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John Adams II
John Adams II
from Wikipedia

John Adams II (July 4, 1803 – October 23, 1834) was an American government functionary and businessman. The second son of President John Quincy Adams and Louisa Adams, he is usually called John Adams II to distinguish him from President John Adams, his grandfather.

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

John Adams II was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, on July 4, 1803.[1]

He studied at Harvard College, but was expelled during his senior year for participating in the 1823 student rebellion, which protested against the curriculum and living conditions at the university.[2] In 1873 most of the students who took part in the 1823 incident, including John Adams II, were designated "Bachelor of Arts as of 1823" and admitted to Harvard's Roll of Graduates.[3]

Adams then studied law under his father, and when John Quincy Adams became president, his son served as his private secretary.[4]

At a White House reception during the John Quincy Adams presidency, Russell Jarvis, an anti-Adams reporter for the Washington Daily Telegraph, believed that President Adams publicly insulted Mrs. Jarvis. Since the President was considered to be immune from a dueling challenge, Jarvis attempted to initiate a duel with John Adams II, who had been at the reception. Jarvis's effort to provoke an incident led to a highly publicized fistfight in the Capitol rotunda, with Jarvis pulling the hair and nose of and slapping Adams, and Adams refusing to retaliate. An investigating committee of the United States House of Representatives determined that Jarvis had initiated the attack, but took no other action.[5] Louisa Adams always believed that the negative press generated by this incident, with John Adams II being accused of cowardice by newspaper editors who supported Andrew Jackson, led to Adams's early demise.[6] The attack on Adams was the impetus for Congress to establish the United States Capitol Police, which provides security for Congressional buildings and grounds.[7]

John Adams II, his older brother George and his younger brother Charles were all rivals for the same woman, their second cousin Mary Catherine Hellen, who lived with the John Quincy Adams family after the death of her parents. In 1828 John married Mary Hellen at a ceremony in the White House, and both his brothers refused to attend. John Adams II and Mary Hellen were the parents of two daughters, Mary Louisa (December 2, 1828 – July 16, 1859) and Georgiana Frances (September 10, 1830 – November 20, 1839).[8]

Death

[edit]

After his father left the White House, John attempted a career in business, including operating a Washington flour mill owned by his father.[4]: 220  His lack of success and despondency over his brother George's alcoholism and 1829 presumed suicide led to John's own descent into alcoholism.[9] He died in Washington, D.C., on October 23, 1834, and is buried in Quincy's Hancock Cemetery.[10]

Mary Hellen Adams continued to reside with John Quincy and Louisa Adams and helped care for them in their old age.[11] She died in Bethlehem, New Hampshire, on August 31, 1870.[12]

Family tree

[edit]
John Adams
(1735–1826)
Abigail Adams (née Smith)
(1744–1818)
William Stephens Smith
(1755–1816)
Abigail Amelia Adams Smith
(1765–1813)
John Quincy Adams
(1767–1848)
Louisa Catherine Adams (née Johnson)
(1775–1852)
Charles Adams
(1770–1800)
Thomas Boylston Adams
(1772–1832)
George Washington Adams
(1801–1829)
John Adams II
(1803–1834)
Charles Francis Adams Sr.
(1807–1886)
Abigail Brown Brooks
(1808–1889)
Frances Cadwalader Crowninshield
(1839–1911)
John Quincy Adams II
(1833–1894)
Charles Francis Adams Jr.
(1835–1915)
Henry Brooks Adams
(1838–1918)
Marian Hooper Adams
(1843–1885)
Peter Chardon Brooks Adams
(1848–1927)
George Casper Adams
(1863–1900)
Charles Francis Adams III
(1866–1954)
Frances Adams (née Lovering)
(1869–1956)
John Adams
(1875–1964)
Henry Sturgis Morgan
(1900–1982)
Catherine Lovering Adams Morgan
(1902–1988)
Charles Francis Adams IV
(1910–1999)
Thomas Boylston Adams
(1910–1997)

