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  1. Abigail Adams, orig. Abigail Smith, (born Nov. 22, 1744, Weymouth, Mass.—died Oct. 28, 1818, Quincy, Mass., U.S.), U.S. first lady.Educated entirely at home, she became an avid reader of history. She married John Adams in 1764 and raised four children, including John Quincy Adams, in Quincy, Mass.She was a prolific letter writer whose correspondence with her husband provides a vivid ...

  2. 4 de ene. de 2018 · Abigail Smith nació en Weymouth, Massachusetts, hija de un ministro, pronto se convirtió en ávida lectora, estudiosa de las obras de William Shakespeare y John Milton entre otros. Abigail no fue a la escuela, cosa común entre las jóvenes de la época. Abigail Smith y John Adams eran primos en tercer grado y se conocían desde niños.

  3. 16 de oct. de 2023 · Abigail Adams. November 22, 1744–October 28, 1818 — Second First Lady of the United States. Abigail Adams was the wife of John Adams, second President of the United States and the mother of the sixth President, John Quincy Adams. Her letters and memoirs of the Revolutionary era are considered to be major historical documents.

  4. Unlike Martha Washington, Abigail Adams opposed slavery and had favored its abolition in the early 1770s. While sympathetic to the slaves and the hardships they endured, "Lady Adams" was less compassionate toward the young nation's immigrant population. She feared the effects of a pervasive French influence on fashion as well as on politics.

  5. 26 de feb. de 2015 · Abigail Adams. Abigail Adams was one of the first advocates of women’s equal education and women’s property rights. Adams had strong feelings about marriage and believed women should take more part in decisions rather than simply serve their husbands. Adams believed that women should educate themselves and use their intellect to manage the ...

  6. John and Abigail decided together that the conditions were too risky to endanger the children. Returning from his first appointment in April 1778, John Adams was sent France in November 1779, beginning a five-year separation as Abigail Adams and the children (except John Quincy, who travelled with his father) remained in Massachusetts.

  7. Remember the Ladies. Of all the words that spilled from Abigail Adams' pen, none are more famous than those of March 31, 1776. With her husband at the Continental Congress in Philadelphia arguing ...

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