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Thomas Jefferson and slavery

Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, owned more than 600 slaves during his adult life. Jefferson freed two slaves while he lived, and five others were freed after his death, including two of his children from his relationship with his slave (and sister-in-law) Sally Hemings. His other two children with Hemings were allowed to escape without pursuit. After his death, the rest of the slaves were sold to pay off his estate's debts.

Privately, one of Jefferson's reasons for not freeing more slaves was his considerable debt,[1] while his more public justification, expressed in his book Notes on the State of Virginia, was his fear that freeing enslaved people into American society would cause civil unrest between white people and former slaves.

Jefferson consistently spoke out against the international slave trade and outlawed it while he was president. He advocated for a gradual emancipation of all slaves within the United States and the colonization of Africa by freed African Americans.[2][3][4] However, he opposed some other measures to restrict slavery within the U.S., and also criticized voluntary manumission.[5]

Early years (1743–1774) edit

 
Advertisement placed by Jefferson in the Virginia Gazette offering a reward to whoever returns his escaped slave, 1767.
 

Thomas Jefferson was born into the planter class of a "slave society", as defined by the historian Ira Berlin, in which slavery was the main means of labor production.[6] He was the son of Peter Jefferson, a prominent slaveholder and land speculator in Virginia, and Jane Randolph, granddaughter of English and Scots gentry.[7] In 1757, when Jefferson was 14, his father died, and so he inherited 5,000 acres (20 km2) of land, 52 slaves, livestock, his father's notable library, and a gristmill.[8][9] This property was initially under control of his guardian, John Harvie Sr.[10] He assumed full control over these properties at age 21.[11] In 1768, Thomas Jefferson began construction of a neoclassical mansion known as Monticello, which overlooked the hamlet of his former home in Shadwell.[7] As an attorney, Jefferson represented people of color as well as whites. In 1770, he defended a young mixed-race male slave in a freedom suit, on the grounds that his mother was white and freeborn. By the colony's law of partus sequitur ventrem, that the child took the status of the mother, the man should never have been enslaved. He lost the suit.[12] In 1772, Jefferson represented George Manly, the son of a free woman of color, who sued for freedom after having been held as an indentured servant three years past the expiration of his term. (The Virginia colony at the time bound illegitimate mixed-race children of free women as indentured servants: until age 31 for males, with a shorter term for females.)[13] Once freed, Manly worked for Jefferson at Monticello for wages.[13]

In 1773, the year after Jefferson married the young widow Martha Wayles Skelton, her father died. She and Jefferson inherited his estate, including 11,000 acres, 135 slaves, and £4,000 of debt. With this inheritance, Jefferson became deeply involved with interracial families and financial burden. As a widower, his father-in-law John Wayles had taken his mixed-race slave Betty Hemings as a concubine and had six children with her during his last 12 years.[14]

These additional forced laborers made Jefferson the second-largest slaveholder in Albemarle County. In addition, he held nearly 16,000 acres of land in Virginia. He sold some people to pay off the debt of Wayles' estate.[7] From this time on, Jefferson owned and supervised his large chattel estate, primarily at Monticello, although he also developed other plantations in the colony. Slavery supported the life of the planter class in Virginia.[15]

In collaboration with Monticello, now the major public history site on Jefferson, the Smithsonian opened on the National Mall an exhibit, Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty, (January – October 2012) at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. It covered Jefferson as a slaveholder and the roughly 600 enslaved people who lived at Monticello over the decades, with a focus on six enslaved families and their descendants. It was the first national exhibit on the Mall to address these issues. In February 2012, Monticello opened a related new outdoor exhibition, Landscape of Slavery: Mulberry Row at Monticello, which "brings to life the stories of the scores of people—enslaved and free—who lived and worked on Jefferson's 5,000 acre plantation."[16]

Shortly after ending his law practice in 1774, Jefferson wrote A Summary View of the Rights of British America, which was submitted to the First Continental Congress. In it, he argued Americans were entitled to all the rights of British citizens, and denounced King George for wrongfully usurping local authority in the colonies. In regard to slavery, Jefferson wrote "The abolition of domestic slavery is the great object of desire in those colonies, where it was unhappily introduced in their infant state. But previous to the enfranchisement of the slaves we have, it is necessary to exclude all further importations from Africa; yet our repeated attempts to effect this by prohibitions, and by imposing duties which might amount to a prohibition, have been hitherto defeated by his majesty's negative: Thus preferring the immediate advantages of a few African corsairs to the lasting interests of the American states, and to the rights of human nature, deeply wounded by this infamous practice."[17]

Revolutionary period (1775–1783) edit

 
In the original draft of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson accused King George III of forcing the slave trade onto the American colonies and encouraging slave revolts.

In 1775, Thomas Jefferson joined the Continental Congress as a delegate from Virginia when he and others in Virginia began to rebel against the Royal Governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore. Trying to reassert British authority over the area, Dunmore issued a Proclamation in November 1775 that offered freedom to slaves who abandoned their Patriot masters and joined the British.[18] Dunmore's action led to a mass exodus of tens of thousands of forced laborers from plantations across the South during the war years; some of the people Jefferson held as slaves also took off as runaways.[19]

The colonists opposed Dunmore's action as an attempt to incite a massive slave rebellion. In 1776, when Jefferson co-authored the Declaration of Independence, he referred to the Lord Governor when he wrote, "He has excited domestic insurrections among us," though the institution of slavery itself was never mentioned by name at any point in the document.[20][21] In the original draft of the Declaration, Jefferson inserted a clause condemning King George III for forcing the slave trade onto the American colonies and inciting enslaved African Americans to "rise in arms" against their masters:

He has waged cruel war against human nature itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating & carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither. This piratical warfare, the opprobrium of infidel powers, is the warfare of the Christian King of Great Britain. Determined to keep open a market where Men should be bought & sold, he has prostituted his negative for suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or restrain this execrable commerce. And that this assemblage of horrors might want no fact of distinguished die, he is now exciting those very people to rise in arms among us, and to purchase that liberty of which he has deprived them, by murdering the people on whom he has obtruded them: thus paying off former crimes committed against the Liberties of one people, with crimes which he urges them to commit against the lives of another.

