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Adams's criticisms of Jefferson,171,187,212
constitutional questions and,66,200-1
Jefferson and,177,178,207-10,211,230
Jefferson-Madison collaboration,164,188
Pinckney,Thomas,177-8
Hemings,Sally,201-2,209
Roman Republic,6
prospective candidates,163
fiscal policy,see assumption of state debts by the federal government;funding of the domestic debt
voluntary nature,149-50
Jefferson's conspiracy theory and,140,141
Supreme Court,116,208
elegiac tone,224,242-5
Adams's candidacy,175-7
Declaration of Independence,composition of,212-13,242
bipartisan effort regarding Adams presidency,179,183
national university proposal,omission of,153-4
physical appearance,21,22
political career,40-1,43-4
silence following Jefferson's election,205,211
realist outlook in political and military matters,131-3
see also residency issue
Caesar,Julius,6
slavery debate,85-6,91-4,110-11
Pendleton,Nathaniel,21,23,24,26,27-9,31,34,35
assumption of state debts by the federal government,48
surrendering power,flair for,129-30
Franklin,Benjamin,13,17,53,101,163,164
Berlin,Isaiah,134
treasonable activities,199
eyewitness,statement about,27-9
Franklin and,120-1
French and Indian War,120,134
political foes,attitude toward,179-80
on treaty-making powers,137-8
relocation of freed slaves,100,106,107-8
press,the,187
“disposable president” principle and,125
partisan campaign against Adams presidency,195-201,228-30
press attacks and,125-7
slavery,silence about,157-8
Republican conversion,55
inevitability of,3-4,5
Whiskey Rebellion,140-1,145
Federalist conspiracy,44
“Thesis on Discretion”(Hamilton),37
Hamilton and,54
Hamilton's derogatory comments about Burr,32,41-3,44,45
navy,185,193,227
treaty-making powers,138
assumption issue,57-60,62,64;Compromise of 1790,48,49-50,72,73
secession conspiracy,44
on French Revolution,237-9
Lee,Henry,58,64,68,76
Burr,Theodosia,36
Alien and Sedition Acts,200
criticisms of,9
History of the American Revolution(Warren),13,213
Burrs disgrace,27,38-9
inauguration of,184
scholarly consensus on,253n 16
Alien and Sedition Acts and,190-1
presidential election of 1796,177-8
party leadership role,183
foreign policy message,128-9,131-6,148,150
feud immediately preceding the duel,31-8
memoir projects,213-14
Laurance,John,86
Adams's correspondence with,214-22
Potomac Magazine,71
Native American policy,158-9
Mazzei,Phillip,141,145
Jays Treaty,137,150
on slavery,239-42
Edwards,Jonathan,21,109
romanticized versions of history,beneficiary of,212-13,219-20
as confirmation of republican government,127-8
intractability of slavery problem,91,98,105
qualifications for presidency,162
president pro tem position,166-7
Compromise of 1790(cont'd)
reticent nature,67
Laurens,Henry,132
Braddock,Gen. Edward,120
Adams-Jefferson reconciliation,218,220-2
Adams,John(cont'd)
improbability of,5-6
uncertainty about,162,177
revolutionary career,164-5
Washington,rejection of,160-1
Beckley,John,173
congressional approval,50
Jefferson's candidacy,173-4,181
economic philosophy,65
seal for the United States,101
national leadership's attitude toward,113
Jay's Treaty,137,138
extreme Republican mentality,146
Madison's attitude toward,196-7
dichotomous world view,231
residency issue,74-6;Compromise of 1790,48-51,72,73-4
“inevitable extinction” viewpoint,89,90-1,94,103-4
Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim,111-12
libel case,45,254n 42
Holmes,Oliver Wendell,46
Potomac site,case for,70-2
Virginian perspective,172
direct link between two issues,257n 41
Jefferson's conspiracy theory regarding,139-41,147
slavery debate,90,95,99,100,105,106,113,158
see also American Revolution Reynolds,Maria,198
Potomac mythology,70-2
Federalists,alienation from,193
Adams's alienation from,193
Fairfax,Fernando,105,106
Burr's surprise and regret at outcome,2,5-6,30-1 contradictory accounts,27,30,31
most decisive moment,242-3
Monroe Doctrine,136
personal qualities,53
