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  14. <title>John Adams -- A Defence of the Constitutions of Government -- Reading Revolutions</title>
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  36. <td BGCOLOR="#C0C0C0"><blockquote>
  37. <blockquote><blockquote><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  38. size="-1">John Adams (1735-1826)&nbsp;&nbsp; <br>
  39. President of the United
  40. States (1797-1801)<br>
  41. <b>A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United
  42. States of America,</b>
  43. 1787 </font></blockquote></blockquote>
  44. </blockquote>
  45. </td>
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  47. <tr>
  48. <td><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  49. size="-1"><br>
  50. John Adams was in London serving as a diplomat for
  51. his young country in
  52. 1787.&nbsp; He wrote and published <span style="font-style: italic;">A
  53. </span><i>Defence of the Constitutions of
  54. Government of the United States of America</i> in three volumes.&nbsp;
  55. The
  56. American edition was published the same year in New York and
  57. Philadelphia.&nbsp; The work occurs in the middle of his career and
  58. reflects the depth of thought that our founders engaged in while
  59. building a new country.&nbsp; He explores and encourages others to read
  60. the writings of philosophers and sages from all ages:&nbsp;
  61. Machiavel, Sidney, Locke, Harrington, Milton, Ponnet, the Vindiciae
  62. contra Tyrannos, Hoadley, Trenchard, Gordon, and Plato Redivivus.&nbsp;
  63. <br>
  64. <br>
  65. <i>A Defence</i> was stimulated by the writings of Anne Robert Jacques Turgot,
  66. the Abb&eacute; De
  67. Mably, and Dr. Richard Price.&nbsp; The books are organized in letters
  68. so that Adams could address diverse topics and historical periods while
  69. relating them to the argument before him.&nbsp; In the first letter,
  70. dated October 4, 1786, Adams reviewed the critiques of Turgot in
  71. particular and proposes to address the issues and criticism.&nbsp; He
  72. wrote to
  73. defend the various Constitutions which had been enacted
  74. within the States at that time, while examining the processes used to
  75. balance power and avoid tyranny.&nbsp; <br>
  76. <br>
  77. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/Johnadams_w.jpg" width="235" height="287" align="right">In the first volume Adams described and explored the structure of
  78. various forms of modern and ancient government.&nbsp; He looked at
  79. democratic forms of government formed in several Cantons of
  80. Switzerland, St. Marino in Italy (included below), Biscay in Spain; aristocratic
  81. republics found in Zurich in Switzerland, Venice in Italy,
  82. and Genoa; republics with monarchs such as England and Poland; and
  83. ancient republics such as Carthage, Rome, Corinth, Athens, Crete, and
  84. Thebes.&nbsp; Adams considered political ideas from Plato's Republic to
  85. those of John Locke sometimes with humor:<br>
  86. &nbsp;
  87. <blockquote>Mr. Locke, in 1663, was employed to trace out a
  88. plan
  89. of legislation for Carolina; and he gave the whole authority, executive
  90. and
  91. legislative, to the eight proprietors, the lords Berkley, Clarendon,
  92. Albemarle,
  93. Craven, and Ashley; and messieurs Carteret, Berkley, and Colleton, and
  94. their
  95. heirs.&nbsp; This new oligarchical sovereignty created at once three orders
  96. of
  97. nobility:&nbsp;&nbsp; barons, with twelve thousand acres of land; caciques, with
  98. twenty-four thousand, &amp;c.; and landgraves, with eighty thousand.