— BlackPast, The Declaration of Independence and the Debate Over Slavery[22]

The Continental Congress, however, due to Southern opposition, forced Jefferson to delete the clause in the final draft of the Declaration.[23][24][25][26][27] Jefferson did manage to make a general criticism against slavery by maintaining "all men are created equal."[23] Jefferson did not directly condemn domestic slavery as such in the Declaration, as Jefferson himself was a slaveowner. According to Finkelman, "The colonists, for the most part, had been willing and eager purchasers of slaves."[28] Researcher William D. Richardson proposed that Thomas Jefferson's use of "MEN" in capital letters would be a repudiation of those who may believe that the Declaration was not including slaves with the word "Mankind".[29]

That same year, Jefferson submitted a draft for the new Virginia Constitution containing the phrase "No person hereafter coming into this country shall be held within the same in slavery under any pretext whatever." His proposal was not adopted.[30]

In 1778 with Jefferson's leadership and probably authorship, the Virginia General Assembly banned importing people to be used as slaves into Virginia. It was one of the first jurisdictions in the world to ban the international slave trade, and all other states except South Carolina eventually followed prior to the Congress banning the trade in 1807.[31][32][33]

As governor of Virginia for two years during the Revolution, Jefferson signed a bill to promote military enlistment by giving white men land, "a healthy sound Negro ... or £60 in gold or silver."[34] As was customary, he brought some of the household workers he held in slavery, including Mary Hemings, to serve in the governor's mansion in Richmond. Facing a British invasion in January 1781, Jefferson and the Assembly members fled the capital and moved the government to Charlottesville, leaving the workers enslaved by Jefferson behind. Hemings and other enslaved people were taken by the British as prisoners of war; they were later released in exchange for captured British soldiers. In 2009, the Daughters of the Revolution (DAR) honored Mary Hemings as a Patriot, making her female descendants eligible for membership in the heritage society.[35]

In June 1781, the British arrived at Monticello. Jefferson had escaped before their arrival and gone with his family to his plantation of Poplar Forest to the southwest in Bedford County; most of those he held as slaves stayed at Monticello to help protect his valuables. The British did not loot or take prisoners there.[36] By contrast, Lord Cornwallis and his troops occupied and looted another planation owned by Jefferson, Elkhill in Goochland County, Virginia, northwest of Richmond. Of the 30 enslaved people they took as prisoners, Jefferson later claimed that at least 27 had died of disease in their camp.[37]

While claiming since the 1770s to support gradual emancipation, as a member of the Virginia General Assembly Jefferson declined to support a law to ask that, saying the people were not ready. After the United States gained independence, in 1782 the Virginia General Assembly repealed the slave law of 1723 and made it easier for slaveholders to manumit slaves. Unlike some of his planter contemporaries, such as Robert Carter III, who freed nearly 500 people held slaves in his lifetime, or George Washington, who freed all the enslaved people he legally owned, in his will of 1799, Jefferson formally freed only two people during his life, in 1793 and 1794.[38][39] Virginia did not require freed people to leave the state until 1806.[40] From 1782 to 1810, as numerous slaveholders freed enslaved people, the proportion of free blacks in Virginia increased dramatically from less than 1% to 7.2% of blacks.[41]

Following the Revolution (1784–1800) edit

Some historians have claimed that, as a Representative to the Continental Congress, Thomas Jefferson wrote an amendment or bill that would abolish slavery. But according to Finkelman, "he never did propose this plan" and "Jefferson refused to propose either a gradual emancipation scheme or a bill to allow individual masters to free their slaves."[42] He refused to add gradual emancipation as an amendment when others asked him to; he said, "better that this should be kept back."[42] In 1785, Jefferson wrote to one of his colleagues that black people were mentally inferior to white people, claiming the entire race was incapable of producing a single poet.[43]

On March 1, 1784, in defiance of southern slave society, Jefferson submitted to the Continental Congress the Report of a Plan of Government for the Western Territory.[44] "The provision would have prohibited slavery in all new states carved out of the western territories ceded to the national government established under the Articles of Confederation."[45] Slavery would have been prohibited extensively in both the North and South territories, including what would become Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee.[44] His Ordinance of 1784 would have prohibited slavery completely by 1800 in all territories, but was rejected by the Congress by one vote due to an absent representative from New Jersey.[45][44] On April 23, Congress accepted Jefferson's 1784 Ordinance, but removed the clause prohibiting slavery in all the territories. Jefferson said that southern representatives defeated his original proposal. Jefferson was only able to obtain one southern delegate to vote for the prohibition of slavery in all territories.[44] The Library of Congress notes, "The Ordinance of 1784 marks the high point of Jefferson's opposition to slavery, which is more muted thereafter."[46][47] In 1786, Jefferson bitterly remarked "The voice of a single individual of the state which was divided, or of one of those which were of the negative, would have prevented this abominable crime from spreading itself over the new country. Thus we see the fate of millions unborn hanging on the tongue of one man, & heaven was silent in that awful moment!"[48] Jefferson's Ordinance of 1784 did influence the Ordinance of 1787, that prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory. It would also serve as inspiration and citation for future attempts to restrict slavery's domestic expansion. In 1848, senator David Wilmot cited it while trying to build support for the Wilmot Proviso, which would have banned slavery in territory captured during the Mexican–American War. In 1860, Presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln cited it to make his case that banning slavery in the federal territories was constitutional.[49] But the effect of Jefferson's nearly accomplished plan to ban slavery outright in any new state would have been a huge and likely fatal blow to the institution.[44]

In 1785, Jefferson published his first book, Notes on the State of Virginia. In it, he argued that blacks were inferior to whites and this inferiority could not be explained by their condition of slavery. He also stated that these arguments were not certain (see section on this book below). Jefferson stated emancipation and colonization away from America would be the best policy on how to treat blacks and added a warning about the potential for slave revolutions in the future: "I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever: that considering numbers, nature and natural means only, a revolution of the wheel of fortune, an exchange of situation is among possible events: that it may become probable by supernatural interference! The almighty has no attribute which can take side with us in such a contest."[50]

From the 1770s on, Jefferson wrote of supporting gradual emancipation, based on slaves being educated, freed after 18 for women and 21 for men (later he changed this to age 45, when their masters had a return on investment), and transported for resettlement to Africa. All of his life, he supported the concept of colonization of Africa by American freedmen. The historian Peter S. Onuf suggested that, after having children with his slave Sally Hemings, Jefferson may have supported colonization because of concerns for his unacknowledged "shadow family".[51] In addition, Onuf asserts that Jefferson believed at this point that slavery was "equal to tyranny".[52]

The historian David Brion Davis stated that in the years after 1785 and Jefferson's return from Paris, the most notable thing about his position on slavery was his "immense silence".[53] Davis believed that, in addition to having internal conflicts about slavery, Jefferson wanted to keep his personal situation private; for this reason, he chose to back away from working to end or ameliorate slavery.[53]

As U.S. Secretary of State, Jefferson issued in 1795, with President Washington's authorization, $40,000 in emergency relief and 1,000 weapons to French slave owners in Saint-Domingue (modern-day Haiti) in order to suppress a slave rebellion. President Washington gave the slave owners in Saint Domingue (Haiti) $400,000 as repayment for loans the French had granted to the Americans during the American Revolutionary War.[54]

