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Building America

John Adams, Boston’s Top Attorney
Leading America Tom Hand Leading America Tom Hand

John Adams, Boston’s Top Attorney

When the French and Indian War ended in 1763, John Adams was single, living on a small farm in Braintree, Massachusetts, and enjoying a flourishing law practice just up the road in Boston. The next year his marital status changed, most would say improved, when he married Abigail Smith. A profitable business and a quiet family life seemed to be in his future, but that soon changed.

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John Adams Comes of Age
Leading America Tom Hand Leading America Tom Hand

John Adams Comes of Age

John Adams was one of America’s greatest Patriots. Besides George Washington, Adams may have contributed more to get America its independence from England than anyone else. However, this Founding Father is not nearly as revered or well-known as the other “Big Six” of the Founding Fathers.

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The Legacy of Henry Knox
Leading America Tom Hand Leading America Tom Hand

The Legacy of Henry Knox

Henry Knox was 44 years old when he retired from public office after devoting the previous two decades to the American cause. Henry and his dear wife Lucy headed to Thomaston, Maine, where Henry built a three-story mansion on a large family estate which he named Montpelier.

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George Washington, First in the Hearts of His Countrymen

George Washington, First in the Hearts of His Countrymen

President Washington was again unanimously elected in 1792 and sworn in on March 4, 1793. Although he had not wanted a second term, most our country’s leaders, including Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison, felt the nation needed his leadership and would suffer without it. Reluctantly, he had agreed to another four years.

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George Washington, The Only Man for the Job

George Washington, The Only Man for the Job

In 1787, congressional delegates met in Philadelphia for a Constitutional Convention and created a new form of government. One key change was the creation of a strong Executive or President. Virtually everyone knew there was only one man strong enough to lead the nation and conscientious enough to be entrusted with so much power. That man, of course, was George Washington.

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