The founding of the United States is usually told through public moments. Documents, debates, and decisions take center stage. The Declaration of Independence, the Continental Congress, and the arguments that led toward separation from Britain are often where the story begins and ends. Those moments are important, but they don’t show how those same years were actually lived.
While independence was being debated and eventually declared, daily life continued. Families still had to manage homes, raise children, and deal with illness, shortages, and uncertainty. The founding period didn’t unfold only in assembly rooms. It unfolded in kitchens, farms, and letters written across long distances.
That’s where the lives of John Adams and Abigail Adams come into focus. Their correspondence gives a parallel record of the same years, one that shows how public events and private life moved together.
John spent long stretches of time away from home. He served in the Continental Congress and later took on diplomatic work that kept him overseas for extended periods. His role placed him close to the center of decisions that shaped the direction of the colonies.
Abigail remained in Massachusetts, where those decisions were felt in practical ways. She managed the household, oversaw finances, raised their children, and handled responsibilities that didn’t stop while political change was underway. The distance between them was not unusual for the time, but the record they left behind is unusually detailed.
They wrote often, and they wrote plainly. Their letters move between public events and private concerns without separating the two. That’s what makes them so valuable. They show how the same moment could be experienced from very different positions...
Podcast Notes: https://ancestralfindings.com/john-and-abigail-adams-daily-life/
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