John Adams (1797-1801)

Approval Rate: 54%

54%Approval ratio

Reviews 32

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  • by

    jr1990

    Wed Dec 10 2008

    Adams was very unpopular during his presidency, many considered his time as president a failure. But as time passed, his precidency is now looked as a success. He prevented us from going to war with France, which was the right decision.

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    michael3722

    Fri Sep 19 2008

    In 1796, Adams denounced the deism of political opponent Thomas Paine, saying, "The Christian religion is, above all the religions that ever prevailed or existed in ancient or modern times, the religion of wisdom, virtue, equity and humanity, let the Blackguard Paine say what he will."

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    claire9018

    Thu Sep 18 2008

    A man of honor, integrity, and love for his country. A true Statesman. One of my favorites.

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    astromike

    Thu Sep 18 2008

    One of our founding fathers,  for that alone he gets 4 stars!  He was a man of diginity. I also found the recent HBO series based on him VERY interesting!!  Also an interesting note;  he had quite a longevity, he lived to be 90 years old.

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    billyguns2

    Fri Aug 22 2008

    Adams the father was vain, pig-headed and extremist in his views while he was president; he certainly deserved to be defeated by Jefferson. The Alien & Sedition Acts, which made it a crime to speak against Adams and the government, was a dangerous forerunner of the notorious Patriot Act of our day. In fairness, he was a great patriot, built the U.S. Navy, and became much more reasonable after he left office; his letters to Jefferson are a wonder. Miraculously, they died om the same day: July 4, 1826!

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    michael_jenkins

    Wed Jul 23 2008

    He was misunderstood, the only bad thing he did was sign the aline and sedition act, but he did it to stop a war

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    brenden

    Wed Jun 25 2008

    His accomplishments go unnoticed between both his sucessor and precessor.

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    myspace_30849171

    Tue May 06 2008

    Made some unpopular decisions, but at the time it was what the people wanted. Time is being kinder to this man who loved laws. Made George Washington the central figure we know of today. He was a very "behind the scenes" sort of man who hated politics (he was with Washington on the no party thing) but loved his country and the law. Always was worried about doing the right thing, not the "popular" thing. Unfortunately, when he was in office, his cabinet was more often worried about the opposite... He is wrongly judged.

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    dlf67ff7

    Tue May 06 2008

    Best of the early bunch, since at least he wasn't hypocritical enough to own slaves while crowing about "1 Man, 1 Vote." But loses a point for disowning a family member for not being him.

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    chalky

    Fri Oct 05 2007

    I'll always remember his last words: "Don't taze me, bro!"

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    genghisthehun

    Thu Mar 01 2007

    He had a hard act to follow and had Jefferson stabbing him in the back at every opportunity. He really did a good job with the world at war at the time. The historians are treating him very kindly.

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    lion_in_winter

    Thu Apr 27 2006

    Disliked my many in his time, including many in congress, Adams had a keen intellect, and is vastly underated- being a better President then Monroe or Jackson.

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    callitdownthel_ine75

    Wed Apr 05 2006

    Any man who would have been sandwiched between George Washington and Thomas Jefferson would have failed by comparison. Such is the case of John Adams, who by this standard, ought to be deemed unfortunate and tragic for this. Yes, Adams has been ridiculed by today's historians for his support for the Alien and Sedition Acts. And yes, he had a cold and somewhat-distant personality. But his contribution to the United States can never be questioned as he stood his ground against France- and in the process was able to secure relative peace. His biggest contribution (which he later acknowledged approvingly) was appointing his brilliant Secretary of State, John Marshall, as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. For this, he may have done more to help the United States than any other in American law and jurisprudence.

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    malmsey71

    Thu Dec 01 2005

    Adams was one of the great heroes of the move toward American independence and revolution; of that there is no debate. But despite recent attempts by apologist historians, his presidency can only be seen as a failure. Adams was one of a then-dying breed of statesmen who had no stomach for democracy. The Sedition Act, a blatant affront to the First Amendment, was borne out of Federalist fear that the Jeffersonians, if they rose to power, would give power to the common rabble and undermine rule by the learned aristocracy, who (they felt) knew better than the average American how to govern. Federalists like Adams and Hamilton thought that Americans should leave governing up to them; they would have been just as happy setting up an aristocratic system of rule by appointed elites. Jefferson and Madison, meanwhile, believed in the wisdom of the people to govern themselves and make intelligent decisions at the polls about which leaders should represent them. Adams, quite simply, was on the wr... Read more

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    chagoth

    Wed Jul 27 2005

    Seems many are ranking Adams based on his entire life which is not what we are supposed to be doing here. We should be rating Adams based soley upon his presidency. And he was a poor president. When you have the Alien and Sedition Acts synonymous with your presidency, you don't qualify as a very good president, do you? If I were to rank all forty-two presidents from best to worst, Adams would probably shake out around twenty-nine or thirty.

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    dhgjdlr

    Sun Jul 10 2005

    Terribbly underated as a president. Although everyone knows who Adams is and what he did in Congress they don't what he did in the presidency. Kinda like Ulysses Grant accept in war. This was a guy, who when the nation was burning for war, which would clearly of destroyed the U.S, did the unpopular thing and made peace. If he had made war with France he would have guarantingly been relected as president, as well as been one of the most popular U.S. icons of today.