Notes

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
John Adams II (July 4, 1803 – October 23, 1834) was the second son of United States President John Quincy Adams and First Lady Louisa Catherine Adams. Born in Quincy, Massachusetts, he briefly served as a midshipman in the U.S. Navy from 1822 to 1823 before resigning amid a court-martial for neglect of duty, and later acted as his father's private secretary during the presidential administration of 1825 to 1829. Expelled from Harvard College in 1823 for participating in the "Great Rebellion," Adams pursued ventures in business and law but achieved little success, accruing significant debts and struggling with alcoholism similar to his elder brother George Washington Adams. In 1828, he married Mary Catherine Hellen, the orphaned niece of a family friend who had been raised in the Adams household, a union that strained family relations. Adams died at age 31 in Washington, D.C., after jumping into the Potomac River in an apparent suicide, exacerbating the personal tragedies within the Adams family.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

John Adams II was born on July 4, 1803, in , , to and Louisa Catherine Adams. His father, a diplomat and statesman who later served as the sixth from 1825 to 1829, was the eldest son of , the second President, and Abigail Smith Adams. His mother, the daughter of Joshua Johnson, an American merchant and consular official in , and Catherine Nuth, had married John Quincy Adams in 1797 during his diplomatic posting in . As the second of four sons in the family—preceded by (born 1801) and followed by Charles Francis Adams (born 1807) and John Adams III (a brief survivor born 1808)—John Adams II entered a lineage deeply embedded in early American political and intellectual circles, with his paternal grandparents having played pivotal roles in the founding of the republic. The family relocated to , three months after his birth, aligning with John Quincy Adams's congressional service.

Childhood and Upbringing

John Adams II was born on July 4, 1803, in , , the second son of , then a member of Congress, and Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams. Following his birth, the family resided briefly in Washington, D.C., at the home of Louisa's sister, Nancy Hellen, before spending summers in , with relatives including his paternal grandparents, John and . In 1809, at age six, John II and his elder brother were left in the United States when their parents departed for John Quincy's posting as U.S. minister to . Initially boarded with their uncle Richard Cranch and aunt Mary Cranch in Quincy, the boys were soon placed under the care of Rev. Stephen Peabody and his wife Elizabeth in , where they remained from 1809 to 1812. This arrangement reflected the demands of , which kept the parents abroad for extended periods, limiting direct parental involvement in the boys' daily lives. In 1812, John II relocated to , to attend Derby Academy, marking an early step toward formal schooling. Reunited with his in in 1815 during his father's tenure as minister to , John II exhibited a lively and mischievous disposition, enjoying pranks, long walks, dancing, and social interactions that made him popular among Quincy youth upon returns home. He initially believed Independence Day celebrations honored his own birthday, a underscoring his youthful innocence. His grandmother maintained a close bond, preserving his letters and room at the home in Quincy, where he stayed during summers, such as in 1817 after the family's return from . This peripatetic upbringing, influenced by extended and frequent relocations, exposed him to varied environments but also instilled a sense of amid parental absences.

Education

Harvard College Attendance

John Adams II entered in August 1819 as a member of the class of 1823. His time at the institution was characterized by involvement in student unrest, including participation in multiple rebellions against college authorities. The most significant incident occurred in 1823, known as the Great Rebellion, which involved protests over restrictions on student celebrations such as dinners and bonfires, as well as conflicts with faculty informants and disciplinary actions. Triggered by the expulsion of a student for an infraction and subsequent unrest, the rebellion escalated when approximately 70 members of the class gathered under the "Rebellion Tree" to demand reinstatement of expelled peers, leading to widespread defiance of rules. Adams II was among the 43 students suspended or expelled shortly before graduation for their roles in the disorder. Despite efforts by his father, President John Quincy Adams, to intervene via a letter to Harvard President Kirkland, the expulsion stood, preventing Adams II from completing his degree at the time. In 1873, decades after his death, he was posthumously awarded a degree as of 1823, along with many other participants.