On September 15, 1800, Virginia governor James Monroe sent a letter to Jefferson, informing him of a narrowly averted slave rebellion by Gabriel Prosser. Ten of the conspirators had already been executed, and Monroe asked Jefferson's advice on what to do with the remaining ones.[55] Jefferson sent a reply on September 20, urging Monroe to deport the remaining rebels rather than execute them. Most notably, Jefferson's letter implied that the rebels had some justification for their rebellion in seeking freedom, stating "The other states & the world at large will for ever condemn us if we indulge a principle of revenge, or go one step beyond absolute necessity. They cannot lose sight of the rights of the two parties, & the object of the unsuccessful one."[56] By the time Monroe received Jefferson's letter, twenty of the conspirators had been executed. Seven more would be executed after Monroe received the letter on September 22, including Prosser himself, but an additional 50 defendants charged for the failed rebellion would be acquitted, pardoned, or have their sentences commuted.[57]

As President (1801–1809) edit

In 1800, Jefferson was elected as President of the United States over John Adams. He won more electoral votes than Adams, aided by southern power. The Constitution provided for the counting of slaves as three fifths of their total population, to be added to a state's total population for purposes of apportionment and the electoral college. States with large slave populations, therefore, gained greater representation even though the number of voting citizens was smaller than that of other states. It was due only to this population advantage that Jefferson won the election.[58][59]

Moved slaves to White House edit

Jefferson brought slaves from Monticello to work at the White House.[a] He brought Edith Hern Fossett and Fanny Hern to Washington, D.C., in 1802 and they learned to cook French cuisine at the President's House by Honoré Julien. Edith was 15 years old and Fanny was 18.[63][64] Margaret Bayard Smith remarked of the French fare, "The excellence and superior skill of his [Jefferson's] French cook was acknowledged by all who frequented his table, for never before had such dinners been given in the President's House".[65] Edith and Fanny were the only slaves from Monticello to regularly live in Washington.[66] They did not receive a wage, but earned a two-dollar gratuity each month.[63] They worked in Washington for nearly seven years and Edith gave birth to three children while at the President's House, James, Maria, and a child who did not survive to adulthood. Fanny had one child there. Their children were kept with them at the President's House.[65]

Haitian independence edit

 
Jefferson feared a violent slave revolt, that was taking place in Haiti, could spread into the United States.

After Toussaint Louverture had become governor general of Saint-Domingue following a slave revolt, in 1801 Jefferson supported French plans to take back the island.[67] He agreed to loan France $300,000 (~$6.46 million in 2022) "for relief of whites on the island."[68] Jefferson wanted to alleviate the fears of southern slave owners, who feared a similar rebellion in their territory.[69] Prior to his election, Jefferson wrote of the revolution, "If something is not done and soon, we shall be the murderers of our own children."[68]

By 1802, when Jefferson learned that France was planning to re-establish its empire in the western hemisphere, including taking the Louisiana territory and New Orleans from the Spanish, he declared the neutrality of the US in the Caribbean conflict.[70] While refusing credit or other assistance to the French, he allowed contraband goods and arms to reach Haiti and, thus, indirectly supported the Haitian Revolution.[70] This was to further US interests in Louisiana.[68]

That year and once the Haitians declared independence in 1804, President Jefferson had to deal with strong hostility to the new nation by his southern-dominated Congress. He shared planters' fears that the success of Haiti would encourage similar slave rebellions and widespread violence in the South. Historian Tim Matthewson noted that Jefferson faced a Congress "hostile to Haiti", and that he "acquiesced in southern policy, the embargo of trade and nonrecognition, the defense of slavery internally and the denigration of Haiti abroad."[71] Jefferson discouraged emigration by American free blacks to the new nation.[68] European nations also refused to recognize Haiti when the new nation declared independence in 1804.[72][73][74] In his short biography of Jefferson in 2005, Christopher Hitchens noted the president was "counterrevolutionary" in his treatment of Haiti and its revolution.[75]

Jefferson expressed ambivalence about Haiti. During his presidency, he thought sending free blacks and contentious slaves to Haiti might be a solution to some of the United States' problems. He hoped that "Haiti would eventually demonstrate the viability of black self-government and the industriousness of African American work habits, thereby justifying freeing and deporting the slaves" to that island.[76] This was one of his solutions for separating the populations. In 1824, book peddler Samuel Whitcomb, Jr. visited Jefferson in Monticello, and they happened to talk about Haiti. This was on the eve of the greatest emigration of U.S. Blacks to the island-nation. Jefferson told Whitcomb that he had never seen Blacks do well in governing themselves, and thought they would not do it without the help of Whites.[77]

Virginia emancipation law modified edit

In 1806, with concern developing over the rise in the number of free black people, the Virginia General Assembly modified the 1782 slave law to discourage free black people from living in the state. It permitted re-enslavement of freedmen who remained in the state for more than 12 months. This forced newly freed black people to leave enslaved kin behind. As slaveholders had to petition the legislature directly to gain permission for manumitted freedmen to stay in the state, there was a decline in manumissions after this date.[78][79]

Ended international slave trade edit

 
Jefferson banned the international slave trade on March 2, 1807.

In 1808, Jefferson denounced the international slave trade and called for a law to make it a crime. He told Congress in his 1806 annual message, such a law was needed to "withdraw the citizens of the United States from all further participation in those violations of human rights ... which the morality, the reputation, and the best interests of our country have long been eager to proscribe." Congress complied and on March 2, 1807, Jefferson signed the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves into law; it took effect 1 January 1808 and made it a federal crime to import or export slaves from abroad.[80][81]

By 1808, every state but South Carolina had followed Virginia's lead from the 1780s in banning importation of slaves. By 1808, with the growth of the domestic slave population enabling development of a large internal slave trade, slaveholders did not mount much resistance to the new law, presumably because the authority of Congress to enact such legislation was expressly authorized by the Constitution,[82] and was fully anticipated during the Constitutional Convention in 1787. The end of international trade also increased the monetary value of existing slaves. Jefferson did not lead the campaign to prohibit the importation of slaves.[83] Historian John Chester Miller rated Jefferson's two major presidential achievements as the Louisiana Purchase and the abolition of the international slave trade.[84]

