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Early life and career of Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, was involved in politics from his early adult years. This article covers his early life and career, through his writing the Declaration of Independence, participation in the American Revolutionary War, serving as governor of Virginia, and election and service as Vice-President to President John Adams.

Thomas Jefferson
Portrait of Thomas Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale
3rd President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1801 – March 4, 1809
Vice PresidentAaron Burr
George Clinton
Preceded byJohn Adams
Succeeded byJames Madison
2nd Vice President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1797 – March 4, 1801
PresidentJohn Adams
Preceded byJohn Adams
Succeeded byAaron Burr
1st United States Secretary of State
In office
March 22, 1790 – December 31, 1793
PresidentGeorge Washington
Preceded byJohn Jay (Acting)
Succeeded byEdmund Randolph
United States Minister to France
In office
May 17, 1785 – September 26, 1789
Appointed byCongress of the Confederation
Preceded byBenjamin Franklin
Succeeded byWilliam Short
Delegate to the Congress of the Confederation from Virginia
In office
November 3, 1783 – May 7, 1784
Preceded byJames Madison
Succeeded byRichard Henry Lee
2nd Governor of Virginia
In office
June 1, 1779 – June 3, 1781
Preceded byPatrick Henry
Succeeded byWilliam Fleming
Delegate to the Second Continental Congress from Virginia
In office
June 20, 1775 – September 26, 1776
Preceded byGeorge Washington
Succeeded byJohn Harvie
Personal details
Born(1743-04-13)April 13, 1743
Shadwell, Colony of Virginia
DiedJuly 4, 1826(1826-07-04) (aged 83)
Charlottesville, Virginia, US
Political partyDemocratic-Republican
SpouseMartha Wayles Skelton Jefferson
ChildrenMartha
Jane
Mary
Lucy
Lucy Elizabeth
Unnamed son
Residence(s)Monticello
Poplar Forest
Alma materCollege of William and Mary
ProfessionPlanter
Lawyer
College Administrator
Signature

Born into the planter class of Virginia, Jefferson was highly educated and valued his years at the College of William and Mary. He became an attorney and planter, building on the estate and 20–40 slaves inherited from his father.

Jeffersons of Virginia edit

His father was Peter Jefferson, a planter, slaveholder, and surveyor in Albemarle County (Shadwell, Virginia).[1] When Colonel William Randolph, an old friend of Peter Jefferson, died in 1745, Peter assumed executorship and personal charge of Randolph's estate in Tuckahoe as well as his infant son, Thomas Mann Randolph. That year the Jeffersons relocated to Tuckahoe, where they lived for the next seven years before returning to their home in Albemarle in 1752. Peter Jefferson was appointed to the colonelcy of the county, an important position at the time.[2] After he died in 1757, his son Thomas Jefferson inherited his estate, including about 20-40 slaves. They comprised the core of his labor force when he started to build Monticello as a young man.

Thomas's paternal grandfather and great-grandfather were also named Thomas.[3] His grandfather, Thomas Jefferson (1677-1731) resided at a settlement called Osbornes in what is now Chesterfield County, Virginia.[4] Jefferson's great grandfather was a planter of Henrico County[4][5] and his wife was Mary Branch.[Note 1] Mary was the granddaughter of Christopher Branch, a member of the House of Burgesses. Thomas was a tobacco farmer who owned a couple slaves, surveyor, and "gentleman justice". He purchased land along James River in 1682[7] and lived in the Flowerdieu, also Flowerdew Hundred of Henrico County.[Note 2] Thomas' grandfather died in 1697.[7]

There is conflicting information about Jefferson's heritage[Note 3] and specifically the parents of Thomas' great grandfather.[Note 4] There are also unproven allegations that were made about Jefferson's heritage during an 18th-century Presidential campaign.[Note 5]

Within a few generations, the Jeffersons rose from that of middling planters who struggled against low tobaccos prices beginning in the 1680s to that of the country elite and to the very pinnacle of society.[citation needed] The plantation-based economy of the Jeffersons and their peers relied on acquisition of slaves from West Africa and West Central Africa, primarily from the Bight of Biafra and Angola. In 1784, Jefferson published Notes on the State of Virginia where he stated that enslaved individuals made up to a third to a half of the inhabitants of most Piedmont counties of Virginia.[4]

Thomas Jefferson was born on April 13, 1743 (April 2, 1743 O.S.)[Note 6] at the family home in Shadwell, Goochland County, Virginia, now part of Albemarle County.[26] His mother was Jane Randolph, daughter of Isham Randolph, a ship's captain and sometime planter, and his wife. Peter and Jane married in 1739.[27] Thomas Jefferson had appeared to have little interest in and indifference to his ancestry; he stated that he only knew that his paternal grandfather lived.[28]

Before the widower William Randolph, an old friend of Peter Jefferson, died in 1745, he appointed Peter as guardian to manage his Tuckahoe Plantation and care for his four children. That year the Jeffersons relocated to Tuckahoe, where they lived for the next seven years before returning to Shadwell in 1752. Here Thomas Jefferson recorded his earliest memory, that of being carried on a pillow by a slave during the move to Tuckahoe.[29] Peter Jefferson died in 1757 and the Jefferson estate was divided between Peter's two sons; Thomas and Randolph.[30] John Harvie Sr. then became Thomas' guardian.[31] Thomas inherited approximately 5,000 acres (2,000 ha; 7.8 sq mi) of land, including Monticello and between 20–40 slaves. He took control of the property after he came of age at 21.[32]

On October 1, 1765, when Jefferson was 22, his oldest sister Jane died at the age of 25.[33] He fell into a period of deep mourning, as he was already saddened by the absence of his sisters Mary, who had been married several years to John Bolling III,[34] and Martha, who in July had wed Dabney Carr.[33] Both lived at their husbands' residences. Only Jefferson's younger siblings Elizabeth, Lucy, and the two toddlers, were at home. He drew little comfort from the younger ones, as they did not provide him with the same intellectual engagement as the older sisters had.[33] According to the historian Ferling, while growing up Jefferson struggled with loneliness and abandonment issues that eventually developed into a reclusive lifestyle as an adult.[35]

Education edit

Jefferson began his childhood education under the direction of tutors at Tuckahoe along with the Randolph children.[36]

In 1752, Jefferson began attending a local school run by a Scottish Presbyterian minister. At the age of nine, Jefferson began studying Latin, Greek, and French; he learned to ride horses, and began to appreciate the study of nature. He studied under the Reverend James Maury from 1758 to 1760 near Gordonsville, Virginia. While boarding with Maury's family, he studied history, science and the classics.[37]

At age 16, Jefferson entered the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, and first met the law professor George Wythe, who became his influential mentor. For two years he studied mathematics, metaphysics, and philosophy under Professor William Small, who introduced the enthusiastic Jefferson to the writings of the British Empiricists, including John Locke, Francis Bacon, and Isaac Newton.[38] He also improved his French, Greek, and violin. A diligent student, Jefferson displayed an avid curiosity in all fields.[39] Jefferson read law while working as a law clerk for Wythe. During this time, he also read a wide variety of English classics and political works. Jefferson was admitted to the Virginia bar five years later in 1767.[40]

Throughout his life, Jefferson depended on books for his education. He collected and accumulated thousands of books for his library at Monticello. When Jefferson's father Peter died Thomas inherited, among other things, his large library. [41] A significant portion of Jefferson's library was also bequeathed to him in the will of George Wythe, who had an extensive collection. Always eager for more knowledge, Jefferson continued learning throughout most of his life. Jefferson once said, "I cannot live without books."[42]


Marriage and family edit

After practicing as a circuit lawyer for several years,[43] Jefferson married the 23-year-old widow Martha Wayles Skelton. The wedding was celebrated on January 1, 1772 at Martha's home, an estate called 'The Forest' near Williamsburg, Virginia.[44] Martha Jefferson was described as attractive, gracious and popular with their friends; she was a frequent hostess for Jefferson and managed the large household. They were said to have a happy marriage. She read widely, did fine needle work and was an amateur musician. Jefferson played the violin and Martha was an accomplished piano player. It is said that she was attracted to Thomas largely because of their mutual love of music.[44][45] One of the wedding gifts he gave to Martha was a "forte-piano".[46] During the ten years of their marriage, she had six children: Martha, called Patsy, (1772–1836); Jane (1774–1775); a stillborn or unnamed son in 1777; Mary Wayles (1778–1804), called Polly; Lucy Elizabeth (1780–1781); and Lucy Elizabeth (1782–1784)[47][Note 7]. Two survived to adulthood.[46]

After her father John Wayles died in 1773, Martha and her husband Jefferson inherited his 135 slaves, 11,000 acres and the debts of his estate. These things took Jefferson and other co-executors of the estate years to pay off, which contributed to his financial problems. Among the slaves were Betty Hemings and her 10 children; the six youngest were half-siblings of Martha Wayles Jefferson, as they are believed to have been children of her father,[Note 8] and they were three-quarters European in ancestry. The youngest, an infant, was Sally Hemings. As they grew and were trained, all the Hemings family members were assigned to privileged positions among the slaves at Monticello, as domestic servants, chefs, and highly skilled artisans.[50]

Later in life, Martha Jefferson suffered from diabetes and ill health, and frequent childbirth further weakened her. A few months after the birth of her last child, Martha died on September 6, 1782. Jefferson was at his wife's bedside and was distraught after her death. In the following three weeks, Jefferson shut himself in his room, where he paced back and forth until he was nearly exhausted. Later he would often take long rides on secluded roads to mourn for his wife.[45][46] As he had promised his wife, Jefferson never remarried.

Jefferson's oldest daughter Martha (called Patsy) married Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. in 1790. They had 12 children, eleven of whom survived to adulthood. She suffered severe problems as Randolph became alcoholic and was abusive. When they separated for several years, Martha and her many children lived at Monticello with her father, adding to his financial burdens. Her oldest son, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, helped her run Monticello for a time after her father's death. She had the longest life of Jefferson's children by Martha.[46]

Mary Jefferson (called Polly and Maria) married her first cousin John Wayles Eppes in 1797. As a wedding settlement, Jefferson gave them Betsy Hemmings, the 14-year-old granddaughter of Betty Hemings, and 30 other slaves.[51] The Eppes had three children together, but only a son survived. Frail like her mother, Maria died at the age of 25, several months after her third child was born. Who also died, and only her son Francis W. Eppes survived to adulthood, cared for by slaves, his father and, after five years, a stepmother.[51][52]

Monticello edit

 
West lawn in October 2010

In 1768, Jefferson started the construction of Monticello located on 5,000 acres of land on and around a hilltop. What would soon become a mansion started as a large one room brick house. Over the years Jefferson designed and built additions to the house where it took on neoclassical dimensions. The house soon become his architectural masterpiece. The construction was done by Jefferson and his slave laborers, some of whom were master carpenters. Much of the fine furniture in the house was built by his slaves, who were also very skilled designers and craftsmen.[43] Jefferson moved into the South Pavilion (an outbuilding) in 1770, where his new wife Martha joined him in 1772. Monticello would be his continuing project to create a neoclassical environment, based on his study of the architect Andrea Palladio and the classical orders.[53]

While Minister to France during 1784–1789, he had an opportunity to see some of the classical buildings with which he had become acquainted from his reading, as well as to discover the "modern" trends in French architecture then fashionable in Paris. In 1794, following his service as Secretary of State (1790–93), he began rebuilding Monticello based on the ideas he had acquired in Europe. The remodeling continued throughout most of his presidency (1801–09).[54] The most notable change was the addition of the octagonal dome.[55]

Lawyer and House of Burgesses edit

Jefferson handled many cases as a lawyer in colonial Virginia, and was very active from 1768 to 1773.[56] Jefferson's client list included members of Virginia's elite families, including members of his mother's family, the Randolphs.[56]

Beside practicing law, Jefferson represented Albemarle County in the Virginia House of Burgesses[57] His friend and mentor George Wythe served at the same time. Following the passage of the Coercive Acts by the British Parliament in 1774, Jefferson wrote a set of resolutions against the acts, which were expanded into A Summary View of the Rights of British America, his first published work. Previous criticism of the Coercive Acts had focused on legal and constitutional issues, but Jefferson offered the radical notion that the colonists had the natural right to govern themselves.[58] Jefferson argued that Parliament was the legislature of Great Britain only, and had no legislative authority in the colonies. The paper was intended to serve as instructions for the Virginia delegation of the First Continental Congress, but Jefferson's ideas proved to be too radical for that body.[citation needed]

Political career from 1775 to 1800 edit

Declaration of Independence edit

 
In John Trumbull's painting Declaration of Independence, the five-man drafting committee is presenting its work to the Continental Congress.

