The History Book Club discussion

This topic is about
John Quincy Adams
PRESIDENTIAL SERIES
>
1. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS~~INTRODUCTION and CHAPTER ONE (ix - 24) (1/9/12 - 1/15/12)~No Spoilers, please
date
newest »

message 51:
by
Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Feb 02, 2012 11:00AM

reply
|
flag
message 52:
by
Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief
(last edited Feb 03, 2012 04:59AM)
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
I wonder with John Adam (the father) so frequent absences away from the family that this is what affected JQAs temperament; moving around to Braintree and back and having to put up with all that. Tough on Abigail too. JQAs temperament and how he got along with folks and his being rather difficult may have contributed to his father sending him off early and giving him something to do.
That author brings this up very early on in Chapter One. This was a difficult boy to get along with.
That author brings this up very early on in Chapter One. This was a difficult boy to get along with.

message 55:
by
Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief
(last edited Feb 04, 2012 07:31PM)
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
It seems because folks called his father a hero that JQA tried to emulate John Adams Senior and his personal style yet inwardly he seems to be so much more like his mother than he probably would ever let on. He emulated and made one parent a hero in his mind yet it seems that Abigail was demonized in a way (and she was the one dealing with him day in and day out at the beginning). She was the disciplinarian from what I can see thus far.
I guess that I do not buy that Abigail was condescending to males; she had many males that she corresponded with and they all thought highly of her. What did you think Bryan about that comment?
I do agree that once JQA was alone with his father abroad that of course they would bond in a way that males do; not sure if that was good for JQA or if it contributed in a way to his not being adequately influenced by his mother more. The author I think seems to feel that JQA and his mother were constantly at odds due to her brother's fate; I find that a bit hard to to embrace as well. But JQA was not only a difficult adult but a difficult child so maybe this is part of his make-up and upbringing. And certainly what he ended up being was as a result of his parents and his environment and influences (good or bad).
I guess that I do not buy that Abigail was condescending to males; she had many males that she corresponded with and they all thought highly of her. What did you think Bryan about that comment?
I do agree that once JQA was alone with his father abroad that of course they would bond in a way that males do; not sure if that was good for JQA or if it contributed in a way to his not being adequately influenced by his mother more. The author I think seems to feel that JQA and his mother were constantly at odds due to her brother's fate; I find that a bit hard to to embrace as well. But JQA was not only a difficult adult but a difficult child so maybe this is part of his make-up and upbringing. And certainly what he ended up being was as a result of his parents and his environment and influences (good or bad).

If we read a biography on Abigail, we might get a different picture...
Yes, I had done that and never got the impression that the author is conveying. But retracing the letters I have not done.

I just want to comment that traveling an adolesant child and a parent is certainly a bonding but I would think not as men but as parent & child. Otherwise the subsequent remarks made by John the father would be inconsistent with being both men.
Persaonal experience also says that one's children are always one's children and I think it takes a long time into adulthood to bond the parent and child as equals. Also JQA is constantly, so far, supported by his folks so I would view the bonding as a real bonding but not between men so to say.


I appreciated the introduction the author gives us. Unlike many introductions, it was actually helpful! Just about all that I knew about JQA was that he was president of the US and son of John Adams. The introduction helped set the stage for me, giving a brief and general overview of the man. I am impressed with JQA's journal-keeping. Even back in those days when writing was more common, JQA's commitment to his journal was quite impressive. (If I ever accidentally become famous enough for someone to write a bio about me, I'm going to wish I had kept a better journal!)

pg 10 - the inscription of John Adams on the burial stone of Henry Adams........ "Veneration of the piety, humility, simplicity, prudence, patience, temperance, frugality, industry and perseverance"
Makes me think of
A (boy) Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful (maybe kill the cheerful for the Adams), thrifty, brave, clean, reverent --- from memory after all these years
Pretty impressive, Vince. Once a Boy Scout, always a Boy Scout, right? My son was just learning the scout law a few weeks ago, so it is rather fresh in my mind. :)

I am impressed, by the way, with how well Nagel does with differentiating between John Adams and JQA. It is tricky when names are so similar, but I think Nagel does a great job.
As with others, I am impressed by the education JQA received and what he was encouraged to study. Without a formal school situation, so much of the study had to be self-driven. Even with a tutor/father who says, "read this" and "do this", a student would have to have some drive to do that successfully.


Thanks for the welcome, Bryan.
That makes sense for sending things back where one came from, but sometimes (such as on page 17) I think they are writing to people in the same direction as they are going. So, while waiting for a ship to Mass., writing a letter to Abigail in Mass. I'm wondering if maybe there were mail ships that were smaller or faster or something that means they can sail more often or without passengers?
Books mentioned in this topic
American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson (other topics)Sermons for Young Women, 1766 (other topics)
Abigail Adams (other topics)
John Quincy Adams: A Public Life, a Private Life (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Joseph J. Ellis (other topics)Joseph J. Ellis (other topics)
James Fordyce (other topics)
Woody Holton (other topics)
Paul C. Nagel (other topics)