Retirement (1810–1826) edit

In 1819, Jefferson strongly opposed a Missouri statehood application amendment that banned domestic slave importation and freed slaves at the age of 25 believing it would destroy or break up the union.[85] By 1820, Jefferson, objected to what he viewed as "Northern meddling" with Southern slavery policy. On April 22, Jefferson criticized the Missouri Compromise because it might lead to the breakup of the Union. Jefferson said slavery was a complex issue and needed to be solved by the next generation. Jefferson wrote that the Missouri Compromise was a "fire bell in the night" and "the knell of the Union". Jefferson said that he feared the Union would dissolve, stating that the "Missouri question aroused and filled me with alarm." In regard to whether the Union would remain for a long period of time Jefferson wrote, "I now doubt it much."[86][87] In 1823, in a letter to Supreme Court Justice William Johnson, Jefferson wrote "this case is not dead, it only sleepeth. the Indian chief said he did not go to war for every petty injury by itself; but put it into his pouch, and when that was full, he then made war."[88]

 
Tadeusz Kościuszko

In 1798, Jefferson's friend from the Revolution, Tadeusz Kościuszko, a Polish nobleman and revolutionary, visited the United States to collect back pay from the government for his military service. He entrusted his assets to Jefferson with a will directing him to spend the American money and proceeds from his land in the U.S. to free and educate slaves, including Jefferson's, and at no cost to Jefferson. Kościuszko revised will states: "I hereby authorise my friend Thomas Jefferson to employ the whole thereof in purchasing Negroes from among his own or any others and giving them Liberty in my name." Kosciuszko died in 1817, but Jefferson never carried out the terms of the will: At age 77, he pleaded an inability to act as executor due to his advanced age[89] and the numerous legal complexities of the bequest—the will was contested by several family members and was tied up in the courts for years, long after Jefferson's death.[90] Jefferson recommended his friend John Hartwell Cocke, who also opposed slavery, as executor, but Cocke likewise declined to execute the bequest.[91] In 1852 the U.S. Supreme Court awarded the estate, by then worth $50,000, to Kościuszko's heirs in Poland, having ruled that the will was invalid.[92]

Jefferson continued to struggle with debt after serving as president. He used some of his hundreds of slaves as collateral to his creditors. This debt was due to his lavish lifestyle, long construction and changes to Monticello, imported goods, art, and lifelong issues with debt, from inheriting the debt of father-in-law John Wayles to signing two 10,000 notes late in life to assist dear friend Wilson Cary Nicholas, which proved to be his coup de grace. Yet he was merely one of numerous others who suffered crippling debt around 1820. He also incurred debt in helping support his only surviving daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph, and her large family. She had separated from her husband, who had become abusive from alcoholism and mental illness (according to different sources), and brought her family to live at Monticello.[93]

In August 1814, the planter Edward Coles and Jefferson corresponded about Coles' ideas on emancipation. Jefferson urged Coles not to free his slaves, but the younger man took all his slaves to the Illinois and freed them, providing them with land for farms.[94][95]

In April 1820, Jefferson wrote to John Holmes giving his thoughts on the Missouri compromise. Concerning slavery, he said:

there is not a man on earth who would sacrifice more than I would, to relieve us from this heavy reproach [slavery] ... we have the wolf by the ear, and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and self-preservation in the other.[96][97]

Jefferson may have borrowed from Suetonius, a Roman biographer, the phrase "wolf by the ears", as he held a book of his works. Jefferson characterized slavery as a dangerous animal (the wolf) that could not be contained or freed. He believed that attempts to end slavery would lead to violence.[98] Jefferson concluded the letter lamenting "I regret that I am now to die in the belief that the useless sacrifice of themselves, by the generation of '76. to acquire self government and happiness to their country, is to be thrown away by the unwise and unworthy passions of their sons, and that my only consolation is to be that I live not to weep over it." Following the Missouri Compromise, Jefferson largely withdrew from politics and public life, writing "with one foot in the grave, I have no right to meddle with these things."[88]

In 1821, Jefferson wrote in his autobiography that he felt slavery would inevitably come to an end, though he also felt there was no hope for racial equality in America, stating "Nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate than that these people [negros] are to be free. Nor is it less certain that the two races, equally free, cannot live in the same government. Nature, habit, opinion has drawn indelible lines of distinction between them. It is still in our power to direct the process of emancipation, and deportation, peaceably, and in such slow degrees, as that the evil will wear off insensibly; and their places be, pari passu, filled up by free white laborers. If, on the contrary, it is left to force itself on, human nature must shudder at the prospect held up."[99]

The U.S. Congress finally implemented colonization of freed African American slaves by passing the Slave Trade Act of 1819 signed into law by President James Monroe. The law authorized funding to colonize the coast of Africa with freed African American slaves. In 1824, Jefferson proposed an overall emancipation plan that would free slaves born after a certain date.[100] Jefferson proposed that African-American children born in America be bought by the federal government for $12.50 and that these slaves be sent to Santo Domingo.[100] Jefferson admitted that his plan would be liberal and may even be unconstitutional, but he suggested a constitutional amendment to allow congress to buy slaves. He also realized that separating children from slaves would have a humanitarian cost. Jefferson believed that his overall plan was worth implementing and that setting over a million slaves free was worth the financial and emotional costs.[100]

Posthumous (1827–1830) edit

At his death, Jefferson was greatly in debt, in part due to his continued construction program.[101] The debts encumbered his estate, and his family sold 130 slaves, virtually all the members of every slave family, from Monticello to pay his creditors.[102][103][104][105][106] Slave families who had been well established and stable for decades were sometimes split up. Most of the sold slaves either remained in Virginia or were relocated to Ohio.[107]

Jefferson freed five slaves in his will, all males of the Hemings family. Those were his two natural sons, and Sally's younger half-brother John Hemings, and her nephews Joseph (Joe) Fossett and Burwell Colbert.[108][109] He gave Burwell Colbert, who had served as his butler and valet, $300 for purchasing supplies used in the trade of "painter and glazier". He gave John Hemings and Joe Fossett each an acre on his land so they could build homes for their families. His will included a petition to the state legislature to allow the freedmen to remain in Virginia to be with their families, who remained enslaved under Jefferson's heirs.[108]

Jefferson freed Joseph Fossett in his will, but Fossett's wife (Edith Hern Fossett) and their eight children were sold at auction. Fossett was able to get enough money to buy the freedom of his wife and two youngest children. The remainder of their ten children were sold to different slaveholders. The Fossetts worked for 23 years to purchase the freedom of their remaining children.[110]

Born and reared as free, not knowing that I was a slave, then suddenly, at the death of Jefferson, put upon an auction block and sold to strangers.

