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  1. Johnson was the wealthy daughter of an American businessman, yet she suffered migraines and fainting spells in 1795. At Hallows Barking parish in London, Adams and Johnson married on July 26, 1797; Adams was 30, and Johnson was 22. They had four children together before Adams died in 1848: George Washington, John II, Charles Francis, and Louisa ...

  2. Jan 22, 2004 · From 1797 to 1801, under his father, he served as Minister to Prussia. In the former year, he married Louisa C. Johnson, daughter of a U.S. consular official whom he had met earlier while in London on diplomatic business. They were to have three sons, including Charles Francis, and one daughter. Returning to Boston in 1801, John Quincy resumed ...

  3. Sep 25, 2020 · Sonja Morgan married John Adams Morgan in 1998, but they divorced in 2006. John has two other children from different marriages, who are Quincy’s stepbrothers, John Adams Morgan Jr., and Chauncey Goss Morgan. Both men are much older than Quincy, who was born in October 2000 and is now 19. Her father is currently married to his fifth wife ...

  4. Jul 16, 2008 · One Plastered President. Ulysses S. Grant is famous for being a drunk, but its inevitably presented in a fun, Norm from Cheers -esque way (e.g., Lincoln quipping that if Grant was on the sauce ...

  5. Abigail Adams was an American first lady (1797–1801), the wife of John Adams, second president of the United States, and mother of John Quincy Adams, sixth president of the United States. She was a prolific letter writer whose correspondence gives an intimate and vivid portrayal of life in the young republic.

  6. Feb 1, 2024 · John Adams. October 30, 1735–July 4, 1826 — Second President of the United States. John Adams was a Founding Father, America's First Ambassador to the Court of St. James and the Second President of the United States. He was also the first Vice President, serving two terms under George Washington. John Adams was a key figure during the ...

  7. On February 21, 1848, a severe stroke hit John Quincy Adams just minutes after he cast a loud vote in opposition to a motion to decorate certain Army officers serving in the Mexican War. It happened on the House floor in the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. Two days later, he slipped into a coma moments after reputedly uttering a final ...

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