Papers of John Adams: June 1783 – January 1784 (Adams Papers) (General Correspondence and Other Papers of the Adams Statesmen)

by John Adams

Gregg L. Lint (Editor), C. James Taylor (Editor), Robert F. Karachuk (Editor), Hobson Woodward (Editor), Margaret A. Hogan (Editor), Sara B. Sikes (Editor), Mary T. Claffey (Editor), and Karen N. Barzilay (Editor)

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On September 3, 1783, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay signed the definitive Anglo-American peace treaty. Adams and his colleagues strived to establish a viable relationship between the new nation and its largest trading partner but were stymied by rising British anti-Americanism.

Adams’ diplomatic efforts were also complicated by domestic turmoil. Americans, in a rehearsal for the later Federalist-Antifederalist conflict over the United States Constitution, were debating the proper relationship between the central government and the states. Adams, a Federalist as early as 1783, argued persuasively for a government that honored its treaties and paid its foreign debts. But when bills far exceeding the funds available for their redemption were sent to Europe, he was forced to undertake a dangerous winter journey to the Netherlands to raise a new loan and save the United States from financial disaster.

None of the founding fathers equals the candor of John Adams’ observations of his eighteenth-century world. His letters, always interesting, reveal with absolute clarity Adams’ positions on the personalities and issues of his times.

  • ISBN10 0674051238
  • ISBN13 9780674051232
  • Publish Date 14 June 2010
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher Harvard University Press
  • Imprint The Belknap Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 592
  • Language English