In 1827, the auction of 130 slaves took place at Monticello. The sale lasted for five days despite the cold weather. The slaves brought prices over 70% of their appraised value. Within three years, all of the "black" families at Monticello had been sold and dispersed.[112]

Sally Hemings and her children edit

For two centuries the claim that Thomas Jefferson fathered children by his slave, Sally Hemings, has been a matter of discussion and disagreement. In 1802, the journalist James T. Callender, after being denied a position as postmaster by Jefferson, published allegations that Jefferson had taken Hemings as a concubine and had fathered several children with her.[113] John Wayles held her as a slave, and was also her father, as well as the father of Jefferson's wife Martha. Sally was three-quarters white and strikingly similar in looks and voice to Jefferson's late wife.[114]

In 1998, in order to establish the male DNA line, a panel of researchers conducted a Y-DNA study of living descendants of Jefferson's uncle, Field, and of a descendant of Sally's son, Eston Hemings. The results, published in the journal Nature,[115] showed a Y-DNA match with the male Jefferson line. In 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation (TJF) assembled a team of historians whose report concluded that, together with the DNA and historic evidence, there was a high probability that Jefferson was the father of Eston and likely of all Hemings' children. W. M. Wallenborn, who worked on the Monticello report, disagreed, claiming the committee had already made up their minds before evaluating the evidence, was a "rush to judgement", and that the claims of Jefferson's paternity were unsubstantiated and politically driven.[116]

Since the DNA tests were made public, most biographers and historians have concluded that the widower Jefferson had a long-term relationship with Hemings,[117] and fathered at least some and probably all of her children.[118][119] A minority of scholars, including a team of professors associated with the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, maintain that the evidence is insufficient to conclude Thomas Jefferson's paternity, and note the possibility that other Jeffersons, including Thomas's brother Randolph Jefferson and his five sons, who were alleged to have raped enslaved women, could have fathered Hemings' children.[120][121] Jefferson allowed two of Sally's children to leave Monticello without formal manumission when they came of age; five other slaves, including the two remaining sons of Sally, were freed by his will upon his death. Although not legally freed, Sally left Monticello with her sons. They were counted as free whites in the 1830 census.[122][123] Madison Hemings, in an article titled, "Life Among the Lowly", in small Ohio newspaper called Pike County Republican, claimed that Jefferson was his father.[124][125]

Monticello slave life edit

 
Isaac Jefferson, 1845, was a slave blacksmith at Monticello.

Jefferson ran every facet of the four Monticello farms and left specific instructions to his overseers when away or traveling. Slaves in the mansion, mill, and nailery reported to one general overseer appointed by Jefferson, and he hired many overseers, some of whom were considered cruel at the time. Jefferson made meticulous periodical records on his slaves, plants and animals, and weather.[126][127] Jefferson, in his Farm Book journal, visually described in detail both the quality and quantity of purchased slave clothing and the names of all slaves who received the clothing.[128] In a letter written in 1811, Jefferson described his stress and apprehension in regard to difficulties in what he felt was his "duty" to procure specific desirable blankets for "those poor creatures" – his slaves.[129]

Some historians have noted that Jefferson maintained many slave families together on his plantations; historian Bruce Fehn says this was consistent with other slave owners at the time. There were often more than one generation of family at the plantation and families were stable. Jefferson and other slaveholders shifted the "cost of reproducing the workforce to the workers' themselves". He could increase the value of his property without having to buy additional slaves.[130] He tried to reduce infant mortality, and wrote, "[A] woman who brings a child every two years is more profitable than the best man on the farm."[131]

Jefferson encouraged the enslaved at Monticello to "marry". (The enslaved could not marry legally in Virginia.) He would occasionally buy and sell slaves to keep families together. In 1815, he said that his slaves were "worth a great deal more" due to their marriages.[132][page needed] "Married" slaves, however, had no legal protection or recognition under the law; masters could separate slave "husbands" and "wives" at will.[133]

Thomas Jefferson recorded his strategy for employing children in his Farm Book. Until the age of 10, children served as nurses. When the plantation grew tobacco, children were at a good height to remove and kill tobacco worms from the crops.[134] Once he began growing wheat, fewer people were needed to maintain the crops, so Jefferson established manual trades. He stated that children "go into the ground or learn trades." When girls were 16, they began spinning and weaving textiles. Boys made nails from age 10 to 16. In 1794, Jefferson had a dozen boys working at the nailery.[134][b] The nail factory was on Mulberry Row. After it opened in 1794, for the first three years, Jefferson recorded the productivity of each child. He selected those who were most productive to be trained as artisans: blacksmiths, carpenters, and coopers. Those who performed the worst were assigned as field laborers.[136] While working at the nailery, boys received more food and may have received new clothes if they did a good job.[134]

James Hubbard was an enslaved worker in the nailery who ran away on two occasions. The first time Jefferson did not have him whipped, but on the second Jefferson reportedly ordered him severely flogged. Hubbard was likely sold after spending time in jail. Stanton says children suffered physical violence. When a 17-year-old James was sick, one overseer reportedly whipped him "three times in one day". Violence was commonplace on plantations, including Jefferson's.[137] Henry Wiencek cited within a Smithsonian Magazine article several reports of Jefferson ordering the whipping or selling of slaves as punishments for extreme misbehavior or escape.[138]

The Thomas Jefferson Foundation quotes Jefferson's instructions to his overseers not to whip his slaves, but noted that they often ignored his wishes during his frequent absences from home.[139] According to Stanton, no reliable document portrays Jefferson as directly using physical correction.[140] During Jefferson's time, some other slaveholders also disagreed with the practices of flogging and jailing slaves.[141]

Slaves had a variety of tasks: Davy Bowles was the carriage driver, including trips to take Jefferson to and from Washington D.C. or the Virginia capital. Betty Hemings, a mixed-race slave inherited from his father-in-law with her family, was the matriarch and head of the house slaves at Monticello, who were allowed limited freedom when Jefferson was away. Four of her daughters served as house slaves: Betty Brown; Nance, Critta and Sally Hemings. The latter two were half-sisters to Jefferson's wife, and Sally bore him 6 children. Another house slave was Ursula Granger, whom he had purchased separately. The general maintenance of the mansion was under the care of Hemings family members as well: the master carpenter was Betty's son John Hemings. His nephews Joe Fossett, as blacksmith, and Burwell Colbert, as Jefferson's butler and painter, also had important roles. Wormley Hughes, a grandson of Betty Hemings and gardener, was given informal freedom after Jefferson's death.[126] Memoirs of life at Monticello include those of Isaac Jefferson (published, 1843), Madison Hemings, and Israel Jefferson (both published, 1873). Isaac was an enslaved blacksmith who worked on Jefferson's plantation.[142][143]

The last surviving recorded interview of a former slave was with Fountain Hughes, then 101, in Baltimore, Maryland in 1949. It is available online at the Library of Congress and the World Digital Library.[144] Born in Charlottesville, Fountain was a descendant of Wormley Hughes and Ursula Granger; his grandparents were among the house slaves owned by Jefferson at Monticello.[145]

