Jump to content

Samuel Adams: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m →‎External Links: Added links
add details, books
Line 18: Line 18:
}}
}}


'''Samuel Adams''' ([[September 27]], [[1722]] – [[October 2]], [[1803]]) was an American Patriot and organizer of the [[Boston Tea Party]]. He played a major role in starting the [[American Revolution]].
'''Samuel Adams''' ([[September 27]], [[1722]] – [[October 2]], [[1803]]) was an American Patriot and organizer of the [[Boston Tea Party]]. He played a major role in starting the [[American Revolution]] and in articulating the principles of [[republicanism]] that shaped the American political culture.


Born to [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]] parents, Adams was their second child. He had a brother named, who was not the [[John Adams]] who would become the 2<sup>nd</sup> [[President of the United States]]. That John Adams was Samuel Adams' second cousin.
Born to [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]] parents, Adams was their second child. President [[John Adams]] was his second cousin.


Adams attended school at [[Boston Latin School]]. At [[Harvard College]] he received a [[bachelor's degree]] in [[1740]] and a [[master's degree]] in [[1743]]. Prophetically, the subject of his master's [[thesis]] was "Whether it be lawful to resist the supreme magistrate if the commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved."
Adams attended school at [[Boston Latin School]]. At [[Harvard College]] he received a [[bachelor's degree]] in [[1740]] and a [[master's degree]] in [[1743]]. Prophetically, the subject of his master's [[thesis]] was "Whether it be lawful to resist the supreme magistrate if the commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved."


After he completed his college education, Adams and his father, [[Old Samuel Adams]], began a partnership in a brewery. Adams's father, however, soon lost most of his wealth due to the failure of an investment venture in paper currency, which was made illegal by the [[United Kingdom|British]] government in [[1744]], thus exacerbating the family's dislike for the central government. The elder Adams died in [[1748]], and Samuel took full charge of the family brewery.
After he completed his college education, Adams and his father, [[Old Samuel Adams]], began a partnership in a brewery. He lost most of his inheritance by poor business management.


Turning his attention to politics Adams wrote political essays to the ''Independent Advertiser'' newspaper and joined a political club, the "Whipping Post Club," as well as Boston's South End Caucus, which was a powerful force in the selection of candidates for elective office. He served as tax collector of Boston 1756 through 1764, where he did used non-collection of taxes as a political bargaining chip. By 1764-65 he was a leader in Boston's town meetings, drafting protests against the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]] that protested British efforts to tax the colonists and called for a spirited defense of Americans' "invalueable Rights & Libertys." Over the next decade he became an increasingly dominant leader of the town meeting. He repeatedly insisted on the "inherent and unalienable rights" of the people (''Writings,'' vol. 1, pp. 25-26), a theme that became a core element of [[republicanism]].
Adams, in the meantime, became tax collector of Boston and was vocal in [[town meeting]]s, which brought him significant political influence among his peers. He was a leader of a group of radicals called the [[Sons of Liberty]]. When the brewery, never enormously profitable, failed in 1764, Adams began devoting himself full time to political matters, first drafting the colony's negative response to the [[Sugar Act]] in May [[1764]], and the next year being elected to a seat in the [[Massachusetts]] colonial legislature (called the "[[Massachusetts General Court|General Court]]"), where he immediately became a vocal opponent of the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]].


While a member of the legislature, Adams served as clerk of the house, in which capacity he was responsible for drafting written protests of various British governmental acts during his tenure, which continued to [[1774]]. Notable among these was a circular letter he drafted as a response to the [[1767]] [[Townshend Acts]], distributed among the other [[Thirteen Colonies|twelve colonies]] in a bid to achieve a united front of resistance to these acts. The failure of the legislature to rescind the contents of this letter at the express demand of [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George]] is usually cited as one of the main factors resulting in the stationing of troops in Boston beginning in [[1768]].
While a member of the legislature, Adams served as clerk of the house, in which capacity he was responsible for drafting written protests of various British governmental acts during his tenure, which continued to [[1774]]. Notable among these was a circular letter he drafted as a response to the [[1767]] [[Townshend Acts]], distributed among the other [[Thirteen Colonies|twelve colonies]] in a bid to achieve a united front of resistance to these acts. The failure of the legislature to rescind the contents of this letter at the express demand of [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]] was one of the main factors resulting in the stationing of troops in Boston beginning in [[1768]].


