John Adams Accomplishments

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Adams served as the second President of the United States after serving as the first Vice President under President George Washington. This is how it all started… John Adams was born on October 30, 1735, in Quincy (Now Braintree) Massachusetts on his family's farm. John was named after his father, who he later would name his son after. John growing up had always wanted to be a farmer, but obviously that didn’t happen.
John Adams went to a dame school when he was young and then later went to a Latin school, to prepare him to go to college. He excelled in his studies and was admitted to Harvard on scholarship when he was only fifteen. He graduated in 1755 and decided to teach in a Latin school in Worcester Massachusetts in order to earn the money
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By 1770, Adams was a successful layer with one of the largest caseloads in Boston, and was chosen to defend the British soldiers charged in the Boston Massacre, who through his defense, were not sent to jail. By doing this Adams was known for being a fair , courageous man.
In May of 1776, Adam proposed that each colony adopted their own independent government which was then approved by Congress on the fifteenth. And he was the one to write the preamble to this resolution. Adams seconded Richard Henry Lee’s resolution of independence on June 7,1776, and passionately stood behind it until it was adopted by Congress on July 2. Adams along with with Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and others, were appointed to draft the declaration, and Jefferson wrote the first draft which was approved on July
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He lost his re-election campaign in 1800 and when the fourth election came around, not only did he not have a re-election campaign, but ended up being surpassed with electoral votes then Thomas Jefferson who served as the Vice President while adams was in presidency.
After his presidential term, Adams lives a peaceful live on their family farm in Quincy, and he continues to write with and talk to Thomas Jefferson. And on july 4,1826, which is the fiftieth anniversary of American Independence, John Adams passed away, his last words being “Thomas Jefferson survives.” The irony in that statement will be revealed in my next report about Thomas Jefferson.
Many years later, John Adams son, John Quincy Adams would be elected as the sixth President of the United States. Quincy Adams was the second child of Adams, and the first son. And little fun fact, Quincy was actually in the opposing political party than his