  99. Who did
  100. this legislator think would live under his government?&nbsp; He should have
  101. first
  102. created a new species of beings to govern, before he instituted such a
  103. government.&nbsp; (Letter LIV)</blockquote>
  104. <br>
  105. How many branches of government should there be?&nbsp; Adams strongly
  106. favored separation of powers and used examples from other republics to
  107. show how the balance of power limits corruption and supports
  108. stability.&nbsp; Should the legislature be separated into two chambers
  109. or should there be a single body?&nbsp; Adams gave a vivid description
  110. of how leadership is chosen in a group to illustrate that just a few in
  111. any assembly would wield much of the power.&nbsp; He
  112. said:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </font>
  113. <blockquote><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  114. size="-1">A single assembly thus constituted, without any
  115. counterpoise, balance, or equilibrium, is to have all authority,
  116. legislative, executive, and judicial, concentered in it.&nbsp; It is to make
  117. a constitution and laws by its own will, execute those laws at its
  118. pleasure, and adjudge all controversies, that arise concerning the
  119. meaning and application of them, at discretion.&nbsp; What is there to
  120. restrain them from making tyrannical laws, in order to execute them in
  121. a tyrannical manner?&nbsp; (Letter XXV)<br>
  122. </font></blockquote>
  123. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1">Adams
  124. saw the two branches of the legislature balancing the power of
  125. government, pulling together in times of crisis, but arguing and
  126. debating the slow path toward law.&nbsp; He knew people, he knew their
  127. weakness, and he and his contemporaries were very aware of the
  128. fragility of what they were attempting to build.<br>
  129. <br>
  130. Adams even described our modern problem of voter turnout in his
  131. description of the republic of St. Marino in Italy.&nbsp; </font><br>
  132. <blockquote><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  133. size="-1"> Another remarkable circumstance is, the
  134. reluctance
  135. of the citizens to attend the assembly of the arengo, which obliged
  136. them to make a law, obliging themselves to attend, upon a penalty.&nbsp; This
  137. is a defect, and a misfortune natural to every democratical
  138. constitution, and to the popular part of every mixed government.&nbsp; A
  139. general or too common disinclination to attend, leaves room for persons
  140. and parties more active to carry points by faction and intrigue, which
  141. the majority, if all were present, would not approve.&nbsp; (Letter III)</font><br>
  142. </blockquote>
  143. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1">Earlier,
  144. in 1776, John Adams had been on the committee to draft the
  145. Declaration of Independence and was an early proponent of separation
  146. from England.&nbsp; He describes the Declaration and his work with
  147. Jefferson in a letter to Thomas Pickering in 1888.&nbsp; He gives
  148. Jefferson full credit for the draft of the Declaration and notes that
  149. the original draft contained language to abolish slavery.&nbsp; Adams
  150. supported that language and regretted that Congress as a whole struck
  151. it from the document.<br>
  152. <br>
  153. His strong belief in the individual rights of man was also displayed by
  154. his support for the inclusion of the Bill of Rights in the
  155. Constitution.&nbsp; He had helped write the constitution for the State
  156. of Massachusetts and authored much of the Declaration of Rights for
  157. Massachusetts.&nbsp; It included provisions against unreasonable search
  158. and seizure, guaranteeing freedom of religion and the press, and
  159. providing for trial by jury.&nbsp; The Declaration of Rights for
  160. Massachusetts comes before the body of the Constitution of
  161. Massachusetts.&nbsp; During 1787 he not only published <em>A Defence of the
  162. Constitutions of Government of the United States of America</em>, but also
  163. corresponded extensively with those who were writing the
  164. Constitution.&nbsp; It must have been frustrating for him to be in
  165. England during that period.&nbsp; Nonetheless, the power of his writing
  166. and the wealth of ideas explored in the &#8220;Defence&#8221; influenced the
  167. development of the Constitution.&nbsp; <br>
  168. <br>
  169. His letters and writings show that he thought the Bill of Rights for
  170. the United States should have preceded the Constitution, and that the
  171. principles of the Constitution should have been based on them.&nbsp;
  172. After he returned from England, he made extensive contributions to what
