Note: This is just one of
1,162
family groupings listed on
The Political Graveyard web site.
These families each have three or more politician members,
all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.
This specific family group is a subset of the
much larger Three Thousand
Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed
with more than one subset.
These groupings — even the names of the groupings,
and the areas of main activity — are the
result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have,
not the choices of any historian or genealogist.
|
John Adams (1735-1826) —
also known as "His Rotundity"; "The Duke of
Braintree"; "American Cato"; "Old
Sink and Swim"; "The Colossus of
Independence"; "Father of the American
Navy" —
of Quincy, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in Braintree (part now in Quincy), Norfolk
County, Mass., October
30, 1735.
Lawyer;
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Massachusetts, 1774-78; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; U.S. Minister to Netherlands, 1781-88; Great Britain, 1785-88; Vice
President of the United States, 1789-97; President
of the United States, 1797-1801; defeated (Federalist), 1800; delegate
to Massachusetts state constitutional convention, 1820.
Unitarian.
English
ancestry. Member, American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1900.
Died in Quincy, Norfolk
County, Mass., July 4,
1826 (age 90 years, 247
days).
Original interment at Hancock
Cemetery, Quincy, Mass.; reinterment in 1828 at United
First Parish Church, Quincy, Mass.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John Adams (1691-1761) and Susanna (Boylston) Adams (1699-1797);
married, October
25, 1764, to Abigail
Quincy Smith (aunt of William
Cranch); father of Abigail Amelia Adams (1765-1813; who married
William
Stephens Smith) and John
Quincy Adams (1767-1848) (who married Louisa
Catherine Johnson); grandfather of George
Washington Adams and Charles
Francis Adams (1807-1886); great-grandfather of John
Quincy Adams (1833-1894) and Brooks
Adams; second great-grandfather of Charles
Francis Adams (1866-1954); third great-grandfather of Thomas
Boylston Adams; first cousin thrice removed of Edward
M. Chapin; first cousin four times removed of Arthur
Chapin; first cousin six times removed of Denwood
Lynn Chapin; second cousin of Samuel
Adams; second cousin once removed of Joseph
Allen; second cousin twice removed of John
Milton Thayer; second cousin thrice removed of William
Vincent Wells; second cousin four times removed of Lyman
Kidder Bass, Daniel
T. Hayden, Arthur
Laban Bates and Almur
Stiles Whiting; second cousin five times removed of Charles
Grenfill Washburn, Lyman
Metcalfe Bass and Emerson
Richard Boyles; third cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Mason and George
Bailey Loring; third cousin twice removed of Asahel
Otis, Erastus
Fairbanks, Charles
Stetson, Henry
Brewster Stanton, Charles
Adams Jr., Isaiah
Stetson, Joshua
Perkins, Eli
Thayer and Bailey
Frye Adams; third cousin thrice removed of Day
Otis Kellogg, Dwight
Kellogg, Caleb
Stetson (1801-1885), Oakes
Ames, Oliver
Ames Jr., Benjamin
W. Waite, Alfred
Elisha Ames, George
Otis Fairbanks, Austin
Wells Holden, Horace
Fairbanks, Ebenezer
Oliver Grosvenor, Joseph
Washburn Yates, Augustus
Brown Reed Sprague, Franklin
Fairbanks, Erskine
Mason Phelps, Arthur
Newton Holden, John
Alden Thayer, Irving
Hall Chase, Isaiah
Kidder Stetson and Giles
Russell Taggart. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Adams counties in Idaho, Iowa, Miss., Neb., Ohio, Pa., Wash. and Wis. are
named for him. |
| | Mount
Adams (second highest peak in the Northeast), in the White Mountains,
Coos
County, New Hampshire, is named for
him. — The World War II Liberty
ship SS John Adams (built 1941-42 at Richmond,
California; torpedoed and lost in the Coral
Sea, 1942) was named for
him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: John
Adams Harper
— John
A. Cameron
— John
A. Dix
— John
Adams Fisher
— John
A. Taintor
— John
A. Gilmer
— John
A. Perkins
— John
Adams Hyman
— John
A. Damon
— John A.
Lee
— John
A. Sanders
— John
Adams Hurson
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — U.S.
