Back to
the Dead Presidents. We are more than
halfway through presenting this ten-year quest of mine to visit and photograph
the last resting places of our nation’s Chief Executives.
On this day
166 years ago, our sixth president, John Quincy Adams, the son of the second president, passed away. He was the first president to be
photographed. His wife, Louisa
Catherine, is the only First Lady born outside the United States
[England].
Statue of Young Quincy with his mother, Abigail Adams [15
November 2007]
The
bronze, by Lloyd Lillie, stands beside the church
where
the two are buried. It depicts the
protective
mother
and her son as they might have witnessed the
Battle
of Bunker Hill from the top of Penn’s Hill in 1775.
In 2012, I
posted John Adams’ story with pictures of his grave. The president rests in a basement room in the
United First Parish Church in Quincy, MA.
John Quincy, his second child, lies alongside wife, Louisa Catherine
just a few feet away. Before the space
was prepared for the sixth president, he was interred in the family vault
across the street in Hancock Cemetery.
The Adams Family Vault in Hancock Cemetery,
Quincy, MA [15 November 2007]
Across
the street is the United First Parish Church,
where
the 6th president currently resides.
Regarding
Quincy Adams’ career highlights, his presidency was the distant third among his
achievements. He had a most
distinguished record in foreign affairs.
His experience began at a remarkably early age. At age 11, father John took him to France during
his mission to persuade the French to recognize our new nation. By age 14, fluent in French...the language of
diplomacy, he served as the secretary and translator to our Minister to
Russia. By age 18, he was also fluent in
Latin, Greek and Dutch. Beginning in his
20’s, he served as Washington’s Minister to the Netherlands, his father’s
Minister to Prussia, Madison’s Minster to Russia and Great Britain and Monroe’s
Secretary of State. Adams wrote the
speech that became the Monroe Doctrine, where we asserted the freedom of the
American continents from colonization [and interference] by the European
powers. After all that, he became
president.
In 1824,
four guys vied for the job including House Speaker Henry
Clay and Andrew Jackson. When none of them gained a majority of
electoral votes, the decision was given to the House of Representatives. Once Clay threw his support to Adams, the
election was won. Adams made Clay his
Secretary of State. This was called the
“corrupt bargain” and it frosted the Jackson supporters in Congress so much,
they opposed everything the president wanted to do. Hardly anything Adams proposed was
passed. What is old is new again. With little to show for his first term, Adams
was soundly defeated by Jackson in 1828.
Up to that time, Quincy and his dad were the only presidents who were
not re-elected.
Plaques by the entrance to the President’s tomb [9
October 2009]
One of my
favorite things about Adams was that he returned to serve in Congress AFTER
leaving the White House. No cushy
appointments and six-figure speaking gigs for him. He was elected at age 63 and served the last
17 years of his life in the House of Representatives...the only former
president to do so. It was in the House Speaker’s
Room where he died two days after having a stroke in the chamber.
Adams was
much more effective as a legislator than president. He was the leading opponent of slavery in the
House. At a time when the slave state
representatives had an official rule that forbade taking up questions regarding
slavery (our original “gag rule”), Adams opposed it and worked for
years to abolish it. Before the Supreme
Court, he won the freedom of the Amistad slaves who commandeered the Spanish
ship that stole them from Africa.
John Quincy Adams
6th
president; served 1825-1829
Born: July 11, 1767, Braintree MA
Died February 23, 1848, Washington, D.C.
Grave Location: United First Parish Church, Quincy, Ma
Dates Visited: 7/24/99; 10/9/2009
Just
because he was not an accomplished president doesn’t mean he wasn’t a great
American.
He served
this country well.
2 Comments:
I learn something every time you post, Ted. And I consider myself a history buff. Thanks for all the work you put into these.
Thanks, Jack. you keep buffing along. You taught me a thing or two about Hoover.
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