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John Adams
18th Century P. Dramas
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John Adams (miniseries)
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Abby
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Jun 13, 2015 04:04PM

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Some of the medical history scenes were too graphic for me but it was interesting to learn how certain procedures were done and thank goodness for modern medicine! (view spoiler)

As for Abigail, (whom I am named after) I thought she was very serious and a little grumpy in the HBO series, and although she has every right to be, it's not what I ever pictured her as. At least she has brown hair in this version, instead of the somewhat inaccurate 1776 version with a blond Abigail!

You must have a lot of information to share about John Adams since you live near his former home.
Was John Adams also a huge plantation owner like the southern founding fathers that you mentioned were slave owners?
Even though I have lived close to Elvis's Graceland I've never visited it either so I can understand why you haven't gotten around to visiting John Adams's former stomping grounds.
(view spoiler)

I don't subscribe to the HBO channel so I missed the John Adams series unfortunately.
There was a miniseries on Masterpiece Theatre during the 70's about John and Abigail Adams that I did see but it's been so long ago I can hardly recall this now.
Here's the link for anyone interested:
http://www.shoppbs.org/product/index....
I do remember enjoying this series very much at the time though.
I'm always disappointed when any historical drama isn't true to its time and gives historical figures modern day sensibilities. Do you feel that HBO series portrayed Abigail in such a light? This might explain her grumpiness I thought.
I also loved the movie 1776, been years since I've seen this one and wouldn't mind watching it again.

Adams and abolitionists
Adams and Slavery
Abigail was all kinds of awesome and I know more about her and the children. One of my favorite novels as a teen was The Fifth of March: A Story About the Boston Massacre. I still reread it from time to time, usually on the train to Boston. I take it as sort of a tour guide through the colonial city but I've never made it out to the Adams park.

I'm not able to appreciate what exactly it was that attracted Abigail to John either just by looking at his portraits, but perhaps they were intellectually compatible.



I'm not able to appreciate what exactly it was that at..."
Check the NPS website above and see if they say. A Google search or ask.com might bring up that information too. I bet Historic New England has something about population at that time. Boston was a peninsula at that time. The Back Bay was filled in much later. Roxbury and Dorchester were country towns and Concord was way out there in the country. I think Boston was fairly populated. If searching doesn't reveal an answer, I'll try to remember to find out for you when I visit the New England Historic Genealogy Society in Boston.