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Adams, Charles Francis

Male 1770 - 1800  (30 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Adams, Charles Francis was born on 29 May 1770 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts Bay, British America (son of Adams, President John Jr. and Smith, Abigail); died on 1 Dec 1800 in New York, New York, New York; was buried in Dec 1800 in FIrst Presbyterian Church, Manhattan, New York, United States.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Adams, President John Jr. was born on 30 Oct 1735 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts; was christened in 1735 in Medway, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States (son of Adams, John and Boylston, Susanna); died on 4 Jul 1826 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 10 Jul 1826 in United First Parish Church Cemetery, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    Other Events:

    • Profession: Lawyer
    • Pub Svc: Second President of the United States
    • Religion: Unitarian Congregationalism
    • Education: 1755, Harvard University
    • Education: 1755, Graduated from Harvard Univ.

    Notes:



    BIRTH: Also shown as Born Braintree, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born Quincey, Massachusetts.

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born 19 Oct 1735

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried United First Parish Church, Quincy, N, Massachusetts, USA.

    GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as (Pres.) John

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried United First Parish Church, Quincy, N, Massachusetts, USA.

    DEATH: Also shown as Died Deceased



    BIRTH: Also shown as Born Braintree, Massachusetts.

    John married Smith, Abigail on 24 Feb 1757 in Weymouth, Norfolk, Massachusetts. Abigail was born on 11 Nov 1744 in Weymouth, Massachusetts; died on 28 Oct 1818 in Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried in 1818 in First Unitarian Church Cemetery, Hancock, Berkshire, Massaschusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Smith, Abigail was born on 11 Nov 1744 in Weymouth, Massachusetts; died on 28 Oct 1818 in Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried in 1818 in First Unitarian Church Cemetery, Hancock, Berkshire, Massaschusetts.

    Notes:

    !She is the granddaughter of Colonel John Quincy.

    Note: - Information from James Thompson via Prodigy indicates she had 4children with William Stephens Smith. (ADA048)- Sailed with daughter,Abigail, to Europe on 20 June 1784 on the ship "Active." ("The AdamsChronicles," pg. 114).

    !Amer. Desc. of Henry LUCE of Martha's Vineyard-pg. 1821-A - Abigail SMITH and Pres John ADAMS were 3rd Cousins.

    Abigail Smith (1764-1818); was a third cousin to her husband, John Adams. They are both great-great grandchildren of Thomas Boylston. Historians do not know if they were aware of this fact when they were married. See the portrait of First Lady Abigail (Smith) Adams, by Gilbert Stuart. Abigail was the first First Lady to occupy the White House. Wife of John Adams, second president of the United States, and mother of John Quincy Adams, the sixth president. She was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts, the daughter of the Reverend William Smith, minister of the Congregational church there. Through her mother, Elizabeth Quincy (1721-75), she was descended from the 17th-century Puritan preacher Thomas Shepard (1605-49) of Cambridge. Although she had little formal education, she was among the most influential women of her day, especially as a fashion leader and social arbiter. During and after the American Revolution she was separated for long periods of time from her husband, who was first a delegate to Congress and later a diplomat in Europe. Her letters to him present a vivid picture of the time. After 1800 she lived in Washington, D.C., and thereafter in Braintree, Massachusetts. The Familiar Letters of John Adams and His Wife, Abigail (2 volumes, 1876), published with a memoir by their grandson, Charles Francis Adams, and later collections of her letters show that she was perceptive, sagacious, warmhearted, and generous.