Notes on the State of Virginia (1785) edit

In 1780, Jefferson began answering questions on the colonies asked by French minister François de Marboias. He worked on what became a book for five years, having it printed in France while he was there as U.S. minister in 1785.[146] The book covered subjects such as mountains, religion, climate, slavery, and race.[147]

Views on race edit

In Query XIV of his Notes, Jefferson analyses the nature of Blacks. He stated that Blacks lacked forethought, intelligence, tenderness, grief, imagination, and beauty; that they had poor taste, smelled bad, and were incapable of producing artistry or poetry; but conceded that they were the moral equals of all others.[148][149] Jefferson believed that the bonds of love for blacks were weaker than those for whites.[150] Jefferson never settled on whether differences were natural or nurtural, but he stated unquestionably that his views ought to be taken cum grano salis;

The opinion, that they are inferior in the faculties of reason and imagination, must be hazarded with great diffidence. To justify a general conclusion, requires many observations, even where the subject may be submitted to the Anatomical knife, to Optical glasses, to analysis by fire or by solvents. How much more then where it is a faculty, not a substance, we are examining; where it eludes the research of all the senses; where the conditions of its existence are various and variously combined; where the effects of those which are present or absent bid defiance to calculation; let me add too, as a circumstance of great tenderness, where our conclusion would degrade a whole race of men from the rank in the scale of beings which their Creator may perhaps have given them. To our reproach it must be said, that though for a century and a half we have had under our eyes the races of black and of red men, they have never yet been viewed by us as subjects of natural history. I advance it, therefore, as a suspicion only, that the blacks, whether originally a distinct race, or made distinct by time and circumstances, are inferior to the whites in the endowments both of body and mind. It is not against experience to suppose that different species of the same genus, or varieties of the same species, may possess different qualifications.[148]

In 1808, French abolitionist Henri Grégoire sent Jefferson a copy of his book, An Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral Faculties and Literature of Negroes. In the book, Grégoire responded to and challenged Jefferson's arguments of Black inferiority in Notes on the State of Virginia by citing the advanced civilizations Africans had developed as evidence of their intellectual competence.[151][152] Jefferson replied to Grégoire that the rights of African Americans should not depend on intelligence and that Black people had "respectable intelligence".[153] Jefferson wrote of Black people that,

but whatever be their degree of talent it is no measure of their rights. Because Sir Isaac Newton was superior to others in understanding, he was not therefore lord of the person or property of others. On this subject they are gaining daily in the opinions of nations, and hopeful advances are making towards their re-establishment on an equal footing with the other colors of the human family.[153][154]

Dumas Malone, Jefferson's biographer, explained Jefferson's contemporary views on race as expressed in Notes were the "tentative judgements of a kindly and scientifically minded man". Merrill Peterson, another Jefferson biographer, claimed Jefferson's racial bias against African Americans was "a product of frivolous and tortuous reasoning ... and bewildering confusion of principles." Peterson called Jefferson's racial views on African Americans "folk belief".[155]

In a reply (in The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 10, 22 June-31 December 1786, ed. Julian P. Boyd p. 20-29) to Jean Nicolas DeMeunier's inquiries concerning the Paris publication of his Notes On The State of Virginia (1785) Jefferson described the Southern slave plantation economy as "a species of property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London": "Virginia certainly owed two millions sterling to Great Britain at the conclusion of the [Revolutionary] war. ... This is to be ascribed to peculiarities in the tobacco trade. The advantages [profits] made by the British merchants on the tobaccoes consigned to them were so enormous that they spared no means of increasing those consignments. A powerful engine for this purpose was the giving good prices and credit to the planter, till they got him more immersed in debt than he could pay without selling his lands or slaves. They then reduced the prices given for his tobacco so that let his shipments be ever so great, and his demand of necessaries ever so economical, they never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son for many generations, so that the planters were a species of property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London." After the Revolution this subjection of the Southern plantation economy to absentee finance, commodities brokers, import-export merchants and wholesalers continued, with the center of finance and trade shifting from London to Manhattan where, up until the Civil War, banks continued to write mortgages with slaves as collateral, and foreclose on plantations in default and operate them in their investors' interests, as discussed by Philip S. Foner.[156]

Support for colonization plan edit

In his Notes Jefferson wrote of a plan he supported in 1779 in the Virginia legislature that would end slavery through the colonization of freed slaves.[157][158] This plan was widely popular among the French people in 1785 who lauded Jefferson as a philosopher. According to Jefferson, this plan required enslaved adults to continue in slavery but their children would be taken from them and trained to have a skill in the arts or sciences. These skilled women at age 18 and men at 21 would be emancipated, given arms and supplies, and sent to colonize a foreign land.[157] Jefferson believed that colonization was the practical alternative,[159] while freed blacks living in a white American society would lead to a race war:

It will probably be asked, Why not retain and incorporate the blacks into the state, and thus save the expense of supplying, by importation of white settlers, the vacancies they will leave? Deep rooted prejudices entertained by the whites; ten thousand recollections, by the blacks, of the injuries they have sustained; new provocations; the real distinctions which nature has made; and many other circumstances, will divide us into parties, and produce convulsions which will probably never end but in the extermination of the one or the other race.[160]

Criticism for effects of slavery edit

In Notes Jefferson criticized the effects slavery had on both white and African-American slave society.[161] He writes:

There must doubtless be an unhappy influence on the manners of our people produced by the existence of slavery among us. The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one part, and degrading submissions on the other. Our children see this, and learn to imitate it; for man is an imitative animal. This quality is the germ of all education in him. From his cradle to his grave he is learning to do what he sees others do. If a parent could find no motive either in his philanthropy or his self-love, for restraining the intemperance of passion towards his slave, it should always be a sufficient one that his child is present. But generally it is not sufficient. The parent storms, the child looks on, catches the lineaments of wrath, puts on the same airs in the circle of smaller slaves, gives a loose to his worst of passions, and thus nursed, educated, and daily exercised in tyranny, cannot but be stamped by it with odious peculiarities. The man must be a prodigy who can retain his manners and morals undepraved by such circumstances. And with what execration should the statesman be loaded, who permitting one half the citizens thus to trample on the rights of the other, transforms those into despots, and these into enemies, destroys the morals of the one part, and the amor patriae of the other.