Whitehead,Alfred North,16
Civil War,12,16,101,241
on f九_九_藏_书_网rustration of governing,8
consitutional significance,122
paradox of,7-8
recovery of public debt,see assumption of state debts by the federal government;funding of the domestic debt
Adams-Jefferson argument about,237-9
Clay,Henry,156
Great Britain(England),156,219
courage under fire,120
recalculation of Virginia's debt,73
Republicans,162
Jefferson's condemnation of,143
Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory(Adams),223
ideological warfare,186-7
Van Ness,William,21,23,24,25,27-9,33,34,35
childlessness of,169
Jefferson and,37,41
see also Adams-Jefferson correspondence;Adams-Jefferson relationship
Adams,attitude toward,196-7
peace delegations to,180,183,184,185-6,188-90,191-5,197,202,229
Mason,George,68,95,96
slavery debate and,108
global revolution,belief in,141-3
timing,sense of,109
compromises to produce consensus,9-10
Douglas,Stephen,241
blacks,attitude toward,158
Pemberton,John,116
philosophical foundations,62-5
slavery debate,113
on treaty-making powers,138
Twenty-second Amendment,122
secession issue and,77,80
historical explanation,13-14
Adams-Jefferson argument,227-42
Washington's site selection,75
Coles,Edward,221
dissolution of American nation,potential for,8
secession conspiracy of New England Federalists,44
Jay's Treaty,136-9,144,149
Scott,William,112-13
Northwest Ordinance of 1787,93-4
Jefferson,Thomas,(cont'd) death of,225,248
presidential election of 1800,42,43
Quakers,81,97,110,117
Compromise of 1790 and,80
Cobbett,William,190,217
Smith,William Loughton,81-2,85,97,100-1,112,116,118
Porcupines Gazette,190,192,193
ratification of,52-3
France,165,219
firing of weapons,25,26,27-31,253n 16
Sectional Compromise,94,95,98,111
Adams's relationship with,174,185
Burr's intentions,30-1
Adams,John Quincy,47,54,156,169,170,171,187,194,195,223
Eppes,Maria Jefferson,207
physical appearance,21
Treaty of Mortefontaine(1800),205
presidential form of address,167-8
neutrality policy,134-6
Hamilton,Elizabeth,26
presidential election of 1796,173,176,178
Short,William,36-7,66
Adams,Samuel,163,165,180
Washington's relationship with,138-9,140-1,143-5,2-69n 71
transcendental status,122
weapons for,24
Church,John,24
see also Burr-Hamilton duel
Adams-Jefferson correspondence,169,170
Adams's realistic approach,215-20
constitutionality issue,82,83,84,85-6,87,91-6,112,116-18
see also Washington's Farewell Address
Thoughts on Government(Adams),165
Madison and,54
Indians,see Native Americans isolationism,129
Moore,Benjamin,26
treasonable action,defense of,145-6
Jefferson's relationship with,138-9,140-1,143-5,269n 71
Confederation Congress,93
American Colonization Society,107
New Army,21,193-4
correspondence,172-3
treaty-making powers,137-8
Arnold,Benedict,27,38,126,132
presidential election of 1800,41,42
silence about slavery,84,87,93,102,115,157-8,239,241-2
Notes on the State of Virginia(Jefferson),90,99,100,105,158
Postlethwayt,Malachai,61
vice presidency of,184
treasonable activities,198-9
assumption issue,57,62-5,77;
motives of participants,38
Johnson,Samuel,226
common themes regarding revolutionary generation,17-18
Hume,David,61
secession issue,200-1
composition of,212-13,216,2.42
presidential election of 1796,175,176-7
participants' historical perspective,4-5
Jay's Treaty,136-9,141,143,144,145-6,149,150,156,167,175,186,267n 35
survival of American nation and,50-2,78
Jay's Treaty,138
western adventure,38-9
Antifederalists,9,59
friendship recovered through,224-5,230,244
Washington and,124,125,175,217
Franklins memorial service,119
aristocracy,231,233-7
centralized political power,Americans' suspicion of,7-8,9
Hannibal,131
presidential election of 1796,173
federal government's transition to permanent location,205 Philadelphia's status as likely permanent capital,74,76
Independence Day comments(1826),247-8
Trumbull,John,18,36
see also Compromise of 1790
delivery of letters,277n 33