This British troop presence in Boston, aggravated by protest activities such as Adams' formation of the [[Non-Importation Association]], led to the [[Boston Massacre]] (a term coined by Adams) two years later. After the incident Adams chaired a town meeting which formed a petition, presented to acting governor [[Thomas Hutchinson]], demanding the removal of two British regiments from Boston proper. Hutchinson at first claimed no responsibility for the matter, owing to his temporary status as governor, but stated he would be willing to move one regiment; the meeting was re-convened and Adams successfully urged the crowd of over 5,000 present to stand firm on the terms: "Both regiments or none!" Fearing open warfare, Hutchinson had both regiments removed to [[Castle William]], an old fort on an island in [[Boston Harbor]]. These regiments would thereafter be known in the [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|British Parliament]] as "The Sam Adams Regiments."
This British troop presence in Boston, aggravated by protest activities such as Adams' formation of the [[Non-Importation Association]], led to the [[Boston Massacre]] (a term coined by Adams) two years later. After the incident Adams chaired a town meeting which formed a petition, presented to acting governor [[Thomas Hutchinson]], demanding the removal of two British regiments from Boston proper. Hutchinson at first claimed no responsibility for the matter, owing to his temporary status as governor, but stated he would be willing to move one regiment; the meeting was re-convened and Adams successfully urged the crowd of over 5,000 present to stand firm on the terms: "Both regiments or none!" Fearing open warfare, Hutchinson had both regiments removed to [[Castle William]], an old fort on an island in [[Boston Harbor]]. These regiments would thereafter be known in the [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|British Parliament]] as "The Sam Adams Regiments."


In [[1772]], after a British declaration that judges should be paid by the Crown rather than by the colonial legislatures, a demand from the people of Boston for a special session of the legislature to reconsider this matter was refused by Hutchinson. It was at this point Adams devised a system of [[Committees of Correspondence]], whereby the towns of Massachusetts would consult with each other concerning political matters via messages. Such a scheme was still technically legal under British law, but led to a ''de facto'' colonial legislative body. [[Dabney Carr]] of [[Virginia]] later proposed the adoption of this system throughout the [[Thirteen Colonies]], which led eventually to the formation of the [[Continental Congress]].
In [[1772]], after a British declaration that judges should be paid by the Crown rather than by the colonial legislatures, a demand from the people of Boston for a special session of the legislature to reconsider this matter was refused by Hutchinson. It was at this point Adams devised a system of [[Committees of Correspondence]], whereby the towns of Massachusetts would consult with each other concerning political matters via messages. Such a scheme was still technically legal under British law, but led to a ''de facto'' colonial legislative body. This system was adopted by each of the [[Thirteen Colonies]], creating the [[Continental Congress]].


[[Image:Samuel adams illustration.3.jpg|none|right|An illustration of Adams from an [[1899]] history book.]]
[[Image:Samuel adams illustration.3.jpg|none|right|An illustration of Adams from an [[1899]] history book.]]
===Tea Party 1773===
Adams is perhaps best remembered for helping to organize, with [[William Molineux]], the [[Boston Tea Party]] of [[December 16]], [[1773]], in response to the [[Tea Act]]. As British tea-ships sat in Boston Harbor awaiting payment of the import duties, Adams energized a large crowd gathered at the port with his oratory, and later donned costume and led a band of men aboard ship where they dumped the tea into the harbor, to the delight of the assembled spectators on shore. In response to this escapade, Parliament passed the "[[Intolerable Acts]]," which called for the revocation of the colonial charter of Massachusetts and the closing of the port of Boston. The angry reaction from all the colonies was to expedite the opening of a Continental Congress, and when the Massachusetts legislature met in [[Salem, Massachusetts|Salem]] on [[June 17]], [[1774]], Adams locked the doors and made a motion for the formation of a colonial delegation to attend the Congress. A loyalist member, faking illness, was excused from the assembly and immediately went to the governor, who issued a writ for the legislature's dissolution; however, when the legislator returned to find a locked door, he could do nothing.