Thomas Jefferson was the principal author of the Declaration of Independence, a formal document which officially proclaimed the dissolution of the American colonies from the British Crown. The sentiments of revolution put forth in the Declaration were already well established in 1776 as the colonies were already at war with the British when the Declaration was being debated, drafted and signed.[59][60]

Before the Declaration was drafted, Jefferson served as a delegate from Virginia to the Second Continental Congress beginning in June 1775, soon after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War. He sought out John Adams who, along with his cousin Samuel, had emerged as a leader of the convention.[61] Jefferson and Adams established a lifelong friendship and would correspond frequently; Adams ensured that Jefferson was appointed to the five-man committee to write a declaration in support of the resolution of independence.[62] Having agreed on an approach, the committee selected Jefferson to write the first draft. His eloquent writing style made him the committee's choice for primary author; the others edited his draft.[63][64] During June 1776, the month before the signing, Jefferson took notes of the Congressional debates over the proposed Declaration in order to include such sentiments in his draft, among other things justifying the right of citizens to resort to revolution.[65] Jefferson also drew from his proposed draft of the Virginia Constitution, George Mason's draft of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, and other sources.

The historian Joseph Ellis states that the Declaration was the "core of [Jefferson]'s seductive appeal across the ages".[66] After working for two days to modify the document, Congress removed language that was deemed offensive to supporters of the Patriot cause in Britain along with Jefferson's clause that denounced King George III for supposedly imposing the slave trade on the American colonies. This was the longest clause removed.[65] Congress trimmed the draft by about one fourth, wanting the Declaration to appeal to both the British and American public, while at the same time not wanting to give representatives from South Carolina and Georgia reasons to oppose the Declaration on abolitionist grounds. Jefferson deeply resented some of the many omissions Congress made.[65][67] On July 4, 1776, Congress ratified the Declaration of Independence and distributed the document.[68] Historians have considered it to be one of Jefferson's major achievements; the preamble is considered an enduring statement of human rights that has inspired people around the world.[69] Its second sentence is the following:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

This has been called "one of the best-known sentences in the English language",[70] containing "the most potent and consequential words in American history".[71] The passage came to represent a moral standard to which the United States should strive. This view was notably promoted by Abraham Lincoln, who based his philosophy on it, and argued for the Declaration as a statement of principles through which the United States Constitution should be interpreted.[72] Intended also as a revolutionary document for the world, not just the colonies, the Declaration of Independence was Jefferson's assertion of his core beliefs in a republican form of government.[65] The Declaration became the core document and a tradition in American political values. It also became the model of democracy that was adopted by many peoples around the world. Abraham Lincoln once referred to Jefferson's principles as "..the definitions and axioms of a free society..".[73]

Virginia state legislator and Governor edit

After Independence, Jefferson desired to reform the Virginia government.[74] In September 1776, eager to work on creating the new government and dismantle the feudal aspects of the old, Jefferson returned to Virginia and was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates for Albemarle County.[75] Before his return, he had contributed to the state's constitution from Philadelphia; he continued to support freehold suffrage, by which only property holders could vote.[76] He served as a Delegate from September 26, 1776 – June 1, 1779, as the war continued. Jefferson worked on Revision of Laws to reflect Virginia's new status as a democratic state. By abolishing primogeniture, establishing freedom of religion, and providing for general education, he hoped to make the basis of "republican government." [76] Ending the Anglican Church as the state (or established) religion was the first step. Jefferson introduced his "Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom" in 1779, but it was not enacted until 1786, while he was in France as US Minister.[77]

In 1778 Jefferson supported a bill to prohibit the international slave trade in Virginia; the state was the first in the union to adopt such legislation. This was significant as the slave trade would be protected from regulation for 20 years at the federal level under the new Constitution in 1787. Abolitionists in Virginia expected the new law to be followed by gradual emancipation, as Jefferson had supported this by opinion, but he discouraged such action while in the Assembly. Following his departure, the Assembly passed a law in 1782 making manumission easier. As a result, the number of free blacks in Virginia rose markedly by 1810: from 1800 in 1782 to 12,766 in 1790, and to 30,570 by 1810, when they formed 8.2 percent of the black population in the state.[78] He drafted 126 bills in three years, including laws to establish fee simple tenure in land, which removed inheritance strictures and to streamline the judicial system. In 1778, Jefferson's "Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge" and subsequent efforts to reduce control by clergy led to some small changes at William and Mary College, but free public education was not established until the late nineteenth century after the Civil War.[79] Jefferson proposed a bill to eliminate capital punishment in Virginia for all crimes except murder and treason, but his effort was defeated.[80] In 1779, at Jefferson's behest, William and Mary appointed his mentor George Wythe as the first professor of law at an American university.[81]

In 1779, at the age of thirty-six, Jefferson was elected Governor of Virginia by the two houses of the legislature, as was the process.[82] The term was then for one year, and he was re-elected in 1780. As governor in 1780, he transferred the state capital from Williamsburg to Richmond. He served as a wartime governor, as the united colonies continued the Revolutionary War against Great Britain. In late 1780, Governor Jefferson prepared Richmond for attack by moving all arms, military supplies and records to a foundry located five miles outside of town. General Benedict Arnold, who had switched to the British side in 1780, learned of the transfer and moved to capture the foundry. Jefferson tried to get the supplies moved to Westham, seven miles to the north, but he was too late. He also delayed too long in raising a militia. With the Assembly, Jefferson evacuated the government in January 1781 from Richmond to Charlottesville. They began to meet at his home of Monticello. The government had moved so rapidly that he left his household slaves in Richmond, where they were captured as prisoners of war by British forces and later exchanged for captive British soldiers. In January 1781, Benedict Arnold led an armada of British ships and, with 1,600 British regulars, conducted raids along the James River. Later Arnold would join Lord Cornwallis, whose troops were marching across Virginia from the south.

In early June 1781, Cornwallis dispatched a 250-man cavalry force commanded by Banastre Tarleton on a secret expedition to capture Governor Jefferson and members of the Assembly at Monticello.[82] Tarleton hoped to surprise Jefferson, but Jack Jouett, a captain in the Virginia militia, thwarted the British plan by warning the governor and members of the Assembly.[83] Jefferson and his family escaped and fled to Poplar Forest, his plantation to the west. Tarleton did not allow looting or destruction at Monticello by his troops. By contrast, when British forces led by Lord Cornwallis subsequently occupied Elkhill, a smaller estate owned by Jefferson on the James River in Goochland County, Virginia, they looted and burnt the plantation. According to a letter written by Jefferson on July 16, 1788, Cornwallis used Elkhill during the ten-day occupation as a temporary headquarters; during those ten days, his men burnt all crops of corn and tobacco on the plantation in addition to its barns and fences, took all cattle, sheep, and hogs in Elkhill as sustenance, and carried off all horses capable of military service along with putting down foals too young to be useful. They also captured 27 slaves owned by Jefferson as prisoners of war, 24 of which subsequently died of smallpox or epidemic typhus.[84]

Jefferson believed his gubernatorial term had expired in June, and he spent much of the summer with his family at Poplar Forest.[83] The members of the General Assembly had quickly reconvened in June 1781 in Staunton, Virginia across the Blue Ridge Mountains. They voted to reward Jouett with a pair of pistols and a sword, but considered an official inquiry into Jefferson's actions, as they believed he had failed his responsibilities as governor.

The inquiry ultimately was dropped, yet Jefferson insisted on appearing before the lawmakers in December to respond to charges of mishandling his duties and abandoning leadership at a critical moment. He reported that he had believed it understood that he was leaving office and that he had discussed with other legislators the advantages of Gen. Thomas Nelson, a commander of the state militia, being appointed the governor.[83]

(The legislature did appoint Nelson as governor in late June 1781.)

Jefferson was a controversial figure at this time, heavily criticized for inaction and failure to adequately protect the state in the face of a British invasion. Even on balance, Jefferson had failed as a state executive, leaving his successor, Thomas Nelson, Jr. to pick up the pieces.[85]

He was not re-elected again to office in Virginia.[74]

Notes on the State of Virginia edit

In 1780 Jefferson as governor received numerous questions about Virginia, posed to him by François Barbé-Marbois, then Secretary of the French delegation in Philadelphia, the temporary capital of the united colonies, who intended to gather pertinent data on the American colonies. Jefferson's responses to Marbois' "Queries" would become known as Notes on the State of Virginia (1785). Scientifically trained, Jefferson was a member of the American Philosophical Society, which had been founded in Philadelphia in 1743. He had extensive knowledge of western lands from Virginia to Illinois. In a course of five years, Jefferson enthusiastically devoted his intellectual energy to the book; he included a discussion of contemporary scientific knowledge, and Virginia's history, politics, and ethnography. Jefferson was aided by Thomas Walker, George R. Clark, and U.S. geographer Thomas Hutchins. The book was first published in France in 1785 and in England in 1787.[86]

It has been ranked as the most important American book published before 1800. The book is Jefferson's vigorous and often eloquent argument about the nature of the good society, which he believed was incarnated by Virginia. In it he expressed his beliefs in the separation of church and state, constitutional government, checks and balances, and individual liberty. He also compiled extensive data about the state's natural resources and economy. He wrote extensively about the problems of slavery, miscegenation, and his belief that blacks and whites could not live together as free people in one society.

Member of Congress and Minister to France edit

Following its victory in the war and peace treaty with Great Britain, in 1783 the United States formed a Congress of the Confederation (informally called the Continental Congress), to which Jefferson was appointed as a Virginia delegate. As a member of the committee formed to set foreign exchange rates, he recommended that American currency should be based on the decimal system; his plan was adopted. Jefferson also recommended setting up the Committee of the States, to function as the executive arm of Congress. The plan was adopted but failed in practice.

Jefferson was "one of the first statesmen in any part of the world to advocate concrete measures for restricting and eradicating Negro slavery."[87] Jefferson wrote an ordinance banning slavery in all the nation's territories (not just the Northwest), but it failed by one vote. The subsequent Northwest Ordinance prohibited slavery in the newly organized territory, but it did nothing to free slaves who were already held by settlers there; this required later actions. Jefferson was in France when the Northwest Ordinance was passed.[88]

He resigned from Congress when he was appointed as minister to France in May 1784.

 
Memorial plaque marking where Jefferson lived while he was Minister to France.

The widower Jefferson, still in his 40s, was minister to France from 1785 to 1789, the year the French Revolution started. When the French foreign minister, the Count de Vergennes, commented to Jefferson, "You replace Monsieur Franklin, I hear," Jefferson replied, "I succeed him. No man can replace him."[89]

Beginning in early September 1785, Jefferson collaborated with John Adams, US minister in London, to outline an anti-piracy treaty with Morocco. Their work culminated in a treaty that was ratified by Congress on July 18, 1787. Still in force today, it is the longest unbroken treaty relationship in U.S. history.[90] Busy in Paris, Jefferson did not return to the US for the 1787 Constitutional Convention.

He enjoyed the architecture, arts, and the salon culture of Paris. He often dined with many of the city's most prominent people, and stocked up on wines to take back to the US.[91] While in Paris, Jefferson corresponded with many people who had important roles in the imminent French Revolution. These included the Marquis de Lafayette, and the Comte de Mirabeau, a popular pamphleteer who repeated ideals that had been the basis for the American Revolution.[92] His observations of social tensions contributed to his anti-clericalism and strengthened his ideas about the separation of church and state.[citation needed]

Jefferson's eldest daughter Martha, known as Patsy, went with him to France in 1784. His two youngest daughters were in the care of friends in the United States.[82] To serve the household, Jefferson brought some of his slaves, including James Hemings, who trained as a French chef for his master's service.

