Sam adams biography timelines
•
Samuel Adams Timeline
- Period: to
Samueal Adams Life
- Sam Adams failed repeatedly in business. Then decided to go into Law. He finally gruduated in 1740.
- Samual Adams's first wife, Elizabeth Checkly, died in 1757. They were married for 8 years. He struggled in his career for many years due to her death.
- Samula Adams's married Elizabeth Wells in 1764. Elizabeth Wells was his second wife. She helped change his life for the better since she was a good manager.
- The Stamp Act was finally repealed on November 1, 1765. The word reached Boston on May 16, 1766 where there was alot of celeabration. Samuel Aams made a public statement to thank all the British Merchants for supporting their cause.
- The Sons of Liberty was an organization of American colonists that was created in the Thirteen American Colonies. The secret society was formed to protect the rights of the colonists and to fight taxation by the British gover
•
Samuel Adams (1722-1803)
The Boston Tea Party Ships Arrive in Griffin’s Wharf
By November 28, the crisis was now on the doorstep of Boston. The first tea ship to arrive was the Dartmouth owned by the Rotch family. The ship arrived with 114 crates of East India Company tea. Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty now had a deadline. According to customs law, the ship had only twenty days to unload its cargo. The twentieth day would be December 17, 1773. Still two more ships arrived. On December 2, the Eleanor arrived with 114 crates, and on December 15, the Beaver had joined the other two ships at Griffin’s Wharf.
Samuel Adams took the lead in negotiating with ship owners, and the customs officials for the port of Boston. On December 3, Adams ordered John Rowe, the owner of the Eleanor to unload his other cargo, but not the tea. On December 11, Adams and the Boston Committee of Correspondence ordered Francis Rotch, the owner of the Dartmouth and Beaver, to set sail for London with th
•
Samuel Adams
Share to Google ClassroomAdded by 78 EducatorsBorn 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 propagandist for the independence movement, especially in comparison to his second cousin John, the future president. But those accusations tend to obscure his nature as an astute political thinker and a tireless activist. Adams' father, also named Samuel, frequently used his position as preacher to organize large numbers of associates into groups to lobby local Boston politicians and officials on specific issues, with young Sam frequently accompanying him. At the age of fourteen, Adams entered Harvard, ostensibly to study theology and later take up his father's career, but life in college also exposed him to the ideas of the Enlightenment phil