Adams was one of the major proponents of the [[Suffolk Resolves]] drafted in response to the Intolerable Acts, and adopted in September 1774. Those "spirited" resolves called for disobedience to the Coercive Acts, endorsed military preparations for defense, and called for the meeting of an extralegal provincial congress. Adams opposed a compromise offered by [[Joseph Galloway]] and advocated boycotts of British imports through the continental association.
Adams is perhaps best remembered for helping to organize, with [[William Molineux]], the [[Boston Tea Party]] of [[December 16]], [[1773]], in response to the [[Tea Act]]. As British tea-ships sat in Boston Harbor awaiting payment of the import duties, Adams energized a large crowd gathered at the port with his oratory, and later donned costume and led a band of men aboard ship where they dumped the tea into the harbor, to the delight of the assembled spectators on shore. In response to this escapade, Parliament passed what were later to be known as the "[[Intolerable Acts]]," which called for the revocation of the colonial charter of Massachusetts and the closing of the port of Boston. Reaction from the colonies was to expedite the opening of a Continental Congress, and when the Massachusetts legislature met in [[Salem, Massachusetts|Salem]] on [[June 17]], [[1774]], Adams locked the doors and made a motion for the formation of a colonial delegation to attend the Congress. A loyalist member, faking illness, was excused from the assembly and immediately went to the governor, who issued a writ for the legislature's dissolution; however, when the legislator returned to find a locked door, he could do nothing.
===Continental Congress===

Adams was one of the major proponents of the [[Suffolk Resolves]] drafted in response to the Intolerable Acts, and adopted in September 1774. Also that month the Continental Congress held its first meeting, and Adams retired from the legislature and was sent to [[Philadelphia]] as a representative from the Massachusetts colony. From the beginning of his time in Congress he was one of the most vocal proponents of independence. (Notably, only he and [[John Hancock]] were exempted from the general amnesty offered by [[Thomas Gage]] to Massachusetts rebels in [[1775]].) After signing the Declaration in [[1776]], Adams, wary of a strong central government, was instrumental in the development and adoption of the loose government embodied in the [[Articles of Confederation]], to which he was also a signatory in [[1777]]. He continued serving in the Congress until [[1781]], when he was elected to the state senate of Massachusetts. He served in that body until [[1788]], becoming its president.
In September 1774 Adams retired from the legislature and was a delegate to the [[Continental Congress]] in [[Philadelphia]]. He was one of the first and loudest voices for independence. (Notably, only he and [[John Hancock]] were exempted from the general amnesty offered by [[Thomas Gage]] to Massachusetts rebels in [[1775]].) He was a workhorse member of the Second Continental Congress, serving on numerous committees, notably the Board of War, from May 1775 until 1781.


