Ask your own question, for FREE!
History 7 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

HELP MEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!! John Adams :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I need help please explain at least two events from John Adams’s presidency i cant fnd the answer anywhere

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thats easy I'll tell you in spanish

OpenStudy (anonymous):

no i dont understand spanish

OpenStudy (anonymous):

here I go

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Im just kidding ok so don't you have a history book

OpenStudy (anonymous):

sorry home school

OpenStudy (anonymous):

can yo please help me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Yes I can yo help yo

OpenStudy (anonymous):

my key board isnt working

OpenStudy (anonymous):

please

OpenStudy (anonymous):

John Adams born on Oct. 30 (Oct. 19, old style), 1735, at Braintree (now Quincy), Mass. A Harvard graduate, he considered teaching and the ministry but finally turned to law and was admitted to the bar in 1758. Six years later, he married Abigail Smith. He opposed the Stamp Act, served as lawyer for patriots indicted by the British, and by the time of the Continental Congresses, was in the vanguard of the movement for independence. In 1778, he went to France as commissioner. Subsequently he helped negotiate the peace treaty with Britain, and in 1785 became envoy to London. Resigning in 1788, he was elected vice president under Washington and was reelected in 1792. Though a Federalist, Adams did not get along with Hamilton, who sought to prevent his election to the presidency in 1796 and thereafter intrigued against his administration. In 1798, Adams's independent policy averted a war with France but completed the break with Hamilton and the right-wing Federalists; at the same time, the enactment of the Alien and Sedition Acts, directed against foreigners and against critics of the government, exasperated the Jeffersonian opposition. The split between Adams and Hamilton resulted in Jefferson's becoming the next president. Adams retired to his home in Quincy. He and Jefferson died on the same day, July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence

OpenStudy (anonymous):

whew

OpenStudy (anonymous):

my key board works =)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so war in france and what else

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Alien and Sedition Acts right

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yahoo you there

OpenStudy (anonymous):

echo echo echo

OpenStudy (anonymous):

THANK YOU SOOO MUCH

OpenStudy (anonymous):

dont mention it ;o

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hey nobody can stop me from loving my family to I read about you while i was waiting for you to reply:o

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hhuh wht do you mean

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hhuh what do you mean?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

you said you read about me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

get a keyboard for christmas!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes i did ;p P;

OpenStudy (anonymous):

how

OpenStudy (anonymous):

??

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ok so click on my picture

OpenStudy (anonymous):

and then click on my picture again

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so what i did is clicked on your picture again then again then i read!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

you don't get it do you urg

Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!
Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!