    Notes handwritten by Margaret Elizabeth (Olive May Wiley) Gunn Leonard: Abigail Smith of Weymouth, Mass. Mother was a Quincy, her father was a minister and taught a sickly Abigair the basices at home. She read thru her father's library and then larger library of Grandfather Quincy. At 20 married John Adams, farmer, lawyer and lived on his Braintree farm south of Boston.Ran John's law office and the farm and reared 4 children while John was working for his country. Two other children died when infants. Sometimes did not see John for years when he was sent abroad on diplomatic missions. John became 1st Ambassador to Great Brittain, then V. Pres. and in 1797 the 2nd president of the U.S. She lived to see her son John Quincy Adams become Secy. of State, but died before he became our sixth president. Excerpt from newspaper (name unknown) clipping: Abigail Adams John Quincy Adams said his mother was an angel upon the earth. She a minister of blessings to all within her sphere of action. Her heart was the abode of heavenly purity. She had no feelings but of kindness and beneficence, yet her mind was as firm as her temper was mild and gentle. She had known sorrow but her sorrow was silent. Had she lived to the age of the patriarchs, evry day of her life would have been filled with clouds of goodness and of love. Additional notes written by MGL, appear to have been taken from some published work: Abigail Adams by Ewing Stone 1. Abigair Smith daughter of Pastor at 17 she became friend of John Adams. Married when she was 19, he was 28. "Sometimes I think the bottom of me is more important than the top." At 19 married. 1. Abigail; 2. John Quincy; 3. Charles; 4. Tommy; 5. Susanne (died 1 year old). Reared as delicate, but she became strong when "I married John Adams I had to be." He was in France 9 months with 2 boys and never wrote Abigail a word.

    !New Eng Gen Vol I,Fam Grp Sh by Maj George Wallace Hanks, Salt Lake City. Also info from Encyclopedia of Biography for Mass,p179 daug of William and Elizabeth Quincy Smith.

    Notes for Abigail Smith: Biography: Inheriting New England's strongest traditions, Abigail Smith was born in 1744 at Weymouth, Massachusetts. On her mother's side she was descended from the Quincys, a family of great prestige in the colony; her father and other forebearers were Congregational ministers, leaders in a society that held its clergy in high esteem. Like other women of the time, Abigail lacked formal education; but her curiosity spurred her keen intelligence, and she read avidly the books at hand. Reading created a bond between her and young John Adams, Harvard graduate launched on a career in law, and they were married in 1764. It was a marriage of the mind and of the heart, enduring for more than half a century, enriched by time. The young couple lived on John's small farm at Braintree or in Boston as his practice expanded. In ten years she bore three sons and two daughters; she looked after family and home when he went traveling as circuit judge. "Alas!" she wrote in December 1773, "How many snow banks divide thee and me...." Long separations kept Abigail from her husband while he served the country they loved, as delegate to the Continental Congress, envoy abroad, elected officer under the Constitution. Her letters--pungent, witty, and vivid, spelled just as she spoke--detail her life in times of revolution. They tell the story of the woman who stayed at home to struggle with wartime shortages and inflation; to run the farm with a minimum of help; to teach four children when formal education was interrupted. Most of all, they tell of her loneliness without her "dearest Friend." The "one single expression," she said, "dwelt upon my mind and played about my Heart...." In 1784, she joined him at his diplomatic post in Paris, and observed with interest the manners of the French. After 1785, she filled the difficult role of wife of the first United States Minister to Great Britain, and did so with dignity and tact. They returned happily in 1788 to Massach usetts and the handsome house they had just acquired in Braintree, later called Quincy, home for the rest of their lives. As wife of the first Vice President, Abigail became a good friend to Mrs. Washington and a valued help in official entertaining, drawing on her experience of courts and society abroad. After 1791, however, poor health forced her to spend as much time as possible in Quincy. Illness or trouble found her resolute; as she once declared, she would "not forget the blessings which sweeten life." When John Adams was elected President, she continued a formal pattern of entertaining--even in the primitive conditions she found at the new capital in November 1800. The city was wilderness, the President's House far from completion. Her private complaints to her family provide blunt accounts of both, but for her three months in Washington she duly held her dinners and receptions. The Adamses retired to Quincy in 1801, and for 17 years enjoyed the companionship that public life had long denied them. Abigail died in 1818, and is buried beside her husband in United First Parish Church. She leaves her country a most remarkable record as patriot and First Lady, wife of one President and mother of another.

