John Quincy Adams’s (JQA) diary, which was inspired by his father John Adams (JA) and started as a travel journal, initiated a lifelong writing obsession. In 1779, twelve-year-old JQA made his second trip abroad to accompany his father’s diplomatic mission. While in Europe, he attended various schools and traveled to St. Petersburg as an interpreter during Francis Dana’s mission to Russia. He subsequently served as JA’s secretary at Paris during the final months before the Anglo-American Definitive Peace Treaty was signed in September 1783. Two years later, JQA returned to the US. After graduating from Harvard College in 1787, he moved to Newburyport to read law under Theophilus Parsons and in 1790 he established a legal practice in Boston. JQA’s skill as a writer brought him public acclaim, and in 1794 President George Washington nominated him as US minister resident to the Netherlands.
John Quincy Adams (JQA) entered diplomatic service in September 1794 as US minister resident to the Netherlands. He married Louisa Catherine Johnson (LCA) in July 1797 after a fourteen-month engagement, and their three sons were born in this period. During his father John Adams’s (JA) presidency they moved to Berlin where, as US minister plenipotentiary, JQA signed a new Prussian-American Treaty of Amity and Commerce. JQA returned to the US in 1801 and entered politics, elected first to the Massachusetts senate in 1802 and then to the US Senate in 1803. His contentious relationship with fellow Federalist members over his support of some Democratic-Republican policies led to his removal from office. In May 1808 the Federalist-controlled Massachusetts legislature voted to replace him at the end of his term, prompting JQA’s resignation in June. Between 1806 and 1809 he also served as the first Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard.
John Quincy Adams (JQA) returned to diplomatic service in August 1809 as the US’s first minister plenipotentiary to Russia. In St. Petersburg JQA was well-liked by Emperor Alexander I and closely followed the battles of the Napoleonic Wars then raging across Europe. When the US declared war on Great Britain in 1812, Adams watched from afar as the conflict dragged on for two years. In April 1814, he traveled to Ghent, Belgium, as part of the US delegation to negotiate an end to the war with England; the Treaty of Ghent was signed on Christmas Eve. Subsequently appointed US minister to the Court of St. James’s in May 1815, JQA served in London for the next two years.
John Quincy Adams (JQA) served as the US secretary of state during James Monroe’s presidency. Adams’s duties included organizing and responding to all State Department correspondence and negotiating agreements beneficial to the US. His achievements as secretary of state include the Anglo-American Convention of 1818, which established the US border with Canada along the 49th parallel, and the Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819 (Transcontinental Treaty), which resulted in the US acquisition of Florida. JQA also formulated the policy that became known as the Monroe Doctrine, in which the US called for European non-intervention in the western hemisphere, specifically in the affairs of newly independent Latin American nations. As Monroe’s presidency came to an end, JQA was among the top candidates in the 1824 presidential election. When no candidate earned the necessary majority, the House of Representatives decided the election in JQA’s favor in February 1825.
John Quincy Adams (JQA) was inaugurated as the sixth president of the US on 4 March 1825 and began his administration with an ambitious agenda of improvements for American society. His presidency was embattled. Supporters of Andrew Jackson, who believed their candidate had unfairly lost the 1824 election, worked ceaselessly to foil JQA’s plans. Domestically, JQA refused to replace civil servants with partisan supporters, and his administration became involved in disputes between the Creek Nation and the state of Georgia. JQA’s foreign policy also suffered, as partisan bickering in Congress failed to provide timely funding for US delegates to attend the 1826 Congress of Panama. Political mudslinging in advance of the 1828 presidential election was particularly fierce, and by mid-1827 JQA knew he would not be reelected.
In 1831 John Quincy Adams (JQA) became the only former president to subsequently serve in the US House of Representatives. As the chairman of the House Committee on Manufactures, he helped compose the compromise tariff bill of 1832. He traveled to Philadelphia as part of a committee that investigated the Bank of the United States, drafting a minority report in support of rechartering the bank after disagreeing with the committee’s majority report. JQA regularly presented the antislavery petitions he received from across the country, and he vehemently opposed the passage of the Gag Rule in 1836 that prevented House discussion of petitions related to slavery. He opposed the annexation of Texas, and in 1838 he delivered a marathon speech condemning the evils of slavery. JQA also chaired the committee that oversaw the bequest of James Smithson, which was used to establish the Smithsonian Institution.
During his final years of service in the US House of Representatives, John Quincy Adams (JQA) continued to oppose the Gag Rule that prevented House discussion of petitions related to slavery. In 1839 he joined the defense team for the Africans who revolted aboard the Spanish slave ship Amistad. The Supreme Court declared the Amistad Africans free on 9 March 1841 after JQA delivered oral arguments in their favor. In 1842 JQA faced a censure hearing and ably defended himself against charges from southern congressmen. He introduced a successful resolution that finally led to the repeal of the Gag Rule in 1844. JQA voted against both the annexation of Texas in 1845 and the US declaration of war with Mexico in 1846. He collapsed on the floor of the House on 21 February 1848 and died two days later.
- Huntington Asahel
- Lewis George.
Snow— Rain— Hail— Clear Cold— Shrove Tuesday.
My wife had again a
distressing night, and was again all this day confined to her bed— The
mails still so absorb my time that I am upon the verge of losing the
continuity of my journal. I had a long morning visit from Mr Asahel
Huntington, one of the public County Attornies of
Massachusetts and now in attendance on the Supreme Court of the United
States as the Counsel and agent for the State, upon a writ of error from
a decision of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts upon the
constitutionality of her licence Laws. Mr
Huntington has finished his business here, and departs for home
to-morrow. In the Senate this day Evans chairman of the Committee of Finance reported
against the revived Sub-treasury-bill which had passed the house; and
Archer chairman of the
Committee of foreign affairs reported for the rejection of the
joint-resolution from the house for the annexation of Texas— Buchanan a minority of one in the
Committee, undertook to support the joint Resolution from the house. In
the house on the motion of Burke
a resolution from the Senate, for the appointment of a joint Committee
of 3 members from each house, to ascertain the mode of counting the
votes of the election of President and Vice-President of the United
States, and of informing the persons chosen of their election was
concurred in by the house— Tibbatts moved a suspension of the rules to smuggle in a
bill of his own making an appropriation for the improvement of certain
harbours and rivers.— There was a bill already reported by the Committee
of Commerce for the same purpose— Tibbatts wanted to explain but the
house would not hear him—his motion to suspend the rules was rejected 52
to 90. Hardin moved to suspend the
rules to go into Committee of the whole on the state of the Union to
take up his Post-Office Bill. They went into Committee Linn Boyd in the Chair; but instead of the
Post-Office bill took up Houston’s land plunder bill— It was debated by Shepherd Cary, Thomasson, Andrew Stuart, Bidlack and Payne, till Weller got out of patience and moved the
committee to rise for him to offer a resolution to close the debate and
take the Bill out of Committee to-morrow at 12 O’Clock which was done
without opposition, Weller consenting to take one O’Clock instead of 12.
Then the house went into Committee again on the same bill, and Bower, David L. Seymour, Jameson and Hannibal
Hamlin discussed the choicest mode of robbing the public
lands, until the Committee rose again. Dr Bayly reported a Bill for
the relief of Commodore Thomas ap Catesby
Jones— Sundry Executive Communications were presented, and
the house adjourned. A Sailor by the name of George Lewis was here this
Evening.
