Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
October 18, 1972 (40 Washington St. 32: Noah Curtis House: Noah Curtis House: September 20, 1989 (313 Franklin St. 33: Thomas Curtis House: Thomas Curtis House
John Halloran House; Hancock Cemetery; Hardwick House (Quincy, Massachusetts) House at 15 Gilmore Street; House at 20 Sterling Street; House at 23–25 Prout Street; House at 25 High School Avenue; House at 32 Bayview Avenue; House at 92 Willard Street; House at 94 Grandview Avenue; House at 105 President's Lane
An additional lean-to was added sometime in 1764 along with the door trim and secondary entrance. John Quincy Adams was born in this house in 1767, and lived in it until 1783. John Quincy Adam's Birthplace is now owned and operated as a museum by the Federal government of the United States through the National Park Service. John Adams ...
John Halloran House; Hardwick House (Quincy, Massachusetts) House at 15 Gilmore Street; House at 20 Sterling Street; House at 23–25 Prout Street; House at 25 High School Avenue; House at 32 Bayview Avenue; House at 92 Willard Street; House at 94 Grandview Avenue; House at 105 President's Lane
Edmund Quincy (1602–1636) I, who emigrated to Boston 1633 and settled Mount Wollaston 1635, married Judith Pares (d. 1654) Judith Quincy (1626–1695), married John Hull (1624–1683), merchant and Massachusetts Bay Colony politician
Peacefield, also called Peace field or Old House, is a historic home formerly owned by the Adams family of Quincy, Massachusetts. It was the home of United States Founding Father and U.S. president John Adams and First Lady Abigail Adams , and of U.S. president John Quincy Adams and his First Lady, Louisa Adams .
The John Quincy Adams Birthplace is a historic house at 141 Franklin Street in Quincy, Massachusetts. It is the saltbox home in which the sixth United States President, John Quincy Adams , was born in 1767.
In 1803 John sold both houses to his son, who lived in the house of his birth, and rented this one out. The house was occupied from 1810 to 1818 by John Quincy Adams' son, Thomas Boylston Adams. [3] Both houses remained in Adams family ownership, and were rented out until 1885, when most of the surrounding farmland was sold off.