Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/30013
Appears in Collections:History and Politics Conference Papers and Proceedings
Author(s): Nicolson, Colin
Title: The Case for the Prosecution: John Adams and History
Citation: Nicolson C (2015) The Case for the Prosecution: John Adams and History. British Group in Early American History 2015 Conference, University of Sheffield, 03.09.2015-06.09.2015. https://www.baas.ac.uk/project/british-group-of-early-american-historians/
Issue Date: 3-Sep-2015
Date Deposited: 26-Jan-2019
Conference Name: British Group in Early American History 2015 Conference
Conference Dates: 2015-09-03 - 2015-09-06
Conference Location: University of Sheffield
Abstract: First paragraph: John Adams’s most famous letter—oft-quoted yet little analyzed—was written at home in a winter of contentment fondly recalling the glory days of the Revolution. Yet it also spoke poignantly to rising generations of Americans. The octogenarian Adams was performing what he supposed would be one of the last acts in a distinguished and sometimes controversial public career. Handicapped by the infirmities of age, he was reliant upon readers and scribes from within his extended family to reach a public audience. He enjoined all to discover their shared history. Nostalgia had never blinded Adams to his own shortcomings and now spurred him to remind the children and grandchildren of the revolutionary generation of what in 1775 he called their "revolution principles." Americans’ intellectual and emotional attachments to Great Britain, the letter to Hezekiah Niles continued, were profoundly altered in the decade before the Declaration of Independence. "This radical change in the principles, opinions, sentiments and affections of the people, was the real American Revolution," he emphasized. “Revolution principles,” which included both impetus and restraint, had bound Americans together when fighting the British and in building a new nation. Whereas the American Union Adams surveyed in 1818, though it had survived a second British war and earlier scuffles with France, was beset by internecine squabbles and scarred by slavery. When writing Niles, Adams had already set his own mind and heart on uniting Americans by helping them write, and thus perpetually remember, the history of their revolution. History, he believed, ought to be the intellectual anchor for the American experiment in republican government.
Status: AO - Author's Original
Rights: Author retains copyright.
URL: https://www.baas.ac.uk/project/british-group-of-early-american-historians/
Licence URL(s): https://storre.stir.ac.uk/STORREEndUserLicence.pdf

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