Evaluations by historians edit

According to James W. Loewen, Jefferson's character "wrestled with slavery, even though in the end he lost." Loewen says that understanding Jefferson's relationship with slavery is significant in understanding current American social problems.[162]

Important 20th-century Jefferson biographers including Merrill Peterson support the view that Jefferson was strongly opposed to slavery; Peterson said that Jefferson's ownership of slaves "all his adult life has placed him at odds with his moral and political principles. Yet there can be no question of his genuine hatred of slavery or, indeed, of the efforts he made to curb and eliminate it."[163] Peter Onuf stated that Jefferson was well known for his "opposition to slavery, most famously expressed in his ... Notes on the State of Virginia."[164] Onuf, and his collaborator Ari Helo, inferred from Jefferson's words and actions that he was against the cohabitation of free blacks and whites.[165] This, they argued, is what made immediate emancipation so problematic in Jefferson's mind. As Onuf and Helo explained, Jefferson opposed the mixing of the races not because of his belief that blacks were inferior (although he did provisionally believe this) but because he feared that instantly freeing the slaves in white territory would trigger "genocidal violence". He could not imagine the blacks living in harmony with their former oppressors. Jefferson was sure that the two races would be in constant conflict. Onuf and Helo asserted that Jefferson was, consequently, a proponent of freeing the Africans through "expulsion", which he thought would have ensured the safety of both the whites and blacks. Biographer John Ferling said that Thomas Jefferson was "zealously committed to slavery's abolition".[166]

Starting in the early 1960s, some academics began to challenge Jefferson's position as an anti-slavery advocate having reevaluated both his actions and his words.[167][168] Paul Finkelman wrote in 1994 that earlier scholars, particularly Peterson, Dumas Malone, and Willard Randall, engaged in "exaggeration or misrepresentation" to advance their argument of Jefferson's anti-slavery position, saying "they ignore contrary evidence" and "paint a false picture" to protect Jefferson's image on slavery.[169]

In 2012, author Henry Wiencek, highly critical of Jefferson, concluded that Jefferson tried to protect his legacy as a Founding Father by hiding slavery from visitors at Monticello and through his writings to abolitionists.[170] According to Wiencek's view Jefferson made a new frontage road to his Monticello estate to hide the overseers and slaves who worked the agriculture fields. Wiencek believed that Jefferson's "soft answers" to abolitionists were to make himself appear opposed to slavery.[170] Wiencek stated that Jefferson held enormous political power but "did nothing to hasten slavery's end during his terms as a diplomat, secretary of state, vice president, and twice-elected president or after his presidency."[170]

According to Greg Warnusz, Jefferson held typical 19th-century beliefs that blacks were inferior to whites in terms of "potential for citizenship", and he wanted them recolonized to independent Liberia and other colonies. His views of a democratic society were based on a homogeneity of white working men. He claimed to be interested in helping both races in his proposal. He proposed gradually freeing slaves after the age of 45 (when they would have repaid their owner's investment) and resettling them in Africa. (This proposal did not acknowledge how difficult it would be for freedmen to be settled in another country and environment after age 45.) Jefferson's plan envisioned a whites-only society without any blacks.[25]

Concerning Jefferson and race, author Annette Gordon-Reed stated the following:

Of all the Founding Fathers, it was Thomas Jefferson for whom the issue of race loomed largest. In the roles of slaveholder, public official and family man, the relationship between blacks and whites was something he thought about, wrote about and grappled with from his cradle to his grave.[171]

Paul Finkelman claims that Jefferson believed that Blacks lacked basic human emotions.[172]

According to historian Jeremy J. Tewell, although Jefferson's name had been associated with the anti-slavery cause during the early 1770s in the Virginia legislature, Jefferson viewed slavery as a "Southern way of life", similar to mainstream Greek and antiquity societies. In agreement with the Southern slave society, Tewell says Jefferson believed that slavery served to protect blacks, whom he viewed as inferior or incapable of taking care of themselves.[173]

According to Joyce Appleby, Jefferson had opportunities to disassociate himself from slavery. In 1782, after the American Revolution, Virginia passed a law making manumission by the slave owner legal and more easily accomplished, and the manumission rate rose across the Upper South in other states as well. Northern states passed various emancipation plans. Jefferson's actions did not keep up with those of the antislavery advocates.[158] On September 15, 1793, Jefferson agreed in writing to free James Hemings, his mixed-race slave who had served him as chef since their time in Paris, after the slave had trained his younger brother Peter as a replacement chef. Jefferson finally freed James Hemings in February 1796. According to one historian, Jefferson's manumission was not generous; he said the document "undermines any notion of benevolence."[174] With freedom, Hemings worked in Philadelphia and traveled to France.[175]

In contrast, a sufficient number of other slaveholders in Virginia freed slaves in the first two decades after the Revolution so that the proportion of free blacks in Virginia compared to the total black population rose from less than 1% in 1790 to 7.2% in 1810.[176]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ He offered James Hemings, his former slave freed in 1796, the position of White House chef. Hemings refused, although his kin were still held at Monticello. (Hemings later became depressed and turned to drinking. He committed suicide at age 36, perhaps in a fit of inebriation.)[60][61][62]
  2. ^ Jefferson's nail factory was in competition with the Virginia State Penitentiary and Catharine Flood McCall's Alexandria blacksmith shop and nail factory, the latter of which was staffed by enslaved and free laborers. The Penitentiary, staffed by inmates, became profitable in 1807 from prisoner-made nails and other products. By 1815, it undercut McCall's and Jefferson's businesses, both of which ultimately closed down.[135]

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  139. ^ National Museum of African American History and Culture in Partnership with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello. . Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello – Paradox of Liberty: Exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture, January 27 – October 14, 2012. Charlottesville, Virginia: Monticello.org. Archived from the original on March 11, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-11. Stating that it was his "first wish" that his slaves be "well treated," Jefferson struggled to balance humane treatment with a need for profit. He tried to minimize the then-common use of harsh physical punishment and used financial incentives rather than force to encourage his artisans. He instructed his overseers not to whip slaves, but his wishes were often ignored during his frequent absences from home.
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  157. ^ a b Weincek (2012), Master of the Mountain Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves, pp. 53–54
  158. ^ a b Joyce Oldham Appleby and Arthur Meier Schlesinger, Thomas Jefferson, pp. 77–78, 2003
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  166. ^ Ferling (2000), Setting the World Ablaze, p. 161
  167. ^ Robert McColley, Slavery and Jeffersonian Virginia, Urbana, 1964, p. 124
  168. ^ William Cohen, "Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Slavery" in The Journal of American History volume 56, No. 3 (Dec. 1969), p. 505
  169. ^ Paul Finkelman, "Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery: The Myth Goes On", The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 102, No. 2, April 1994, pp 199, 201]
  170. ^ a b c Wiencek (2012), Master of the Mountain Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves, pp. 267–68
  171. ^ , cover story, TIME, 4 July 2004, accessed 23 February 2012
  172. ^ Finkelman, Paul (2012-12-01). "The Monster of Monticello". The New York Times. p. A25. from the original on 2012-12-04. Retrieved 2012-12-02. Destroying families didn't bother Jefferson, because he believed blacks lacked basic human emotions.
  173. ^ Tewell (Summer 2011), p. 235
  174. ^ Finkleman (1994), Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery, pp. 193+
  175. ^ "The Thomas Jefferson Timeline: 1743–1827". Retrieved December 9, 2010.; Finkleman (1994), Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery, pp. 193+
  176. ^ Peter Kolchin, American Slavery, 1619–1865, p. 81