Jefferson's youngest daughter Lucy died of whooping cough in 1785 in the United States, and he was bereft.[85] In 1786, Jefferson met and fell in love with Maria Cosway, an accomplished Italian-English artist and musician of 27. They saw each other frequently over a period of six weeks. A married woman, she returned to Great Britain, but they maintained a lifelong correspondence.[85]

In 1787, Jefferson sent for his youngest surviving child, Polly, then age nine. He requested that a slave accompany Polly on the trans-Atlantic voyage. By chance, Sally Hemings, a younger sister of James, was chosen; she lived in the Jefferson household in Paris for about two years. According to her son Madison Hemings, Sally and Jefferson began a sexual relationship in Paris and she became pregnant.[93] She agreed to return to the United States as his concubine after he promised to free her children when they came of age.[93]

Secretary of State edit

In September 1789 Jefferson returned to the US from France with his two daughters and slaves. Immediately upon his return, President Washington wrote to him asking him to accept a seat in his Cabinet as Secretary of State. Jefferson accepted the appointment.

As Washington's Secretary of State (1790–1793), Jefferson argued with Alexander Hamilton, the Secretary of the Treasury, about national fiscal policy,[94] especially the funding of the debts of the war. Jefferson later associated Hamilton and the Federalists with "Royalism," and said the "Hamiltonians were panting after ... crowns, coronets and mitres."[95] Due to their opposition to Hamilton, Jefferson and James Madison founded and led the Democratic-Republican Party. He worked with Madison and his campaign manager John J. Beckley to build a nationwide network of Republican allies. Jefferson's political actions and his attempt to undermine Hamilton nearly led Washington to dismiss Jefferson from his cabinet.[96] Although Jefferson left the cabinet voluntarily, Washington never forgave him for his actions, and never spoke to him again.[96]

The French minister said in 1793: "Senator Morris and Secretary of the Treasury Hamilton ... had the greatest influence over the President's mind, and that it was only with difficulty that he [Jefferson] counterbalanced their efforts."[97] Jefferson supported France against Britain when they fought in 1793.[98] Jefferson believed that political success at home depended on the success of the French army in Europe.[99] In 1793, the French minister Edmond-Charles Genêt caused a crisis when he tried to influence public opinion by appealing to the American people, something which Jefferson tried to stop.[99]

Jefferson tried to achieve three important goals during his discussions with George Hammond, British Minister to the U.S.: secure British admission of violating the Treaty of Paris (1783); vacate their posts in the Northwest (the territory between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River north of the Ohio); and compensate the United States to pay American slave owners for the slaves whom the British had freed and evacuated at the end of the war. Chester Miller notes that after failing to gain agreement on any of these, Jefferson resigned in December 1793.[100]

Election of 1796 and Vice Presidency edit

In late 1793, Jefferson retired to Monticello, from where he continued to oppose the policies of Hamilton and Washington. The Jay Treaty of 1794, led by Hamilton, brought peace and trade with Britain – while Madison, with strong support from Jefferson, wanted "to strangle the former mother country" without going to war.[101] "It became an article of faith among Republicans that 'commercial weapons' would suffice to bring Great Britain to any terms the United States chose to dictate."[101] Even during the violence of the Reign of Terror in France, Jefferson refused to disavow the revolution because "To back away from France would be to undermine the cause of republicanism in America."[102] As vice president, Jefferson conducted secret talks with the French, in which he advocated that the French government take a more aggressive position against the American government, which he thought was too close to the British.[103] He succeeded in getting the American ambassador expelled from France.

As the Democratic-Republican presidential candidate in 1796, Jefferson lost to John Adams, but had enough electoral votes to become Vice President (1797–1801). One of the chief duties of a Vice president is presiding over the Senate, and Jefferson was concerned about its lack of rules leaving decisions to the discretion of the presiding officer. Years before holding his first office, Jefferson had spent much time researching procedures and rules for governing bodies. As a student, he had transcribed notes on British parliamentary law into a manual which he would later call his Parliamentary Pocket Book. Jefferson had also served on the committee appointed to draw up the rules of order for the Continental Congress in 1776. As Vice President, he was ready to reform Senatorial procedures. Prompted by the immediate need, he wrote A Manual of Parliamentary Practice, a document which the House of Representatives follows to the present day.[104]

With the Quasi-War underway, the Federalists under John Adams started rebuilding the military, levied new taxes, and enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts. Jefferson believed that these acts were intended to suppress Democratic-Republicans rather than dangerous enemy aliens, although the acts were allowed to expire. Jefferson and Madison rallied opposition support by anonymously writing the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, which declared that the federal government had no right to exercise powers not specifically delegated to it by the states.[105] Though the resolutions followed the "interposition" approach of Madison, Jefferson advocated nullification. At one point he drafted a threat for Kentucky to secede.[Note 9] Jefferson's biographer Dumas Malone argued that had his actions become known at the time, Jefferson might have been impeached for treason.[103] In writing the Kentucky Resolutions, Jefferson warned that, "unless arrested at the threshold," the Alien and Sedition Acts would "necessarily drive these states into revolution and blood."[103] The historian Ron Chernow says, "[H]e wasn't calling for peaceful protests or civil disobedience: he was calling for outright rebellion, if needed, against the federal government of which he was vice president."[106]

Chernow believes that Jefferson "thus set forth a radical doctrine of states' rights that effectively undermined the constitution."[106] He argues that neither Jefferson nor Madison sensed that they had sponsored measures as inimical as the Alien and Sedition Acts.[106] The historian Garry Wills argued, "Their nullification effort, if others had picked it up, would have been a greater threat to freedom than the misguided [alien and sedition] laws, which were soon rendered feckless by ridicule and electoral pressure."[107] The theoretical damage of the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions was "deep and lasting, and was a recipe for disunion".[106] George Washington was so appalled by them that he told Patrick Henry that if "systematically and pertinaciously pursued", they would "dissolve the union or produce coercion."[106] The influence of Jefferson's doctrine of states' rights reverberated to the Civil War and beyond.[108]

According to Chernow, during the Quasi-War, Jefferson engaged in a "secret campaign to sabotage Adams in French eyes."[109] In the spring of 1797, he held four confidential talks with the French consul Joseph Letombe. In these private meetings, Jefferson attacked Adams, predicted that he would only serve one term, and encouraged France to invade England.[109] Jefferson advised Letombe to stall any American envoys sent to Paris by instructing them to "listen to them and then drag out the negotiations at length and mollify them by the urbanity of the proceedings." This toughened the tone that the French government adopted with the new Adams Administration.[109] Due to pressure against the Adams Administration from Jefferson and his supporters, Congress released the papers related to the XYZ Affair, which rallied a shift in popular opinion from Jefferson and the French government to supporting Adams.[109]

Ancestry edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ His wife, Mary Branch, married Joseph Mattocks, having obtained a marriage license on November 17, 1700.[6]
  2. ^ A John Jefferson[8][9] or Mr. Jefferson was a delegate representing the Flowerdieu hundred in the first legislative assembly of Colonial America in 1619.[10][11] The attendee of the 1619 legislative assembly is believed to be an ancestor of President Thomas Jefferson, according to Virginia Biographer Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1898).[12] Thomas Jefferson believed, but was unable to prove, that John Jefferson was his great great grandfather. John arrived in Virginia in 1619, having arrived on the Bonahora[13] or the Bona Nova.[14] He was made a burgess that year and represented the Flowerdieu Hundred at Farolay's Council in Jamestown. He obtained a land patent at Archer's Hope in 1626.[13] He abandoned the property and moved to the West Indies and was back in England by 1645.[15]
  3. ^ According to historian Jon Meacham, Jefferson's first American ancestor immigrated to Virginia from England in 1612.[16] Monticello states that a Jefferson ancestor(s) immigrated about the 1660s or 1670s.[4] Family tradition was that his first American ancestor arrived in Virginia from Wales, near Snowdon mountain. (Peter Jefferson named some of his land along the James River 'Snowden' for this family story.) No records have been found, though, that state that there were Jeffersons in the Snowdonia region in the 16th and early 17th centuries.[4][17] Other relatives were also early settlers of Virginia. Taylor (1965) argues that the ancestors of the Jeffersons may have been associated with the time of the Norman Conquest (1066), for "Jefferson" is derived from the Norman "Geoffrey."[18] (It stands for Jeffrey's son or other similar father's name.[19])
  4. ^ There are two theories in which Thomas Jefferson may be related to the Jeaffreson family from Suffolk, England. One theory is that Samuel Jeaffreson who became a successful businessman in the Leeward Islands was the father of Jefferson's great grandfather. Samuel, who was born at Pettistree, Suffolk in 1607 and he settled St. Kitts and Antigua, had a son named Thomas.[4][17] Samuel is thought to have arrived in St. Kitts in 1624 aboard the Hopewell.[20] Colonel John Jeaffreson, also from the family of Suffolk, was a merchant in London and did business with the Virginia Colony in the early 1620s. He built a fortune on St. Kitts before returning in the 1650s to England, where he purchased the Dullingham House estate in Cambridgeshire. There is some information he may have been the father of a Thomas Jefferson who lived in Nevis and Jamaica in the mid 1600s and may have then removed to Henrico County, Virginia. Although there is scant information to support this theory, the Virginia Jeffersons derived their coat of arms from the Jeaffresons of Dullingham House.[4][17]
  5. ^ In an 18th-century Presidential campaign, someone speaking against Jefferson's candidacy and in favor of that of John Adams accused Jefferson of being "half Injun, half nigger, half Frenchman"[21][22] and born to a "mulatto father"[21][22][23] or slave[24] and "a half-breed Indian squaw",[21][22][23] this birth to a mulatto and an Indian allegedly "well-known in the neighbourhood where he was raised"[21][25] but otherwise unproven.
  6. ^ The birth and death of Thomas Jefferson are given using the Gregorian calendar. As he was born when Britain and her colonies still used the Julian calendar, contemporary records and his tombstone record his birth as April 2, 1743.
  7. ^ While the news from Francis Eppes, with whom Lucy was staying, did not reach Jefferson until 1785, in an undated letter,[48] it is clear that the year of her death was 1784 from another letter to Jefferson from James Currie dated 20 November 1784.[49]
  8. ^ "John Wayles", Jefferson's Community: Relatives, Monticello. Footnote to Wayles' paternity: Isaac Jefferson, Memoirs, 4; Madison Hemings, "Life Among the Lowly," Pike County Republican, March 13, 1873. A December 20, 1802 letter from Thomas Gibbons, a Federalist planter of Georgia, to Jonathan Dayton states that Sally Hemings "is half sister to his first wife." Similarly, a letter from Thomas Turner in the May 31, 1805 Boston Repertory states, "an opinion has existed . . . that this very Sally is the natural daughter of Mr. Wales, who was the father of the actual Mrs. Jefferson."
  9. ^ Jefferson's draft said: "where powers are assumed [by the federal government] which have not been delegated, a nullification of the act is the rightful remedy: that every State has a natural right in cases not within the compact, (casus non fœderis) to nullify of their own authority all assumptions of power by others within their limits." See Jefferson's draft of the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798.
  10. ^ Peter Field's mother may be Ann Rogers Clark (a widow), Anne Clark, Anna Clark, Sarah Clark, or someone else/unknown. A citation from a reliable source is needed.