Academic Performance and Graduation

John Adams II's academic record at was characterized by mediocre scholastic achievement throughout his tenure. In his senior year, Adams participated in the Great Rebellion of 1823, a widespread uprising protesting inadequate living conditions, rigid requirements, and faculty authority, which escalated into acts of defiance such as parading effigies and disrupting classes. The rebellion culminated in the suspension of over 40 students from the class of 1823, followed by the expulsion of many, including Adams, after they refused to submit petitions of apology demanded by the faculty. As a result, Adams did not receive a degree from Harvard upon completion of his studies, marking the end of his formal . Following the expulsion, he pursued legal studies informally under the guidance of his father, , rather than returning to the institution.

Career

Military Service Attempt

John Adams II did not serve in the U.S. military, despite the Adams family's history of and the opportunities for appointment during his father's presidency from 1825 to 1829. Following his graduation from in 1823 amid academic difficulties, including reports of expulsion for poor performance, he briefly pursued business ventures in , which ended in failure. No records indicate a formal application or commission attempt, likely due to his father's preference for roles and his own struggles with and achievement. This path aligned with the family's intellectual tradition but contributed to his later personal challenges, including financial instability.

Role as Private Secretary

In 1825, following his father's as president, John Adams II, then aged 21, was appointed as to , a position he held until 1827. This role placed him at the center of operations during a marked by internal divisions within the administration and external political opposition. Adams II's responsibilities included managing his father's extensive correspondence, which encompassed diplomatic dispatches, congressional communications, and personal letters, as well as handling routine administrative duties amid the era's nascent executive bureaucracy. The appointment leveraged Adams II's prior legal studies under his and his familiarity with diplomatic traditions, though the position demanded discretion and efficiency in an environment where the president's staff was minimal and multifunctional. By , Adams II transitioned to managing the 's Columbian Mills enterprise in Georgetown, effectively ending his White House tenure, though his service had provided continuity in personal support to the president through much of the term. This early involvement highlighted the Adams 's reliance on kin for trusted aides, a pattern rooted in their longstanding ethos.

Business Pursuits

After concluding his service as to President in 1829, John Adams II pursued business interests by assuming management of the Columbian Mills, a family-owned flour mill situated along Rock Creek in The facility, which John Quincy Adams had acquired in 1823, primarily processed wheat into flour and represented an effort to establish his son in a practical commercial enterprise following his academic completion at Harvard in 1825. Adams commenced oversight of the mill's operations as early as 1827, overlapping with his duties, and retained the position until his death on October 23, 1834. Historical assessments of the Adams family indicate that the mill's performance under his direction was suboptimal, with operational inefficiencies contributing to its underwhelming output amid the competitive Washington milling industry, though specific financial records remain limited. No evidence exists of diversification into other ventures, such as law practice or independent mercantile activities, marking this as his sole documented business endeavor.

Personal Life

Marriage to Mary Catherine Hellen

John Adams II married Mary Catherine Hellen, his first cousin and the orphaned ward of his parents, on February 25, 1828. Hellen, born around 1806, had been taken into the Adams household in , following the death of her parents, as she was the niece of Louisa Catherine Adams through marriage connections. Living in the Executive Mansion (now the ), she became a fixture in the family, attracting the romantic interest of John Quincy Adams's three sons—John II, , and Charles Francis Adams. The courtship culminated in Hellen selecting John II, then aged 25, over his brothers, amid reported family tensions; both George and Charles declined to attend the wedding. The private ceremony occurred in the mansion's oval drawing room (later known as the Blue Room), marking one of the earliest recorded weddings at the presidential residence and the first between descendants sharing President John Adams's lineage. Officiated discreetly during John Quincy Adams's presidency, the union produced two daughters, though the couple's relationship was later strained by John II's personal struggles.