“St九*九*藏*书*网atement on the Impending Duel”(Hamilton),37-8
presidency after Washington,perspective on,181-2
Great Britain,attitude toward,239
vice presidency,166-7
press criticism of,190
Jay's Treaty,138,139,143,145-6
Jackson,Andrew,156
Virginia's paradoxical position,95-6,103
misnaming of,122
slavery debate,113
bonding during revolutionary period,163-4,180
Lafayette,Marquis de,89,245
vision for American nation,139-42
People v. Croswell,254n 42
Republican triumph over Federalists,202-4
presidential election of 1796,163,173-4,177,178,181
presidential election of 1800,41,42,43,202-3,205
Washington's realist approach to command,131-3,135
Shays's Rebellion,141
extralegal nature,8
economic philosophy,65
economic philosophy,60-5
Report on the Public Credit(Hamilton),54,55,60-1,62,63
neutrality policy,134-6
Continental Army,11,121,130-1,165
historical vindication,desire for,213-14,224
Jackson,James,81,82,84-5,97-100,111,116
XYZ Affair,189-90,196
Webster,Daniel,118
Wilson,James,94
Mather,Cotton,109
on aging and death,226,243-4
Franklin and,109,110
federal governments transition to permanent location,205
Scott,Thomas,84,86
personal and political ideals,68
Franklins involvement in abolitionist movement,83,109,110-13
monarchical principle,168-9,204
peace delegations to France,180,183,184
in state legislatures,84,94-6
early republic,see revolutionary era and the early republic
Declaration of Independence,11,67,68,122,127-8,139,143,163,165,247
death of,225,248
“miraculous” quality,8-9
slavery debate,113,118,263n 47
presidential election of 1800,41,42,43,203,205
Augustus,Caesar,16
Whiskey Rebellion,140-1,145,147,167,186
Missouri Compromise,239-40,241
consolidation issue,58,59,63-4
Virginians'objections,58-9,65,76-7
on retirement by politicians,123-4
Continental Congress,67,89,101,165
Adams's jealousy of Jefferson's revolutionary reputation,212-13
Tucker,St. George,105,106,262n 39
reclusive period in mid-1790s,172-3
demographic dimension,102-4
Independence Day letter(1826),245-7
slavery debate and,82,83,84,85-6,87,91-6,112,116-18
political elitism and,237
nullification issue,93,199-200
historical commentary on,129
national capital,permanent residence for,see residency issue national university,proposal for,153-4
see also Compromise of 1790
Henry,Patrick,52-3,76,163
retirement from public life,206
Defence of the Constitution of the United States of America(Adams),165,218,234
see also Burr—Hamilton duel
personal qualities,22,60
Ballard,Martha,12
presidential election of 1796
political cacophony of,16 political leaders' central role,12-13
Stuart,Gilbert,18
institutionalization of ongoing national debate,15-16
alternate possible outcomes,5
historical explanation,realistic approach to,215-20
Virginia-writ-large myth,78-9,161 Voltaire,109,139
presidential election of 1800,203,208-10 Adams,Henry,40,44,195
Madison's views on,57-60,62,64
XYZ Affair,189-90,196
Constitutional Convention,52,121,130,132,165,212,213
Rush's correspondence with,214-22
mythology surrounding,120-1
reactions to,159-60
Rush,Benjamin,4-5,114,124,167,168,180,183,188,213,237
on Gerry,188
Alien and Sedition Acts,199-200
decision-making process,150
see also Adams-Jefferson correspondence;Adams-Jefferson relationship;Jefferson-Madison collaboration
Cicero,6,42,123
Rights of Man,The(Paine),139,169
Adams's sense of betrayal,207
Adams-Jefferson relationship,comparison with,171-2 bipartisan effort regarding Adams presidency and,182-3
presidential election of 1800,202-3,205
Islam's enslavement of Christians and,111-12
Schuyler,Philip,40
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions,199-201
Jefferson's vision of,246-7
Adams and,165,217,218
Washington's Farewell Address,123,148,149,150-4,157
Hemings affair,201-2,209
“original intentions”issue,88-97
see also Washington's Farewell Address;Washington's retirement
Gallatin,Albert,191
tradition of retirement and,123-4
American Daily Advertiser,12199lib•net