References edit

  1. ^ Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia – Welsh Ancestry June 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved June 2, 2010.
  2. ^ Henry Stephens Randall, The Life of Thomas Jefferson
  3. ^ Malone 1948, p. 427.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Jefferson's Ancestry". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  5. ^ Thomas Jefferson (January 1, 2010). The Works of Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, Anas, Writings 1760-1770. Cosimo, Inc. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-61640-194-8.
  6. ^ Dumas Malone (January 30, 1948). Jefferson the Virginian. Little, Brown. p. 427. ISBN 978-0-316-54474-0.
  7. ^ a b Willard Sterne Randall (June 18, 1994). Thomas Jefferson: A Life. HarperCollins. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-06-097617-0.
  8. ^ Charles E. Hatch (1943). The Oldest Legislative Assembly in America & Its First Statehouse. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 30.
  9. ^ "Colonial and later Flowerdew". Flowerdew Hundred: Exploring a Cultural Landscape Through Archaeology. August 19, 2019. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  10. ^ Frederick Doveton Nichols; Ralph E. Griswold (1981). Thomas Jefferson, Landscape Architect. University of Virginia Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-8139-0899-1.
  11. ^ Colonial Records of Virginia. Genealogical Publishing Com. August 28, 2012. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-8063-0558-5.
  12. ^ Tyler, Lyon Gardiner; Kropf, Lewis L.; Fiske, John (1898). The American Historical Review. Vol. 3. Oxford University Press, American Historical Association. pp. 734–738. doi:10.2307/1834159. hdl:2027/uc1.31175007116703. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1834159.
  13. ^ a b Curtis, William Eleroy (1901). Thomas Jefferson. J. B. Lippincott. pp. 18–19.
  14. ^ Collections of the Virginia Historical Society: Constitution of the Virginia Historical and Philosophical Society ... February, 1833. Virginia Historical Society. 1888. p. 118.
  15. ^ McCartney, Martha W. (2007). Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 419. ISBN 978-0-8063-1774-8.
  16. ^ Jon Meacham (September 2016). Thomas Jefferson - President and Philosopher. Random House Children's Books. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-385-38752-1.
  17. ^ a b c "Welsh Ancestry". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
  18. ^ Olivia Taylor, "The Ancestry of Thomas Jefferson," in George Shackelford, ed. Collected Papers to Commemorate Fifty Years of Monticello, vol i (1965), ch. 3
  19. ^ Harrison, Henry (1969). Surnames of the United Kingdom: A Concise Etymological Dictionary. Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 978-0-8063-0171-6.
  20. ^ Klein, Debra A. (July 12, 2017). "Uncovering the Secrets of St. Kitts". The Daily Beast. Retrieved December 28, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d Nock, Albert Jay, Jefferson (N.Y.: Hill & Wang, 1st Am. Century ser. ed. September 1960, 3d printing November 1963, 1926), p. 141, citing The Johnnycake Papers (in another ed., possibly p. 233).
  22. ^ a b c Taylor, Coley, & Samuel Middlebrook, The Eagle Screams (N.Y.: Macaulay, 1936), p. 77 and see p. 76 (campaign of 1796), citing Nock, A. J., Jefferson.
  23. ^ a b Broder, David S., Why the Candidates are Targets for Mudslingers, in The New York Times, September 27, 1964, last page of article.
  24. ^ Taylor, Coley, et al., The Eagle Screams, op. cit., p. 67.
  25. ^ Taylor, Coley, et al., The Eagle Screams, op. cit., p. 77 (without hyphen & "u") and see p. 76, citing Nock, A. J., Jefferson.
  26. ^ Malone 1948, p. 3, 430.
  27. ^ Malone 1948, pp. 13–14.
  28. ^ Malone 1948, pp. 5–6.
  29. ^ Malone 1948, pp. 19–21, 428.
  30. ^ Malone 1948, pp. 31–33.
  31. ^ Woods, Edgar (1901). Albemarle County in Virginia. Charlottesville, Virginia. p. 225.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  32. ^ Malone 1948, pp. 437–40 The actual amount of land and slaves that Jefferson inherited is estimated. The first known record Jefferson made in regards to slave ownership, was in 1774, when he owned 41.
  33. ^ a b c Henry Stephens Randall, The Life of Thomas Jefferson. p. 41
  34. ^ Virginia Historical Society "The Virginia magazine of history and biography". P. 331
  35. ^ Ferling 2000, pp. 36–37.
  36. ^ Malone 1948, p. 22.
  37. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 7–9.
  38. ^ Peterson, Merrill D. ed. Thomas Jefferson: Writings. New York: Library of America, p. 1236.
  39. ^ Thomas Jefferson on Wine by John Hailman, 2006
  40. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 9–12.
  41. ^ Ferling 2000, p. 48.
  42. ^ "Jefferson's Library". Library of Congress. August 3, 2010. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  43. ^ a b "Life Before the Presidency". University of Virginia. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
  44. ^ a b Peterson 1970, p. 27.
  45. ^ a b Halliday 2001, pp. 48–52.
  46. ^ a b c d "Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson". The White House. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  47. ^ "Lucy Jefferson (1782-1784)". Thomas Jefferson's Monticello. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
  48. ^ “To Thomas Jefferson from Francis Eppes, [14 October 1784],” Founders Online, National Archives, accessed September 29, 2019, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-07-02-0342. [Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 7, 2 March 1784 – 25 February 1785, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953, pp. 441–442.]
  49. ^ “To Thomas Jefferson from James Currie, 20 November 1784,” Founders Online, National Archives, accessed September 29, 2019, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-07-02-0388. [Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 7, 2 March 1784 – 25 February 1785, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953, pp. 538–539.]
  50. ^ "Betty Hemings", Plantation and slavery, Monticello
  51. ^ a b "Betsy Hemmings: Loved by a Family, But What of Her Own?", Keeping Families Together, Monticello, accessed January 8, 2012
  52. ^ Annette Gordon-Reed, The Hemingses of Monticello, Hemings Family Tree-1, frontispiece, 2008. Note: Eppes and Betsy Hemmings had a son Joseph and daughter Frances.
  53. ^ . Architecture Week. Archived from the original on July 19, 2009. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  54. ^ "Monticello". National Park Service, US Dept of the Interior. Retrieved April 30, 2011.
  55. ^ Kern, Chris. "Jefferson's Dome at Monticello". Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  56. ^ a b Henry Stephens Randall, The Life of Thomas Jefferson. p 47
  57. ^ "The Thomas Jefferson Papers Timeline: 1743–1827". Retrieved July 19, 2009.
  58. ^ Merrill D. Peterson, "Jefferson, Thomas"; American National Biography Online, February 2000.[page needed]
  59. ^ Becker 1922, pp. 5–6.
  60. ^ Ferling 2000, pp. 134–36.
  61. ^ Peterson 1970, p. 87.
  62. ^ Maier 1997, pp. 97–105.; Boyd & Gawalt 1999, p. 21.
  63. ^ Boyd & Gawalt 1999, p. 22.
  64. ^ Ferling 2000, p. 132.
  65. ^ a b c d Ferling 2000, p. 135.
  66. ^ Ferling 2000, p. 136.
  67. ^ Becker 1922, p. 171.
  68. ^ Ferling 2000, pp. 135–36.
  69. ^ Ellis 1996, p. 50.
  70. ^ Stephen E. Lucas, "Justifying America: The Declaration of Independence as a Rhetorical Document", in Thomas W. Benson, ed., American Rhetoric: Context and Criticism, Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press, 1989, p. 85
  71. ^ Ellis 2007, pp. 55–56.
  72. ^ McPherson, Second American Revolution, 126.
  73. ^ Bernstein 2005, pp. 197–98.
  74. ^ a b Ferling 2004, p. 26.
  75. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 101–02.
  76. ^ a b Peterson 1970, pp. 105–06.
  77. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 134, 142.
  78. ^ Kolchin 1993, p. 81.
  79. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 146–49.
  80. ^ Peterson 1970, pp. 125–29.
  81. ^ Bennett 2006, p. 99.
  82. ^ a b c Leonard Liggio, "The Life and Works of Thomas Jefferson" May 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, The Locke Luminary Vol. II, No. 1 (Summer 1999) Part 3, George Mason University, accessed January 10, 2012
  83. ^ a b c "Jack Jouett's Ride". Monticello Foundation. Retrieved April 30, 2011.
  84. ^ Places: "Elkhill", Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia, Monticello, accessed January 10, 2012
  85. ^ a b c "Thomas Jefferson: Biography". National Park Service. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
  86. ^ Shuffelton (1999, June 2001), Notes on the State of Virginia Thomas Jefferson, Introduction
  87. ^ David Brion Davis, The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution: 1770–1823, 1975, p. 174
  88. ^ Finkelman, P. (1989). "Evading the Ordinance: The Persistence of Bondage in Indiana and Illinois". Journal of the Early Republic. 9 (1): 21–51. doi:10.2307/3123523. JSTOR 3123523.
  89. ^ Hale, 1896 p. 119
  90. ^ "1787 Treaty with Morocco", Department of State, Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  91. ^ Lawrence S. Kaplan, Jefferson and France: An Essay on Politics and Political Ideas, Yale University Press, 1980[page needed]
  92. ^ Antonina Vallentin, Mirabeau, trans. E. W. Dickes, The Viking Press, 1948, p. 86.
  93. ^ a b "Memoirs of Madison Hemings". Frontline. Public Broadcasting Service – WGBH Boston. Retrieved November 29, 2011.
  94. ^ Pearson, Ellen Holmes. "Jefferson versus Hamilton." Teachinghistory.org. Accessed July 14, 2011.
  95. ^ Ferling 2004, p. 59.
  96. ^ a b Chernow 2004, p. 427.
  97. ^ Elkins, Stanley and Eric McKitrick (1995). The Age of Federalism New York: Oxford University Press, p. 344.
  98. ^ "Foreign Affairs," in Peterson, ed. Thomas Jefferson: A Reference Encyclopedia (1986) p. 325
  99. ^ a b Schachner 1951, p. 495.
  100. ^ Miller 1977, p. 117.
  101. ^ a b Miller (1960), pp. 143–44, 148–49.[full citation needed]
  102. ^ Thomas Jefferson, Jean M. Yarbrough, The Essential Jefferson, Hackett Publishing, 2006. (p. xx)
  103. ^ a b c Chernow 2004, p. 586.
  104. ^ "Manual of Parliamentary Practice". Monticello Foundation. Retrieved May 9, 2011.
  105. ^ "Primary Documents in American History, Alien and Sedition Acts". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 10, 2011.[dead link]
  106. ^ a b c d e Chernow 2004, p. 587.
  107. ^ Wills, Gary. "James Madison". p49
  108. ^ Knott. "Alexander Hamilton and the Persistence of Myth". p. 48
  109. ^ a b c d Chernow 2004, p. 551.
  110. ^ a b Verell, Nancy (April 14, 2015). "Peter Jefferson". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  111. ^ a b Meachum, Jon (2012) Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. Random House. p. 5
  112. ^ a b c d Andrea O'Reilly (April 6, 2010). Encyclopedia of Motherhood. SAGE Publications. pp. 603–604. ISBN 978-1-4522-6629-9.
  113. ^ a b Thomas Jefferson (January 1, 2010). The Works of Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, Anas, Writings 1760-1770. Cosimo, Inc. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-61640-194-8.
  114. ^ a b Boddie, John Bennett (1972). Historical Southern Families. Pacific Coast Publishers. p. 111. ISBN 9780806305257. Retrieved December 27, 2019. The Soane family is discussed and descendants listed in Historical Southern Families, Vol.V, p. 86. Mary, daughter of Judith Soane and Peter Field, married Thomas Jefferson, son of Thomas Jefferson and Mary Branch (ibid, p. 90).
  115. ^ a b c d Anderson, Sarah Travers Lewis (Scott) (2008) [1984]. Lewises, Meriwethers and Their Kin. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-8063-1072-5.[better source needed]
  116. ^ a b Tyler, Lyon Gardiner; Morton, Richard Lee (1917). The William and Mary Quarterly. William and Mary College. pp. 61–62.
  117. ^ Hart, Craig (November 1, 2014). A Genealogy of the Wives of the American Presidents and Their First Two Generations of Descent. McFarland. p. 239. ISBN 9780786483679. Retrieved December 27, 2019. Peter Field was married to Judith Soane (generation 7). Peter's father was James Field (generation 8)
  118. ^ a b McLean, Dabney Neff (1985). Henry Soane, Progenitor of Thomas Jefferson. D.N. McLean. ISBN 9780961493400. "This collection of abstracts will forcus on his [i.e. Thomas Jefferson] great grandparents Peter Field and Judith Soane, and on his great grandparents Henry Soane and Judith Fuller for whom there are few extant records." (p. 5).
  119. ^ a b Stoermer, Taylor (January 4, 2009). "William Randolph". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 26, 2019.
  120. ^ a b Virginia. General Court; Sir John Randolph; Edward Barradall (1909). Virginia colonial decisions. The Boston book company. p. 227.

