Abigail Adams
By Kathleen McFadden
http://writetools.com/women
Abigail Smith Adams had a front-row
seat to the birth of a nation. She already had deep roots in America
by the time the colonists began agitating for freedom from English
rule in the 1700s. Both her mother's and her father's families
had lived in the colonies for generations when Abigail was born
in 1744. In keeping with the era's expectations for women, Abigail
received no formal education, but she did have a lively intellect
and read so extensively that she became one of the best-read women
of her time. Her intelligence and inquiring mind gave her an understanding
of the American desire for political freedom that was relatively
uncommon among women in those days. She was a bit aloof, however,
and didn't make much of an impression on John Adams the first
time they met. When they met a second time two years later, however,
the two immediately connected and throughout their 54-year marriage,
Adams considered Abigail his best friend and closest advisor.
Although her husband's election to the Continental Congress kept
them apart a great deal during the Revolutionary War, Abigail
wrote to him constantly. She was a gifted letter-writer, even
though she was embarrassed by her poor penmanship and spelling,
and she is best remembered for the progressive views she espoused
in her numerous epistles, not only to her husband but also to
family members and friends. Abigail entreated her husband to give
women in the new country equal opportunities to be educated and
to vote. The necessity for women to be educated was one of Abigail's
most deeply held beliefs. She felt that education was not only
critical for the woman herself, but would also benefit her children,
whom she was responsible for teaching in their early years. Through
her letters, Abigail was instrumental in beginning the dialog
about women's rights in this country and she is considered one
of the country's first feminists. Her husband became the second
president of the United States; her son, John Quincy, the sixth.
Abigail was born on November 22, 1744, and died in 1818.