Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Samuel Adams delivered what may count as the most remarkable second act in American life. It was all the more confounding after the first: He was a perfect failure until middle age.

  2. Explore the variety of beers from Samuel Adams, from classics to non-alcoholic, and find your favorite brew. Taste the difference.

  3. Samuel Adams was born on September 16, 1722 to Samuel Adams Sr. and Mary (Fifield) Adams in the family home on Purchase Street in the South End of colonial Boston. Both Samuel Sr. and Mary hailed from prominent Boston seafaring families and provided a comfortable and stable home for their children. The elder Adams was a successful malter and ...

  4. Quality and Innovation. From pioneering aging beer in used spirit barrels to the innovative brewing process behind Sam ’76, we are constantly innovating. We are dedicated to cultivating an equitable, inclusive and diverse culture at Sam Adams and for the craft community. That is why we are proud to be a member of Crafted For All.

  5. Samuel Adams. Date of Birth - Death September 27, 1722 - October 2, 1803. Born as the son of a church deacon in 1722, Samuel Adams understood from a young age the authority private citizens could hold over politics once properly mobilized. Adams acquired something of a historical reputation—in his own time no less—as a rabble-rouser and ...

  6. Samuel Adams, "Samuel Adams to the Representatives of Boston, May 24, 1764," in The Writings of Samuel Adams vol I 1764-1769, edited by Harry Alonzo Cushing (G.P. Putnum, 1904) 5. Samuel Adams to Arthur Lee December 31, 1773, accessed November 2021, Samuel Adams Heritage Society .

  7. Samuel Adams. Samuel Adams, (born Sept. 27, 1722, Boston, Mass.—died Oct. 2, 1803, Boston, Mass., U.S.), American Revolutionary leader. A cousin of John Adams, he graduated from Harvard College in 1740 and briefly practiced law. He became a strong opponent of British taxation measures and organized resistance to the Stamp Act.

  1. People also search for