The Stone Library, completed in 1870, stands next to Peacefield and houses personal papers and over 14,000 books that belonged to John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Charles Francis Adams,
Henry Adams, and
Brooks Adams. In his will, John Quincy Adams requested that the library be built out of stone so that it would be fireproof. The Library holds John Adams' copy of
George Washington's Farewell Address as well as the
Mendi Bible, a Bible presented to John Quincy Adams in 1841 by the freed
Mendi captives who had mutinied on the schooner
La Amistad and whom Adams had successfully defended before the United States Supreme Court. Henry Adams wrote his nine-volume
The History of the United States of America 1801–1817 in the library. On the evening of November 11, 1996, one or more thieves used a chainsaw to gain access to and rob the building. The break-in triggered the site’s alarm system; however, the perpetrators fled before police arrived. Four priceless books were stolen: a 1772 English Bible which belonged to
Louisa Catherine Adams (John Quincy Adams's English-born wife), a 1611
King James Bible, an 18th-century copy of
Marcus Elieser Bloch's
Ichthyology (which contained hand-painted illustrations), and the 1838
Mendi Bible (which was presented to John Quincy Adams by the group of 53 Mendi tribes people whom Adams defended for at the Supreme Court). With the help of the FBI, the books were returned to Adams National Historical Park undamaged. Kevin P. Gildea, 42, was indicted on two counts of theft and one count each of concealing objects of cultural heritage and concealing government property. ==United First Parish Church==