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  1. John Adams Sr. (1691–1761), married Susanna Boylston (1708-1797) John Adams (1735–1826), second president of the United States, married Abigail Adams (née Smith) (1744–1818).. John Quincy Adams (1767–1848), sixth president of the United States, married English-born Louisa Adams (née Johnson) (1775–1852).. George Washington Adams (1801–1829), member of Massachusetts state legislature.

  2. George Washington Adams. Born 15 Aug 1796 in Tennessee, United States. Ancestors. Son of Robert Warson Adams and Rebecca (Wylie) Adams. Brother of Alexander Ansel Adams, Sarah (Adams) Stroud, John Squire Adams, Martha (Adams) Wallace, James Robert Adams and Jane (Adams) Wood. Husband of Nancy (Morrow) Adams — married 3 Dec 1816 (to 1853) in ...

  3. Though eager to retire at war's end, Washington agreed to lead the Constitutional Convention in May 1787. The new constitution called for a single chief executive. Washington was elected unanimously by the electoral college. After his inauguration on April 30, 1789, Washington faced the challenge of establishing the proper tone for the office.

  4. When George Washington Adams was born on 12 March 1795, in Trenton, Mercer, New Jersey, United States, his father, Jonathan Harrison Adams, was 38 and his mother, Margaret Costilow, was 24. He married Sarah Rawden on 30 January 1815, in Harrison, Virginia, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 4 daughters.

  5. St: Petersburg 10 January 1813. My dear Son. In the promise with which my last Letter to you, upon the Bible, was concluded, that I would next consider the Scriptures in their ethical character, as containing a system of morals, I undertook a task from the performance of which I have been hitherto deterred, by its very magnitude and importance.

  6. 19 de ene. de 2021 · Adams made his inaugural address, complimenting his predecessor and echoing Washington’s anti-partisan, country-above-all sentiments of the previous fall. (Spoiler alert: That didn’t last .)

  7. Before becoming President in 1797, John Adams built his reputation as a blunt-speaking man of independent mind. A fervent patriot and brilliant intellectual, Adams served as a delegate from Massachusetts to the Continental Congress between 1774 and 1777, as a diplomat in Europe from 1778 to 1788, and as vice president during the Washington administration.