Abigail loved John and she missed him when he was on business trips!
it might have been different because if Abigail Adams didnt write john Adams those letters on how to make the better decisions about womens rights and slavery he might have not let women have there rights but since Abigail convinced him to give women their rights he did.
Actually, she was writing to her son John Quincy Adams (not to a daughter); it was 1800, and she explained to him how cold and uncomfortable she was in her new surroundings-- she had just moved to the White House, but there was not enough wood for all the fireplaces yet. In fact, the White House was still being finished at that time, and she was living there before it was really ready for her use. Abigail Adams was a frequent letter-writer (it was an era before telephones, telegraph, radio, etc), and she expressed her emotions in letters the way you and I would express them in an e-mail or by talking on the phone to someone.
prezident
John Quincy Adams didn't write the Monroe Doctrine, President James Monroe did.
Samuel Adams was not chosen to write the Declaration. His cousin John Adams was chosen as one of five people to write it. Sam Adams was not part of the Second Continental Congress; therefore, he could not have been chosen to help write it.
Some people Abigail Adams wrote letters to were:her friends in Boston (which is where she moved when she became older)her cousin, Isaacher husband, John Adams (the 2nd president of the United States), when he was away from homeher sister, Mary, who she often came to for advice
Abigail Adams wrote long letters to her friends Mercy Warren Otis and Marta Washington. She would write about women's rights.
By most accounts, Abigail Adams loved to read, she loved to write letters to people she cared about (including her husband John, who was often traveling on government business), and there is evidence at what is today the Adams Mansion historical site that Abigail also enjoyed gardening.
John and Abigail wrote about a huge number of topics, John would ask Abigail's opinion on affairs of government and law and she gave thoughtful answers and sometimes volunteered her opinions. Of course they also wrote about family and home life. Most if not all of her letters have been transcribed and are available on-line.
Abigail Adams wrote long letters to her friends Mercy Warren Otis and Marta Washington. She would write about women's rights.
Abigail Adams helped write letters to people and taught many people to read and write If you don't't believe what i said than that's ur problem i learned this in 5th grade Ms. Boles class
== == Abigail Adams helped in the revolutionary war by writing letters to people and taking care of people. She would often write her husband John Adams about politics. What she is remembered for most is that in one of her letters she asked John Adams to remember the ladies. This meant to remember the little people while drafting the constitution
it might have been different because if Abigail Adams didnt write john Adams those letters on how to make the better decisions about womens rights and slavery he might have not let women have there rights but since Abigail convinced him to give women their rights he did.
Abigail Adams was a great women. She was John Adams wife and had 6 children. She was the first lady to be both, a mother and a wife to a U.S. President. She was born in 1744 and dies in 1818 because of tyophoid fever. Her and her husband are famous for their letters. One of her most famous letters are "Remember the Ladies". She thought that women should have the same education as men did, and should have the write to vote. If you became a married women you couldn't sue or be sued, you couldn't have anything under your name and you were concidered as a child to your husband. Abigail wanted those laws changed. She was famous for the letters that her and her husband John wrote, they were different from the other Founders' and their relationships. She was the brightest and the well learned of the Founders wives.
Yes, she did she took care of her kids, managed the farm, ran the family financial affairs, shelter soldiers and so much More you want more information go to Abigail Adams Bioghriphy.com
Abigail Adams loved to read, which was actually unusual for women of her era, many of whom got very little education. (She was educated at home, but she spent her life advocating for all children to get a good education.) Living in a time before mass communication, she enjoyed writing letters, and we have learned a lot about her from her correspondence with her husband when he was traveling. And she very much enjoyed giving parties and being a hostess.
There is nothing the modern world that is much like the art of letter writing that John and Abigail practiced, except perhaps those few people that still write serious letters to each other. E-mail could be used to send longer, carefully written letters, but most people write off the top of their heads and send their letters off after 2 or 3 minutes of composition and no rewriting. Essays or compositions of the sort that people write for college English are the probably the closest thing today to the Adams' letters, I think.