The climax of his career came when he signed the Declaration of Independence in [[1776]]. After that Adams, wary of a strong central government, was instrumental in the development and adoption of the loose government embodied in the [[Articles of Confederation]], to which he was also a signatory in [[1777]]. He continued serving in the Congress until [[1781]], when he was elected to the state senate of Massachusetts. He served in that body until [[1788]], becoming its president.
===State politics===
At the time of the drafting of the [[United States Constitution]], Adams was considered an [[anti-federalist]], but more moderate than others of that political stripe. His contemporaries nicknamed him "the last Puritan" for his views; in 1788 he would write in his diary regarding the [[federalist]] and anti-federalist factions, "Neither Interest, I fear, display that Sobriety of Manners, Temperance, or Frugality&mdash;among other manly Virtues&mdash;which once were the Glory and Strength of our Christian Sparta on the Bay...". He finally came in on the side of ratification, with the stipulation that a [[bill of rights]] be added. Additionally, Adams was a member of the conventions that drafted the first [[Massachusetts Constitution|Massachusetts state constitution]] in [[1779]], and the second one in 1788.
At the time of the drafting of the [[United States Constitution]], Adams was considered an [[anti-federalist]], but more moderate than others of that political stripe. His contemporaries nicknamed him "the last Puritan" for his views; in 1788 he would write in his diary regarding the [[federalist]] and anti-federalist factions, "Neither Interest, I fear, display that Sobriety of Manners, Temperance, or Frugality&mdash;among other manly Virtues&mdash;which once were the Glory and Strength of our Christian Sparta on the Bay...". He finally came in on the side of ratification, with the stipulation that a [[bill of rights]] be added. Additionally, Adams was a member of the conventions that drafted the first [[Massachusetts Constitution|Massachusetts state constitution]] in [[1779]], and the second one in 1788.


Line 54: Line 58:


His son, Samuel Adams, Jr., studied medicine under Doctor Joseph Warren, fellow patriot and friend to both Adams and his second cousin John Adams. [[Samuel Adams, Jr.]] held an appointment as surgeon in Washington's army. He died in 1788. His government claims provided enough for Adams and his wife to live on in their old age.
His son, Samuel Adams, Jr., studied medicine under Doctor Joseph Warren, fellow patriot and friend to both Adams and his second cousin John Adams. [[Samuel Adams, Jr.]] held an appointment as surgeon in Washington's army. He died in 1788. His government claims provided enough for Adams and his wife to live on in their old age.

His daughter Hannah married Captain Thomas Wells, a younger brother of Elizabeth Wells Adams, her stepmother.


Well before his death, he freed his wife's slave, Surry; however, she chose to remain in her service. It was rumored that they were involved in a love affair, which Adams insisted it was not true. Yet some of his letters were burned by Surry and Surry liked to recount tales of her master's friendly laugh and wholesome heart. She also spread rumors of rages, which may be founded on fact.
Well before his death, he freed his wife's slave, Surry; however, she chose to remain in her service. It was rumored that they were involved in a love affair, which Adams insisted it was not true. Yet some of his letters were burned by Surry and Surry liked to recount tales of her master's friendly laugh and wholesome heart. She also spread rumors of rages, which may be founded on fact.


Adams died at the age of 81 and was interred at the [[Granary Burying Ground]] in Boston. Owing to his occupation as a brewer, today a popular brand of Boston beer bears his name: [[Samuel Adams (beer)|Samuel Adams]].
Adams died at the age of 81 and was interred at the [[Granary Burying Ground]] in Boston. Owing to his occupation as a brewer, today a popular brand of Boston beer bears his name: [[Samuel Adams (beer)|Samuel Adams]].
===Place in History===
Historian Pauline Maier (1980) argues that Adams was not the "grand incendiary" or firebrand of Revolution and was not a mob leader. Rather he took a moderate position based firmly on the English revolutionary tradition that imposed strict constraints on resistance to authority. It justified force only against threats to the constitutional rights so grave that the "body of the people" recognized the danger and after all the peaceful means of redress had failed. Within that revolutionary tradition, resistance was essentially conservative, intended to preserve what in 1748 Adams described as "the true object" of patriotic loyalty, "a good legal constitution, which . . . condemns every instance of oppression and lawless power." It had nothing in common with sedition or rebellion, which Adams, like earlier English writers, charged to officials who sought "illegal power" (Wells, vol. 1, pp. 16-17).


