John Adams served as the American Revolution's spokesperson and was instrumental in persuading the Continental Congress to support independence. Additionally, he collaborated on the Declaration of Independence with Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
In the early years of the republic, Massachusetts' John Adams and Pennsylvania's Benjamin Franklin met at "important occasions." They initially came together in 1774 at the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia, the first gathering of the 12 American colonies as a whole (Georgia did not attend). Both Adams and Franklin supported independence, with Adams doing it more publicly and Franklin more covertly, despite the fact that both were equally skilled wordsmiths.
Adams and Franklin collaborated in Paris during the Revolutionary War to win the French over to the American cause, occasionally disagreeing on how to do it.
And they were able to reach an agreement on peace with Britain. When Adams left Franklin in Paris to take up his position as the first American Minister Plenipotentiary to Great Britain, they last saw one another in 1785. Their relationship saw ups and downs throughout the intervening years.
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