Works cited edit

Further reading and bibliography edit

  • Gordon-Reed, Annette. The Hemingses of Monticello: an American Family. (W.W. Norton & Company, 2008); (Pulitzer Prize winner)
  • Malone, Dumas (1948). Jefferson, The Virginian. Jefferson and His Time. Vol. 1. Little Brown. OCLC 1823927.
  • Peterson, Merrill D. Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation: A Biography (Oxford U.P., 1975)

External links edit

  • "Jefferson's Ancestry" Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia

early, life, career, thomas, jefferson, thomas, jefferson, third, president, united, states, involved, politics, from, early, adult, years, this, article, covers, early, life, career, through, writing, declaration, independence, participation, american, revolu. Thomas Jefferson the third president of the United States was involved in politics from his early adult years This article covers his early life and career through his writing the Declaration of Independence participation in the American Revolutionary War serving as governor of Virginia and election and service as Vice President to President John Adams Thomas JeffersonPortrait of Thomas Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale3rd President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1801 March 4 1809Vice PresidentAaron BurrGeorge ClintonPreceded byJohn AdamsSucceeded byJames Madison2nd Vice President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1797 March 4 1801PresidentJohn AdamsPreceded byJohn AdamsSucceeded byAaron Burr1st United States Secretary of StateIn office March 22 1790 December 31 1793PresidentGeorge WashingtonPreceded byJohn Jay Acting Succeeded byEdmund RandolphUnited States Minister to FranceIn office May 17 1785 September 26 1789Appointed byCongress of the ConfederationPreceded byBenjamin FranklinSucceeded byWilliam ShortDelegate to the Congress of the Confederation from VirginiaIn office November 3 1783 May 7 1784Preceded byJames MadisonSucceeded byRichard Henry Lee2nd Governor of VirginiaIn office June 1 1779 June 3 1781Preceded byPatrick HenrySucceeded byWilliam FlemingDelegate to the Second Continental Congress from VirginiaIn office June 20 1775 September 26 1776Preceded byGeorge WashingtonSucceeded byJohn HarviePersonal detailsBorn 1743 04 13 April 13 1743Shadwell Colony of VirginiaDiedJuly 4 1826 1826 07 04 aged 83 Charlottesville Virginia USPolitical partyDemocratic RepublicanSpouseMartha Wayles Skelton JeffersonChildrenMarthaJaneMaryLucyLucy ElizabethUnnamed sonResidence s MonticelloPoplar ForestAlma materCollege of William and MaryProfessionPlanterLawyerCollege AdministratorSignatureBorn into the planter class of Virginia Jefferson was highly educated and valued his years at the College of William and Mary He became an attorney and planter building on the estate and 20 40 slaves inherited from his father Contents 1 Jeffersons of Virginia 1 1 Education 1 2 Marriage and family 1 3 Monticello 1 4 Lawyer and House of Burgesses 2 Political career from 1775 to 1800 2 1 Declaration of Independence 2 2 Virginia state legislator and Governor 2 3 Notes on the State of Virginia 2 4 Member of Congress and Minister to France 2 5 Secretary of State 2 6 Election of 1796 and Vice Presidency 3 Ancestry 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 Further reading and bibliography 8 External linksJeffersons of Virginia editHis father was Peter Jefferson a planter slaveholder and surveyor in Albemarle County Shadwell Virginia 1 When Colonel William Randolph an old friend of Peter Jefferson died in 1745 Peter assumed executorship and personal charge of Randolph s estate in Tuckahoe as well as his infant son Thomas Mann Randolph That year the Jeffersons relocated to Tuckahoe where they lived for the next seven years before returning to their home in Albemarle in 1752 Peter Jefferson was appointed to the colonelcy of the county an important position at the time 2 After he died in 1757 his son Thomas Jefferson inherited his estate including about 20 40 slaves They comprised the core of his labor force when he started to build Monticello as a young man Thomas s paternal grandfather and great grandfather were also named Thomas 3 His grandfather Thomas Jefferson 1677 1731 resided at a settlement called Osbornes in what is now Chesterfield County Virginia 4 Jefferson s great grandfather was a planter of Henrico County 4 5 and his wife was Mary Branch Note 1 Mary was the granddaughter of Christopher Branch a member of the House of Burgesses Thomas was a tobacco farmer who owned a couple slaves surveyor and gentleman justice He purchased land along James River in 1682 7 and lived in the Flowerdieu also Flowerdew Hundred of Henrico County Note 2 Thomas grandfather died in 1697 7 There is conflicting information about Jefferson s heritage Note 3 and specifically the parents of Thomas great grandfather Note 4 There are also unproven allegations that were made about Jefferson s heritage during an 18th century Presidential campaign Note 5 Within a few generations the Jeffersons rose from that of middling planters who struggled against low tobaccos prices beginning in the 1680s to that of the country elite and to the very pinnacle of society citation needed The plantation based economy of the Jeffersons and their peers relied on acquisition of slaves from West Africa and West Central Africa primarily from the Bight of Biafra and Angola In 1784 Jefferson published Notes on the State of Virginia where he stated that enslaved individuals made up to a third to a half of the inhabitants of most Piedmont counties of Virginia 4 Thomas Jefferson was born on April 13 1743 April 2 1743 O S Note 6 at the family home in Shadwell Goochland County Virginia now part of Albemarle County 26 His mother was Jane Randolph daughter of Isham Randolph a ship s captain and sometime planter and his wife Peter and Jane married in 1739 27 Thomas Jefferson had appeared to have little interest in and indifference to his ancestry he stated that he only knew that his paternal grandfather lived 28 Before the widower William Randolph an old friend of Peter Jefferson died in 1745 he appointed Peter as guardian to manage his Tuckahoe Plantation and care for his four children That year the Jeffersons relocated to Tuckahoe where they lived for the next seven years before returning to Shadwell in 1752 Here Thomas Jefferson recorded his earliest memory that of being carried on a pillow by a slave during the move to Tuckahoe 29 Peter Jefferson died in 1757 and the Jefferson estate was divided between Peter s two sons Thomas and Randolph 30 John Harvie Sr then became Thomas guardian 31 Thomas inherited approximately 5 000 acres 2 000 ha 7 8 sq mi of land including Monticello and between 20 40 slaves He took control of the property after he came of age at 21 32 On October 1 1765 when Jefferson was 22 his oldest sister Jane died at the age of 25 33 He fell into a period of deep mourning as he was already saddened by the absence of his sisters Mary who had been married several years to John Bolling III 34 and Martha who in July had wed Dabney Carr 33 Both lived at their husbands residences Only Jefferson s younger siblings Elizabeth Lucy and the two toddlers were at home He drew little comfort from the younger ones as they did not provide him with the same intellectual engagement as the older sisters had 33 According to the historian Ferling while growing up Jefferson struggled with loneliness and abandonment issues that eventually developed into a reclusive lifestyle as an adult 35 Education edit Further information Thomas Jefferson and education Jefferson began his childhood education under the direction of tutors at Tuckahoe along with the Randolph children 36 In 1752 Jefferson began attending a local school run by a Scottish Presbyterian minister At the age of nine Jefferson began studying Latin Greek and French he learned to ride horses and began to appreciate the study of nature He studied under the Reverend James Maury from 1758 to 1760 near Gordonsville Virginia While boarding with Maury s family he studied history science and the classics 37 At age 16 Jefferson entered the College of William amp Mary in Williamsburg and first met the law professor George Wythe who became his influential mentor For two years he studied mathematics metaphysics and philosophy under Professor William Small who introduced the enthusiastic Jefferson to the writings of the British Empiricists including John Locke Francis Bacon and Isaac Newton 38 He also improved his French Greek and violin A diligent student Jefferson displayed an avid curiosity in all fields 39 Jefferson read law while working as a law clerk for Wythe During this time he also read a wide variety of English classics and political works Jefferson was admitted to the Virginia bar five years later in 1767 40 Throughout his life Jefferson depended on books for his education He collected and accumulated thousands of books for his library at Monticello When Jefferson s father Peter died Thomas inherited among other things his large library 41 A significant portion of Jefferson s library was also bequeathed to him in the will of George Wythe who had an extensive collection Always eager for more knowledge Jefferson continued learning throughout most of his life Jefferson once said I cannot live without books 42 Marriage and family edit After practicing as a circuit lawyer for several years 43 Jefferson married the 23 year old widow Martha Wayles Skelton The wedding was celebrated on January 1 1772 at Martha s home an estate called The Forest near Williamsburg Virginia 44 Martha Jefferson was described as attractive gracious and popular with their friends she was a frequent hostess for Jefferson and managed the large household They were said to have a happy marriage She read widely did fine needle work and was an amateur musician Jefferson played the violin and Martha was an accomplished piano player It is said that she was attracted to Thomas largely because of their mutual love of music 44 45 One of the wedding gifts he gave to Martha was a forte piano 46 During the ten years of their marriage she had six children Martha called Patsy 1772 1836 Jane 1774 1775 a stillborn or unnamed son in 1777 Mary Wayles 1778 1804 called Polly Lucy Elizabeth 1780 1781 and Lucy Elizabeth 1782 1784 47 Note 7 Two survived to adulthood 46 After her father John Wayles died in 1773 Martha and her husband Jefferson inherited his 135 slaves 11 000 acres and the debts of his estate These things took Jefferson and other co executors of the estate years to pay off which contributed to his financial problems Among the slaves were Betty Hemings and her 10 children the six youngest were half siblings of Martha Wayles Jefferson as they are believed to have been children of her father Note 8 and they were three quarters European in ancestry The youngest an infant was Sally Hemings As they grew and were trained all the Hemings family members were assigned to privileged positions among the slaves at Monticello as domestic servants chefs and highly skilled artisans 50 Later in life Martha Jefferson suffered from diabetes and ill health and frequent childbirth further weakened her A few months after the birth of her last child Martha died on September 6 1782 Jefferson was at his wife s bedside and was distraught after her death In the following three weeks Jefferson shut himself in his room where he paced back and forth until he was nearly exhausted Later he would often take long rides on secluded roads to mourn for his wife 45 46 As he had promised his wife Jefferson never remarried Jefferson s oldest daughter Martha called Patsy married Thomas Mann Randolph Jr in 1790 They had 12 children eleven of whom survived to adulthood She suffered severe problems as Randolph became alcoholic and was abusive When they separated for several years Martha and her many children lived at Monticello with her father adding to his financial burdens Her oldest son Thomas Jefferson Randolph helped her run Monticello for a time after her father s death She had the longest life of Jefferson s children by Martha 46 Mary Jefferson called Polly and Maria married her first cousin John Wayles Eppes in 1797 As a wedding settlement Jefferson gave them Betsy Hemmings the 14 year old granddaughter of Betty Hemings and 30 other slaves 51 The Eppes had three children together but only a son survived Frail like her mother Maria died at the age of 25 several months after her third child was born Who also died and only her son Francis W Eppes survived to adulthood cared for by slaves his father and after five years a stepmother 51 52 Monticello edit Further information Monticello and Jeffersonian architecture nbsp West lawn in October 2010In 1768 Jefferson started the construction of Monticello located on 5 000 acres of land on and around a hilltop What would soon become a mansion started as a large one room brick house Over the years Jefferson designed and built additions to the house where it took on neoclassical dimensions The house soon become his architectural masterpiece The construction was done by Jefferson and his slave laborers some of whom were master carpenters Much of the fine furniture in the house was built by his slaves who were also very skilled designers and craftsmen 43 Jefferson moved into the South Pavilion an outbuilding in 1770 where his new wife Martha joined him in 1772 Monticello would be his continuing project to create a neoclassical environment based on his study of the architect Andrea Palladio and the classical orders 53 While Minister to France during 1784 1789 he had an opportunity to see some of the classical buildings with which he had become acquainted from his reading as well as to discover the modern trends in French architecture then fashionable in Paris In 1794 following his service as Secretary of State 1790 93 he began rebuilding Monticello based on the ideas he had acquired in Europe The remodeling continued throughout most of his presidency 1801 09 54 The most notable change was the addition of the octagonal dome 55 Lawyer and House of Burgesses edit Jefferson handled many cases as a lawyer in colonial Virginia and was very active from 