==Further reading==
==Primary sources==
* ''The Writings of Samuel Adams'' ed. by Harry Alonzo Cushing; 1904
* ''The Writings of Samuel Adams'' ed. by Harry Alonzo Cushing; 1904-8, 4 vol.
* [[William V. Wells]], ''The Life and Public Services of Samuel Adams: Being a Narrative of His Acts and Opinions, and of His Agency in Producing and Forwarding the American Revolution, with Extracts from His Correspondence, State Papers, and Political Essays.'' 3 Vol 1865
==Bibliography==
* John K. Alexander. ''Samuel Adams: America's Revolutionary Politician'' (2002)
* John K. Alexander. ''Samuel Adams: America's Revolutionary Politician'' (2002)
* Steward Beach, ''Samuel Adams, The Fateful Years, 1764-1776'' (1965),
* David Hackett Fischer. ''Paul Revere's Ride'' (1994)
* Dennis Brindell Fradin. ''Samuel Adams: The Father of American Independence'' (1998) for middle school audience
* James Kendall Hosmer. ''Samuel Adams'' 1885 [http://books.google.com/books?vid=LCCN04022925&id=k-MT-fdyJFUC&printsec=toc&dq=%22samuel+adams%22+%22tea+party%22 online edition]
* Benjamin H. Irvin. ''Sam Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution'' Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. 176.
* Benjamin H. Irvin. ''Sam Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution'' Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. 176.
* Pauline Maier. ''From Resistance to Revolution: Colonial Radicals and the Development of American Opposition to Britain, 1765-1776'' (1992)
* [[William V. Wells]], ''The Life and Public Services of Samuel Adams: Being a Narrative of His Acts and Opinions, and of His Agency in Producing and Forwarding the American Revolution, with Extracts from His Correspondence, State Papers, and Political Essays.'' 3 Vol 1888
* Pauline Maier, ''The Old Revolutionaries: Political Lives in the Age of Samuel Adams'' (1980) chap. 1: "A New Englander as Revolutionary: Samuel Adams,” pp 3-50

* John C. Miller, ''Sam Adams, Pioneer in Propaganda'' (1936)
==See also==
==See also==
* [[Liberalism]]
* [[Republicanism]]
* [[American Revolution]]
* [[Contributions to liberal theory]]

==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikiquote}}

Revision as of 00:32, 21 June 2006

Samuel Adams
5th Governor of Massachusetts
In office
October 8 1793 – June 2, 1797
LieutenantMoses Gill
Preceded byJohn Hancock
Succeeded byIncrease Sumner
Personal details
BornSeptember 27, 1722
Boston, Massachusetts
DiedOctober 2, 1803
Boston, Massachusetts
Political partyNone
SpouseUnknown

Samuel Adams (September 27, 1722October 2, 1803) was an American Patriot and organizer of the Boston Tea Party. He played a major role in starting the American Revolution and in articulating the principles of republicanism that shaped the American political culture.

Born to Boston parents, Adams was their second child. President John Adams was his second cousin.

Adams attended school at Boston Latin School. At Harvard College he received a bachelor's degree in 1740 and a master's degree in 1743. Prophetically, the subject of his master's thesis was "Whether it be lawful to resist the supreme magistrate if the commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved."

After he completed his college education, Adams and his father, Old Samuel Adams, began a partnership in a brewery. He lost most of his inheritance by poor business management.

Turning his attention to politics Adams wrote political essays to the Independent Advertiser newspaper and joined a political club, the "Whipping Post Club," as well as Boston's South End Caucus, which was a powerful force in the selection of candidates for elective office. He served as tax collector of Boston 1756 through 1764, where he did used non-collection of taxes as a political bargaining chip. By 1764-65 he was a leader in Boston's town meetings, drafting protests against the Stamp Act that protested British efforts to tax the colonists and called for a spirited defense of Americans' "invalueable Rights & Libertys." Over the next decade he became an increasingly dominant leader of the town meeting. He repeatedly insisted on the "inherent and unalienable rights" of the people (Writings, vol. 1, pp. 25-26), a theme that became a core element of republicanism.

While a member of the legislature, Adams served as clerk of the house, in which capacity he was responsible for drafting written protests of various British governmental acts during his tenure, which continued to 1774. Notable among these was a circular letter he drafted as a response to the 1767 Townshend Acts, distributed among the other twelve colonies in a bid to achieve a united front of resistance to these acts. The failure of the legislature to rescind the contents of this letter at the express demand of King George III was one of the main factors resulting in the stationing of troops in Boston beginning in 1768.