State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
| | Books about John Adams: John Ferling,
John
Adams: A Life — Joseph J. Ellis, The
Passionate Sage: The Character and Legacy of John
Adams — David McCullough, John
Adams — Gore Vidal, Inventing
A Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson — John Ferling,
Adams
vs. Jefferson: The Tumultuous Election of 1800 — James
Grant, John
Adams : Party of One |
| | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
Samuel Allyne Otis (1740-1814) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Barnstable, Barnstable
County, Mass., November
24, 1740.
Merchant;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1776-85; Speaker of
the Massachusetts State House of Representatives, 1784-85; delegate
to Massachusetts state constitutional convention, 1780; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Massachusetts, 1787-88; Secretary of
the United States Senate, 1789-1814.
Died in Washington,
D.C., April
22, 1814 (age 73 years, 149
days).
Interment at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of James Otis (1702-1778) and Mary (Allyne) Otis (1702-1774);
married, December
31, 1764, to Elizabeth Gray (1745-1779); married, March
28, 1782, to Mary (Smith) Gray; father of Harrison
Gray Otis (1765-1848); great-grandfather of James
Otis (1836-1898); third great-grandfather of Robert
Helyer Thayer; first cousin twice removed of Nathaniel
Freeman Jr.; first cousin thrice removed of Benjamin
Fessenden and Charles
Backus Hyde Fessenden; first cousin four times removed of Albert
Clinton Griswold; second cousin once removed of Asahel
Otis; second cousin twice removed of Oran
Gray Otis, Day
Otis Kellogg, Asa H.
Otis, Dwight
Kellogg, John
Otis, William
Shaw Chandler Otis, David
Perry Otis, Harris
F. Otis, James
Otis (1826-1875) and Harrison
Gray Otis (1837-1917); second cousin thrice removed of Charles
Augustus Otis, Sr., George
Lorenzo Otis, John
Grant Otis, Norton
Prentiss Otis, Lauren
Ford Otis and Charles
Eugene Otis; second cousin four times removed of Ralph
Chester Otis; third cousin once removed of Chillus
Doty; third cousin twice removed of James
Duane Doty, George
Bailey Loring and Abraham
Lansing; third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Doty. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Otis
family of Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Samuel Osgood (1748-1813) —
of Andover (part now in North Andover), Essex
County, Mass.; New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Andover (part now in North Andover), Essex
County, Mass., February
3, 1748.
Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; delegate
to Massachusetts state constitutional convention, 1779-80; member
of Massachusetts
state senate, 1780; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Massachusetts, 1781-84; member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1784; U.S.
Postmaster General, 1789-91; Presidential Elector for New York,
1792;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1800-02.
Member, American
Philosophical Society.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., August
12, 1813 (age 65 years, 190
days).
Original interment at Brick
Presbyterian Church, Manhattan, N.Y.; reinterment in 1856 at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|
|
Simeon Baldwin (1761-1851) —
of New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn.
Born in Norwich, New London
County, Conn., December
14, 1761.
U.S.
Representative from Connecticut at-large, 1803-05; superior court
judge in Connecticut, 1806-18; mayor
of New Haven, Conn., 1826-27.
Died in New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn., May 26,
1851 (age 89 years, 163
days).
Interment at Grove
Street Cemetery, New Haven, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Ebenezer Baldwin (1710-1792) and Bethiah (Barker) Baldwin
(1719-1762); married to Rebecca Sherman (daughter of Roger
Sherman (1721-1793)) and Elizabeth (Sherman) Burr (daughter of Roger
Sherman (1721-1793)); father of Roger
Sherman Baldwin; grandfather of Simeon
Eben Baldwin; great-grandfather of Edward
Baldwin Whitney and Henry
de Forest Baldwin; third great-grandnephew of Thomas
Welles; second cousin of Samuel
Gager; second cousin once removed of Samuel
R. Gager and Samuel
Austin Gager; second cousin thrice removed of Walter
Booth, George
Bailey Loring, Charles
Page, Ernest
Harvey Woodford and Clement
Phineas Kellogg; second cousin four times removed of Herman
Arod Gager and Harry
Andrews Gager; second cousin five times removed of George
Franklin Chapin, Frederick
B. Piatt, Mary
Winsor, Joseph
Clark Baldwin III, George
Henry Augur and George
Leroy Saal; third cousin of Josiah
Cowles; third cousin once removed of James
Doolittle Wooster and Daniel
Upson; third cousin twice removed of John
Charles Birdsall, Francis
William Kellogg, Ausburn
Birdsall and Joseph
Washburn Yates; third cousin thrice removed of Jesse
Hoyt, Truman
Hotchkiss, George
Isaac Sherwood, Charles
Upson, Calvin
Josiah Cowles (1821-1907), Gad
Ely Upson, Christopher
Columbus Upson, Andrew
Seth Upson, David
B. Sherwood, Austin
George Nettleton, Evelyn
M. Upson, Benjamin
Pixley Birdsall and Frederick
Washburn Yates; fourth cousin once removed of Ezra
Cornell. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Baldwin-Greene-Upson-Hoar
family of Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Benjamin Pickman Jr. (1763-1843) —
of Salem, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Salem, Essex
County, Mass., September
30, 1763.