1768 to 1773 56 Jefferson s client list included members of Virginia s elite families including members of his mother s family the Randolphs 56 Beside practicing law Jefferson represented Albemarle County in the Virginia House of Burgesses 57 His friend and mentor George Wythe served at the same time Following the passage of the Coercive Acts by the British Parliament in 1774 Jefferson wrote a set of resolutions against the acts which were expanded into A Summary View of the Rights of British America his first published work Previous criticism of the Coercive Acts had focused on legal and constitutional issues but Jefferson offered the radical notion that the colonists had the natural right to govern themselves 58 Jefferson argued that Parliament was the legislature of Great Britain only and had no legislative authority in the colonies The paper was intended to serve as instructions for the Virginia delegation of the First Continental Congress but Jefferson s ideas proved to be too radical for that body citation needed Political career from 1775 to 1800 editDeclaration of Independence edit nbsp In John Trumbull s painting Declaration of Independence the five man drafting committee is presenting its work to the Continental Congress Main article United States Declaration of IndependenceThomas Jefferson was the principal author of the Declaration of Independence a formal document which officially proclaimed the dissolution of the American colonies from the British Crown The sentiments of revolution put forth in the Declaration were already well established in 1776 as the colonies were already at war with the British when the Declaration was being debated drafted and signed 59 60 Before the Declaration was drafted Jefferson served as a delegate from Virginia to the Second Continental Congress beginning in June 1775 soon after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War He sought out John Adams who along with his cousin Samuel had emerged as a leader of the convention 61 Jefferson and Adams established a lifelong friendship and would correspond frequently Adams ensured that Jefferson was appointed to the five man committee to write a declaration in support of the resolution of independence 62 Having agreed on an approach the committee selected Jefferson to write the first draft His eloquent writing style made him the committee s choice for primary author the others edited his draft 63 64 During June 1776 the month before the signing Jefferson took notes of the Congressional debates over the proposed Declaration in order to include such sentiments in his draft among other things justifying the right of citizens to resort to revolution 65 Jefferson also drew from his proposed draft of the Virginia Constitution George Mason s draft of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and other sources The historian Joseph Ellis states that the Declaration was the core of Jefferson s seductive appeal across the ages 66 After working for two days to modify the document Congress removed language that was deemed offensive to supporters of the Patriot cause in Britain along with Jefferson s clause that denounced King George III for supposedly imposing the slave trade on the American colonies This was the longest clause removed 65 Congress trimmed the draft by about one fourth wanting the Declaration to appeal to both the British and American public while at the same time not wanting to give representatives from South Carolina and Georgia reasons to oppose the Declaration on abolitionist grounds Jefferson deeply resented some of the many omissions Congress made 65 67 On July 4 1776 Congress ratified the Declaration of Independence and distributed the document 68 Historians have considered it to be one of Jefferson s major achievements the preamble is considered an enduring statement of human rights that has inspired people around the world 69 Its second sentence is the following We hold these truths to be self evident that all men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights that among these are Life Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness This has been called one of the best known sentences in the English language 70 containing the most potent and consequential words in American history 71 The passage came to represent a moral standard to which the United States should strive This view was notably promoted by Abraham Lincoln who based his philosophy on it and argued for the Declaration as a statement of principles through which the United States Constitution should be interpreted 72 Intended also as a revolutionary document for the world not just the colonies the Declaration of Independence was Jefferson s assertion of his core beliefs in a republican form of government 65 The Declaration became the core document and a tradition in American political values It also became the model of democracy that was adopted by many peoples around the world Abraham Lincoln once referred to Jefferson s principles as the definitions and axioms of a free society 73 Virginia state legislator and Governor edit After Independence Jefferson desired to reform the Virginia government 74 In September 1776 eager to work on creating the new government and dismantle the feudal aspects of the old Jefferson returned to Virginia and was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates for Albemarle County 75 Before his return he had contributed to the state s constitution from Philadelphia he continued to support freehold suffrage by which only property holders could vote 76 He served as a Delegate from September 26 1776 June 1 1779 as the war continued Jefferson worked on Revision of Laws to reflect Virginia s new status as a democratic state By abolishing primogeniture establishing freedom of religion and providing for general education he hoped to make the basis of republican government 76 Ending the Anglican Church as the state or established religion was the first step Jefferson introduced his Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom in 1779 but it was not enacted until 1786 while he was in France as US Minister 77 In 1778 Jefferson supported a bill to prohibit the international slave trade in Virginia the state was the first in the union to adopt such legislation This was significant as the slave trade would be protected from regulation for 20 years at the federal level under the new Constitution in 1787 Abolitionists in Virginia expected the new law to be followed by gradual emancipation as Jefferson had supported this by opinion but he discouraged such action while in the Assembly Following his departure the Assembly passed a law in 1782 making manumission easier As a result the number of free blacks in Virginia rose markedly by 1810 from 1800 in 1782 to 12 766 in 1790 and to 30 570 by 1810 when they formed 8 2 percent of the black population in the state 78 He drafted 126 bills in three years including laws to establish fee simple tenure in land which removed inheritance strictures and to streamline the judicial system In 1778 Jefferson s Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge and subsequent efforts to reduce control by clergy led to some small changes at William and Mary College but free public education was not established until the late nineteenth century after the Civil War 79 Jefferson proposed a bill to eliminate capital punishment in Virginia for all crimes except murder and treason but his effort was defeated 80 In 1779 at Jefferson s behest William and Mary appointed his mentor George Wythe as the first professor of law at an American university 81 In 1779 at the age of thirty six Jefferson was elected Governor of Virginia by the two houses of the legislature as was the process 82 The term was then for one year and he was re elected in 1780 As governor in 1780 he transferred the state capital from Williamsburg to Richmond He served as a wartime governor as the united colonies continued the Revolutionary War against Great Britain In late 1780 Governor Jefferson prepared Richmond for attack by moving all arms military supplies and records to a foundry located five miles outside of town General Benedict Arnold who had switched to the British side in 1780 learned of the transfer and moved to capture the foundry Jefferson tried to get the supplies moved to Westham seven miles to the north but he was too late He also delayed too long in raising a militia With the Assembly Jefferson evacuated the government in January 1781 from Richmond to Charlottesville They began to meet at his home of Monticello The government had moved so rapidly that he left his household slaves in Richmond where they were captured as prisoners of war by British forces and later exchanged for captive British soldiers In January 1781 Benedict Arnold led an armada of British ships and with 1 600 British regulars conducted raids along the James River Later Arnold would join Lord Cornwallis whose troops were marching across Virginia from the south In early June 1781 Cornwallis dispatched a 250 man cavalry force commanded by Banastre Tarleton on a secret expedition to capture Governor Jefferson and members of the Assembly at Monticello 82 Tarleton hoped to surprise Jefferson but Jack Jouett a captain in the Virginia militia thwarted the British plan by warning the governor and members of the Assembly 83 Jefferson and his family escaped and fled to Poplar Forest his plantation to the west Tarleton did not allow looting or destruction at Monticello by his troops By contrast when British forces led by Lord Cornwallis subsequently occupied Elkhill a smaller estate owned by Jefferson on the James River in Goochland County Virginia they looted and burnt the plantation According to a letter written by Jefferson on July 16 1788 Cornwallis used Elkhill during the ten day occupation as a temporary headquarters during those ten days his men burnt all crops of corn and tobacco on the plantation in addition to its barns and fences took all cattle sheep and hogs in Elkhill as sustenance and carried off all horses capable of military service along with putting down foals too young to be useful They also captured 27 slaves owned by Jefferson as prisoners of war 24 of which subsequently died of smallpox or epidemic typhus 84 Jefferson believed his gubernatorial term had expired in June and he spent much of the summer with his family at Poplar Forest 83 The members of the General Assembly had quickly reconvened in June 1781 in Staunton Virginia across the Blue Ridge Mountains They voted to reward Jouett with a pair of pistols and a sword but considered an official inquiry into Jefferson s actions as they believed he had failed his responsibilities as governor The inquiry ultimately was dropped yet Jefferson insisted on appearing before the lawmakers in December to respond to charges of mishandling his duties and abandoning leadership at a critical moment He reported that he had believed it understood that he was leaving office and that he had discussed with other legislators the advantages of Gen Thomas Nelson a commander of the state militia being appointed the governor 83 The legislature did appoint Nelson as governor in late June 1781 Jefferson was a controversial figure at this time heavily criticized for inaction and failure to adequately protect the state in the face of a British invasion Even on balance Jefferson had failed as a state executive leaving his successor Thomas Nelson Jr to pick up the pieces 85 He was not re elected again to office in Virginia 74 Notes on the State of Virginia edit Main article Notes on the State of Virginia In 1780 Jefferson as governor received numerous questions about Virginia posed to him by Francois Barbe Marbois then Secretary of the French delegation in Philadelphia the temporary capital of the united colonies who intended to gather pertinent data on the American colonies Jefferson s responses to Marbois Queries would become known as Notes on the State of Virginia 1785 Scientifically trained Jefferson was a member of the American Philosophical Society which had been founded in Philadelphia in 1743 He had extensive knowledge of western lands from Virginia to Illinois In a course of five years Jefferson enthusiastically devoted his intellectual energy to the book he included a discussion of contemporary scientific knowledge and Virginia s history politics and ethnography Jefferson was aided by Thomas Walker George R Clark and U S geographer Thomas Hutchins The book was first published in France in 1785 and in England in 1787 86 It has been ranked as the most important American book published before 1800 The book is Jefferson s vigorous and often eloquent argument about the nature of the good society which he believed was incarnated by Virginia In it he expressed his beliefs in the separation of church and state constitutional government checks and balances and individual liberty He also compiled extensive data about the state s natural resources and economy He wrote extensively about the problems of slavery miscegenation and his belief that blacks and whites could not live together as free people in one society Member of Congress and Minister to France edit Following its victory in the war and peace treaty with Great Britain in 1783 the United States formed a Congress of the Confederation informally called the Continental Congress to which Jefferson was appointed as a Virginia delegate As a member of the committee formed to set foreign exchange rates he recommended that American currency should be based on the decimal system his plan was adopted Jefferson also recommended setting up the Committee of the States to function as the executive arm of Congress The plan was adopted but failed in practice Jefferson was one of the first statesmen in any part of the world to advocate concrete measures for restricting and eradicating Negro slavery 87 Jefferson wrote an ordinance banning slavery in all the nation s territories not just the Northwest but it failed by one vote The subsequent Northwest Ordinance prohibited slavery in the newly organized territory but it did nothing to free slaves who were already held by settlers there this required later actions Jefferson was in