Written at the height of Sherman Adams’s rise onto the national stage, Ralph “Deak” Morse’s affectionate profile of Rachel Adams—dubbed “The Pebble”—offers a lively and revealing portrait of a woman who remained unmistakably herself amid political prominence. With warmth, wit, and a keen eye for character, the article celebrates Rachel Adams’s humor, independence, and deep attachment to New Hampshire life, from Lincoln to Concord and beyond. More than a political spouse, she emerges as a steady, quick-witted presence whose love of the mountains, local traditions, and everyday people grounded one of the Granite State’s most influential families during a pivotal moment in American history.
February 14, 2026

In her 1959 LIFE magazine article “Life in Washington,” Rachel Adams—wife of Lincoln native and former New Hampshire governor Sherman Adams—offered a rare, personal glimpse into the rhythms of political life from the perspective of a woman who carried the White Mountains with her into the nation’s capital. Writing at the height of her husband’s influence in the Eisenhower administration, she wove reflections on Washington’s social landscape with the steady values of her New England upbringing, shaped by the mill town of Lincoln and the rugged quiet of the Upper Pemigewasset Valley. Her piece is more than a Washington diary; it is a reminder that our region’s stories travel—sometimes all the way to the White House—carried by the people who call this place home.
December 31, 2025
