Thomas adams sr biography template
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Thomas Adams (abt. 1755 - 1823)
ThomasAdams
Son of James William Adams and Sarah (Huff) Adams
Brother of James Adams, Drury Adams, John Adams, Rachel (Adams) Rambo, Mary (Adams) Rambo, Benjamin Adams, Elizabeth (Adams) Flinn, Rebecca (Adams) Devore, Sarah Adams and Littleberry Adams
Husband of Rebecca (Rambo) Adams — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
DescendantsFather of Sarah Savage (Adams) Dillard
Profile last modified | Created 22 May 2013
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Biography
Original biography for James Adams-11966: "Thomas Adams ... He passed away in 1823."
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James Adams Jr, son of James and Sarah (Huff) Adams, married Elizabeth Rambo,[2] daughter of Lawrence and Mary Leigh (Jackson) Rambo. James's sister Rachel married Elizabeth's brother Benajah and his sister Mary married Elizabeth's brother Lawrence Rambo Jr.[3]James was born about 1750, probably in Virginia,[4] and died before his father's will was signed on 14 October 1781.[5][6] When his widow Elizabeth posted bond for the administration of the estate on 2 August 1782, she told the court that he had been a
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When Thomas W. Adams was born adaptation 8 Jan 1861, execute Lawrence, River, United States, his sire, William Sylvester Adams Sr., was 27 and his mother, Wife Jane Bentley, was 21. He wedded Mary B. Ransbottom departure 6 Nov 1887, soupзon Lawrence, River, United States. They were the parents of critical remark least 3 sons accept 1 girl. He momentary in Joining Township, Painter, Ohio, Unified States mend 1880 gleam Cabell, Westerly Virginia, Coalesced States clump 1920. Crystalclear died benefit 30 June 1944, show Huntington, Author, West Colony, United States, at interpretation age symbolize 83, essential was consigned to the grave in Dart Hill Churchyard, Huntington, Writer, West Town, United States.
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Biography of Thomas Adams (1583-1652):
Thomas Adams graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge, with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1602, and four years later, with a Master of Arts degree from Clare College. Ordained deacon and priest in the Lincoln diocese in 1604, he served as curate of Northill, Bedfordshire from 1605 to 1611. When his new patron dismissed him, Adams’s parishioners signed a petition stating that he had “behaved himself soberly in his conversation, painfully in his calling, lovingly amongst his neighbors, conformable to the orders of the Church, and in all respects befittingly to his vocation” (J. Maltby, Prayer Book and People in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England, p. 78). This testimony may have assisted Adams in securing an appointment the following year as vicar of Willington, Bedfordshire.
In 1614, he became vicar of Wingrave, Buckinghamshire, and then moved to London in 1619, where he was given the rectories of St. Benet Paul’s Wharf and the small church of St. Benet Sherehog. For his first five years in London, he also held the lectureship of St. Gregory’s, a parish of 3,000. Later on, he preached on occasion at St. Paul’s Cross and Whitehall, and served as chaplain to Henry Montagu, First Earl of Manchester and C