This British troop presence in Boston, aggravated by protest activities such as Adams' formation of the Non-Importation Association, led to the Boston Massacre (a term coined by Adams) two years later. After the incident Adams chaired a town meeting which formed a petition, presented to acting governor Thomas Hutchinson, demanding the removal of two British regiments from Boston proper. Hutchinson at first claimed no responsibility for the matter, owing to his temporary status as governor, but stated he would be willing to move one regiment; the meeting was re-convened and Adams successfully urged the crowd of over 5,000 present to stand firm on the terms: "Both regiments or none!" Fearing open warfare, Hutchinson had both regiments removed to Castle William, an old fort on an island in Boston Harbor. These regiments would thereafter be known in the British Parliament as "The Sam Adams Regiments."

In 1772, after a British declaration that judges should be paid by the Crown rather than by the colonial legislatures, a demand from the people of Boston for a special session of the legislature to reconsider this matter was refused by Hutchinson. It was at this point Adams devised a system of Committees of Correspondence, whereby the towns of Massachusetts would consult with each other concerning political matters via messages. Such a scheme was still technically legal under British law, but led to a de facto colonial legislative body. This system was adopted by each of the Thirteen Colonies, creating the Continental Congress.

An illustration of Adams from an 1899 history book.
An illustration of Adams from an 1899 history book.

Tea Party 1773

Adams is perhaps best remembered for helping to organize, with William Molineux, the Boston Tea Party of December 16, 1773, in response to the Tea Act. As British tea-ships sat in Boston Harbor awaiting payment of the import duties, Adams energized a large crowd gathered at the port with his oratory, and later donned costume and led a band of men aboard ship where they dumped the tea into the harbor, to the delight of the assembled spectators on shore. In response to this escapade, Parliament passed the "Intolerable Acts," which called for the revocation of the colonial charter of Massachusetts and the closing of the port of Boston. The angry reaction from all the colonies was to expedite the opening of a Continental Congress, and when the Massachusetts legislature met in Salem on June 17, 1774, Adams locked the doors and made a motion for the formation of a colonial delegation to attend the Congress. A loyalist member, faking illness, was excused from the assembly and immediately went to the governor, who issued a writ for the legislature's dissolution; however, when the legislator returned to find a locked door, he could do nothing.

Adams was one of the major proponents of the Suffolk Resolves drafted in response to the Intolerable Acts, and adopted in September 1774. Those "spirited" resolves called for disobedience to the Coercive Acts, endorsed military preparations for defense, and called for the meeting of an extralegal provincial congress. Adams opposed a compromise offered by Joseph Galloway and advocated boycotts of British imports through the continental association.

Continental Congress

In September 1774 Adams retired from the legislature and was a delegate to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. He was one of the first and loudest voices for independence. (Notably, only he and John Hancock were exempted from the general amnesty offered by Thomas Gage to Massachusetts rebels in 1775.) He was a workhorse member of the Second Continental Congress, serving on numerous committees, notably the Board of War, from May 1775 until 1781.

The climax of his career came when he signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776. After that Adams, wary of a strong central government, was instrumental in the development and adoption of the loose government embodied in the Articles of Confederation, to which he was also a signatory in 1777. He continued serving in the Congress until 1781, when he was elected to the state senate of Massachusetts. He served in that body until 1788, becoming its president.

State politics

At the time of the drafting of the United States Constitution, Adams was considered an anti-federalist, but more moderate than others of that political stripe. His contemporaries nicknamed him "the last Puritan" for his views; in 1788 he would write in his diary regarding the federalist and anti-federalist factions, "Neither Interest, I fear, display that Sobriety of Manners, Temperance, or Frugality—among other manly Virtues—which once were the Glory and Strength of our Christian Sparta on the Bay...". He finally came in on the side of ratification, with the stipulation that a bill of rights be added. Additionally, Adams was a member of the conventions that drafted the first Massachusetts state constitution in 1779, and the second one in 1788.

