At Home in Quincy
Cobblestone American History Magazine for Kids|October 2022
Today, the National Park Service (NPS) oversees three historic residences connected to the Adams family.
Elizabeth Howard
At Home in Quincy

They make up the Adams National Historical Park in Quincy, Massachusetts.

Two of the buildings are the birthplaces of John Adams (built-in 1681) and John Quincy Adams (built-in 1663). Located next door to each other, they remain on their original foundations in their original locations. They once were part of a 188-acre farm owned by John Adams's father. The John Quincy Adams birthplace home was bequeathed to John Adams after his father died in 1761. Eventually, John Adams's brother, who had inherited the family's original home, sold that home to John in 1774.

The Adams family owned both homes until 1940. After that, they gifted them to the Quincy Historical Society, which managed the buildings as museums. But the historic homes were expensive to maintain. In the late 1970s, they became part of the NPS. The two structures are the oldest presidential birthplaces in the United States.

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