•
Edmund Quincy (1602–1636) I, who emigrated to
Boston 1633 and settled
Mount Wollaston 1635, married Judith Pares (d. 1654) • Judith Quincy (1626–1695), married
John Hull (1624–1683), merchant and
Massachusetts Bay Colony politician • Hannah Hull (1657-1717), married
Samuel Sewall (1652-1730), judge during the
Salem witch trials •
Edmund Quincy (1628–1698) II, who built the
Dorothy Quincy House (1685), married
Joanna Hoar (1625–1680) and remarried to
Elizabeth Gookin Eliot (1645–1700) •
Daniel Quincy (1651–1690), Boston merchant and ker, married
Anna Shephard (1663–1708) • Anna Quincy (1685–1717), married John Holman (1679–1759) • Colonel
John Quincy (1689–1767):
Quincy, Massachusetts and
John Quincy Adams were both named in his honor. Quincy was
Abigail Adams' grandfather. He was John Quincy Adams' great-grandfather. John married Elizabeth Norton (1696–1769) of
Hingham, daughter of Rev. John Norton, pastor of
Old Ship Church. •
Norton Quincy (1716–1801), public servant, recluse, married
Martha Salisbury (1727–1748) • Anna Quincy (1719–1799), married John Thaxter (1721–1802) of
Hingham • Elizabeth Quincy (1721–1775), married the
Reverend William Smith (1707–1783) of the First Church of Weymouth • Mary Smith (1741–1811), married Richard Cranch (1726–1811) •
William Cranch (1769-1855), federal judge, married Nancy Greenleaf (1772-1843), sister of
James Greenleaf, land speculator responsible for the development of
Washington, D.C. •
John Cranch (1807-1891), painter and print collector •
Christopher Pearse Cranch (1813-1892), writer and artist •
Abigail Smith (1744–1818), married
John Adams (1735–1826), second president of the
United States •
Abigail Adams (1765–1813), "Nabby" married
William Stephens Smith (1755–1816) •
John Quincy Adams (1767–1848), sixth president of the United States, married
Louisa Catherine Johnson (1775–1852) •
Charles Francis Adams Sr. (1807–1886), married
Abigail Brooks (1808–1889) •
John Quincy Adams II (1833–1894), lawyer and politician •
Charles Francis Adams Jr. (1835–1915), Civil War general, president of
Union Pacific Railroad (1884–1890) •
Charles Francis Adams III (1866–1954), 44th
Secretary of the Navy, mayor of
Quincy, Massachusetts •
Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918), married Marian Hooper (1843–1885) • Mary Gardiner Adams (1845–1928), married Henry Parker Quincy (1838–1899) •
Susanna Boylston Adams (1768–1770) •
Charles Adams (1770–1800), married Sarah Smith •
Thomas Boylston Adams (1772–1832), Massachusetts Representative, justice, married Ann Harrod •
William Smith (1746–1787), married Catherine Louise Salmon (1749–1824) • Elizabeth Smith (1750–1815), married John Shaw (1748–1794), remarried to Stephen Peabody (1741–1819) • Lucy Quincy (1729–1785), married
Cotton Tufts (1732–1815) • John Quincy (1652–1674) • Joanna Quincy (1654–1695), married Lieut. David Hobart (1651–1717) of
Hingham • Judith Quincy (1655–1679), married John Rayner (1643–1676) • Ruth Quincy (1658–1698), married John Hunt •
Edmund Quincy (1681–1737) III, married Dorothy Flynt (1678–1737) •
Edmund Quincy (1703–1788) IV, married Elizabeth Wendell (1704–1769) partner with brother Josiah Quincy (1710–1784) •
Edmund Quincy (1726–1782) V, businessman and land developer, married Anna Huske, remarried to Mehitabel Temple, remarried to Hannah Gannett • Henry Quincy (1727–1780), married Mary Salter, remarried to Eunice Newell • Abraham Quincy (1728–1756) • Elizabeth Quincy (1729–1770), married Samuel Sewall (1715–1771) • Katherine Quincy (b. 1733) • Dr. Jacob Quincy (1734–1773), married Elizabeth Williams • Sarah Quincy (1736–1790), married General William Greenleaf • Esther Quincy (1738–1810), married
Jonathan Sewall (1728–1796), last royal
attorney general of Massachusetts •
Dorothy Quincy (1747–1830), married
John Hancock (1737–1793), remarried to Captain James Scott (1746–1809) • Elizabeth Quincy (1706–1746), married John Wendell (1703–1762) •
Dorothy Quincy (1709–1762), "Dorothy Q" of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., married Edward Jackson (1707–1757), Boston merchant and manufacturer • Mary Jackson (1740–1804), married Oliver Wendell (1733–1818) • Sarah Wendell married the Reverend
Abiel Holmes (1763–1837) •
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. (1809–1894), married Amelia Lee Jackson •
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841–1935), jurist •
Jonathan Jackson (1743–1810), merchant and
Continental Congress delegate from