Member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1797-1802, 1812-13; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1803; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 2nd District, 1809-11.
Died in Salem, Essex
County, Mass., August
16, 1843 (age 79 years, 320
days).
Interment at Broad
Street Cemetery, Salem, Mass.
|
|
Harrison Gray Otis (1765-1848) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., October
8, 1765.
Lawyer;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1796, 1803-05; Speaker of
the Massachusetts State House of Representatives, 1803-05; U.S.
Attorney for Massachusetts, 1796; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts at-large, 1797-1801; member of
Massachusetts
state senate, 1805; common pleas court judge in Massachusetts,
1814; U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, 1817-22; Federalist candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1823; mayor of
Boston, Mass., 1829-32.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., October
28, 1848 (age 83 years, 20
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Samuel
Allyne Otis and Elizabeth (Gray) Otis (1745-1779); married, May 31,
1790, to Sally Foster (1770-1836); grandfather of James
Otis (1836-1898); second great-grandfather of Robert
Helyer Thayer; second cousin once removed of Nathaniel
Freeman Jr.; second cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Fessenden and Charles
Backus Hyde Fessenden; second cousin thrice removed of Albert
Clinton Griswold; third cousin of Asahel
Otis; third cousin once removed of Oran
Gray Otis, Day
Otis Kellogg, Dwight
Kellogg, Asa H.
Otis (1797-1855), John
Otis, William
Shaw Chandler Otis, David
Perry Otis, Harris
F. Otis, James
Otis (1826-1875) and Harrison
Gray Otis; third cousin twice removed of Charles
Augustus Otis, Sr., George
Lorenzo Otis, John
Grant Otis, Norton
Prentiss Otis, Lauren
Ford Otis and Charles
Eugene Otis; fourth cousin of Chillus
Doty; fourth cousin once removed of James
Duane Doty, George
Bailey Loring and Abraham
Lansing. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Otis
family of Connecticut; Lansing
family of New York; Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The town
of Harrison,
Maine, is named for
him. |
| | Politician named for him: Harrison
Gray Otis Blake
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) —
also known as "Old Man Eloquent"; "The
Accidental President"; "The Massachusetts
Madman" —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.; Quincy, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in Braintree (part now in Quincy), Norfolk
County, Mass., July 11,
1767.
Lawyer;
U.S. Minister to Netherlands, 1794-97; Prussia, 1797-1801; Russia, 1809-14; Great Britain, 1815-17; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1802; U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, 1803-08; resigned 1808; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1817-25; President
of the United States, 1825-29; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts, 1831-48 (11th District
1831-33, 12th District 1833-43, 8th District 1843-48); died in office
1848; candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1834.
Unitarian.
English
ancestry. Member, American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1905.
Suffered a stroke
while speaking on the floor of the U.S. House of
Representatives, February 21, 1848, and died two days later in
the Speaker's office,
U.S. Capitol
Building, Washington,
D.C., February
23, 1848 (age 80 years, 227
days).
