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Letters Of Love

Submitted by lindi_weier on August 26, 2007

Category: American History
Words: 1270 | Pages: 6
Views: 117
Popularity Rank: 89,949
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Letters of Love

Now letter-Writing is, to me, the most agreeable Amusement: and Writing to you the most entertaining and Agreeable of all Letter-Writing. – John Adams
And – then Sir if you please you may take me. – Abigail Smith

Love is a deep feeling of profound passion and intimacy. The story between John and Abigail Adams is a warm and deeply moving love between two of America's most moving people. Their names are inseparably linked as those of any pair in history. The story of these amazing lovers, patriots, comes to life through their intimate correspondence. Through their numerous letters of communication, one can relive their thoughts and feelings as they strengthened their bond.
John Adams was born in Braintree, what is now Quincy, Massachusetts, on October 30, 1735. His father was a farmer, a deacon of the First Parish of Braintree, and a militia officer. John's mother came from a leading family of Brookline and Boston merchants and physicians. John studied hard in the village school. He was twenty three years old when he graduated from Harvard in the class of 1755. He began to practice law in Braintree in 1758. John and Abigail first met in 1759.
Abigail was only fifteen when they first met. Abigail Smith was born November 11, 1744 at Weymouth, Massachusetts. Her father was a minister in Weymouth. On her mother's side she was descended from the Quincys, a family of great prestige in the colony. Like most women of her time, Abigail had received little formal schooling, but she read constantly thanks to her father's library. Because of this she became one of the best informed women of her time. Her father often lent out his collection of books to friends and neighbors, which inevitably John and Abigail met. Through these books she learned Shakespeare, Milton and Pope, and even taught herself French, and many men were intimidated by a woman with her knowledge. John was captivated by it. By 1762...

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