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Toggle Early life and education subsection. 1.1 College education and adulthood. 1.2 Law practice and marriage. ... John Adams (October 30, 1735 – July 4, 1826) ...
January 20 – Adams nominates John Marshall to the Supreme Court to replace Oliver Ellsworth. [1] January 23 – A vote to ratify the Convention of 1800 fails in the Senate with 16 votes in favor and 14 against, falling below the required 20-vote supermajority. [46] January 27 – The Senate confirms Marshall's nomination to the Supreme Court. [1]
The premier modern biography was Honest John Adams, a 1933 biography by the noted French specialist in American history Gilbert Chinard, who came to Adams after writing his acclaimed 1929 biography of Jefferson. For a generation, Chinard's work was regarded as the best life of Adams, and it is still an important text in illustrating the themes ...
John Adams. is a 2001 biography of the Founding Father and second U.S. President John Adams, written by the popular American historian David McCullough, which won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography. It was adapted into the 2008 television miniseries of the same name by HBO Films.
The John Adams Library at the Boston Public Library; Adams Family Papers: An Electronic Archive at the Massachusetts Historical Society; Founders Online – Printed Volumes: John Adams from the National Archives; John Adams Papers at the Avalon Project "Life Portrait of John Adams", from C-SPAN's American Presidents: Life Portraits, March 22, 1999
John Quincy Adams (/ ... Early life, education, and early career. John Quincy Adams was born on July 11, 1767, to John and Abigail Adams (née Smith) ...
One evening early in Eric Adams’ run for New York State Senate in 2006, the candidate and his advisers gathered for a small fundraiser at the now-defunct Ovation nightclub on Atlantic Ave. in ...
This house is a National Historic Landmark, the birthplace of John Adams. In 1720 it was purchased by Deacon John Adams, Sr., the father of the future second president. The younger Adams lived here until 1764, when he married Abigail Smith. It is a few feet from the John Quincy Adams Birthplace home, where John and Abigail Adams moved.