John Adams: His Rotundity (1797 - 1801)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 23 лип 2017
  • Who is up after Georgie? Why it's John Adams! He helped with the Declaration of Independence and in general was one of the most important founding fathers. What else did he do? Check it out here!
    Script by Michael Thomas
    Watch the whole American History playlist: bit.ly/ProfDaveAmericanHistory
    Italian Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDaveItalian
    Classical Physics Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDavePhysics1
    Modern Physics Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDavePhysics2
    General Chemistry Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDaveGenChem
    Organic Chemistry Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDaveOrgChem
    Biochemistry Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDaveBiochem
    Biology Tutorials: bit.ly/ProfDaveBio
    EMAIL► ProfessorDaveExplains@gmail.com
    PATREON► / professordaveexplains
    Check out "Is This Wi-Fi Organic?", my book on disarming pseudoscience!
    Amazon: amzn.to/2HtNpVH
    Bookshop: bit.ly/39cKADM
    Barnes and Noble: bit.ly/3pUjmrn
    Book Depository: bit.ly/3aOVDlT

КОМЕНТАРІ • 65

  • @dallasjones4696
    @dallasjones4696 3 роки тому +35

    You are incorrect on the quasi-war. French privateers were attacking American merchant vessels all along the east coast and down through the west indies. This prompted Adams to commission a permanent navy for our defense. In addition, the standing army was created to prepare for a French invasion under the Directory that was ruling France at the time. Once Napoleon took over and formally received our diplomats tensions were eased somewhat. Once Adams received word from his diplomat that Napoleon had no interest invading the U.S. he disbanded the army much to the chagrin of the federalists.

    • @joshuapatrick682
      @joshuapatrick682 2 роки тому +5

      That may have been the official reasons given and written down but truthfully under Hamilton’s direction I have no doubt the true intentions of the army were to consolidate power for the federalists.

  • @freepointsgals609
    @freepointsgals609 3 роки тому +38

    "Facts don't care about your feelings" John Adams.

  • @mbaxter22
    @mbaxter22 2 роки тому +16

    This video is a great companion piece to the HBO miniseries John Adams.

  • @EveSantamaria-mq8kv
    @EveSantamaria-mq8kv Рік тому +2

    John Adams was a fine patriot and is extremely underrated. He and his wife loved America and believed in liberty. They had integrity and gave much of themselves for the cause. Adams was a victim of propaganda and had a "frenemy" in Jefferson, who, though an important figure in our nations history, did not have anywhere near John Adam's integrity. I recommend "John Adams" by McCullough to learn more about this fine man who was a true American hero. No statues for this humble, plump, short man. But he was a true man of the people, a farmer's son, and a loyal, honest soul.

  • @Clutchprep
    @Clutchprep 6 років тому +13

    THIS IS AWESOME. Great explanations!

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 2 роки тому +9

    People don’t seem to hold a high opinion of the Voice of the Revolution; but I believe he is the person most responsible for the end of the Federalist Party. Had he not dismantled it in his tenure; who knows what the Nation would have looked like.

    • @TheJosephPrice
      @TheJosephPrice 2 роки тому +2

      Jefferson wasn’t exactly a saint himself and was a pretty subpar president, tbh.

    • @julianmarsh1378
      @julianmarsh1378 2 роки тому +1

      @@TheJosephPrice Thank you!

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 2 роки тому +1

      Why would you say that?

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 Рік тому +1

      @@TheJosephPrice Jefferson was actually a very good president all in all. Thanks to him the national debt was cut by a third, the Barbary pirates were defeated, the Louisiana Purchase happened, the strongest anti slavery bill up until the Civil War was passed, various expeditions like Lewis and Clark provided valuable information and maps of the interior, West Point and the Army corps of Engineers was established, coastal fortifications were built, and the essential groundwork was laid for resolving the Yazoo land disputes.
      It was only in the latter part of his second term that Jefferson really started to fuck up. Starting with rejection of the Monroe-Pinkney Act (though I understand why) and trying to enforce a ridiculous and unenforceable embargo that wrecked the economy, as well as his insistence on useless gunboats. But these major screw ups don't erase his great accomplishments that came before.

  • @ginger4166
    @ginger4166 3 роки тому +2

    I understand the need for ads and thank you very much for this free content but really wish there didn't have to be an ad every 5 minutes! But still, thank you.

  • @SoutherStacker007
    @SoutherStacker007 6 років тому +3

    Another great video!