  173. we call our "Bill of Rights", the first 10 Amendments to the
  174. Constitution.&nbsp; <br>
  175. <br>
  176. Adams served as President of the United States from 1797-1800.&nbsp;
  177. His presidency had a tone that illustrated the necessity of separation
  178. of powers, the need for a Bill of Rights, and the overwhelming
  179. attraction of power.&nbsp; Adams saw himself as one of the elite and
  180. loved the trappings of power.&nbsp; Even at the beginning of his
  181. presidency, the newspapers of the time began to criticize him both for
  182. his policies and for the pomp and elitism surrounding his office.&nbsp;
  183. They saw him as a representative of the rich, to the exclusion of the
  184. rest of the country.&nbsp; To be fair, newspapers criticized his
  185. opponents as well, but Adams couldn&#8217;t stand it when it was directed at
  186. him.&nbsp; This defender of
  187. individual rights pushed to pass the &#8220;Alien and Sedition Acts&#8221; in 1798
  188. which allowed the Federal government to limit freedom of speech and
  189. freedom of the press.&nbsp; Adams immediately had several of his
  190. newpaper critics and even a member of Congress arrested.&nbsp; Matthew
  191. Lyon was a Representative from Vermont who was critical of the
  192. Federalists, President Adam&#8217;s party.&nbsp; He was arrested for a letter
  193. he published in the <em>Vermont Journal</em> critical of President Adams.&nbsp;
  194. When another publisher, Anthony Haswell, attempted to raise money to pay Lyon&#8217;s fine, he too
  195. was jailed.&nbsp; To the credit of the people of Vermont, they
  196. re-elected Lyon while he was still in jail.<br>
  197. <br>
  198. Fortunately, the Constitution and the country Adams had worked to
  199. found was strong enough to withstand this insult to liberty.&nbsp;
  200. The Virginia and Kentucky legislatures both wrote resolutions deploring
  201. the
  202. Alien and Sedition acts.&nbsp; Newspapers throughout the country
  203. campaigned hard against them.&nbsp; In the end, Adams served only a
  204. single term as President.&nbsp; Thomas Jefferson succeeded him and the
  205. Alien and Sedition Acts expired in 1801 before Jefferson took
  206. office.&nbsp;
  207. The Federalists never recovered.&nbsp; They were seen as trying to
  208. establish a monarchy and to undermine the very foundations of liberty,
  209. of individual freedom, and the rights of citizens Adams had fought to
  210. establish.<br>
  211. </font>
  212. <blockquote>
  213. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  214. size="-1"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Quotations:</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
  215. <br>&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
  216. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
  217. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br>Without three divisions of power, stationed to watch each other, and
  218. compare each other's conduct with the laws, it will be impossible that
  219. the laws should at all times preserve their authority, and govern all
  220. men.&nbsp; (Letter XXXIV)<br><br>Congress will always be composed of members from the natural and
  221. artificial aristocratical body in every state, even in the northern, as
  222. well as in the middle and southern states.&nbsp; Their natural dispositions
  223. then in general will be (whether they shall be sensible of it or not,
  224. and whatever integrity or abilities they may be possessed of) to
  225. diminish the prerogatives of the governors, and the privileges of the
  226. people, and to augment the influence of the aristocratical parties.&nbsp;
  227. There have been causes enough to prevent the appearance of this
  228. inclination hitherto; but a calm course of prosperity would very soon
  229. bring it forth, if effectual provision against it be not made in
  230. season.&nbsp; It will be found absolutely necessary, therefore, to give
  231. negatives to the governors, to defend the executives against the
  232. influence of this body, as well as the senates and representatives in
  233. their several states.&nbsp; The necessity of a negative in the house of
  234. representatives, will be called in question by nobody.&nbsp; (Letter LIII)<br>
  235. <br>But we have not yet considered how the legislative power is to be
  236. exercised in this single assembly?&nbsp; &#8212; Is there to be a constitution?&nbsp; Who
  237. are to compose it?&nbsp; The assembly itself, or a convention called for that
  238. purpose?&nbsp; In either case, whatever rules are agreed on for the
  239. preservation of the lives, liberties, properties, and characters of the
  240. citizens, what is to hinder this assembly from transgressing the bounds