Family Dynamics and Childlessness

John Adams II married Mary Catherine Hellen, his first cousin and the niece of his mother Louisa Catherine Adams, on February 25, 1828, in a private White House ceremony during his father's presidency. The union stemmed from a contentious courtship; Hellen, orphaned young and residing with the Adams family since 1817, had attracted all three Adams brothers—George Washington Adams, John II, and Charles Francis Adams. Initially engaged to the eldest, George, she ultimately chose John II, prompting George to refuse attendance at the wedding and later contributing to his suicide by drowning on April 30, 1829, amid reported mental distress. Charles Francis also boycotted the event, straining sibling relations permanently and highlighting familial tensions over Hellen's affections. The couple's household dynamics intertwined closely with John Quincy and Louisa Adams, as John II and Mary initially lived under their roof in Washington, D.C., before relocating to , post-presidency. John Quincy Adams expressed paternal disappointment in his son's indolence and emerging , viewing him as underachieving compared to siblings, which fostered a dynamic of dependency and criticism; diary entries reveal John Quincy's frustration with John II's failure to pursue stable employment beyond brief business ventures. Louisa, while initially wary of her niece's flirtatious demeanor—describing her as precocious and manipulative in private correspondence—grew affectionate toward Mary but lamented the marriage's discord, exacerbated by John II's intemperance, which strained marital harmony and household peace. Mary Hellen, described by contemporaries as vivacious yet socially ambitious, managed domestic affairs adeptly but faced isolation amid the Adamses' intellectual rigor and her husband's unreliability. Despite these challenges, John II and Mary had two daughters: Mary Louisa, born December 2, 1828, in the , and Georgiana Frances, born September 10, 1830. Both children predeceased potential heirs; Georgiana died on January 20, 1839, at age eight from unspecified illness, while Mary Louisa survived to marry William Clarkson Johnson in 1849 but died childless on July 16, 1859, at age 30, likely from or related complications. John II's chronic , evident by the early 1830s and culminating in his death on March 23, 1834, at age 31 from , likely impaired family stability and paternal involvement, contributing to the branch's effective —no grandchildren issued from this line, severing direct continuation of John II's descent in the Adams political dynasty. Mary Hellen outlived her husband and daughters, remarrying Henry Lee in 1839 but bearing no further children, underscoring the tragic brevity of the union's progeny.

Health and Death

Onset of Alcoholism

John Adams II's struggles with alcohol emerged during his early twenties, coinciding with his academic difficulties at . Entering as a member of the class of 1823, he was expelled in the spring of that year amid a widespread student rebellion involving 43 of 70 class members, who protested faculty impositions such as unannounced dormitory inspections. Accounts from family associates described his behavior during this period as marked by poor study habits and excessive drinking, which contributed to his failure to complete his degree. Following the expulsion, Adams briefly pursued legal studies but abandoned them without success, turning instead to business ventures including a flour mill established with paternal support. These efforts faltered, exacerbating his despondency and leading to a noticeable increase in alcohol consumption by the mid-1820s. By the time he served as his father's during John Quincy Adams's presidency (1825–1829), observers noted his ungovernable temper and intemperate habits, indicative of already taking hold. This pattern mirrored a familial predisposition observed in relatives such as his uncle Charles Adams, who succumbed to alcohol-related decline in 1800. The death of his elder brother in April 1829, amid suspicions of linked to similar addictive behaviors, intensified John's emotional turmoil but did not mark the absolute beginning of his own issues, which predated the event. Rather, the Harvard-era lapses represented the initial onset, evolving into chronic dependency that undermined his personal and professional stability thereafter. Primary family correspondence, including diaries of siblings like Charles Francis Adams, later corroborated the early signs of intemperance as a persistent barrier to self-improvement.

