| Rotunda:
A collection of digital scholarship from the Electronic
Imprint of the University of Virginia Press
|
The Adams Papers:
Digital Edition |
| C. James Taylor, Editor in Chief |
| ISBN 978-08139-2700-8 |
| February 2008 |
One of the outstanding documentary editions in American scholarship,
The Adams Papers collects the correspondence and other
significant papers of our nation's first great political family.
At the center, of course, is John Adams. Beginning with his early
diaries and three volumes selected from his legal papersdocumenting,
among other cases, the Boston Massacre trialsthis edition
covers Adams’s ascent from young Boston lawyer to passionate
advocate for American independence, including his time in the
Continental Congress and his drafting of the Massachusetts state
constitution (the oldest of the world’s active constitutions).
As one of the great diplomats of the era, Adams spent eight years
in Europe, called upon by his young country to negotiate treaties
with France, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Prussia, and the
Barbary States.
George Washington and, eventually, second president of the United
States. An embattled nonpartisan in an age of emerging party alliance,
his popularity and influence fluctuated dramatically with the
controversy over the XYZ Affair, Quasi-War with France, the Alien
and Sedition Acts, and conflicts with his own cabinet. During
this period in the Executive branch, he saw the movement of the
federal government from New York to Philadelphia to the District
of Columbia. The vice presidential and presidential years or executive
period of Adams’s public career will be dealt with in the
future as new print volumes are added to the digital edition shortly
after their publication.
Adams’s importance lay not only in his insistence on freedom
for America, but in his ability to show the emerging republic
what this freedom meant. To Thomas Jefferson, both friend and
rival, Adams was the “colossus of independence.”
The Papers also contains John’s frequent correspondence
with his wife Abigail, allowing the reader an uncommonly candid
view on the workings of the state, as well as Abigail’s
own observant, spirited writings. Her letters offer an invaluable
view on eighteenth-century life, from the farm and family she
often managed by herself to the war being played out on her doorstep.
Also featured are the writings of the four Adams children, including
eldest sonand sixth presidentJohn Quincy Adams.
This digital edition brings together all 30 volumes of The
Adams Papers from the founding generation that have so far
appeared in print, comprising the completed series of John Adams’s
diary and the ongoing series of family correspondence and state
papers, including three volumes carefully selected from John Adams’s
legal papers. Users may access the contents by date, series, author,
or recipient, as well as through linked cross-references. XML
technology provides the most advanced searching, including the
ability to search across all titles in Rotunda’s American
Founding Era Collection.
Rotunda
is made possible by generous grants from the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation and the President's Office of the University of Virginia
The Adams Papers Digital Edition is published in association
with the
Massachusetts
Historical Society. The print edition is published by the Harvard
University Press.