Massachusetts, married Sarah Barnard (d. 1770), remarried to Hannah Tracy (d. 1797) • Edward Jackson (1768–1777) • Henry Jackson (1774–1806), married Hannah Swett (1774–1850) •
Charles Jackson (1775–1855), married Amelia Lee(d. 1808), remarried to Frances Cabot • Amelia Lee Jackson (d. 1888), married
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. (1809–1894) • Hannah Jackson, married Francis Cabot Lowell (1775–1817) • Sarah Jackson, married John Gardner (1770–1825) • Dr. James Jackson (1777–1867), married Elizabeth Cabot, remarried to Sarah Cabot • Patrick Tracy Jackson (1780–1847), married Lydia Cabot •
Colonel Josiah Quincy I (1710–1784), Revolutionary War soldier, built the
Josiah Quincy House, married Hanna Sturgis (1712–1755), remarried to Elizabeth Waldron (1722–1760), remarried to Ann Marsh (1723–1805) •
Edmund Quincy (1733–1768), Boston merchant died at sea in
West Indies • Benjamin Quincy (1767-1856) Married Sarah Sally Hammond (1770-1862) m.1/1/1793. • Hannah L Quincy (1793-1866) Married Henry Clark "Harry" Hollembeak (1787-1867) m. 1810 • John William Hollembeak (1833-1913) Married Hannah Lewton (1836-1908) m. 1853 • Asa Herbert Hollembeak (1869-1927) Married Sadie Mae Puckett (1878-1943) m 1894 • Hannah Marguerite Hollembeak (1894-1941) Married Richard A Trafton (1885-1966) m 1911 • Beatrice Marguerite Trafton (1914-2000) Married James Sinkler Jernigan (1909-1969) m. 1934 • Samuel Quincy (1735–1789), attorney and barrister, solicitor general, loyalist exile, married
Hannah Hill (1734–1782) who was a revolutionary and stayed in Massachusetts during her husband's exile, remarried to Mary Ann Chadwell •
Hannah Quincy (1736–1826), "Orlinda" of John Adams diaries, married Bela Lincoln (1734–1773),
Hingham physician, brother of General
Benjamin Lincoln; remarried to
Ebenezer Storer (1730–1807), deacon of Brattle Street Church and treasurer of Harvard College •
Josiah Quincy II (1744–1775), attorney, "the Patriot", newspaper propagandist, died at sea returning from mission to
London, married Abigail Phillips (1745–1798), daughter of
William Phillips Sr. (1722–1804) •
Josiah Quincy III (1772–1864), president of
Harvard University (1829–1845), U.S. Representative (1805–1813), mayor of
Boston (1823–1828), married Eliza Susan Morton (1773–1850) •
Eliza Susan Quincy (1798–1884), eldest of "five articulate sisters", artist, archivist and historian •
Josiah Quincy Jr. (1802–1882), mayor of Boston (1846–1848), built the
Josiah Quincy Mansion, married Mary Jane Miller (1806–1874) • Josiah Phillips Quincy (1829–1910), poet, writer, publicist, married Helen Frances Huntington (1831–1903) •
Josiah Quincy (1859–1919), General Court representative, assistant secretary of the Navy, mayor of Boston (1895–1899), married Ellen Krebs Tyler (1862–1904) • (1903–1997), artist • Helen Quincy (b. 1861) • Frances Huntington Quincy (1870–1933), essayist and author, married
Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe (1864–1960) •
Quincy Howe (1900–1977), news analyst, author •
Helen Huntington Howe (1905–1975), monologuist, novelist, married Reginald Allen • Mark DeWolfe Howe (1906–1967), Harvard law professor, historian, biographer,
civil rights leader • Mabel Quincy • Violet Quincy •
Samuel Miller Quincy (1833–1887), lawyer, historian, Civil War soldier, and 28th mayor of New Orleans (May 5, 1865 – June 8, 1865) • Mary Apthorp Quincy (1834–1883), married Benjamin Apthorp Gould • Susan Quincy Gould (b. 1862) • Lucretia Gould (b. 1864) •
Alice Bache Gould (b. 1868) • Benjamin Apthorp Gould (b. 1870) • Maria Gould (b. 1872) •
Abigail Phillips Quincy (1803–1893), last Quincy to occupy the
Josiah Quincy House • Maria Sophia Quincy (1805–1886) • Margaret Morton Quincy (1806–1882), married
Benjamin Daniel Greene (1793–1862), traveler and botanist •
Edmund Quincy (1808–1877), diarist, lecturer, author,
abolitionist, married Lucilla Pinckney Parker (1810–1860), daughter of prominent Boston merchant
Daniel Pinckney Parker • Edmund Quincy (1834–1894),
civil engineer • Henry Parker Quincy (1838–1899), Harvard MD, "anatomical draughtsman", married Mary Gardiner Adams (1845–1928) • Mary Quincy (b. 1841) •
Anna Cabot Lowell Quincy (1812–1899), youngest of the "articulate sisters", married Robert Cassie Waterston (1812–1899), Boston clergyman who gave his library to the
Massachusetts Historical Society • Elizabeth Quincy (1757–1825), married
Benjamin Guild (1749–1792) • Ann Quincy (1763–1844), married Asa Packard (1758–1843) • John Quincy (b.1683) • Mary Quincy (1684–1716), married Daniel Baker (1686–1731) ==Notes and references==