France when the Northwest Ordinance was passed 88 He resigned from Congress when he was appointed as minister to France in May 1784 nbsp Memorial plaque marking where Jefferson lived while he was Minister to France The widower Jefferson still in his 40s was minister to France from 1785 to 1789 the year the French Revolution started When the French foreign minister the Count de Vergennes commented to Jefferson You replace Monsieur Franklin I hear Jefferson replied I succeed him No man can replace him 89 Beginning in early September 1785 Jefferson collaborated with John Adams US minister in London to outline an anti piracy treaty with Morocco Their work culminated in a treaty that was ratified by Congress on July 18 1787 Still in force today it is the longest unbroken treaty relationship in U S history 90 Busy in Paris Jefferson did not return to the US for the 1787 Constitutional Convention He enjoyed the architecture arts and the salon culture of Paris He often dined with many of the city s most prominent people and stocked up on wines to take back to the US 91 While in Paris Jefferson corresponded with many people who had important roles in the imminent French Revolution These included the Marquis de Lafayette and the Comte de Mirabeau a popular pamphleteer who repeated ideals that had been the basis for the American Revolution 92 His observations of social tensions contributed to his anti clericalism and strengthened his ideas about the separation of church and state citation needed Jefferson s eldest daughter Martha known as Patsy went with him to France in 1784 His two youngest daughters were in the care of friends in the United States 82 To serve the household Jefferson brought some of his slaves including James Hemings who trained as a French chef for his master s service Jefferson s youngest daughter Lucy died of whooping cough in 1785 in the United States and he was bereft 85 In 1786 Jefferson met and fell in love with Maria Cosway an accomplished Italian English artist and musician of 27 They saw each other frequently over a period of six weeks A married woman she returned to Great Britain but they maintained a lifelong correspondence 85 In 1787 Jefferson sent for his youngest surviving child Polly then age nine He requested that a slave accompany Polly on the trans Atlantic voyage By chance Sally Hemings a younger sister of James was chosen she lived in the Jefferson household in Paris for about two years According to her son Madison Hemings Sally and Jefferson began a sexual relationship in Paris and she became pregnant 93 She agreed to return to the United States as his concubine after he promised to free her children when they came of age 93 Secretary of State edit In September 1789 Jefferson returned to the US from France with his two daughters and slaves Immediately upon his return President Washington wrote to him asking him to accept a seat in his Cabinet as Secretary of State Jefferson accepted the appointment As Washington s Secretary of State 1790 1793 Jefferson argued with Alexander Hamilton the Secretary of the Treasury about national fiscal policy 94 especially the funding of the debts of the war Jefferson later associated Hamilton and the Federalists with Royalism and said the Hamiltonians were panting after crowns coronets and mitres 95 Due to their opposition to Hamilton Jefferson and James Madison founded and led the Democratic Republican Party He worked with Madison and his campaign manager John J Beckley to build a nationwide network of Republican allies Jefferson s political actions and his attempt to undermine Hamilton nearly led Washington to dismiss Jefferson from his cabinet 96 Although Jefferson left the cabinet voluntarily Washington never forgave him for his actions and never spoke to him again 96 The French minister said in 1793 Senator Morris and Secretary of the Treasury Hamilton had the greatest influence over the President s mind and that it was only with difficulty that he Jefferson counterbalanced their efforts 97 Jefferson supported France against Britain when they fought in 1793 98 Jefferson believed that political success at home depended on the success of the French army in Europe 99 In 1793 the French minister Edmond Charles Genet caused a crisis when he tried to influence public opinion by appealing to the American people something which Jefferson tried to stop 99 Jefferson tried to achieve three important goals during his discussions with George Hammond British Minister to the U S secure British admission of violating the Treaty of Paris 1783 vacate their posts in the Northwest the territory between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River north of the Ohio and compensate the United States to pay American slave owners for the slaves whom the British had freed and evacuated at the end of the war Chester Miller notes that after failing to gain agreement on any of these Jefferson resigned in December 1793 100 Election of 1796 and Vice Presidency edit Further information United States presidential election 1796 In late 1793 Jefferson retired to Monticello from where he continued to oppose the policies of Hamilton and Washington The Jay Treaty of 1794 led by Hamilton brought peace and trade with Britain while Madison with strong support from Jefferson wanted to strangle the former mother country without going to war 101 It became an article of faith among Republicans that commercial weapons would suffice to bring Great Britain to any terms the United States chose to dictate 101 Even during the violence of the Reign of Terror in France Jefferson refused to disavow the revolution because To back away from France would be to undermine the cause of republicanism in America 102 As vice president Jefferson conducted secret talks with the French in which he advocated that the French government take a more aggressive position against the American government which he thought was too close to the British 103 He succeeded in getting the American ambassador expelled from France As the Democratic Republican presidential candidate in 1796 Jefferson lost to John Adams but had enough electoral votes to become Vice President 1797 1801 One of the chief duties of a Vice president is presiding over the Senate and Jefferson was concerned about its lack of rules leaving decisions to the discretion of the presiding officer Years before holding his first office Jefferson had spent much time researching procedures and rules for governing bodies As a student he had transcribed notes on British parliamentary law into a manual which he would later call his Parliamentary Pocket Book Jefferson had also served on the committee appointed to draw up the rules of order for the Continental Congress in 1776 As Vice President he was ready to reform Senatorial procedures Prompted by the immediate need he wrote A Manual of Parliamentary Practice a document which the House of Representatives follows to the present day 104 With the Quasi War underway the Federalists under John Adams started rebuilding the military levied new taxes and enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts Jefferson believed that these acts were intended to suppress Democratic Republicans rather than dangerous enemy aliens although the acts were allowed to expire Jefferson and Madison rallied opposition support by anonymously writing the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions which declared that the federal government had no right to exercise powers not specifically delegated to it by the states 105 Though the resolutions followed the interposition approach of Madison Jefferson advocated nullification At one point he drafted a threat for Kentucky to secede Note 9 Jefferson s biographer Dumas Malone argued that had his actions become known at the time Jefferson might have been impeached for treason 103 In writing the Kentucky Resolutions Jefferson warned that unless arrested at the threshold the Alien and Sedition Acts would necessarily drive these states into revolution and blood 103 The historian Ron Chernow says H e wasn t calling for peaceful protests or civil disobedience he was calling for outright rebellion if needed against the federal government of which he was vice president 106 Chernow believes that Jefferson thus set forth a radical doctrine of states rights that effectively undermined the constitution 106 He argues that neither Jefferson nor Madison sensed that they had sponsored measures as inimical as the Alien and Sedition Acts 106 The historian Garry Wills argued Their nullification effort if others had picked it up would have been a greater threat to freedom than the misguided alien and sedition laws which were soon rendered feckless by ridicule and electoral pressure 107 The theoretical damage of the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions was deep and lasting and was a recipe for disunion 106 George Washington was so appalled by them that he told Patrick Henry that if systematically and pertinaciously pursued they would dissolve the union or produce coercion 106 The influence of Jefferson s doctrine of states rights reverberated to the Civil War and beyond 108 According to Chernow during the Quasi War Jefferson engaged in a secret campaign to sabotage Adams in French eyes 109 In the spring of 1797 he held four confidential talks with the French consul Joseph Letombe In these private meetings Jefferson attacked Adams predicted that he would only serve one term and encouraged France to invade England 109 Jefferson advised Letombe to stall any American envoys sent to Paris by instructing them to listen to them and then drag out the negotiations at length and mollify them by the urbanity of the proceedings This toughened the tone that the French government adopted with the new Adams Administration 109 Due to pressure against the Adams Administration from Jefferson and his supporters Congress released the papers related to the XYZ Affair which rallied a shift in popular opinion from Jefferson and the French government to supporting Adams 109 Ancestry editFor a narrative see the Jeffersons of Virginia section above Ancestors of Thomas Jefferson8 Thomas Jefferson 113 4 Thomas Jefferson 111 18 Christopher Branch 116 9 Mary Branch 113 19 Mary Francis Addie 116 2 Peter Jefferson 110 20 James Field 117 10 Peter Field 114 21 Note 10 5 Mary Field 111 22 Henry Soane 118 11 Judith Soane 114 23 Judith Fuller 118 1 Thomas Jefferson24 Richard Randolph 119 12 William Randolph 112 25 Elizabeth Ryland 119 6 Isham Randolph of Dungeness 112 26 Henry Isham 120 13 Mary Isham 112 27 Katherine Banks 120 3 Jane Randolph 110 14 Charles Rogers 115 7 Jane Rogers 112 30 William Lilburn 115 15 Jane Lilburn 115 31 Elizabeth Nicholson 115 See also editBibliography of Thomas JeffersonNotes edit His wife Mary Branch married Joseph Mattocks having obtained a marriage license on November 17 1700 6 A John Jefferson 8 9 or Mr Jefferson was a delegate representing the Flowerdieu hundred in the first legislative assembly of Colonial America in 1619 10 11 The attendee of the 1619 legislative assembly is believed to be an ancestor of President Thomas Jefferson according to Virginia Biographer Lyon Gardiner Tyler 1898 12 Thomas Jefferson believed but was unable to prove that John Jefferson was his great great grandfather John arrived in Virginia in 1619 having arrived on the Bonahora 13 or the Bona Nova 14 He was made a burgess that year and represented the Flowerdieu Hundred at Farolay s Council in Jamestown He obtained a land patent at Archer s Hope in 1626 13 He abandoned the property and moved to the West Indies and was back in England by 1645 15 According to historian Jon Meacham Jefferson s first American ancestor immigrated to Virginia from England in 1612 16 Monticello states that a Jefferson ancestor s immigrated about the 1660s or 1670s 4 Family tradition was that his first American ancestor arrived in Virginia from Wales near Snowdon mountain Peter Jefferson named some of his land along the James River Snowden for this family story No records have been found though that state that there were Jeffersons in the Snowdonia region in the 16th and early 17th centuries 4 17 Other relatives were also early settlers of Virginia Taylor 1965 argues that the ancestors of the Jeffersons may have been associated with the time of the Norman Conquest 1066 for Jefferson is derived from the Norman Geoffrey 18 It stands for Jeffrey s son or other similar father s name 19 There are two theories in which Thomas Jefferson may be related to the Jeaffreson family from Suffolk England One theory is that Samuel Jeaffreson who became a successful businessman in the Leeward Islands was the father of Jefferson s great grandfather Samuel who was born at Pettistree Suffolk in 1607 and he settled St Kitts and Antigua had a son named Thomas 4 17 Samuel is thought to have arrived in St Kitts in 1624 aboard the Hopewell 20 Colonel John Jeaffreson also from the family of Suffolk was a merchant in London and did business with the Virginia Colony in the early 1620s He built a fortune on St Kitts before returning in the 1650s to England where he purchased the Dullingham House estate in Cambridgeshire There is some information he may have been the father of a Thomas Jefferson who lived in Nevis and Jamaica in the mid 1600s and may have then removed to Henrico County Virginia Although there is scant information to support this theory the Virginia Jeffersons derived their coat of arms from the Jeaffresons of Dullingham House 4 17 In an 18th century Presidential campaign someone speaking against Jefferson s candidacy and in favor of that of John Adams accused Jefferson of being half Injun half nigger half Frenchman 21 22 and born to a mulatto father 21 22 23 or slave 24 and a half breed Indian squaw 21 22 23 this birth to a mulatto and an Indian allegedly well known in the neighbourhood where he was raised 21 25 but otherwise unproven The birth and death of Thomas Jefferson are given using the Gregorian calendar As he was born when Britain and her colonies still used the Julian calendar contemporary records and his tombstone record his birth as April 2 1743 While the news from Francis Eppes with whom Lucy was staying did not