Abbey's Road
John Adams was the second President of the United States of America. Though his face isn't found on any of the coins of our realm, and doesn't grace any currency he was an important figure in the founding of our great nation. The faces of our first and third Presidents, Washington and Jefferson, can be found on our money. Other founding fathers were commemorated though they never reached the rank of President, such as Alexander Hamilton or Benjamin Franklin. But John Adams was nevertheless an important figure in our nation's history. This book tells the story of Adams and those tumultuous times not through the eyes of John Adams, but through the eyes of his wife Abigail, and her two sisters, Mary and Elizabeth.
Abigail was the second oldest of three daughters and one son born to William Smith, a Parson. She was born on November 11th, 1744. The book begins on a hot July evening in 1766 when the sisters, all living in various small towns on the outskirts of Boston, are writing to each other. Mary and Abigail are both married, and Betsy is a teenager still living at home in Weymouth. Mary lives in Salem with her husband Richard Cranch, and Abigail is in Braintree with her husband, John Adams, a successful lawyer.
Since the sisters kept up a life long correspondence author Diane Jacobs was able to compile a chronicle of their remarkable lives and revolutionary ideas. How many how various how complicated were their sensations, to paraphrase one of their letters. It was a time of revolution in America and France, and the letters were concerned not only with family matters, husbands and household chores, raising children, and so forth, but with the ideas of Rousseau, Voltaire, Locke, and Hume. Abigail and her sisters were concerned with the role of women in our emerging democracy, and she would later concur with the views expressed in A Vindication of the Rights of Women by Mary Wollstonecraft in 1792, though her husband John Adams would argue against it in furious scribbles in the margins.
The Federalist Papers also provided subjects for debate. Publius was the pen name for Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay when they wrote the Federalist Papers. It is also the name of the journalist who was all set to reveal a scandal on the show, Scandal, that would bring down the White House. Since reading this book, I now know the background behind this name, and why it was appropriate for a political journalist to use it.
Speaking of scandal, there was a bit of it in this book, though nothing approaching the scale of the gladiators in suits on that over the top television program. More like the impropriety of a friendship with a man who used an obscene hieroglyph in a letter that was exposed to the public by the British. I didn't quite get what was meant here, and would have liked for Diane Jacobs to explain it a bit clearer. This was a momentary lapse in what was otherwise a most lucid account.
In summation, this was a well researched and detailed book on the founding fathers told through the eyes of the founding mothers. Abigail Adams had a most positive effect on her husband. He sometimes lacked faith in the ability of people to govern themselves, and would otherwise have been an even bigger wet blanket on our experiment in Democracy.