Webb Genealogy - Person Sheet
Webb Genealogy - Person Sheet
NameAbigail Smith 2567
Birth23 Nov 1744, Weymouth, Norfolk County, MA, USA2567
Death28 Oct 1818, Quincy, Norfolk County, MA, USA2567
FlagsDeceased
FatherWilliam Smith Jr. (1706-1783)
MotherElizabeth Quincy (1721-1775)
Spouses
Birth30 Oct 1735, Braintree, Norfolk County, MA, USA4560,4561
MemoBraintree was renamed Quincy
Death4 Jul 1826, Quincy, Norfolk County, MA, USA2567
BurialQuincy Congregational Church, Quincy, Norfolk County, MA, USA2567
FatherJohn Adams Sr. (1690-1761)
MotherSusannah Boylston (1708-1797)
Marriage25 Oct 1764, Weymouth, Norfolk County, MA, USA2567
ChildrenAbigail (1765-1813)
 John Quincy (1767-1848)
 Susannah (1768-)
 Charles (1770-1800)
 Thomas Boylston (1772-1832)
Notes for Abigail Smith
From the Massachusetts Historical Society:4561

ABIGAIL SMITH ADAMS was born 11 November 1744, in Weymouth, Massachusetts, to the Reverend William and Elizabeth (Quincy) Smith. She had no formal schooling, but her education included reading works by William Shakespeare, John Milton, and Alexander Pope. On 25 October 1764, she married John Adams. John Adams' protracted absences from home (first while traveling the court circuits and later while at the Continental Congress and on diplomatic assignments abroad) often left Abigail with the children to raise, a farm to manage, the household and tenants to supervise, and extended family and friends to care for—all while the Revolution in Boston unfolded on her doorstep. The letters she exchanged with John and other family members reveal her cares and worries, her frank opinions and advice, and give an extraordinary view of everyday life in 18th-century New England.

In 1784, Adams and her daughter Abigail joined John and son John Quincy in Europe. Abigail's record of her month-long voyage from Boston to England, along with two shorter journals she kept while in England and on her return voyage to America in 1788, are printed in The Adams Papers' Diary and Autobiography of John Adams, volume 3. During the 12 years of John Adams' vice-presidency and presidency, Abigail moved between their home in Quincy and the national capitol in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., successively. Again, the burden of their household and personal affairs fell on her capable shoulders. She was also responsible for raising nieces and grandchildren entrusted to her care. Among her notable correspondents were Thomas Jefferson, James Lovell, Benjamin Rush, and Mercy Otis Warren. Abigail Adams died 28 October 1818, at home in Quincy.
Last Modified 27 Mar 2004Created 12 Mar 2023 using Reunion for Macintosh
All sources of data are documented on the “Person Sheet” for each individual. My early data often came from less-than-reliable sources (e.g., “Sarah’s genealogy pages”). If the only sources for a person is something like that or worse there is no listed source for data, please take the information as only a suggestion and not a fact.

(C) Richard Webb, 2023. All rights reserved.