reach Jefferson until 1785 in an undated letter 48 it is clear that the year of her death was 1784 from another letter to Jefferson from James Currie dated 20 November 1784 49 John Wayles Jefferson s Community Relatives Monticello Footnote to Wayles paternity Isaac Jefferson Memoirs 4 Madison Hemings Life Among the Lowly Pike County Republican March 13 1873 A December 20 1802 letter from Thomas Gibbons a Federalist planter of Georgia to Jonathan Dayton states that Sally Hemings is half sister to his first wife Similarly a letter from Thomas Turner in the May 31 1805 Boston Repertory states an opinion has existed that this very Sally is the natural daughter of Mr Wales who was the father of the actual Mrs Jefferson Jefferson s draft said where powers are assumed by the federal government which have not been delegated a nullification of the act is the rightful remedy that every State has a natural right in cases not within the compact casus non fœderis to nullify of their own authority all assumptions of power by others within their limits See Jefferson s draft of the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 Peter Field s mother may be Ann Rogers Clark a widow Anne Clark Anna Clark Sarah Clark or someone else unknown A citation from a reliable source is needed References edit Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia Welsh Ancestry Archived June 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 2 2010 Henry Stephens Randall The Life of Thomas Jefferson Malone 1948 p 427 a b c d e f g Jefferson s Ancestry www monticello org Retrieved December 23 2019 Thomas Jefferson January 1 2010 The Works of Thomas Jefferson Autobiography Anas Writings 1760 1770 Cosimo Inc p 4 ISBN 978 1 61640 194 8 Dumas Malone January 30 1948 Jefferson the Virginian Little Brown p 427 ISBN 978 0 316 54474 0 a b Willard Sterne Randall June 18 1994 Thomas Jefferson A Life HarperCollins pp 3 4 ISBN 978 0 06 097617 0 Charles E Hatch 1943 The Oldest Legislative Assembly in America amp Its First Statehouse U S Government Printing Office p 30 Colonial and later Flowerdew Flowerdew Hundred Exploring a Cultural Landscape Through Archaeology August 19 2019 Retrieved December 23 2019 Frederick Doveton Nichols Ralph E Griswold 1981 Thomas Jefferson Landscape Architect University of Virginia Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 8139 0899 1 Colonial Records of Virginia Genealogical Publishing Com August 28 2012 p 10 ISBN 978 0 8063 0558 5 Tyler Lyon Gardiner Kropf Lewis L Fiske John 1898 The American Historical Review Vol 3 Oxford University Press American Historical Association pp 734 738 doi 10 2307 1834159 hdl 2027 uc1 31175007116703 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1834159 a b Curtis William Eleroy 1901 Thomas Jefferson J B Lippincott pp 18 19 Collections of the Virginia Historical Society Constitution of the Virginia Historical and Philosophical Society February 1833 Virginia Historical Society 1888 p 118 McCartney Martha W 2007 Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers 1607 1635 A Biographical Dictionary Genealogical Publishing Com p 419 ISBN 978 0 8063 1774 8 Jon Meacham September 2016 Thomas Jefferson President and Philosopher Random House Children s Books p 1 ISBN 978 0 385 38752 1 a b c Welsh Ancestry www monticello org Retrieved December 28 2019 Olivia Taylor The Ancestry of Thomas Jefferson in George Shackelford ed Collected Papers to Commemorate Fifty Years of Monticello vol i 1965 ch 3 Harrison Henry 1969 Surnames of the United Kingdom A Concise Etymological Dictionary Genealogical Publishing Com ISBN 978 0 8063 0171 6 Klein Debra A July 12 2017 Uncovering the Secrets of St Kitts The Daily Beast Retrieved December 28 2019 a b c d Nock Albert Jay Jefferson N Y Hill amp Wang 1st Am Century ser ed September 1960 3d printing November 1963 1926 p 141 citing The Johnnycake Papers in another ed possibly p 233 a b c Taylor Coley amp Samuel Middlebrook The Eagle Screams N Y Macaulay 1936 p 77 and see p 76 campaign of 1796 citing Nock A J Jefferson a b Broder David S Why the Candidates are Targets for Mudslingers in The New York Times September 27 1964 last page of article Taylor Coley et al The Eagle Screams op cit p 67 Taylor Coley et al The Eagle Screams op cit p 77 without hyphen amp u and see p 76 citing Nock A J Jefferson Malone 1948 p 3 430 Malone 1948 pp 13 14 Malone 1948 pp 5 6 Malone 1948 pp 19 21 428 Malone 1948 pp 31 33 Woods Edgar 1901 Albemarle County in Virginia Charlottesville Virginia p 225 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Malone 1948 pp 437 40 The actual amount of land and slaves that Jefferson inherited is estimated The first known record Jefferson made in regards to slave ownership was in 1774 when he owned 41 a b c Henry Stephens Randall The Life of Thomas Jefferson p 41 Virginia Historical Society The Virginia magazine of history and biography P 331 Ferling 2000 pp 36 37 Malone 1948 p 22 Peterson 1970 pp 7 9 Peterson Merrill D ed Thomas Jefferson Writings New York Library of America p 1236 Thomas Jefferson on Wine by John Hailman 2006 Peterson 1970 pp 9 12 Ferling 2000 p 48 Jefferson s Library Library of Congress August 3 2010 Retrieved June 19 2011 a b Life Before the Presidency University of Virginia Retrieved January 9 2012 a b Peterson 1970 p 27 a b Halliday 2001 pp 48 52 a b c d Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson The White House Retrieved October 3 2011 Lucy Jefferson 1782 1784 Thomas Jefferson s Monticello Retrieved February 17 2020 To Thomas Jefferson from Francis Eppes 14 October 1784 Founders Online National Archives accessed September 29 2019 https founders archives gov documents Jefferson 01 07 02 0342 Original source The Papers of Thomas Jefferson vol 7 2 March 1784 25 February 1785 ed Julian P Boyd Princeton Princeton University Press 1953 pp 441 442 To Thomas Jefferson from James Currie 20 November 1784 Founders Online National Archives accessed September 29 2019 https founders archives gov documents Jefferson 01 07 02 0388 Original source The Papers of Thomas Jefferson vol 7 2 March 1784 25 February 1785 ed Julian P Boyd Princeton Princeton University Press 1953 pp 538 539 Betty Hemings Plantation and slavery Monticello a b Betsy Hemmings Loved by a Family But What of Her Own Keeping Families Together Monticello accessed January 8 2012 Annette Gordon Reed The Hemingses of Monticello Hemings Family Tree 1 frontispiece 2008 Note Eppes and Betsy Hemmings had a son Joseph and daughter Frances The Orders 01 Architecture Week Archived from the original on July 19 2009 Retrieved July 20 2009 Monticello National Park Service US Dept of the Interior Retrieved April 30 2011 Kern Chris Jefferson s Dome at Monticello Retrieved July 10 2009 a b Henry Stephens Randall The Life of Thomas Jefferson p 47 The Thomas Jefferson Papers Timeline 1743 1827 Retrieved July 19 2009 Merrill D Peterson Jefferson Thomas American National Biography Online February 2000 page needed Becker 1922 pp 5 6 Ferling 2000 pp 134 36 Peterson 1970 p 87 Maier 1997 pp 97 105 Boyd amp Gawalt 1999 p 21 Boyd amp Gawalt 1999 p 22 Ferling 2000 p 132 a b c d Ferling 2000 p 135 Ferling 2000 p 136 Becker 1922 p 171 Ferling 2000 pp 135 36 Ellis 1996 p 50 Stephen E Lucas Justifying America The Declaration of Independence as a Rhetorical Document in Thomas W Benson ed American Rhetoric Context and Criticism Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press 1989 p 85 Ellis 2007 pp 55 56 McPherson Second American Revolution 126 Bernstein 2005 pp 197 98 a b Ferling 2004 p 26 Peterson 1970 pp 101 02 a b Peterson 1970 pp 105 06 Peterson 1970 pp 134 142 Kolchin 1993 p 81 Peterson 1970 pp 146 49 Peterson 1970 pp 125 29 Bennett 2006 p 99 a b c Leonard Liggio The Life and Works of Thomas Jefferson Archived May 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Locke Luminary Vol II No 1 Summer 1999 Part 3 George Mason University accessed January 10 2012 a b c Jack Jouett s Ride Monticello Foundation Retrieved April 30 2011 Places Elkhill Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia Monticello accessed January 10 2012 a b c Thomas Jefferson Biography National Park Service Retrieved August 1 2007 Shuffelton 1999 June 2001 Notes on the State of Virginia Thomas Jefferson Introduction David Brion Davis The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution 1770 1823 1975 p 174 Finkelman P 1989 Evading the Ordinance The Persistence of Bondage in Indiana and Illinois Journal of the Early Republic 9 1 21 51 doi 10 2307 3123523 JSTOR 3123523 Hale 1896 p 119 1787 Treaty with Morocco Department of State Retrieved February 15 2011 Lawrence S Kaplan Jefferson and France An Essay on Politics and Political Ideas Yale University Press 1980 page needed Antonina Vallentin Mirabeau trans E W Dickes The Viking Press 1948 p 86 a b Memoirs of Madison Hemings Frontline Public Broadcasting Service WGBH Boston Retrieved November 29 2011 Pearson Ellen Holmes Jefferson versus Hamilton Teachinghistory org Accessed July 14 2011 Ferling 2004 p 59 a b Chernow 2004 p 427 Elkins Stanley and Eric McKitrick 1995 The Age of Federalism New York Oxford University Press p 344 Foreign Affairs in Peterson ed Thomas Jefferson A Reference Encyclopedia 1986 p 325 a b Schachner 1951 p 495 Miller 1977 p 117 a b Miller 1960 pp 143 44 148 49 full citation needed Thomas Jefferson Jean M Yarbrough The Essential Jefferson Hackett Publishing 2006 p xx a b c Chernow 2004 p 586 Manual of Parliamentary Practice Monticello Foundation Retrieved May 9 2011 Primary Documents in American History Alien and Sedition Acts Library of Congress Retrieved May 10 2011 dead link a b c d e Chernow 2004 p 587 Wills Gary James Madison p49 Knott Alexander Hamilton and the Persistence of Myth p 48 a b c d Chernow 2004 p 551 a b Verell Nancy April 14 2015 Peter Jefferson www monticello org Retrieved December 22 2019 a b Meachum Jon 2012 Thomas Jefferson The Art of Power Random House p 5 a b c d Andrea O Reilly April 6 2010 Encyclopedia of Motherhood SAGE Publications pp 603 604 ISBN 978 1 4522 6629 9 a b Thomas Jefferson January 1 2010 The Works of Thomas Jefferson Autobiography Anas Writings 1760 1770 Cosimo Inc p 4 ISBN 978 1 61640 194 8 a b Boddie John Bennett 1972 Historical Southern Families Pacific Coast Publishers p 111 ISBN 9780806305257 Retrieved December 27 2019 The Soane family is discussed and descendants listed in Historical Southern Families Vol V p 86 Mary daughter of Judith Soane and Peter Field married Thomas Jefferson son of Thomas Jefferson and Mary Branch ibid p 90 a b c d Anderson Sarah Travers Lewis Scott 2008 1984 Lewises Meriwethers and Their Kin Genealogical Publishing Com p 48 ISBN 978 0 8063 1072 5 better source needed a b Tyler Lyon Gardiner Morton Richard Lee 1917 The William and Mary Quarterly William and Mary College pp 61 62 Hart Craig November 1 2014 A Genealogy of the Wives of the American Presidents and Their First Two Generations of Descent McFarland p 239 ISBN 9780786483679 Retrieved December 27 2019 Peter Field was married to Judith Soane generation 7 Peter s father was James Field generation 8 a b McLean Dabney Neff 1985 Henry Soane Progenitor of Thomas Jefferson D N McLean ISBN 9780961493400 This collection of abstracts will forcus on his i e Thomas Jefferson great grandparents Peter Field and Judith Soane and on his great grandparents Henry Soane and Judith Fuller for whom there are few extant records p 5 a b Stoermer Taylor January 4 2009 William Randolph www monticello org Retrieved December 26 2019 a b Virginia General Court Sir John Randolph Edward Barradall 1909 Virginia colonial decisions The Boston book company p 227 Works cited edit Becker Carl Lotus 1922 The Declaration of independence A Study in the History of Political Ideas New York Harcourt Brace and Company Inc Bennett William J 2006 The Greatest Revolution America The Last Best Hope From the Age of Discovery to a World at War Vol I Nelson Current ISBN 978 1 59555 055 2 Bernstein Richard B 2005 2003 Thomas Jefferson Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518130 2 Boyd Julian Parks Gawalt Gerard W 1999 The Declaration of Independence the evolution of the text Library of Congress in association with the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation ISBN 978 0 8444 0980 1 Chernow Ron 2004 Alexander Hamilton Penguin Press ISBN 978 1594200090 Ellis Joseph J 1996 American Sphinx The Character of Thomas Jefferson Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0679444909 online free Ellis Joseph 2007 American Creation Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the Republic New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 26369 8 Ferling John 2000 Setting the World Ablaze Washington Adams Jefferson and the American Revolution Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195134094 Ferling John 2004 Adams vs Jefferson The Tumultuous Election of 1800 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195167719 Halliday E M 2001 Understanding Thomas Jefferson Harper Collins ISBN 978 0060197933 Kolchin Peter June 1 1993 American Slavery 1619 1877 Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 8090 2568 8 Maier Pauline 1997 American Scripture Making the Declaration of Independence Knopf ISBN 978 0679454922 Miller John Chester 1977 The Wolf by the Ears Thomas Jefferson and Slavery Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 921500 5 Peterson Merrill D 1970 Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation a Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195000542 Schachner Nathan 1951 Thomas Jefferson A Biography 2 volumes Further reading and bibliography editGordon Reed Annette The Hemingses of Monticello an American Family W W Norton amp Company 2008 Pulitzer Prize winner Malone Dumas 1948 Jefferson The Virginian Jefferson and His Time Vol 1 Little Brown OCLC 1823927 Peterson Merrill D Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation A Biography Oxford U P 1975 External links edit Jefferson s Ancestry Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Early life and career of Thomas Jefferson amp oldid 1198249186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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