  • @user-tf6pg7jj6c
    @user-tf6pg7jj6c 3 роки тому +8

    Division in USA
    Federalists:
    Wasington
    Adams
    Hamilton
    Marshall
    Demoreps:
    Jefferson
    Madison
    Burr
    In this episode:
    Adams became president, but was bad president.
    So demoreps take the power
    Jefferson - president
    Burr - Vice
    Madison - important minister
    Federalist dissolve
    Washington dies
    Hamiston is killed by Burr
    Adams survives but not a big factor anymore.
    Only Marshal remain on jurisdiction.

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 2 роки тому

      Adams prevented us from a disastrous war with France. That's not something a bad president does.

  • @glennxokim
    @glennxokim 2 роки тому +1

    Well done

  • @murvo
    @murvo 2 роки тому +3

    You said that at that time the person who came in second during the election became Vice President, but then a few minutes later said Burr was Jefferson's running mate. That could not have been the case if they were both campaigning to be President against each other? Unless I'm misunderstanding the term running mate.

    • @TNTITAN
      @TNTITAN 2 роки тому +3

      The confusion come from how the electoral college worked back then. In this election each member was given 2 votes for President. The idea was that the one running for president was going to get the most and one of the electoral college members would abstain to give one less vote to be Vice President. That did not go as planned and it would take about 36 extra votes before Jefferson officially beat Burr.

    • @petermalowski4886
      @petermalowski4886 2 роки тому +4

      Each member of the electoral college got two votes back then. When Adams was elected the candidates did not have running mates, so Jefferson just came in second. But for the election of 1800 they decided to try using running mates so that the president could have a vice president of his choice.

  • @TheCompleteMental
    @TheCompleteMental 2 роки тому +6

    Damn, those final words really capped off a depressing life

    • @murvo
      @murvo 2 роки тому +4

      Depressing? His life was amazing and he and his contemporaries accomplished SO much.

    • @EveSantamaria-mq8kv
      @EveSantamaria-mq8kv Рік тому +1

      Depressing?! He loved his wife, and she him. They had a long and mutually supportive, loving, intellectually stimulating marriage. He was brilliant. He had many friends. He delighted in his daughter and son John Quincy, and he adored his grandchildren. He read prolifically and delighted in books to the very end of his long, honorable life. He was instrumental to the founding of our nation. He had many adventures. He was ALWAYS loyal to George Washington. He delighted in nature, in his farm, in his family. He was active even in old age, going on long walks, doing physical work on his farm and riding horses. He lived a life so full of meaning and soul, I can only hope to come close to what this humble, good man lived. He delighted in everything, be it rain or ice on the trees, or a good book, or his dear grandchildren, and of course, his brilliant wife Abigail.

    • @TheCompleteMental
      @TheCompleteMental Рік тому +1

      @@EveSantamaria-mq8kv not sure I was joking originally, but that's cash either way. Good on him.

  • @howardman3926
    @howardman3926 6 років тому +6

    Hey, could you make a calculus course?

  • @blue2134
    @blue2134 3 роки тому +5

    Can you do ALL the presidents. Great information and clearly presented

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  3 роки тому +6

      I have been doing all the presidents in order! Just did JFK. Watch the whole playlist!

    • @blue2134
      @blue2134 3 роки тому +3

      @@ProfessorDaveExplains I see that thanks!!!

    • @jalonglover4488
      @jalonglover4488 Рік тому +1

      @@ProfessorDaveExplains yes thank you.

  • @ashleighstratmann7783
    @ashleighstratmann7783 8 місяців тому

    I think part of Adam’s problems is that he was more of a man of word than action as shown through out the American Revolution as he was more help in the background than in the battle field like Washington, and when he became president, he kept being put in situation where action was more appropriate than word so he was outside his element. It didn’t help the position of VP was more like a title than an actual government position. VPs wouldn’t even be fully recognized as second-in-command until after William Harrison’s death when John Tyler declared himself next president AFTER the era of the Founding Fathers.
    Funny though, if you want a man of action you can turn to his cousin Samuel Adams as the two cousins might as well be each other’s counterbalance. Even when they agree on something they had different ideas in how to handle it

  • @cryhav0k2112
    @cryhav0k2112 2 роки тому

    Signing was August 2nd

  • @dhirajsinha1947
    @dhirajsinha1947 6 років тому +1

    love from India

  • @williamschnarr7961
    @williamschnarr7961 3 дні тому

    The alien and sedition act may have been meant with good intentions but the measures were too extreme for the time, particularly because it was against the French who should've been treated better for their contribution to the war

  • @georgevasquez7356
    @georgevasquez7356 2 роки тому

    We're can I sell my john Adams stamp, I have 4 beautiful ones. And I enjoyed your video of john adams my friend, Thank u!!

