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  1. 15 de nov. de 2023 · Tour the historic Abigail Adams Birthplace. Built in 1685, the Abigail Smith Adams (1744-1818) Birthplace was home to this exceptional woman for the first twenty years of her life. It has survived two relocations and now stands as a monument to her extraordinary life. Tour Information. Tickets.

  2. Abigail Adams struggled her whole life with the limitations that society placed upon her dreams. Despite these hardships, she found a way to use her talents to serve her nation by assisting and advising her husband, President John Adams, and teaching and guiding her son, President John Quincy Adams.

  3. Abigail Adams Biography. Abigail Smith (Adams) was born on November 11, 1744, in Weymouth, Massachusetts. She was the second child born to Elizabeth Quincy Smith and the Reverend William Smith. Her father was Pastor of Weymouth's North Parish Congregational Church and one of the best educated and most prosperous citizens of the community.

  4. 2 de mar. de 2022 · But before Abigail Adams became a president's wife or mother, she was simply Abigail Smith. She was born Nov. 11, 1744, in Weymouth, Massachusetts, to William Smith, a Congregationalist minister and Elizabeth Quincy Smith, the daughter of John Quincy, a member of the colonial governor's council and colonel of the militia.

  5. 3 de jul. de 2019 · John Adams served as Vice President of the United States from 1789–1797 and then as President 1797–1801. Abigail spent some of her time at home, managing the family financial affairs, and part of her time in the federal capital, in Philadelphia most of those years and, very briefly, in the new White House in Washington, D.C. (November 1800–March 1801).

  6. Signatura. Abigail Adams ( Weymouth, 22 de novembre del 1744 - Quincy, 28 d'octubre del 1818 ), de soltera Abigail Smith i també coneguda com a Abigail Smith Adams, fou la primera segona dama (esposa del vicepresident) i la segona primera dama dels Estats Units. [1] [2] [3]

  7. 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.

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