Original interment at Hancock
Cemetery, Quincy, Mass.; reinterment at United
First Parish Church, Quincy, Mass.; cenotaph at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Adams and Abigail
Adams; brother of Abigail Amelia Adams (1765-1813; who married William
Stephens Smith); married, July 26,
1797, to Louisa
Catherine Johnson (daughter of Joshua
Johnson; sister-in-law of John
Pope; niece of Thomas
Johnson); father of George
Washington Adams and Charles
Francis Adams (1807-1886); grandfather of John
Quincy Adams and Brooks
Adams; great-grandfather of Charles
Francis Adams (1866-1954); second great-grandfather of Thomas
Boylston Adams; first cousin of William
Cranch; second cousin once removed of Samuel
Adams; second cousin twice removed of Edward
M. Chapin; second cousin thrice removed of Arthur
Chapin; second cousin five times removed of Denwood
Lynn Chapin; third cousin of Joseph
Allen; third cousin once removed of Samuel
Sewall, Josiah
Quincy and John
Milton Thayer; third cousin twice removed of William
Vincent Wells; third cousin thrice removed of Lyman
Kidder Bass, Daniel
T. Hayden, Arthur
Laban Bates and Almur
Stiles Whiting; fourth cousin of Jeremiah
Mason, Josiah
Quincy Jr. and George
Bailey Loring; fourth cousin once removed of Asahel
Otis, Erastus
Fairbanks, Charles
Stetson, Henry
Brewster Stanton, Charles
Adams Jr., Isaiah
Stetson (1812-1880), Joshua
Perkins, Eli
Thayer, Bailey
Frye Adams and Samuel
Miller Quincy. |
| | Political families: Greene-Lippitt
family of Providence, Rhode Island; DuPont
family of Wilmington, Delaware; Thayer-Capron-Aldrich-Stetson
family; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: John
Smith — Thurlow
Weed |
| | Adams counties in Ill. and Ind. are
named for him. |
| | Mount
Quincy Adams, in the White Mountains, Coos
County, New Hampshire, is named for
him. — Mount
Quincy Adams, on the border between British
Columbia, Canada, and Hoonah-Angoon
Census Area, Alaska, is named for
him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: John
Q. A. Brackett
— John
Q. A. Shelden
— J.
Q. A. Reber
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — U.S.
State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
| | Books about John Quincy Adams: Paul C.
Nagel, John
Quincy Adams : A Public Life, a Private Life — Lynn
Hudson Parsons, John
Quincy Adams — Robert V. Remini, John
Quincy Adams — Joseph Wheelan, Mr.
Adams's Last Crusade: John Quincy Adams's Extraordinary
Post-Presidential Life in Congress |
| | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
Samuel Putnam (1768-1853) —
of Massachusetts.
Born in Danvers, Essex
County, Mass., May 13,
1768.
Justice
of Massachusetts state supreme court, 1814-42.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., July 3,
1853 (age 85 years, 51
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Asahel Otis (1768-1837) —
of Montville, New London
County, Conn.
Born in Montville, New London
County, Conn., May 1,
1768.
Member of Connecticut
state house of representatives from Montville, 1822.
Died in Bethany, Genesee
County, N.Y., January
12, 1837 (age 68 years, 256
days).
Interment at Chester Burying Ground, Montville, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Nathaniel Otis (1742-1834) and Amy (Gardner) Otis (1745-1815);
married, January
15, 1792, to Mary Chester (1770-1834); first cousin once removed
of Day
Otis Kellogg and Dwight
Kellogg; second cousin once removed of Samuel
Allyne Otis and Asa H.
Otis; third cousin of Harrison
Gray Otis; third cousin once removed of Nathaniel
Freeman Jr. and Abraham
Lansing; third cousin twice removed of John
Adams, Benjamin
Fessenden, Charles
Backus Hyde Fessenden, Charles
Augustus Otis, Sr. and James
Otis; third cousin thrice removed of William
Barret Ridgely and Austin
Eugene Lathrop; fourth cousin of Stephen
Daniel Tilden, Moses
Younglove Tilden and Samuel
Jones Tilden; fourth cousin once removed of John
Quincy Adams, Daniel
Rose Tilden, Calvin
Tilden Hulburd, Andrew
Gould Chatfield (1810-1875) and George
Bailey Loring. |
| | Political families: Otis
family of Connecticut; Sherman
family of Connecticut; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Dudley Leavitt Pickman (1779-1846) —
of Salem, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Salem, Essex
County, Mass., 1779.
Shipowner;
importer
and exporter; investor and stockholder in cotton and
woolen
mills and railroads;
financier;
member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1820.
Died November
4, 1846 (age about 67
years).
Interment at Harmony
Grove Cemetery, Salem, Mass.
|
|
Benjamin Toppan Pickman (1790-1835) —
also known as Benjamin T. Pickman —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Salem, Essex
County, Mass., 1790.
Member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1833-35.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., March
12, 1835 (age about 44
years).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Roger Sherman Baldwin (1793-1863) —
also known as Roger S. Baldwin —
of New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn.
Born in New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn., January
4, 1793.
Whig. Lawyer;
member of Connecticut
state senate 4th District, 1837-38; member of Connecticut
state house of representatives from New Haven, 1840-41; Governor of
Connecticut, 1844-46; U.S.
Senator from Connecticut, 1847-51.