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born 22 Nov 1744

    DEATH: Also shown as Died Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried United First Parish Church Cemetery, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    Children:
    1. Adams, Abigail was born on 14 Jul 1765 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 13 Aug 1813 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in 1813 in Quincy, Massachusetts.
    2. Adams, John Quincy was born on 11 Jul 1767 in Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 23 Feb 1848 in Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.; was buried in Februrary 1848 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States (Unitarian Church).
    3. Adams, Susanna was born on 28 Dec 1768 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 4 Feb 1770 in Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 6 Feb 1770.
    4. 1. Adams, Charles Francis was born on 29 May 1770 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts Bay, British America; died on 1 Dec 1800 in New York, New York, New York; was buried in Dec 1800 in FIrst Presbyterian Church, Manhattan, New York, United States.
    5. Adams, Thomas Boylston was born on 15 Sep 1772 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts Bay, British America; was christened in Sep 1772 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 May 1832 in Portsmouth (Independent City), Virginia, United States; was buried on 17 Mar 1832 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.
    6. Adams, Elizabeth was born on 11 Jul 1777 in Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 11 Jul 1777 in Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Adams, John was born on 8 Feb 1691 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was christened on 15 Mar 1691 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States (son of Adams, Joseph Jr and Bass, Hannah); died on 25 May 1761 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 28 May 1761 in Hancock Cemetery, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    John married Boylston, Susanna on 31 Oct 1734 in Brookline, Norfolk, Massachusetts. Susanna was born on 5 Mar 1699 in Brookline, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 17 Apr 1797 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in 1797. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Boylston, Susanna was born on 5 Mar 1699 in Brookline, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 17 Apr 1797 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in 1797.

    Notes:

    !Info from A GENEALOGY AND HISTORY of the CHUTE FAMILY IN AMERICA by WILLIAM E. CHUTE published SALEM,MASS. 1894

    !BIRTH: !DEATH: NEHGS REG vol 7, 1853 p --, PEDIGREE OF THE ADAMS FAMILY. HISTORY OF THE ADAMS FAMILY: p 7. !MARRIAGE: NEHGS Reg vol 7, 1853 p --, PEDIGREE OF THE ADAMS FAMILY. HISTORY OF THE ADAMS FAMILY: p 7. Married ADAMS, John,

    Children:
    1. 2. Adams, President John Jr. was born on 30 Oct 1735 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts; was christened in 1735 in Medway, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 4 Jul 1826 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 10 Jul 1826 in United First Parish Church Cemetery, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.
    2. Adams, Peter Boylston was born on 16 Oct 1738 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 2 Jun 1823; was buried in 1823 in Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States of America.
    3. Adams, Elihu was born on 29 Mar 1741 in Massachusetts, British America; died on 18 Mar 1776 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in Holbrook, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Adams, Joseph Jr was born on 24 Dec 1654 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was christened in Jan 1655 in St Methodist, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 Feb 1737 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in Feb 1737 in Braintree Cemetery, Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

    Notes:

    By his second wife, Hannah Bass, Joseph Adams was the grandfather of John Adams, second presi dent of the United States. Their son, Deacon John Adams was the father of President Adams.

    Joseph married Bass, Hannah on 8 Feb 1687/1688 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts. Hannah was born on 22 Jun 1667 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts; was christened in Jul 1667 in St Methodist, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 24 Oct 1705 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 14 Jun 1693 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massaschusetts, Braintree Cem. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Bass, Hannah was born on 22 Jun 1667 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts; was christened in Jul 1667 in St Methodist, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 24 Oct 1705 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 14 Jun 1693 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massaschusetts, Braintree Cem.
    Children:
    1. 4. Adams, John was born on 8 Feb 1691 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was christened on 15 Mar 1691 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 25 May 1761 in Braintree Now Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was buried on 28 May 1761 in Hancock Cemetery, Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.
    2. Adams, Hannah was born on 21 Feb 1697 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; was christened on 13 Mar 1697 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 26 Aug 1744 in Boston, Essex, Massachusetts, United States.
    3. Adams, Ruth was born on 21 Mar 1700 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 26 Aug 1761 in Uxbridge, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States.
    4. Adams, Bertha was born on 13 Jun 1702 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States; died on 10 May 1796 in Prob. Weymouth, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.