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  1. To order an image, navigate to the full. display and click "request this image". on the blue toolbar. Miniature portrait, watercolor on ivory by Mr. Parker, 1795. Oval portrait: 4.7 cm x 4 cm; in gold locket: 5.3 cm x 4.7 cm. Artwork 03.001. This miniature portrait depicts Thomas Boylston Adams (1772-1832), the son of John Adams and Abigail Adams.

  2. Before becoming President in 1797, John Adams built his reputation as a blunt-speaking man of independent mind. A fervent patriot and brilliant intellectual, Adams served as a delegate from Massachusetts to the Continental Congress between 1774 and 1777, as a diplomat in Europe from 1778 to 1788, and as vice president during the Washington administration.

  3. Thomas Boylston Adams returned to the United States on II January 1799. Grateful to “tread once more the land of my Fathers,” Thomas Boylston traveled first to Philadelphia to visit his father, for whom the “happy Event … dissipated a gloom” created by Abigail’s absence from the capital.

  4. 4 de dic. de 2023 · Thomas Boylston Adams died on 13 March 1832, in Quincy. THOMAS BOYLSTON ADAMS, third son and youngest child of John and Abigail (Smith) Adams, was born 15 September 1772. He graduated from Harvard in 1790 and studied law in Philadelphia. He accompanied his brother John Quincy on his first diplomatic mission to Europe as secretary in 1794 ...

  5. Thomas Boylston Adams was born 15 September 1772 in Quincy, Massachusetts, United States to John Adams (1735-1826) and Abigail Smith (1744-1818) and died 13 March 1832 Quincy, Massachusetts, United States of unspecified causes. He married Ann Harrod (1774-1846) 16 May 1805 in Quincy, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States.

  6. 14 de abr. de 2002 · 2. Thomas Duncan (1760–1827) was a Pennsylvania lawyer and native of Carlisle. On 3 March JA nominated him to be attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, and the Senate confirmed the appointment the same day (Katherine Duncan Smith, The Story of Thomas Duncan and His Six Sons, N.Y., 1928, p. 42; U.S. Senate, Exec. Jour. description begins Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the ...

  7. 15 de abr. de 2002 · The article was extracted from James Thomson Callender’s letter “To the Public” in the Richmond, Va., Recorder, 7 July, which claimed that in 1798 Thomas Jefferson had characterized Callender as one of America’s best writers and had made two $50 payments to Callender in support of The Prospect before Us, for which see vol. 14:228 (Jefferson, Papers description begins The Papers of ...