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On May 20, 1797, President John Adams nominated his son, John Quincy Adams, to be Minister Plenipotentiary to the King of Prussia. JQA served in this position until 1801.
 Nomination of John Quincy Adams to be Minister Plenipotentiary, 5/20/1797, McCormick Collection, Records of the U.S. Senate (ARC 306287)
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On May 20, 1797, President John Adams nominated his son, John Quincy Adams, to be Minister Plenipotentiary to the King of Prussia. JQA served in this position until 1801.

 Nomination of John Quincy Adams to be Minister Plenipotentiary, 5/20/1797, McCormick Collection, Records of the U.S. Senate (ARC 306287)

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    • #us congress
    • #history
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    • #john quincy adams
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By the election of 1800, the nation’s first two parties were   beginning to take shape. The Presidential race was hotly contested   between the Federalist President, John Adams, and the   Democratic-Republican candidate, Thomas Jefferson. Because the   Constitution did not distinguish between President and Vice-President in   the votes cast by each state’s electors in the Electoral College, both   Jefferson and his running mate Aaron Burr received 73 votes.
According to the Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution,  if two  candidates each received a majority of the electoral votes but  are tied,  the House of Representatives would determine which one would  be  President. Therefore, the decision rested with the lame duck,   Federalist-controlled House of Representatives. Thirty-five ballots were   cast over five days but neither candidate received a majority. Many   Federalists saw Jefferson as their principal foe, whose election was to   be avoided at all costs. But Alexander Hamilton, a well-respected   Federalist party leader, hated Burr and advised Federalists in Congress   that Jefferson was the safer choice. Finally, on February 17, 1801, on   the thirty-sixth ballot, the House elected Thomas Jefferson to be   President.
The tie vote between Jefferson and Burr in the 1801 Electoral   College pointed out problems with the electoral system. The framers of   the Constitution had not anticipated such a tie nor had they considered   the possibility of the election of a President or Vice President from   opposing factions - which had been the case in the 1796 election. In   1804, the passage of the 12th Amendment corrected these problems by   providing for separate Electoral College votes for President and Vice   President.
For more information about the Electoral College, please visit the Federal Register’s U.S. Electoral College webpage.
Electoral vote tally, 2/1/1801, Records of the U.S. Senate
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By the election of 1800, the nation’s first two parties were beginning to take shape. The Presidential race was hotly contested between the Federalist President, John Adams, and the Democratic-Republican candidate, Thomas Jefferson. Because the Constitution did not distinguish between President and Vice-President in the votes cast by each state’s electors in the Electoral College, both Jefferson and his running mate Aaron Burr received 73 votes.

According to the Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution, if two candidates each received a majority of the electoral votes but are tied, the House of Representatives would determine which one would be President. Therefore, the decision rested with the lame duck, Federalist-controlled House of Representatives. Thirty-five ballots were cast over five days but neither candidate received a majority. Many Federalists saw Jefferson as their principal foe, whose election was to be avoided at all costs. But Alexander Hamilton, a well-respected Federalist party leader, hated Burr and advised Federalists in Congress that Jefferson was the safer choice. Finally, on February 17, 1801, on the thirty-sixth ballot, the House elected Thomas Jefferson to be President.

The tie vote between Jefferson and Burr in the 1801 Electoral College pointed out problems with the electoral system. The framers of the Constitution had not anticipated such a tie nor had they considered the possibility of the election of a President or Vice President from opposing factions - which had been the case in the 1796 election. In 1804, the passage of the 12th Amendment corrected these problems by providing for separate Electoral College votes for President and Vice President.

For more information about the Electoral College, please visit the Federal Register’s U.S. Electoral College webpage.

Electoral vote tally, 2/1/1801, Records of the U.S. Senate

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Congress went into its first session in the newly constructed Capitol on November 17, 1800. President John Adams delivered his fourth annual message to Congress, the first presidential message to be received in the Capitol, on November 22, 1800.

John Adams’ Fourth Annual Message, 11/22/1800, SEN 6A-E1, Records of the U.S. Senate

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Since the First Congress in 1789, the records of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate have documented the history of the legislative branch. Discover the treasures in our holdings here!

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