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  1. Thomas Boylston Adams may refer to: Thomas Boylston Adams (1772–1832), Massachusetts legislator and judge and brother of John Quincy Adams. Thomas Boylston Adams (1910–1997), Massachusetts executive, writer, and political candidate. Category: Human name disambiguation pages.

  2. Thomas Boylston Adams was the third son born to U.S. President John Adams and former First Lady Abigail Adams This short article about a person from the United States can be made longer. You can help Wikipedia by adding to it .

  3. Thomas Boylston Adams (1772-1832), one of the sons of U.S. president John Adams, was a representative to the Massachusetts legislature from 1809 to 1811 and served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts.

  4. Thomas Boylston Adams was the third and youngest son of John and Abigail (Smith) Adams. Thomas' father John was the 2nd President of the United States and his brother John Quincy was the 6th President of the United States Adams lived with relatives in Haverhill, Massachusetts during his father's diplomatic missions in...

  5. When Thomas Boylston Adams was born on 25 July 1910, in Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri, United States, his father, John Adams, was 35 and his mother, Marian Morse, was 32. He married Ramelle Frost Cochrane on 5 January 1940, in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States. He lived in Lincoln, Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1964.

  6. 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 ...

  7. Editorial Note. Throughout the first half of 1794, John Adams made a concerted effort to instruct his son Charles, and to a lesser extent Thomas Boylston and John Quincy, on the subjects of equality, especially “natural equality,” and the laws of nature and of nations. John believed that his own understanding of natural equality had been ...