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John Adolphus
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==Works== He wrote ''Biographical Memoirs of the French Revolution'' (1799) and ''History of England from the Accession of George III to the Conclusion of Peace in 1783'' (1802), and other historical and biographical works. He acquired the friendship of Archdeacon Coxe by helping him in the ''Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole''. In 1799 appeared his first acknowledged work, ''Biographical Memoirs of the French Revolution'', strongly anti-[[Jacobin]] in tone, and differing widely from the ''Biographical Anecdotes of the Founders of the French Republic'', published anonymously in 1797, and often erroneously ascribed to Adolphus. He wrote the memoirs in the ''British Cabinet'' (1799), a series of portraits of more or less distinguished Englishmen and Englishwomen, from [[Margaret of Richmond]] to the [[Philip Yorke, 2nd Earl of Hardwicke|second Lord Hardwicke]].<ref name=DNB/> In 1802 appeared his major work, the ''History of England from the Accession of George III to the Conclusion of Peace in 1783''. It included summaries of parliamentary debates, and Adolphus was praised for it in issue No. 2 of the ''[[Edinburgh Review]]''. The papers of [[George Dodington, 1st Baron Melcombe]] had been placed at Adolphus's disposal in the preparation of his history, and they enabled him to throw light on the conduct of [[Lord Bute]], and on the political transactions of the earlier years of the reign of [[George III of Great Britain|George III]], who, in conversation, commented on the accuracy with which some of the first measures taken after his accession had been described.<ref name=DNB/> In 1803 Adolphus published a ''History of France'' from 1790 to the [[Peace of Amiens]], and a pamphlet, ''Reflections on the Causes of the present Rupture with France'', in vindication of the policy of the English government. According to his son Adolphus wrote ''A Letter to Robert Ward, Esq., M.P.'' (1804), to [[Robert Plumer Ward|Robert Ward]] who had written a defence of [[William Pitt the Younger]] in his party quarrel with Addington.<ref name=DNB/> In 1818 he published, in four volumes, ''The Political State of the British Empire, containing a general view of the domestic and foreign possessions of the crown, the laws, commerce, revenue, offices, and other establishments, civil and military''; in 1824, ''Observations on the Vagrant Act and some other Statutes, and on the Powers and Duties of Justices of the Peace'', in the main a protest against some "[[nanny state]]" legislation of the time; and in 1839 the ''Memoirs'' of [[John Bannister (actor)|John Bannister]] the actor, whom he had known well.<ref name=DNB/> His history had gone through four editions when, in his seventieth year, Adolphus began the task of continuing it to the death of George III. Vol. I. was re-issued in 1840. Vol. VII., closing with the fall of the Addington administration, appeared in 1845, and Adolphus was working on the eighth volume when he died.<ref name=DNB/> Adolphus wrote several chapters of [[Charles Rivington]]'s ''[[Annual Register]]'' and papers for the ''[[British Critic]]''. His final contributions to periodical literature were biographical sketches of [[William Garrow]] and [[John Gurney (judge)|John Gurney]] for the ''[[Law Magazine]]''. The anonymous ''Memoirs of Queen Caroline'' (London, 2 vols., 1824) have been ascribed to him.<ref name=DNB/><ref>In ''[[Notes and Queries]]'', 5th series, iv. 283β4.</ref>
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