From WallBuilders <[email protected]>
Subject Valentine's Day
Date February 14, 2020 11:23 AM
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John & Abigail Adams

The story of John and Abigail Adams is an example of lasting love, affection, trust, and openness -- definitely one to remember on Valentine's Day!

Abigail
[link removed] was born in 1744 to a Congregationalist minister; she had limited formal education, but her self-education was extensive. John Adams
[link removed] , born in 1735, was an attorney when he met Abigail in 1761. After an initial rocky start
[link removed] at their first meeting (John was not impressed with Abigail or her sisters, and Abigail’s mother was not impressed with him), they would court over the course of the next three years. During their courtship, John wrote this letter
[link removed] to Abigail:

Dear Miss Adorable, I hereby order you to give [me] as many kisses and as many hours of your company after 9 o’clock as [I] shall please to demand, and charge them to my account.

John and Abigail married on
[link removed] October 25, 1764. Throughout their 54 years of marriage (Abigail died in 1818 & John in 1826), they shared an extensive correspondence of over 1,100 letters
[link removed] . In this massive correspondence, they addressed topics from politics to everyday life, from their family to their love for each other. (These letters have been preserved
[link removed] and printed
[link removed] in various
[link removed] forms.)

Here are just a few examples of the many letters they exchanged:

I dare not express to you at 300 miles how ardently I long for your return. I have some very miserly wishes and cannot consent to your spending one hour in town till, at least, I have had you twelve. The idea plays about my heart, unnerves my hand whilst I write, [and] awakens all the tender sentiments that years have increased and matured. (Abigail to John: October 16, 1774
[link removed] -- written when John was serving in the Continental Congress)

[I] pray you to come on [as] soon as possible….As to money to bear your expenses, you must, if you can, borrow of some friend enough to bring you here. If you cannot borrow enough, you must sell horses, oxen, sheep, cows, anything at any rate rather than not come on. If no one will take the place, leave it to the birds of the air and the beasts of the field. (John to Abigail: May 14, 1789
[link removed] -- written when John was serving as the first Vice-President)

This Valentine's Day, take some time to learn about the loving relationships that existed between many of our Founding Father and Founding Mothers!

Discover More Stories About Our Founders
and Their Wives!

[link removed] Lives of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence

&

Wives of the Signers

Today, Feb. 14, Get Both
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Presenting America’s forgotten history and heroes with an emphasis on our moral, religious and constitutional heritage.

CONTACT US: 817.441.6044
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