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George Adams II

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George Adams II

Birth
England
Death
10 Oct 1696 (aged 75–76)
Watertown, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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George Adams, II, was one of the first settlers of the Town of Watertown, Massachusetts.

He married Frances Taylor in March 1642, in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

They had 7 children:
John Adams (1645 - 1732)
+ sp: Abigail Pinney
George Adams, Jr. (1648 - 1733)
+ sp: Martha Fiske
Benjamin Adams 1650 - 1672)
Daniel Adams (1652- 1713)
+ sp: Mary Phelps
Joseph Adams (1657 - 1701)
Samuel Adams (1659 - 1737)
+ sp: Elizabeth Hill
+ sp: Deborah Bartlett
Mary Adams (1664 - 1716)

4/12/21-He was a resident of Cambridge Farms (Lexington), Massachusetts, at the time of his death, but he died in Watertown, Massachusetts, as the result of a tragic accident where he had his skull fractured by a falling rock. He was found dead on the road by two men (John Apley and Daniel Pierce), and a coroner's inquest convened in Watertown on 14 Oct 1696 found no evidence of foul play. This info is covered in several sources, especially Adams' (1974) excellent manuscript and Parsons' paper on the family (published in the American Genealogist).

Bio information courtesy of Contributor: yooper gravehound (47206809) & Debra Faul (46780866).
George Adams, II, was one of the first settlers of the Town of Watertown, Massachusetts.

He married Frances Taylor in March 1642, in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

They had 7 children:
John Adams (1645 - 1732)
+ sp: Abigail Pinney
George Adams, Jr. (1648 - 1733)
+ sp: Martha Fiske
Benjamin Adams 1650 - 1672)
Daniel Adams (1652- 1713)
+ sp: Mary Phelps
Joseph Adams (1657 - 1701)
Samuel Adams (1659 - 1737)
+ sp: Elizabeth Hill
+ sp: Deborah Bartlett
Mary Adams (1664 - 1716)

4/12/21-He was a resident of Cambridge Farms (Lexington), Massachusetts, at the time of his death, but he died in Watertown, Massachusetts, as the result of a tragic accident where he had his skull fractured by a falling rock. He was found dead on the road by two men (John Apley and Daniel Pierce), and a coroner's inquest convened in Watertown on 14 Oct 1696 found no evidence of foul play. This info is covered in several sources, especially Adams' (1974) excellent manuscript and Parsons' paper on the family (published in the American Genealogist).

Bio information courtesy of Contributor: yooper gravehound (47206809) & Debra Faul (46780866).

Gravesite Details

Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, by Dr. Henry Bond (1860)



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