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  1. Where can I find Samuel Adams merchandise? I have a question about an order through your E-Store. Can you help me? I’d like a donation for an upcoming event. Who should I contact? I heard about your Brewing the American Dream program for small businesses. Where can I apply?

    • Samuel Adams' Background and Early Life
    • Sons of Liberty
    • Role in The Boston Tea Party
    • Samuel Adams' Later Years
    • Samuel Adams Quotes
    • Sources

    Adams was born in Boston on September 27, 1722, to an affluent Puritanfamily. His father, Samuel Adams Sr., was a prominent local merchant and religious deacon who was also active in local politics. His mother, Mary Adams, was the daughter of a local businessman. Adams attended Boston Latin School and then went to Harvard College. It was there that...

    Though Adams wasn’t very good with money, he was a good writer. He and some friends started their own short-lived newspaper, The Public Advertiser, which published Adams’ opinion pieces. He used that opportunity to exhort other Bostonians to cherish and protect their personal freedom. Adams’ voice became more prominent in the mid-1760s when the Bri...

    After the British Parliament passed the Tea Act in 1773, which sought to force the colonists to buy their tea from the British East India Company, Adams helped organize Bostonians to hinder the tea shipments. One group of resisters took matters even further, dressing up as Indian warriors and boarding several British ships to dump their tea, in wha...

    After leaving the Continental Congress in 1781, Adams went back to Boston and eventually got back into state politics. He served for a time as president of the Massachusetts Senate and as Lieutenant Governor under Governor John Hancock, his former fellow radical. When Hancock died in office, Adams took over for him and subsequently was elected to t...

    “Among the natural rights of the Colonists are these: First, a right to life; Secondly, to liberty; Thirdly, to property; together with the right to support and defend them in the best manner they can. These are evident branches of, rather than deductions from, the duty of self-preservation, commonly called the first law of nature.” “Some of our po...

    Rights of the Colonists, by Samuel Adams. The Writings of Samuel Adams, Vol. III (1773-1777) by Samuel Adams. Biographical sketch of Samuel Adams, American Battlefield Trust. Desperate Sons: Samuel Adams, Patrick Henry, John Hancock, and the Secret Bands of Radicals Who Led the Colonies to War, by Lee Standiford Biographical sketch of Samuel Adams,...

  2. Samuel Adams was born on September 16, 1722 to Samuel Adams Sr. and Mary (Fifield) Adams in the family home on Purchase Street in the South End of colonial Boston. Both Samuel Sr. and Mary hailed from prominent Boston seafaring families and provided a comfortable and stable home for their children. The elder Adams was a successful malter and ...

  3. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Samuel Adams created the first one in Boston in 1772. Samuel Adams (born September 27 [September 16, Old Style], 1722, Boston, Massachusetts [U.S.]—died October 2, 1803, Boston) was a politician of the American Revolution, leader of the Massachusetts “radicals,” who was a delegate to the Continental Congress (1774–81) and a signer of ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Samuel Adams. Date of Birth - Death September 27, 1722 - October 2, 1803. Born 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 ...

  5. 20 de set. de 2021 · This is where Samuel Adamsphilanthropic program Brewing the American Dream (BTAD) comes into play. Since 2008, it has provided more than 3,200 loans to local food and beverage entrepreneurs ...

  6. October 2, 1803. Place of Burial: Boston, Massachusetts. Cemetery Name: Granary Burying Ground. Among the Revolutionary era leaders of Boston, few possessed the fervent passion of Samuel Adams. Born on September 16, 1722 in Boston to two shipping families, Samuel Adams grew up in a home that encouraged both strict Puritan values and political ...