Died in New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn., February
19, 1863 (age 70 years, 46
days).
Interment at Grove
Street Cemetery, New Haven, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Simeon
Baldwin and Rebecca (Sherman) Baldwin (1764-1795); married, October
25, 1820, to Emily Pitkin Perkins (1796-1874; niece of Timothy
Pitkin); father of Henrietta Perkins Baldwin (who married Dwight
Foster) and Simeon
Eben Baldwin (1840-1927); grandson of Roger
Sherman; grandfather of Edward
Baldwin Whitney; granduncle of Henry
de Forest Baldwin; fourth great-grandnephew of Thomas
Welles; first cousin of Sherman
Day, Ebenezer
Rockwood Hoar, William
Maxwell Evarts and George
Frisbie Hoar; first cousin once removed of Rockwood
Hoar, Sherman
Hoar, Maxwell
Evarts and Arthur
Outram Sherman; first cousin twice removed of Roger
Sherman Hoar; first cousin thrice removed of Archibald
Cox; second cousin once removed of Samuel
Gager; second cousin twice removed of Chauncey
Mitchell Depew and John
Frederick Addis; second cousin thrice removed of John
Stanley Addis; third cousin of Samuel
R. Gager and Samuel
Austin Gager; third cousin once removed of Josiah
Cowles and John
Adams Dix; third cousin twice removed of Walter
Booth, George
Bailey Loring, Charles
Page, Ernest
Harvey Woodford and Clement
Phineas Kellogg; third cousin thrice removed of Herman
Arod Gager and Harry
Andrews Gager; fourth cousin of James
Doolittle Wooster and Daniel
Upson; fourth cousin once removed of John
Charles Birdsall, Francis
William Kellogg, Ausburn
Birdsall and Joseph
Washburn Yates. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Sherman
family of Connecticut; Greene-Lippitt
family of Providence, Rhode Island; Baldwin-Greene-Upson-Hoar
family of Connecticut; Foster-Baldwin
family of Brookfield, Massachusetts; Hoar-Sherman
family of Massachusetts; Adams-Baldwin-Otis
family of Boston, Massachusetts (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Caleb Cushing (1800-1879) —
of Newburyport, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Salisbury, Essex
County, Mass., January
17, 1800.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1825, 1833-34, 1845-46, 1850;
member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1827; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 3rd District, 1835-43;
defeated, 1833; U.S. Minister to China, 1843-44; Spain, 1874-77; U.S. Diplomatic Commissioner to China, 1844; colonel in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War;
candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1847, 1848; mayor
of Newburyport, Mass., 1851-52; resigned 1852; justice of
Massachusetts state supreme court, 1852-53; U.S.
Attorney General, 1853-57; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from Massachusetts, 1860.
Died in Newburyport, Essex
County, Mass., January
2, 1879 (age 78 years, 350
days).
Interment at Highland
Cemetery, Newburyport, Mass.
|
|
George Washington Adams (1801-1829) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Berlin, Germany,
April
12, 1801.
Lawyer;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1826.
En route to New York City aboard the Benjamin Franklin, he
apparently killed
himself by jumping from the ship and drowning,
in Long
Island Sound, June 9,
1829 (age 28 years, 58
days). His body washed ashore a few days later.
Interment at Hancock
Cemetery, Quincy, Mass.
|
|
Charles Francis Adams (1807-1886) —
also known as "C.F.A."; "A Whig of the Old
School" —
of Quincy, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., August
18, 1807.
Lawyer;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1831; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1835-40; Free Soil candidate for Vice
President of the United States, 1848; delegate to Republican
National Convention from Massachusetts, 1856
(Convention
Vice-President; speaker);
U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 3rd District, 1859-61; U.S.
Minister to Great Britain, 1861-68; Democratic candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1876.
French
Huguenot ancestry.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., November
21, 1886 (age 79 years, 95
days).
Interment at Mt.
Wollaston Cemetery, Quincy, Mass.
|
|
Isaac Townsend Smith (1813-1906) —
also known as Isaac T. Smith —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., March
12, 1813.
Republican. Banker;
Presidential Elector for New York, 1864;
Consul-General
for Siam in New
York, N.Y., 1887-1902.
Member, Union
League.
Died, from pneumonia,
in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., March
30, 1906 (age 93 years, 18
days).
Interment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|
|
Amos Adams Lawrence (1814-1886) —
also known as Amos A. Lawrence —
of Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., July 31,
1814.
