
Jefferson and Adams: July 4th Marks 200th Anniversary of Their Deaths
In the early afternoon of July 4, 1826, as church bells rang across America to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of independence, John Adams lay dying in his bed in Quincy, Massachusetts. The ninety-year-old former president had been slipping in and out of consciousness for days. Outside, the town was preparing for a grand jubilee—parades, speeches, cannon fire—to mark the half-century since the Declaration of Independence had been signed. Adams had been invited to attend the festivities, but his body had finally betrayed him. He could barely speak. Around five o’clock in the afternoon, witnesses reported that Adams stirred. His lips moved. Those gathered around his deathbed leaned in close to catch his final words. What they heard was a whisper, barely audible: “Thomas Jefferson survives.” Then he was gone. It was a beautiful sentiment—a dying man’s thoughts turning to his old friend and rival, the co-architect of American independence. Adams seemed to take comfort in the idea that Jefferson, at least, would live on to see this golden anniversary, to witness what their revolution had become. But Adams was wrong. Five hundred miles to the south, at Monticello in Virginia, Thomas Jefferson had died that same morning around ten o’clock.
Jefferson and Adams: July 4th Marks 200th Anniversary of Their Deaths
It’s World UFO Day: Roswell Celebrates 79 Years Since the Famous Crash Landing
Confessions of a Soccer, er, Futbol Naïf
American, French Revolutions Took Different Paths in the 18th Century
So Much for the Separation of Bank and State

