Who is John Adams?
Criticism isn’t a crime, and someone should let Whitewater, Wisconsin, police chief James Coan know that. Records show he has involved at least two detectives and several other city employees—all on city time—in a quest to find the identity of “John Adams,” a blogger who has criticized him and other city officials.
John Adams was not only the second president of the United States, but also its first vice president, which means he served in the White House for a period of 12 years starting in 1789. John Adams is considered one of the “founding fathers,” and a key coordinator on the battle for independence. John Adams was on 30 October 1735 in Braintree, Massachusetts. He was the first of three sons, and had a lot of pressure from childhood to become an important figure. Adams graduated from Harvard University and started a career as a lawyer in a local office. He was 29 when he married, and eventually had six children, one of whom died at birth, and other who was eventually elected as a US president, John Quincy Adams. John Adams first got involved in politics during the Stamp Act of 1765.