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  1. 29 de oct. de 2009 · George Washington (1732-99) ... 1789, and Washington won handily. John Adams (1735-1826), who received the second-largest number of votes, became the nation’s first vice president.

  2. George Washington Adams (1801–1829), member of Massachusetts state legislature. John Adams II (1803–1834), private secretary to his father. Charles Francis Adams Sr. (1807–1886), U.S. Congressman and Ambassador to the United Kingdom. John Quincy Adams II (1833–1894), lawyer and politician. His grandson was sociologist George C. Homans.

  3. Eight years after George Washington’s death, John Adams penned this letter to Benjamin Rush explaining why George Washington was considered a hero by the American people. He wrote it on November 11, 1807, in response to a letter from Rush that described Washington as "self-taught in all the arts which gave him his immense elevation above all his fellow citizens."

  4. John Adams. (Braintree, Massachusetts, 1735 - Quincy, id., 1826) Político estadounidense que fue el segundo presidente de los Estados Unidos de América (1797-1800). La negativa de George Washington a presentarse a las elecciones de 1796 abrió el camino de la presidencia a John Adams, hombre impetuoso y vehemente que había sido ya una figura ...

  5. El 4 de julio de 1776, el Congreso general de Filadelfia proclamó la unión de las trece colonias y votó la famosa Declaración de Independencia de los Estados Unidos de América, redactada por Thomas Jefferson con el apoyo de Benjamin Franklin y John Adams. A pesar de que los "Hijos de la Libertad" lograron un triunfo resonante a nivel ...

  6. 15 de dic. de 2012 · Portrait of George Washington Adams (1801-1829), son of John Quincy Adams, by Charles Bird King C. 1820s.

  7. St: Petersburg 10 January 1813. My dear Son. In the promise with which my last Letter to you, upon the Bible, was concluded, that I would next consider the Scriptures in their ethical character, as containing a system of morals, I undertook a task from the performance of which I have been hitherto deterred, by its very magnitude and importance.