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    mr_democratic

    Sat May 21 2005

    Not the best President, but better then a whole lot of others.

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    drbowler

    Sat Feb 26 2005

    I respect Adams, but he signed the Alien and Sedation acts. He may have been a good peacekeeper worldwide, but not at home

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    feef45f7

    Sat Jan 29 2005

    If you are interested in John Adams and the amazing period of time when power was handed over to the next president for the first time ever in America (with no violence either! - amazing) check out the David McCullough biography. It is a good read.

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    cjund9fa

    Thu Jan 06 2005

    Adams laudable personal qualities _ he never owned aslave _ must be balanced against his abuse of power during his failed presidency. Five stars and one star balance out to three.

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    onehungrymonst_er

    Mon Aug 23 2004

    Not the best of Presidents, but at least he was able to stay out of the France-Britain conflict.

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    john_mccain

    Sun Jun 27 2004

    Overated, abused power.

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    anonymous

    Sun Apr 04 2004

    John Adams kept the United States out of a dangerous and costly war against France, but the there is no excuse for the Alien & Sedition Acts.

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    abichara

    Sun Mar 21 2004

    John Adams is overlooked by many historians in large part because he served between two figures who loomed very large in Presidential History, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. It can be fairly stated that Adams had a very successful and productive Presidency. He served as Vice President under George Washington and was elected to the Presidency in 1796. Adams served in a very turbulent time, but yet he managed to maintain equanimity the entire time. He was caught in the middle of many countervailing political personalities and currents. Some members of his Federalist party were itching for war with France, who supported the British. His Presidency was by and large dominated by this conflict which manifested itself through the XYZ Affair and the Alien and Sedition Acts. The XYZ Affair was a very important diplomatic correspondance that ultimately helped prevent a major war with France. Since the Revolution, the United States had a treaty with the France; it was been partially viol... Read more

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    redoedo

    Thu Nov 20 2003

    Adams is tremendously underrated and constantly overlooked by historians. He is scorned for signing the Alien and Sedition Acts, and is commonly thought to be a mediocre to terrible President. However, an objective study of Adams' Presidency proves that he responded quite well to the challenges that he faced. He took office at a time when tensions with the French were at an all time high. The French continued to harass American ships at sea. Adams first attempted to negotiate a diplomatic solution by sending three envoys to France, who were insulted and sent back to the U.S. Anti-French sentiments began to erupt throughout the country, and Adams initiated a massive naval buildup in the event of a war. Adams supported the creation of the Navy Department and the Marine Corps, and cancelled all treaties with France. With tensions at an all time high, it seemed that the United States and France were headed down a fateful road to war. Then, Adams sent an envoy to France to talk with the new... Read more

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    the_arbiter

    Sun Jun 01 2003

    Deserves great respect for being one of the founders of the US. As President he also stood up to some extent against the extreme Federalist tendencies of the times (despite being one himself), although not nearly enough. The Alien and Sedition acts were inexcusable, but he didn't personally iniate them, just failed to fight them enough. And he failed to enact the key reforms on tariffs, slavery, native American rights, and the right to property that would have led to a genuinely free country and prevented the future problems that blighted 19th century US history. I give him 3 stars as president (1 knocked off for the Alien/Sedition acts, another for no real reforms to ensure universal liberty), and an extra star for being a founding father.

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    rewinder

    Thu Apr 10 2003

    When it comes to rating Presidents, I rate them strictly on what they did in office, no before or after about it. Adams did lead a very interesting life, and accomplished a whole slew of great things before and after his Pres. term, but as President he left a lot to be desired. He rather ruthlessly stomped all over the Constitution with his Sedition acts, and his sour attitude at the time didn't help much.

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    fredwah

    Sat Dec 14 2002

    A great American and, until David McCullough wrote his book, an underated President.

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    ellajedlicka21

    Sat Sep 29 2001

    The Alien and Sedition acts are possibly the most totalitarianistic laws I've ever heard of that passed in the U.S.

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    ruby9916

    Sat Jun 16 2001

    I'm embarrassed that I gave Adams a pretty low mark before reading Ellis's book, Founding Brothers. My earlier comment was right about the Sedition Act being a huge failing on Adams' part, but now that I've done more reading about Adams, I'm struck by how prescient he was on so many topics. His "foil" Jefferson was naive on several subjects (e.g., the promise of the French revolutionaries) where Adams obviously was doing more clear-headed thinking. I'm looking forward to reading the new biography by David McCulloch, and it sounds like there may be a new national monument for Adams and his incredible wife Abigail (and perhaps for his son JQ and his cousin Sam). What a family! One more thing, I heard a speech not long ago about how Adams basically handed Jefferson what would become his ticket to immortality, the assignment of writing the Declaration of Independence. In fact, it was Adams who had been the prime mover in getting the various colonies' representatives to come around to th... Read more

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    callmetootie

    Sat Apr 07 2001

    John Adams has an extremly interesting life, and he has a great background. He seems like he was a very caring, nice man. He seems like he spent a lot of time trying to keep the world in one piece, and he was the first president to live in the white house, so he started something special there. Maybe that's why George Washington's life was such a bore.

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    bigjjf92

    Thu Feb 08 2001

    Adams Family. Very scarry.