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Descriptive List of Illustrations Introduction 1. An Overview of the General Correspondence and Other Papers of John Adams 2. John Adams as Public Servant 3. John Adams as Revolutionist 4. The Editorial Method 5. A Note on the Status of The Adams Paper Acknowledgments Guide to Editorial Apparatus 1. Textual Devices 2. Adams Family Code Names 3. Descriptive Symbols 4. Location Symbols 5. Other Abbreviations and Conventional Terms 6. Short Titles of Works Frequently Cited Papers of John Adams, September 1755-- October 1773
Gregg L. Lint is Series Editor for the Papers of John Adams of the Adams Papers at the Massachusetts Historical Society.
Taken together with the celebrated Diary and Autobiography, the
Earliest Diary, the Adams Family Correspondence, and the Legal
Papers of John Adams, [the Papers of John Adams] constitute as
revealing and complete a documentation of the development, both
personal and public, of a successful revolutionist as modern
history affords… In [these documents] the writer bequeathed to
posterity a means of sensing some of the excitement, the
importance, the fears, the apprehensions of the decade in which
‘the real American revolution’ was taking place—in short, the
flavor of the times.
*Times Literary Supplement*
The great theme…is that of independence; all else is subordinate to
it. The reader may trace here the evolution of John Adams’ thought
during this crucial year… His Plan of Treaties became a model in
use down to World War II and his Thoughts on Government was
designed to unite north and south on basic principles. No matter,
it seems, was too small for his attention nor too large to attempt
solution. A colossus indeed! The editing of this work is admirable
in every way. The footnotes are exhaustive but never excessive or
boring. The introductory essays are illuminating. This is an
elegant and inspiring work.
*Historical New Hampshire*
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