  241. which they have prescribed to themselves, or which the convention has
  242. ordained for them?&nbsp; (Letter LV)<br><br>But it is of great importance to begin well; misarrangements now made,
  243. will have great, extensive, and distant consequences; and we are now
  244. employed, how little soever we may think of it, in making
  245. establishments which will affect the happiness of an hundred millions
  246. of inhabitants at a time, in a period not very distant.&nbsp; (Letter
  247. LV)<br>&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;
  248. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;
  249. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;
  250. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;
  251. &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; </font><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  252. size="-2"><br>Portrait of
  253. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Adams">John Adams</a>
  254. shown above from Wikipedia.com</font></blockquote>
  255. <div align="center">
  256. <table border="0" width="80%" id="table1" bgcolor="#000000">
  257. <tr>
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  259. <a href="pictures/Adams/4885Adams_wl.jpg">
  260. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4885Adams_w.jpg" width="413" height="400"></a></td>
  261. <td align="center">
  262. <a href="pictures/Adams/4888Adams_wl.jpg">
  263. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4888Adams_w.jpg" width="329" height="400"></a></td>
  264. </tr>
  265. <tr>
  266. <td align="center">
  267. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  268. The bottom book in the above photograph </font>
  269. <p>
  270. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  271. is the copy of the Essays.</font></p>
  272. <p>
  273. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">The people on the list of subscribers
  274. </font></p>
  275. <p>
  276. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  277. are those who subsidized the printing</font></p>
  278. <p>
  279. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  280. of the essays.&nbsp; Of course, more copies</font></p>
  281. <p>
  282. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  283. would have been printed for general sale.</font></td>
  284. <td align="center">
  285. <p align="center">
  286. <a href="pictures/Adams/4890bAdams_wl.jpg">
  287. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4890bAdams_w.jpg" width="313" height="400"></a></td>
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  323. <td align="center">
  324. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  325. The preface is followed by the <p>first three letters, including that <p>dealing with St. Marino.</font></td>
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  390. <td align="center">
  391. <a href="pictures/Adams/4914Adams_wl.jpg">
  392. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4914Adams_w.jpg" width="310" height="400"></a></td>
  393. </tr>
  394. <tr>
  395. <td align="center">
  396. <a href="pictures/Adams/4935Adams_wl.jpg">
  397. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4935Adams_w.jpg" width="310" height="400"></a></td>
  398. <td align="center">
  399. <a href="pictures/Adams/4915Adams_wl.jpg">
  400. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4915Adams_w.jpg" width="313" height="400"></a></td>
  401. </tr>
  402. <tr>
  403. <td align="center">
  404. <a href="pictures/Adams/4933Adams_wl.jpg">
  405. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4933Adams_w.jpg" width="306" height="400"></a></td>
  406. <td align="center">
  407. <a href="pictures/Adams/4917Adams_wl.jpg">
  408. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4917Adams_w.jpg" width="313" height="400"></a></td>
  409. </tr>
  410. <tr>
  411. <td align="center">
  412. <a href="pictures/Adams/4931Adams_wl.jpg">
  413. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4931Adams_w.jpg" width="307" height="400"></a></td>
  414. <td align="center">
  415. <a href="pictures/Adams/4919Adams_wl.jpg">
  416. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4919Adams_w.jpg" width="316" height="400"></a></td>
  417. </tr>
  418. <tr>
  419. <td align="center">
  420. <a href="pictures/Adams/4930Adams_wl.jpg">
  421. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4930Adams_w.jpg" width="306" height="400"></a></td>
  422. <td align="center">
  423. <a href="pictures/Adams/4922Adams_wl.jpg">
  424. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4922Adams_w.jpg" width="300" height="400"></a></td>
  425. </tr>
  426. <tr>
  427. <td align="center">
  428. <a href="pictures/Adams/4928Adams_wl.jpg">