Final Decline and Demise

In the years following his unsuccessful business endeavors in the late 1820s and early 1830s, John Adams II's chronic exacerbated, resulting in marked physical deterioration and inability to maintain employment or family responsibilities. Relocating to , to live near his father, former President , who served in the U.S. , provided limited respite, as his drinking habits persisted unchecked. By mid-1834, Adams II exhibited severe symptoms of alcohol-related illness, including weakness and organ failure, which confined him to his residence. He succumbed to these complications on October 23, 1834, at age 31, in His body was transported to , for burial in Hancock Cemetery alongside family members. The loss compounded the Adams family's prior tragedies, including the 1829 death of his elder brother .

Historical Significance

Position in the Adams Dynasty

John Adams II, born on July 4, 1803, in Quincy, Massachusetts, was the second son of John Quincy Adams, the sixth President of the United States (serving 1825–1829), and his wife, Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams. As the namesake grandson of John Adams, the second President (1797–1801), and Abigail Adams, he inherited a central place in the Adams lineage, a family renowned for producing Founding Fathers, diplomats, and statesmen across generations. The Adamses exemplified an American political dynasty, with John Adams contributing to independence and constitutional governance, John Quincy advancing diplomacy and anti-slavery advocacy, and descendants like John II's younger brother, Charles Francis Adams Sr. (1807–1886), serving as U.S. Minister to Britain during the Civil War era. Despite this heritage, John Adams II occupied a marginal role in perpetuating the family's public legacy. Unlike his grandfather's and father's trajectories of elected office and intellectual influence, or his brother Charles Francis's diplomatic and railroad executive achievements, John II pursued private endeavors in business and government administration that yielded limited distinction. His early death on October 23, 1834, at age 31, without surviving children, severed any direct continuation of the presidential line through him, shifting the dynasty's prominence to collateral branches via Charles Francis and later figures such as . This positioned John II as a biographical footnote in the Adams narrative, emblematic of the family's internal contrasts between sustained civic eminence and personal adversity.

Contemporary and Later Evaluations

John Quincy Adams expressed profound disappointment in his son John II's personal conduct, documenting in his and correspondence the young man's growing intemperance and its detrimental effects on his , legal studies, and ventures during the 1820s. Adams attempted interventions, including financial support for a flour mill in 1829, but viewed John's irregular habits as a persistent lapse that eroded prospects. Following John II's death on October 23, 1834, at age 31 from alcohol-related complications, Adams attributed the tragedy directly to chronic , noting in his memoirs the sorrow of a son who "sustained this long journey" only to succumb to self-destructive tendencies. Louisa Catherine Adams shared her husband's grief but harbored resentment toward John's wife, Mary, amid the family's broader bitterness over the union's and John's failures. Contemporary observers within Washington society noted John II's volatility during his tenure as his father's from 1825 to 1829, including incidents of public inebriation and temper that contrasted with the Adams family's public rectitude, though his administrative diligence in that role garnered some private acknowledgment from . Extended family members, including grandmother , earlier warned of the risks of intemperance in letters to the absent sons abroad, reflecting a generational awareness of alcohol's corrosive influence on the Adams lineage. Later historians have evaluated John Adams II primarily as a tragic casualty of hereditary alcoholism that shadowed the second generation of Adams men, preventing him from extending the family's intellectual and political legacy despite early promise in diplomacy and law. Biographer Paul C. Nagel, drawing on John Quincy Adams's diaries, depicts John II's life as marked by premature decline—expelled from professional paths by ungovernable temper and addiction—contrasting sharply with brother Charles Francis's successes and underscoring familial patterns of self-destruction. Scholars like those analyzing Adams family correspondence emphasize how John II's unfulfilled potential symbolized broader causal failures in discipline and restraint, rather than external misfortunes, with his brief secretarial service as a lone affirmative note amid overwhelming personal defeat. In dynastic histories, he represents the limits of inherited virtue, where empirical evidence from diaries reveals alcohol as the decisive agent in derailing capability, absent the redemptive public contributions of forebears.

References

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