Owner, Ipswich Mills, maker of cotton and
woollen
goods; abolitionist; candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1858 (American), 1860 (Constitutional Union).
Episcopalian.
Died in Nahant, Essex
County, Mass., August
22, 1886 (age 72 years, 22
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Amos Lawrence (1786-1852) and Sarah (Richards) Lawrence
(1790-1819); married, March
31, 1842, to Sarah Elizabeth Appleton (1822-1891; daughter of William
Appleton); father of Susan Mason Lawrence (1852-1923; who married
William
Caleb Loring); nephew of Luther
Lawrence and Abbott
Lawrence (1792-1855); great-grandfather of Leverett
Saltonstall and Richard
Saltonstall; second great-grandfather of William
Lawrence Saltonstall; first cousin of Samuel
Abbott Green; third cousin twice removed of Charles
Moore Bancroft; fourth cousin of Alonzo
M. Garcelon; fourth cousin once removed of John
Albion Andrew, Charles
Courtney Pinkney Holden, Ebenezer
Gregg Danforth Holden, Winfield
Scott Holden and Alonzo
Marston Garcelon. |
| | Political families: Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts; Woodbury-Holden
family of Massachusetts and New Hampshire; Holden-Davis-Lawrence-Garcelon
family of Massachusetts; Lawrence-Andrew-Rodney-Parrish
family of Adel, Georgia (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The city
of Lawrence,
Kansas, is named for
him. — Lawrence University,
in Appleton,
Wisconsin, is named for
him. |
| | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
George Bailey Loring (1817-1891) —
also known as George B. Loring —
of Salem, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in North Andover, Essex
County, Mass., November
8, 1817.
Republican. Physician;
surgeon;
postmaster at Salem,
Mass., 1853-58; member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1866-67; delegate to Republican
National Convention from Massachusetts, 1868
(member, Credentials
Committee), 1872,
1876
(speaker);
Massachusetts
Republican state chair, 1869-76; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1873-76; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 6th District, 1877-81; U.S.
Commissioner of Agriculture, 1881-85; U.S. Minister to Portugal, 1889-90.
Died in Salem, Essex
County, Mass., September
14, 1891 (age 73 years, 310
days).
Interment at Harmony
Grove Cemetery, Salem, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Bailey Loring (1786-1860) and Sally Pickman (Osgood) Loring
(1796-1835); married, November
6, 1851, to Mary Toppan Pickman (1816-1878); married, June 10,
1880, to Anna T. (Smith) Hildreth (daughter of Isaac
Townsend Smith); father of Sally Pickman Loring (1859-1913; who
married Theodore
Frelinghuysen Dwight); grandnephew of Samuel
Osgood; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Pickman Jr. and Dudley
Leavitt Pickman; second cousin once removed of Benjamin
Toppan Pickman; second cousin thrice removed of Simeon
Baldwin; third cousin once removed of John
Adams and George
Peabody Wetmore; third cousin twice removed of Samuel
Allyne Otis, Roger
Sherman Baldwin, Maude
Alice Keteltas Wetmore and Mary
Winsor; fourth cousin of John
Quincy Adams and Caleb
Cushing; fourth cousin once removed of Harrison
Gray Otis, Asahel
Otis, George
Washington Adams, Charles
Francis Adams, Eli
Thayer, Simeon
Eben Baldwin (1840-1927) and Arthur
Percy Cushing. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Sherman
family of Connecticut; Greene-Lippitt
family of Providence, Rhode Island; Baldwin-Greene-Upson-Hoar
family of Connecticut; Foster-Baldwin
family of Brookfield, Massachusetts; Hoar-Sherman
family of Massachusetts; Adams-Baldwin-Otis
family of Boston, Massachusetts (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Eli Thayer (1819-1899) —
of Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Mendon, Worcester
County, Mass., June 11,
1819.
Republican. School teacher
and principal; member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1853-54; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 9th District, 1857-61;
defeated, 1872; delegate to Republican National Convention from
Oregon, 1860.
Died in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., April
15, 1899 (age 79 years, 308
days).