  • @user-ue6xd9bi5i
    @user-ue6xd9bi5i 6 років тому +1

    nice '

  • @edwardcricchio6106
    @edwardcricchio6106 2 роки тому +4

    I always laugh at today's Democrat Party with their infatuation of the Broadway Show "Hamilton". Just because the guy made Hamilton a hip-hop character and has people of color playing the roles of white men of the 18th Century, doesn't mean Hamilton is now 'woke'. Hamilton is the exact opposite of anything the Democrats stand for today.

    • @petermalowski4886
      @petermalowski4886 2 роки тому +5

      No, actually it makes sense. Hamilton was all in favor of a strong central government, a strong president, government control over monetary policy, and dismissive of states' rights. These are all pretty much big-government, Democrat-type things.

    • @edwardcricchio6106
      @edwardcricchio6106 2 роки тому

      @@petermalowski4886 I know his argument on a strong Federal Government. The Federalist Party wouldn't want anything to do with Democrats of today. But, he is only revered by the Democrats now because the guy was turned into a Hip-Hop character and the people who he associated with are now people of color.

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 2 роки тому +1

      Except for one thing. Hamilton NEVER proposed a welfare state.

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 2 роки тому +1

      @@jabujolly9020 He might have if he had lived during the Great Depression!

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 2 роки тому +3

      @@catofthecastle1681 Had Hamilton lived during that period there probably never would have been a Great Depression in the first place. Remember how he stopped two financial collapses in the early 1790s. Don't get me wrong. I'm basically a Jeffersonian, but I also believe that sometimes Hamiltonianism is needed in times of need. The 1790s, when the country was flat broke and swimming in debt was one such time.

  • @Giggidygiggidy12
    @Giggidygiggidy12 2 роки тому

    So between Washington, Adams and Jefferson who was the smartest??

    • @EveSantamaria-mq8kv
      @EveSantamaria-mq8kv Рік тому

      Adams and Jefferson were intellectually superior. Adams was a better, more moral and stronger man than Jefferson. Washington had other impressive talents, but was not an intellectual. He was a hero and a general. All men were important. I think Jefferson lacked some integrity.

  • @chancelorhardy9893
    @chancelorhardy9893 6 років тому +9

    Taking a break from science and trying out history huh? Lol

  • @joemyers3885
    @joemyers3885 2 роки тому

    Information on Admiralty courts is incomplete: By the American Revenue Plan 1764 a new Admiralty Court was established in Nova Scotia with primary jurisdiction to supercede colonial Admiralty courts in Boston NY Phila and Charleston which were by jury and did not secure convictions of colonial smugglers. The Nova Scotia court was not corrupt but was a court where a judge rendered decisions, and the penalty was severe -- meaning colonial convictions and punishments

  • @bobslydell806
    @bobslydell806 Рік тому

    Disagreeable? I WANT that in my representatives.

  • @JohnBender1313
    @JohnBender1313 2 роки тому +3

    America's founders: let's create a land of freedom!
    One of those founders a decade later: let's lock people up for calling me fat!

  • @rayzhang6453
    @rayzhang6453 6 років тому

    lol history teacher now

  • @JohnHarris-rp2tz
    @JohnHarris-rp2tz 3 роки тому

    what about jQA and Jackson, A democrat, from 1829-1831. if you believe Jackson was really a Dem-repub. no matter the name change, one can argue that JQA acted more like a federalist, no matter what his party's name.

  • @scutterlibby
    @scutterlibby 2 роки тому +1

    Adams was an elite. one term loser.. Hbo mini series is propaganda

    • @m3rl707
      @m3rl707 2 роки тому

      Hes only one of the reasons why America exists but whatever

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 2 роки тому

      Keep putting his life into 21st century thinking!

    • @AppleInTheDesert
      @AppleInTheDesert Рік тому

      Oh you picked this opinion to appear unique didn’t you? 💀

    • @EveSantamaria-mq8kv
      @EveSantamaria-mq8kv Рік тому

      Wrong. Adams was a farmer's son who hauled manure in his youth, and lived relatively humbly all his life. There was nothing "elite" about Adams. He was a man of honor and loved his country and God. He was a "one term" president because his vice president, the scheming Jefferson (a chronic elite spendthrift who used his slave as a concubine) did him dirty, working behind his back (while serving as his vice president) to publish lies and propaganda about Adams. In comparison, Adams was always loyal to Washington when he served as his VP