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Inheriting
New England's strongest traditions, Abigail Smith was born in
1744 at Weymouth, Massachusetts. On her mother's side she was
descended from the Quincys, a family of great prestige in the
colony; her father and other forebears were Congregational ministers,
leaders in a society that held its clergy in high esteem.
Like other women of the time, Abigail lacked formal education;
but her curiosity spurred her keen intelligence, and she read
avidly the books at hand. Reading created a bond between her and
young John Adams, Harvard graduate launched on a career in law,
and they were married in 1764. It was a marriage of the mind and
of the heart, enduring for more than half a century, enriched
by time. The young couple lived on John's small farm at Braintree
or in Boston as his practice expanded. In ten years she bore three
sons and two daughters; she looked after family and home when
he went traveling as circuit judge. "Alas!" she wrote
in December 1773, "How many snow banks divide thee and me...."
Long separations kept Abigail from her husband while he served
the country they loved, as delegate to the Continental Congress,
envoy abroad, elected officer under the Constitution. Her letterspungent,
witty, and vivid, spelled just as she spokedetail her life
in times of revolution. They tell the story of the woman who stayed
at home to struggle with wartime shortages and inflation; to run
the farm with a minimum of help; to teach four children when formal
education was interrupted. Most of all, they tell of her loneliness
without her "dearest Friend." The "one single expression,"
she said, "dwelt upon my mind and played about my Heart...."
In 1784, she joined him at his diplomatic post in Paris, and observed
with interest the manners of the French. After 1785, she filled
the difficult role of wife of the first United States Minister
to Great Britain, and did so with dignity and tact. They returned
happily in 1788 to Massachusetts and the handsome house they had
just acquired in Braintree, later called Quincy, home for the
rest of their lives.
As wife of the first Vice President, Abigail became a good friend
to Mrs. Washington and a valued help in official entertaining,
drawing on her experience of courts and society abroad. After
1791, poor health forced her to spend as much time as possible
in Quincy. Illness or trouble found her resolute; as she once
declared, she would "not forget the blessings which sweeten
life."
When John Adams was elected President, she continued a formal
pattern of entertainingeven in the primitive conditions
she found at the new capital in November 1800. The city was a
wilderness, the President's House far from completion. Her private
complaints to her family provide blunt accounts of both, but for
her three months in Washington she duly held her dinners and receptions.
The Adamses retired to Quincy in 1801, and for 17 years enjoyed
the companionship that public life had long denied them. Abigail
died in 1818, and is buried beside her husband in United First
Parish Church. She leaves her country a most remarkable record
as patriot and First Lady, wife of one President and mother of
another. To the latter, John Quincy Adams, she wrote in a letter
dated May 5, 1816: "There is not any reasoning which can
convince me, contrary to my senses, that three is one and one
three. I acknowlege myself a unitarian..."
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