“Founding Fathers” myth,12
stature of,108-10
funding of the domestic debt,55-7,61
Page,John,87
Adams's nonmythologized account of,215-18,242-3,247-8
target audience,157
Sectional Compromise,94,95,98,111
Butler,Pierce,92
Washington,D.C.,75-6,79,161
Adams and,124,125,175,217
dreams,reports on,214-15
ideological debate over,13-15,145-6
Tolstoy,Leo,216
slavery debate,83,109,110-13
Washington's retirement age and health reasons,124-5
Bill of Rights,53
consolidation assumption issue and,58,59,63-4
American Revolution and,89
assumption issue,51,68—9;Compromise of 1790,48-51,72,73-4
blacks Washington's attitude toward,158
Jefferson's leadership role,183
secession assumption issue and,77,80
viability of a national emancipation policy in 1790,105-8,118-19,262n 36
Cooper,Charles,32
vice presidency of,166-7
death and funeral,26
Adams,Thomas Boylston,194
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions,199-201
“enlightened perversity” style,195 erratic habits,214,218
American Philosophical Society,170
interpretation of revolutionary era and the early republic,13-14
property rights,91
Canada,132 Carroll,Charles,246
Necker,Jacques,61
factionalism of revolutionaries,15
trusting nature,64-5
Benezet,Anthony,110
abolitionist movement,see slavery debate Adams,Abigail,3,17,163,164,206
Pennsylvania Avenue,75
House of Representatives assumption issue,50,57
as prophecy accompanied by advice,155 publication of,121
Bayard,James,26
Washington's retirement and,122
Boone,Daniel,120
Adams's motives,223-4
Treaty of Paris(1783),136
Callender,James,198,201,208-9
Native Americans,12,100,133,226
residency issue,70-1,72,74,75-6;Compromise of 1790,48,49-50,72,73
Lee,Robert E.,131
interpretation of revolutionary era and the early republic,14
peace delegations to France,184
Jefferson's apology,238
Roosevelt,Franklin Delano,122
see also Federalists;Republicans
political parties,15,162,186-7,204,210,230-1
Compromise of 1790,48-50,72,73
presidential form of address,168
insurrections,fears about,87
Duer,William,65,256n 27
funding of the domestic debt,56
Burrs challenge to Hamilton,35-6
American Revolution,134
Alien and Sedition Acts,191
War of 1812,135,227
nonviolent conflict within revolutionary generation,39-40
as threat to American nation,44,45-6
Franklins memorial service,119
residency issue,50,69-71,72 slavery debate,81-8,96-101,112-13,116-18
total emancipation,southern concerns about,82
Hamilton's proposal,57
expansion of slavery into the West,87,90,91,92,93-4
verbal prowess,225-7
Mecklenburg Declaration,242
Republican opposition,160-1
Madison,James,8,17,66,68,155,163,164
anti-dueling crusade following,39
on political parties,186,210,230-1
as justification for strong executive leadership,155
Missouri Compromise,240
Catiline,42-3
memorial service for,119
Randolph,John,35
Courier of New Hampshire,121
Baldwin,Abraham,85-6
vice presidency,views on,167
Jefferson-Madison campaign against,195-201,228-30
slavery debate,278n 60
slavery debate,112-13,240-1
Smith,Adam,61
secession issue,93,97,105,115
presidency of,185-201,204-5
American nationhood,origins of,10
Napoleon I of France,131,135,185,202,237,238
Burr,Aaron,17,18-19,53,175
Adams and,22,37,41,193-4,203,206-7,214,218
monarchical tendencies,127,139
Washington's Farewell Address and,157-8
André,Maj. John,132
War and Peace(Tolstoy),216
libel law,45,254n 42
owner compensation plans,86-7,89,92,106-7,262nn 38,39 petitions for abolition presented to Congress,81-3,118
slavery debate,82-3,87,91,94,95,113-18,119,158
Alien and Sedition Acts,190-1,193,199-200,201,229,273n 50
historical perspective for understanding,6-8
Franklin and,165,217,218
Cato(Addison),139
Pickering,Timothy,44,192
dinner-table bargain,48-50,51,73
Monroe,James,50,51,123,174,198
Bache,Benjamin Franklin,126,146,160,191,198
slavery debate and,93,97,105,115
rise to political domination,202-4
Prospect Before Us,The(Callender),198
Jefferso九*九*藏*书*网n's views on,50-1,73-4
