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  1. Biography of John Quincy Adams by Mary W. M. Hargreaves. Related Documents. Search all documents. February 10, 1825. Reply of the President Elect to Notification of Election. March 01, 1825. Letter From the President Elect. March 01, 1825. Special Message. March 04, 1825. Inaugural Address. March 04, 1825.

  2. John Quincy Adams (1767 - 1848) No American who ever entered the presidency was better prepared to fill that office than John Quincy Adams. Born on July 11, 1767 in Braintree, Massachusetts, he was the son of two fervent revolutionary patriots, John and Abigail Adams, whose ancestors had lived in New England for five generations.

  3. 1 de feb. de 2024 · John Adams, Jr. was born in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1735 in the town of Braintree (today known as Quincy). His parents were John Adams, Sr., and Susan Boylston Adams. At the age of 15, Adams went to Harvard College, where his father expected him to become a minister.

  4. 5 de nov. de 2019 · John Quincy Adams, at the age of 80, was involved in a lively political debate on the floor of the House of Representatives when he suffered a stroke on February 21, 1848. (A young Whig congressman from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln, was present as Adams was stricken.) Adams was carried into an office adjacent to the old House chamber (now known as ...

  5. John Quincy Adams (Braintree, Massachusetts, 1767. július 11. – Washington, 1848. február 23.) amerikai politikus, 1825 és 1829 között az Amerikai Egyesült Államok 6. elnöke. Ifjúsága. A Massachusettsi Braintree-ben született 1767-ben. Az ...

  6. Al resistir la expansión de la esclavitud -y la posibilidad de que la república se convirtiera en un imperio conquistador- Adams se vio obligado, a pesar suyo, a defender la integridad de México. Palabras llave : Relaciones México-Estados Unidos; expansionismo estadunidense; Texas; esclavitud; John Quincy Adams; Andrew Jackson.

  7. John Quincy Adams was appointed Secretary of State by President James Monroe on March 5, 1817. He served from September 22, 1817, until March 3, 1825. Adams enjoyed unique training in diplomacy and became one of the most influential diplomats in U.S. history. John Quincy Adams, Eighth Secretary of State.