  429. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4928Adams_w.jpg" width="313" height="400"></a></td>
  430. <td align="center">
  431. <a href="pictures/Adams/4923Adams_wl.jpg">
  432. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4923Adams_w.jpg" width="312" height="400"></a></td>
  433. </tr>
  434. <tr>
  435. <td align="center">
  436. <a href="pictures/Adams/4927Adams_wl.jpg">
  437. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4927Adams_w.jpg" width="307" height="400"></a></td>
  438. <td align="center">
  439. <p align="center">
  440. <a href="pictures/Adams/4924Adams_wl.jpg">
  441. <img border="0" src="pictures/Adams/4924Adams_w.jpg" width="316" height="400"></a></td>
  442. </tr>
  443. <tr>
  444. <td align="center" colspan="2">
  445. <font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1" color="#FFFFFF">
  446. The enlargements of the document are sufficient for easy reading
  447. -- they will be a slow download on a modem.&nbsp; The
  448. photographs of the <em>A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America</em> may be used freely on non-commercial sites (no
  449. advertisements) and for educational purposes.&nbsp; Please
  450. link to this site for the copyright.</font></td>
  451. </tr>
  452. </table>
  453. </div>
  454. </td>
  455. </tr>
  456. <tr>
  457. <td BGCOLOR="#C0C0C0"><blockquote>
  458. <blockquote><font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif"
  459. size="-1"><b>Further
  460. Resources:</b><br>
  461. <br>
  462. The text of </font><a
  463. href="http://www.constitution.org/jadams/ja1_00.htm"><font
  464. face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1"><i>A Defence of
  465. the
  466. Constitutions of
  467. Government of the United States of America</i></font></a><font
  468. face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans serif" size="-1"><span
  469. style="text-decoration: underline;">.</span>&nbsp; 1787<br>
  470. <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><br>
  471. </span>Letters between <a
  472. href="http://www.founding.com/library/lbody.cfm?id=137&amp;parent=54">John
  473. Adams and his wife Abigail</a> -- 1776<br>
  474. <br>
  475. Letter to <a
  476. href="http://www.constitution.org/primarysources/pickering.html">Thomas
  477. Pickering concerning the writing of the Declaration of Independence</a>
  478. -- 1822<br>
  479. <br>
  480. Text of the <a
  481. href="http://www.napoleonseries.org/reference/political/legislation/alien.cfm">Alien
  482. and Sedition Acts and the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions</a>
  483. protesting the Acts -- 1798<br>
  484. <br>
  485. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Description of the <a
  486. href="http://www.bigeye.com/hartmann.htm">Alien and Sedition Acts and
  487. their consequences</a>.<br>
  488. <br>
  489. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
  490. href="http://www.class.uh.edu/comm/comm_law/federalist_era/listofcases.html">Sedition:&nbsp;
  491. The Cases</a><br>
  492. <br>
  493. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Short biography of <a
  494. href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Lyon">Matthew Lyon</a> --
  495. Wikipedia<br>
  496. <br>
  497. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
  498. href="http://www.csulb.edu/%7Ecrsmith/alien.htm">The Aliens are
  499. Coming: John
  500. Adams and the Federalist Attack on the First Amendment</a>&nbsp; Craig R.
  501. Smith<br>
  502. <br>
  503. <a href="http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=3832">Anne-Robert
  504. Jacques Turgot</a>, French economist, wrote a letter to Dr.
  505. Price.&nbsp; <br>
  506. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br>
  507. <a
  508. href="http://www.100welshheroes.com/en/biography/drrichardprice">Dr.
  509. Richard Price</a>, minister, philosopher and supporter of the American
  510. and French revolutions.<br>
  511. <br>
  512. <a href="http://www.constitution.org/jadams/ja1_ps.htm">Postscript
  513. of <span style="font-style: italic;">A Defence</span></a> in which
  514. Adams writes about his contact with Gabriel Bonnot, Abb&eacute; De
  515. Mably.<br><br>
  516. <a href="http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Europe/San-Marino.html">Republic of St. Marino</a> today. Description of population, trade, and other statistics. Further description of the <a href="http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Europe/San-Marino-GOVERNMENT.html">government</a> and politics can be found through links at the bottom. From Nations Encyclopedia.
  517. <br>
  518. <br>
  519. <br>
  520. <br>
  521. <br>
  522. &nbsp;(c) Marilyn Shea, 2005, 2006<br>
  523. &nbsp;<br>
  524. </font></blockquote>
  525. </blockquote></td>
  526. </tr>
  527. </table>
  528. </body>
  529. </html>