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Adams John Quincy

Name:
John Quincy Adams
Rank:
Commander in Chief
Serial Number:
Unit:
Date of Death:
1848-02-23
State:
Massachusetts
Cemetery:
United First Parish Church, Quincy, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Plot:
Basement crypt - Reinterment from original burial location
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Comments:

Appointed by President James Madison, John Quincy Adams was the first official U.S. representative to Russia, serving with the official title of Minister Plenipotentiary in the Russian imperial capital of St. Petersburg. Son of President John Adams and a gifted linguist, he became Minister to the Netherlands (1794), to Portugal (1796), Prussia (1797-1801), a member of the U.S. Senate (1803-1808), Minister to Russia (1809-14), Minister to England (1815-17), and Secretary of State to President James Monroe (1817-25). The Presidential election of 1824 was decided, according to the Constitution, by the House of Representatives; Adams, second in the electoral vote, was chosen over Andrew Jackson and served as the Sixth President of the United States from 1825 to 1829. After leaving the White House, he served nine terms in the House of Representatives, dying in the Capitol Building in 1848. Adams first visited Russia in 1781 as a French-language interpreter for U.S. envoy Francis Dana. He served in St. Petersburg during Napoleon’s invasion of Russia, strolled along the banks of the Neva with Tsar Alexander I, and visited the Observatory in Pulkovo Heights. At the request of dictionary author Noah Webster, he provided books on Russian grammar and vocabulary, the beginning of Russian studies in the United States. His infant daughter Louisa Catherine Adams was the first American citizen born in Russia in 1811 but developed dysentery and severe illness shortly after her first birthday, and died shortly afterward. His daughter was buried in Smolensk Lutheran Cemetery in St. Petersburg.