social equality and the role of elites,231,233-7
Cincinnatus,123
revolutionary era and the early republic American nationhood,origins of,10 assets of the new nation,10-11
“sovereignty of each generation” idea,54-5
on Hamilton,194
Peale,Charles Willson,18
Hamilton's thoughts about,22-3,25,26,37-8
presidential election of 1800,41,42,43,203,205,208-11
Jays Treaty agreement,136-7
England,see Great Britain
executive leadership,approach to,188,190,194-5
census of 1790,102-4
“General Wolfe's Song,”36
J.Q.Adams's leadership of abolitionist movement,278n 60
Embargo Act of 1807,212
political elitism and,237
Virgil,123
funding of the domestic debt,55-6,61-2,64
Washington's Farewell Address,123,148-9
as executive concern following congressional passage,74-6
funding of the domestic debt,55-7,61-2,64
Hamilton,Philip,24
Constitution,13
core meaning,40,45-7
Monroe's assurances to,146
imperialism,12
Hamilton's alleged suicidal intentions,37
Fauchet,Joseph,147
beginning of retirement correspondence,220-3
slavery debate,8,11,12,17-18,248
liabilities of the new nation,11 as most crucial period in American history,11-12
Calhoun,John C.,94,241
Clinton,George,40
Smith,Abigail Adams,37
Discourses on Davila(Adams),168,169,170,218
long-term effects,80
Congress,U.S.,see House of Representatives;Senate
Sectional Compromise,94
Circular Letter of 1783,133-4
as improvisational affair,5,216
Pennsylvania Abolition Society,83,110
Federalists' attitude toward,149
Washington's policy toward,158-9
Hartford Convention of 1815,44
racial dimension,99-101,102-3,261n 35
natural rights,10
Hamilton and,22,37,41,193-4,203,206-7,214,218
New Army,21,193-4,199,202
“Address to the Cherokee Nation,”158-9
Warren,Mercy Otis,13,180,213-14
Jefferson-Madison collaboration and,80
Hamilton's answer to objections,62
Jefferson's advocacy of,200-1
character of,54,171-2
residency issue congressional debate,69-71,72
American Revolution,account of,215-18,242-3,247-8
funding of the domestic debt,56
Liberia,107
Senate,69,137
Lewis and Clark expedition,71
odd-couple status,163
Great Britain,condemnation of,143
Pinckney's Treaty,267n 35
on presidential election of 1796,178
invasion of Canada during American Revolution,proposed,132
Hosack,David,21,23,25,26,28,29,31
Gettysburg Address,10,122
Tudor,William,240
Proclamation of Neutrality(1793),135
Washington's Farewell Address,123 authentic meaning,means for understanding,129
Hamilton's final hours,26
public's perception of,26-7 rules of,23,24
oratory in,174
in Adams-Jefferson correspondence,239-42
political downfall,203
Louisiana Purchase,74,212,241
departure from office,160
political skills,53-4,113
Hamilton,Alexander,13,14,17,52,132,155,163,164,187,198
Mifflin,Warner,97-8
Jefferson-Madison collaboration,comparison with,171-2
abolitionist position,91-2
Aurora(newspaper),126,146,160,190,198
peace delegations to France,180,185-6,188-90,191-5,197,202
Jefferson's views on,51,68-9
Articles of Confederation,7,8,52,138
diplomatic appointment,189
Federalist orientation prior to 1790,54-5
conspiracy theory regarding Federalist takeover of government,139-41,147
Browere,John Henri,245
Jefferson's congratulatory letter to Adams,178
Alien and Sedition Acts,190-1,193,201
Ames,Fisher,59,72,116,118,123,180
long-standing conflict between Burr and Hamilton,40-6
European affairs,misunderstanding of,219
Compromise of 1790 and,116 congressional debate,83-8,96-101,112-13;rejection of right to end slavery,115-18
self-deception,capacity for,197-8,210-11,219-20
last will and testament,158
republican paradigm,6
detachment from American developments while in Paris,65-7
Adams's correspondence with,123-4,166,170,171,174-5,176-7,178,181,184,185,192,193
serious or mortal injury,unlikelihood of,24
Martin,Luther,92,94-5
Burr-Hamilton duel,18-19,20-1,60
Jefferson's failed attempt at reconciliation,207-10
see also Jefferson-Madison collaboration Marshall,John,199lib•net4,53,155,191
Burke,Aedanus,84
