George H. Adams Explained

George Herbert Adams
Term Start:January 4, 1905
Term End:1907
Term Start3:1905
Term End3:1907
Term Start4:1889
Term End4:1889
Office5:Solicitor of
Grafton County, New Hampshire
Term Start5:April 1, 1895
Term End5:1899
Office6:Member of the
New Hampshire House of Representatives
Birth Date:18 May 1851
Birth Place:Campton, New Hampshire, U.S.
Death Place:Plymouth, New Hampshire, U.S.
Party:Republican
Children:2
Signature:Signature of George Herbert Adams.png

George Herbert Adams (May 18, 1851 – November 18, 1911) was an American Republican politician and lawyer who served as the President of the New Hampshire Senate.[1]

Adams was born in Campton, New Hampshire, May 18, 1851, the only child of Isaac L. and Louisa C. (Blair) Adams.[1] [2]

After he graduated from Dartmouth College in 1873, Adams spent a year as the principal of the high school of Marlborough, Massachusetts. In January 1874, Adams entered the law office of Henry W. Blair in Plymouth, New Hampshire to study the law. Adams studied law until he was admitted to the Bar, during the September 1876 term of the New Hampshire Supreme Court at Grafton County, New Hampshire.[1]

On January 14, 1877, Adams married Sarah Katherine Smith of Meredith, New Hampshire. They had two children, Walter Blair Adams born December 13, 1887, and George Herbert Adams, Jr., born April 12, 1890.[1]

Adams was a delegate from Campton at the 1876 New Hampshire Constitutional Convention, and he was to elected to represent Plymouth in the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1883, and to the New Hampshire Senate in 1889 and 1905, and in 1905 he was chosen the President of the New Hampshire Senate. Adams was twice elected the Solicitor of Grafton County, New Hampshire, serving for four years starting April 1, 1895.[1] [2]

Adams died in Plymouth, New Hampshire on November 18, 1911, aged 60.[2] He is buried in Trinity Cemetery, Holderness, New Hampshire.[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Burleigh, Alvin. Proceedings of the Bar Association of the State of New Hampshire at Its Annual Meeting. 3. 4. 417–423. Bar Association of the State of New Hampshire. Concord, New Hampshire. 1915.
  2. Book: Henry H. Metcalf. The Granite Monthly: A New Hampshire Magazine Devoted to History, Biography, Literature, and State Progress. XLIII. 10. 380. The Granite Monthly Company. Concord, New Hampshire. October 1911.