Interment at Hope
Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Cushman Ferdinando Thayer (1795-1818) and Miranda (Pond) Thayer
(1797-1878); married, August
6, 1845, to Caroline Maria Capron (1826-1908); father of John
Alden Thayer; second cousin thrice removed of Ralph
Waldo Hungerford; third cousin once removed of Staley
N. Wood; third cousin twice removed of John
Adams; fourth cousin of John
Milton Thayer (1820-1906) and James
Abram Garfield; fourth cousin once removed of John
Quincy Adams, Elijah
Hunt Mills, George
Bailey Loring, Alexander
Wheelock Thayer, William
Aldrich, Augustus
Brown Reed Sprague, Edward
M. Chapin, Harry
Augustus Garfield and James
Rudolph Garfield. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Davis
family of Massachusetts; Thayer-Capron-Aldrich-Stetson
family; Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Adams-Rusling
family (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Simeon Eben Baldwin (1840-1927) —
also known as Simeon E. Baldwin —
of New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn.
Born in New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn., February
5, 1840.
Democrat. Lawyer;
candidate for Connecticut
state senate 4th District, 1867; law
professor; justice of
Connecticut state supreme court, 1897-1907; chief
justice of Connecticut Supreme Court, 1907-10; Governor of
Connecticut, 1911-15; candidate for Democratic nomination for
President, 1912;
candidate for U.S.
Senator from Connecticut, 1914.
Congregationalist.
Member, Phi
Beta Kappa; American Bar
Association; American
Historical Association; American
Political Science Association; American
Philosophical Society; American
Antiquarian Society.
Died January
30, 1927 (age 86 years, 359
days).
Interment at Grove
Street Cemetery, New Haven, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Roger
Sherman Baldwin and Emily (Perkins) Baldwin (1796-1874); brother
of Henrietta Perkins (who married Dwight
Foster); married, October
19, 1865, to Susan Mears Winchester (1840-1931); uncle of Edward
Baldwin Whitney; grandson of Simeon
Baldwin; great-grandson of Roger
Sherman; fifth great-grandnephew of Thomas
Welles; first cousin once removed of Sherman
Day, Ebenezer
Rockwood Hoar, William
Maxwell Evarts and George
Frisbie Hoar; second cousin of Roger
Sherman Greene, Rockwood
Hoar, Sherman
Hoar, Maxwell
Evarts, Arthur
Outram Sherman (born1864), Thomas
Day Thacher and Roger
Kent; second cousin once removed of Roger
Sherman Hoar; second cousin twice removed of Samuel
Gager and Archibald
Cox; third cousin once removed of Samuel
R. Gager, Samuel
Austin Gager, Chauncey
Mitchell Depew and John
Frederick Addis; third cousin twice removed of Josiah
Cowles and John
Stanley Addis; fourth cousin of John
Adams Dix; fourth cousin once removed of James
Doolittle Wooster, Daniel
Upson, Walter
Booth, George
Bailey Loring, Charles
Page, Ernest
Harvey Woodford and Clement
Phineas Kellogg. |
| | Political families: Sherman
family of Connecticut; Sewall-Adams-Quincy
family of Maine; Hoar-Sherman
family of Massachusetts; Baldwin-Greene-Upson-Hoar
family of Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: Edwin
Stark Thomas |
| | See also National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Watts Sherman (1842-1912) —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., August
4, 1842.
Republican. Presidential Elector for Rhode Island, 1904.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., January
22, 1912 (age 69 years, 171
days).
Interment at Island
Cemetery, Newport, R.I.
|
|
George Peabody Wetmore (1846-1921) —
also known as George P. Wetmore —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in London, England,
of American parents, August
2, 1846.
Republican. Presidential Elector for Rhode Island, 1880,
1884;
Presidential Elector for Rhode Island, 1880,
1884;
Governor
of Rhode Island, 1885-87; U.S.
Senator from Rhode Island, 1895-1907, 1908-13.
Member, Skull
and Bones.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., September
11, 1921 (age 75 years, 40
days).
Interment at Island
Cemetery, Newport, R.I.
|
|
Theodore Frelinghuysen Dwight (1846-1917) —
also known as Theodore F. Dwight —
of Washington,
D.C.; Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., June 11,
1846.
Librarian;
director, Boston Public Library, 1892-94; U.S. Consular Agent in Vevey, 1904-14.
Bisexual.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., February
3, 1917 (age 70 years, 237
days).
Interment at Harmony
Grove Cemetery, Salem, Mass.
|
|
William Caleb Loring (1851-1930) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Beverly, Essex
County, Mass., August
24, 1851.
Lawyer;
solicitor, New York and New England Railroad,
1881-85; justice of
Massachusetts state supreme court, 1899-1919.
English
ancestry. Member, Phi
Beta Kappa.