candor of,18
politics,distaste for,67-8
ideological warfare,186-7
Jay,John,52,77,136' 137,152-3
presidential election of 1796,163,175-8
residency issue,69,75-6
Abigail Adams and,see under Adorns,Abigail
abolition in northern states,89-90
French Revolution,142-3,170,175,202,219
dishonorable behavior,accusations of,208-11
Priestley,Joseph,228
diffusions victory over consolidation,79-80
debt problem,170-1
Jays Treaty,157,138,175
Abigail Adams and,177,178,207-10,211,230
physical appearance,124
Rutledge,John,92-3
retirement in 1793,171,218-19
bipartisan effort regarding Adams presidency,178-85
slavery debate and,86,88-9
judicial appointments,208
Talleyrand,Charles,189,194,196,197
First Inaugural Address,128
national unity message,128,130—1,148-9,154-6
Massachusetts Constitution,165
see also Adams-Jefferson correspondence Addison,Joseph,139 African Americans,see blacks
Alien and Sedition Acts,190,191
peace delegations to France,180,183,189,192-3,194
as historical record,223,244
Adams-Jefferson relationship,17
Coxe,Tench,72
Adams's attitude toward,239
Wythe,George,67
enlarged federal power,program for,156-7,269n 64 final message to Congress,156-7,269n 64 final years at Mount Vernon,160-1
Jefferson,Thomas,3,4,11,14,16,17,57,58,60,70,71,101,123,127,128,155,165
as argument between competing versions of the revolutionary legacy,227-42
Madison's views,113-15
composition of,148-53
illness of 1790,66,124-5
foreign policy,142-3,202
death of,243
electoral vote,177-8,181
Compromise of 1790
slavery debate and,89
breakdown of,169-71,188
Jefferson's views,90,99,106
Hamilton's wound,25
American Revolution,vision of,246-7
Hamilton and,37,41
Life of George Washington,The(Marshall),14
presidential form of address,167-8
see also slavery debate
Washington's intentions,128,147-8
peace delegations to France,188—9,197
Virginia-writ-large myth and,78-9
Morris,Gouverneur,26,92
Declaration of Independence,composition of,212-13,216,242
Sedgwick,Theodore,191-2
Lincoln,Abraham,10,16,156,241
constitutional government,efforts on behalf of,52-3
presidency of,212
consolidation issue,108
gradual emancipation plans,103,103-8,262n 39 historical perspective on,88
background,22
“ideology,” 238-9
on social equality and the role of elites,231,233-7
first indications of,123
Jefferson-Madison campaign against,195-201,228-30
George Ⅲ of Great Britain,68,130,163,175
minutes of secret deliberations,137
legendary status,39-40 location of,23
Rumbold,Col. Richard,246-7
Federalists' attitude toward,149
downfall of,202-4
proslavery argument,85,92-3,97-102,261n 34
on Washington's physical decline,125
Federalist Papers,The,17,52,54,55,61,164 Federalists,149,162
presidential election of 1796,173-4,178
Jefferson's “dishonorable”behavior,208-11
Destutt de Tracy,Antoine,238
Smith,John,71
economic philosophy,60-5
see also French headings
background,164
Washington and,120-1
Washington,George,11,14,17,43,51,53,60,70,71,89,163,164,165,184,197
New Army,193-4,202
presidential election of 1796,173
slavery debate and,116
Randolph,Edmund,60,66,96,146-7
Randolph,Thomas Jefferson,245
Jefferson's defamation of Adams,198,211,228
“quasi-war” with United States,156,185,192,202,205
constitutional settlement,importance of,8-10
Harrison,Benjamin,5
reconciliation under Rush's influence,218,220-2
Paine,Tom,3,5,126,139,169,207
Supreme Court appointment,208
Adams's satirical account of,220
partisan campaign against Adams presidency,195-201,228-30
New York Manumission Society,113
Smith,Venture,12
American Revolution military command,130-3,135
“monarchist” label,167-9 nepotism charge against,189
as Adams's presidential adviser,188,190
preliminary negotiations,72-3
Declaration of Independence and,86,88-9
Adams,John,3,14,17,59,67,79,101,109,123
Pinckney,Charles Cotesworth,92,95
Gerry,Elbridge,5,86-7,180
vision for American nation,7,133-4
Taylor,John,236
Whiskey Rebellion,140-1,145
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