File:Samuel adams grave 20040930 105414 1.1644x1341.jpg
Samuel Adams grave marker in the Granary Burying Ground

He stood unsuccessfully for election to the House of Representatives for the first Congress, but was elected Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, serving from 178994. He was elected as governor in 1793 to succeed John Hancock, and served to 1797, afterwards retiring to his home in Boston.

Later Life

In old age, Samuel suffered from symptoms akin to those of Cerebral palsy or Parkinson's disease, so Samuel's daughter Hannah had to sign his name for him.

In addition to his daughter Hannah, Adams had a son named Samuel Adams, Jr., held an appointment as surgeon in Washington's army., Jr. by his first wife, Elizabeth Checkly (1725-1757), whom he married in 1749. She died three days after the birth of their last stillborn child.

Adams did remarry. He and his second wife, Elizabeth Wells, whom he married in 1764, did not have any children.

His son, Samuel Adams, Jr., studied medicine under Doctor Joseph Warren, fellow patriot and friend to both Adams and his second cousin John Adams. Samuel Adams, Jr. held an appointment as surgeon in Washington's army. He died in 1788. His government claims provided enough for Adams and his wife to live on in their old age.

Well before his death, he freed his wife's slave, Surry; however, she chose to remain in her service. It was rumored that they were involved in a love affair, which Adams insisted it was not true. Yet some of his letters were burned by Surry and Surry liked to recount tales of her master's friendly laugh and wholesome heart. She also spread rumors of rages, which may be founded on fact.

Adams died at the age of 81 and was interred at the Granary Burying Ground in Boston. Owing to his occupation as a brewer, today a popular brand of Boston beer bears his name: Samuel Adams.

Place in History

Historian Pauline Maier (1980) argues that Adams was not the "grand incendiary" or firebrand of Revolution and was not a mob leader. Rather he took a moderate position based firmly on the English revolutionary tradition that imposed strict constraints on resistance to authority. It justified force only against threats to the constitutional rights so grave that the "body of the people" recognized the danger and after all the peaceful means of redress had failed. Within that revolutionary tradition, resistance was essentially conservative, intended to preserve what in 1748 Adams described as "the true object" of patriotic loyalty, "a good legal constitution, which . . . condemns every instance of oppression and lawless power." It had nothing in common with sedition or rebellion, which Adams, like earlier English writers, charged to officials who sought "illegal power" (Wells, vol. 1, pp. 16-17).

Primary sources

  • The Writings of Samuel Adams ed. by Harry Alonzo Cushing; 1904-8, 4 vol.
  • William V. Wells, The Life and Public Services of Samuel Adams: Being a Narrative of His Acts and Opinions, and of His Agency in Producing and Forwarding the American Revolution, with Extracts from His Correspondence, State Papers, and Political Essays. 3 Vol 1865

Bibliography

  • John K. Alexander. Samuel Adams: America's Revolutionary Politician (2002)
  • Steward Beach, Samuel Adams, The Fateful Years, 1764-1776 (1965),
  • David Hackett Fischer. Paul Revere's Ride (1994)
  • Dennis Brindell Fradin. Samuel Adams: The Father of American Independence (1998) for middle school audience
  • James Kendall Hosmer. Samuel Adams 1885 online edition
  • Benjamin H. Irvin. Sam Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. 176.
  • Pauline Maier. From Resistance to Revolution: Colonial Radicals and the Development of American Opposition to Britain, 1765-1776 (1992)
  • Pauline Maier, The Old Revolutionaries: Political Lives in the Age of Samuel Adams (1980) chap. 1: "A New Englander as Revolutionary: Samuel Adams,” pp 3-50
  • John C. Miller, Sam Adams, Pioneer in Propaganda (1936)

See also

Preceded by Governor of Massachusetts
October 8, 1793June 2, 1797
Succeeded by

Template:Persondata