped
each other in times of trouble. And he did it also
for another reason. As a leader, he knew he ought
to set an example. This is how a newspaper in Washington
described the event the next morning:
The
fire for some time threatened the most destructive
effects–but through the exertions of the citizens,
animated by the example of the President of the United
States (who on this occasion fell into the ranks and
aided in passing the buckets), was the fire at length
subdued.
Adams said once, “I
am but an ordinary man. The times alone have destined
me to fame.” But don't believe that for a minute.
Certainly they were the most interesting times imaginable.
But he was an extraordinary man.
His faith in God and the hereafter remained unshaken.
He was as devout a Christian as ever served in our
highest office. His fundamental creed he had reduced
to a single sentence: “He who loves the Workman
and his work and does what he can to preserve and
improve it, shall be accepted of Him.” His confidence
in the future of his country was, in the final years
of his life, greater than ever. Human nature had not
changed, however, for all the improvements his generation
had brought about. Nor would it, he was sure. Nor
did he love life any less for its pain and uncertainties.
Once, in a letter to his old friend Francis van der
Kemp in the Netherlands, he'd written: “Griefs
upon griefs! Disappointments upon disappointments.
What then? This is a gay, merry old world, notwithstanding.”
It could have been his epitaph.
Copyright 2007. Reprinted
by permission from Imprmis, the national
speech digest of Hillsdale College, www.hillsdale.edu
© 2007
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved
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| About
the Author: |

David McCullough was born in 1933 in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was educated there and at Yale University.
Author of 1776, John Adams, Truman, Brave Companions, The Path
Between the Seas, Mornings on Horseback, The Great Bridge and The
Johnstown Flood, he has twice received the Pulitzer Prize and
twice the National Book Award, as well as the Francis Parkman Prize
and the Los Angeles Times Book Award.
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