"The Adams Family Correspondence," Mr. Butterfield writes, "is
an unbroken record of the changing modes of domestic life,
religious views and habits, travel, dress, servants, food,
schooling, reading, health and medical care, diversions, and every
other conceivable aspect of manners and taste among the members of
a substantial New England family who lived on both sides of the
Atlantic and wrote industriously to each other over a period of
more than a century." These volumes are the first in the estimated
twenty or more in Series 2 of "The Adams Papers."
Including about six hundred letters to and from various members
of the family, the Adams Family Correspondence begins with a series
of hitherto unpublished courtship letters between John Adams and
Abigail Smith. The weekly and sometimes daily reports by Adams of
what was going on in the Continental Congress during the years
1774-1777 are a far fuller and franker record than has been
available before. His wife's letters in reply recount her
difficulties in raising a family of young children and operating a
farm while war went on not far from her doorstep, refugees
inundated Braintree, local epidemics raged, prices soared, and
goods and labor became ever scarcer. We learn for the first time
that amid these distractions Abigail lost a baby daughter, that
getting herself and four children inoculated against smallpox was
an agonizing ordeal of months in 1776, that after Burgoyne's defeat
at Saratoga she wrote a long, lecturing letter to her single
relative who had chosen the Loyalist side, and that her comments on
blundering politicos, lax generals, and unpatriotic neighbors were
more frequent and incisive than has been supposed.
Thinking her letters too careless and too intimate for
preservation, Abigail Adams pleaded at the end of one of them,
written a couple of months before the Declaration of Independence
was voted and while British warships hovered within range of her
house, "I wish you would burn all my Letters." To which John Adams
replied, "The conclusion of your Letter made my Heart throb, more
than a Cannonade would. You bid me burn your Letters. But I must
forget you first."
So he faithfully kept hers, she kept his, and they both kept
their children's. Their grandson Charles Francis Adams chose some
of these for publication in a succession of small editions in the
nineteenth century, but he was highly selective, and he discreetly
pruned away from the letters that he printed much that is both
revealing and engaging. Here, as is the practice with all the Adams
documents in this edition, every letter used is given in full. The
second of these first volumes ends in March 1778 with John Adams on
a Continental frigate bound for his first diplomatic mission in
Europe, accompanied by his ten-year-old son, John Quincy.
General
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