Died in Prides Crossing, Beverly, Essex
County, Mass., September
8, 1930 (age 79 years, 15
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Arthur Percy Cushing (1856-1930) —
also known as Arthur P. Cushing —
of Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in North Scituate, Scituate, Plymouth
County, Mass., August
16, 1856.
Lawyer;
Consul
for Mexico in Boston,
Mass., 1887-1902; Consul
for Bolivia in Boston,
Mass., 1907-29; Honorary
Vice-Consul for Mexico in Boston,
Mass., 1911-14.
Died in Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass., December
13, 1930 (age 74 years, 119
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
|
|
Charles Grenfill Washburn (1857-1928) —
also known as Charles G. Washburn —
of Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., January
28, 1857.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1897-98; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1899-1900; delegate to Republican National
Convention from Massachusetts, 1904,
1916;
U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 3rd District, 1906-11;
defeated, 1900, 1910.
Died in Lenox, Berkshire
County, Mass., May 25,
1928 (age 71 years, 118
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
|
|
Augustus Peabody Gardner (1865-1918) —
also known as Augustus P. Gardner —
of Hamilton, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., November
5, 1865.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War;
member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1900-01; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 6th District, 1902-17; resigned
1917; candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1913; major in the U.S. Army during World War I.
Died, of pneumonia,
while in the
military service at Camp Wheeler, Macon, Bibb
County, Ga., January
14, 1918 (age 52 years, 70
days).
Interment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|
|
Maude Alice Keteltas Wetmore (1873-1951) —
also known as Maude K. Wetmore —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in Paris, France,
of American parents, February
7, 1873.
Republican. Alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from
Rhode Island, 1936.
Female.
Died, from a heart
attack, in Newport, Newport
County, R.I., November
3, 1951 (age 78 years, 269
days).
Interment at Island
Cemetery, Newport, R.I.
|
|
Mary Winsor (b. 1873) —
of Lower Merion Township, Montgomery
County, Pa.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., March
28, 1873.
Socialist. Woman suffrage activist; participant in the first U.S.
birth control conference, New York City, November 1921; on November
13, police arrived to forcibly shut down the event, and she was arrested,
along with Margaret Sanger, for attempting
to speak; charged
with disorderly conduct, but released soon after; candidate for Pennsylvania
secretary of internal affairs, 1922; candidate for Lieutenant
Governor of Pennsylvania, 1930; candidate for U.S.
Representative from Pennsylvania 17th District, 1932.
Female.
Member, Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom; American Civil
Liberties Union.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Arthur Chester Frost (b. 1886) —
also known as Arthur C. Frost —
of Arlington, Middlesex
County, Mass.
Born in Arlington, Middlesex
County, Mass., February
4, 1886.
U.S. Consul in Genoa, 1915-17; Algiers, 1917-20; Barranquilla, 1920-21; Guatemala City, 1921-23; Havana, 1923-26; Tampico, 1926-27; U.S. Consul General in Prague, 1927-31; Calcutta, 1931-33; Zurich, 1938-40; Barcelona, 1940; Toronto, as of 1945-47.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Albert Jason Lima (1907-1989) —
also known as Albert J. Lima —
of San
Francisco, Calif.; Oakland, Alameda
County, Calif.
Born in Mendocino
County, Calif., August
31, 1907.
Communist. Candidate for U.S.
Representative from California 1st District, 1940, 1942;
candidate for Presidential Elector for California, 1972.
Convicted
in 1952 of conspiracy to overthrow
the United States government; the verdict was overturned on appeal.
Died, of cancer,
in Oakland, Alameda
County, Calif., June 3,
1989 (age 81 years, 276
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
William Amory Gardner Minot (1916-1963) —
also known as William A. G. Minot —
of Greenwich, Fairfield
County, Conn.
Born in Berlin, Germany,
of American parents, December
8, 1916.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Navy during World War II; soft drink
bottler; alternate delegate to Republican National Convention
from Connecticut, 1956,
1960;
member of Connecticut
state house of representatives, 1959-60.
Died, in Greenwich Hospital,
Greenwich, Fairfield
County, Conn., July 1,
1963 (age 46 years, 205
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Helen Lima (1917-2005) —
also known as Helen Corbin —
Born, of American parents, in Taiku, Shenzhen, China,
March
31, 1917.
Communist. Candidate for Presidential Elector for California, 1972.
Female.
Died in Oakland, Alameda
County, Calif., May 5,
2005 (age 88 years, 35
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
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