Bibliography edit

  • "Thomas Jefferson Papers, 1606 to 1827". Library of Congress.
  • Appleby, Joyce. Thomas Jefferson (2003)
  • Bernstein, R. B. Thomas Jefferson. (2003)
  • Burstein, Andrew. Jefferson's Secrets: Death and Desire at Monticello. (2005).
  • Cunningham, Noble E. In Pursuit of Reason (1988)
  • Crawford, Alan Pell, Twilight at Monticello,[2], Random House, New York, (2008).
  • Ellis, Joseph J. American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson (1996).
  • Finkelman, Paul. Slavery and the Founders: Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson (2001), esp ch 6–7
  • Forret, Jeff (2012). Ballard C. Campbell (ed.). Slavery in the United States. Infobase Learning. ISBN 978-0-8160-8115-8.
  • Gordon-Reed, Annette (1997). Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 0-8139-1698-4.
  • Gordon-Reed, Annette. The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family, New York: W.W. Norton, 2007
  • Halliday, E. M. (2002). Understanding Thomas Jefferson. New York, NY: Perennial HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-019793-5.
  • Hitchens, C. E.Thomas Jefferson: Author of America (2005)
  • Malone, Dumas. Jefferson and His Time, 6 vols. (1948–82). Multi-volume biography of TJ by leading expert; A short version is online.
  • Malone, Dumas. Thomas Jefferson: A Reference Biography (1986/2002) Peterson, Merrill D. (ed.)
  • Onuf, Peter S., ed. (1993). Jeffersonian Legacies. The University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0-8139-1462-0.
  • Peterson, Merrill D. (1975). Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation. ISBN 0-19-501909-1.
  • Root, Erik S. All Honor to Jefferson? The Virginia Slavery Debates and the Positive Good Thesis (Lexington Books, 2008), argues Jefferson was committed to a timeless ideal of freedom and equality, which was reversed by Virginia after his death
  • Stanton, Lucia (1993). "″Those Who Labor for My Happiness:″ Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves". In Onuf, Peter S. (ed.). Jeffersonian Legacies. University Press of Virginia. pp. 147–80. ISBN 0-8139-1462-0.
  • Stanton, Lucia (1996). Slavery at Monticello. Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation. ISBN 1-882886-02-X.
  • Stanton, Lucia (2000). Free Some Day: The African-American Families of Monticello. Charlottesville, Virginia: Thomas Jefferson Foundation. ISBN 1-882886-14-3.
  • Storozynski, Alex (2009). The Peasant Prince: Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution. New York: St. Martin's Press, 352 pages. ISBN 978-1-4299-6607-8., Book

Academic journals edit

  • Finkelman, Paul. "Regulating the African slave trade," Civil War History 54.4 (2008): 379+.
  • Matthewson, Tim. "Jefferson and Haiti", The Journal of Southern History, 61 (1995)
  • Pasley, Jeffrey L. "Politics and the Misadventures of Thomas Jefferson's Modern Reputation: a Review Essay," Journal of Southern History 2006 72(4): 871–908. ISSN 0022-4642 Fulltext in Ebsco.
  • Scherr, Arthur. "Jefferson's 'Cannibals' Revisited: A Closer Look at His Notorious Phrase," Journal of Southern History 77.2 (2011): 251+
  • Tewell, Jeremy J. "Assuring Freedom to the Free: Jefferson's Declaration and the Conflict over Slavery," Civil War History (Mar 2012) 58#1 pp. 75–96.

Primary edit

  • "To Henri Gregoire Washington, February 25, 1809". University of Groningen. 2012.

External links edit

  • Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Monticello website
  • Thomas Jefferson Digital Archives
  • "A Plan of Emancipation", Letter from TJ To Jared Sparks – Monticello, February 4, 1824, Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia
  • Thomas Jefferson on Politics & Government
  • National Museum of African American History and Culture in Partnership with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello (January 27 – October 14, 2012). . Exhibition. Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on April 13, 2012.

thomas, jefferson, slavery, thomas, jefferson, third, president, united, states, owned, more, than, slaves, during, adult, life, jefferson, freed, slaves, while, lived, five, others, were, freed, after, death, including, children, from, relationship, with, sla. Thomas Jefferson the third president of the United States owned more than 600 slaves during his adult life Jefferson freed two slaves while he lived and five others were freed after his death including two of his children from his relationship with his slave and sister in law Sally Hemings His other two children with Hemings were allowed to escape without pursuit After his death the rest of the slaves were sold to pay off his estate s debts Privately one of Jefferson s reasons for not freeing more slaves was his considerable debt 1 while his more public justification expressed in his book Notes on the State of Virginia was his fear that freeing enslaved people into American society would cause civil unrest between white people and former slaves Jefferson consistently spoke out against the international slave trade and outlawed it while he was president He advocated for a gradual emancipation of all slaves within the United States and the colonization of Africa by freed African Americans 2 3 4 However he opposed some other measures to restrict slavery within the U S and also criticized voluntary manumission 5 Contents 1 Early years 1743 1774 2 Revolutionary period 1775 1783 3 Following the Revolution 1784 1800 4 As President 1801 1809 4 1 Moved slaves to White House 4 2 Haitian independence 4 3 Virginia emancipation law modified 4 4 Ended international slave trade 5 Retirement 1810 1826 6 Posthumous 1827 1830 7 Sally Hemings and her children 8 Monticello slave life 9 Notes on the State of Virginia 1785 9 1 Views on race 9 2 Support for colonization plan 9 3 Criticism for effects of slavery 10 Evaluations by historians 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Academic journals 14 2 Primary 15 External linksEarly years 1743 1774 edit nbsp Advertisement placed by Jefferson in the Virginia Gazette offering a reward to whoever returns his escaped slave 1767 nbsp MonticelloThomas Jefferson was born into the planter class of a slave society as defined by the historian Ira Berlin in which slavery was the main means of labor production 6 He was the son of Peter Jefferson a prominent slaveholder and land speculator in Virginia and Jane Randolph granddaughter of English and Scots gentry 7 In 1757 when Jefferson was 14 his father died and so he inherited 5 000 acres 20 km2 of land 52 slaves livestock his father s notable library and a gristmill 8 9 This property was initially under control of his guardian John Harvie Sr 10 He assumed full control over these properties at age 21 11 In 1768 Thomas Jefferson began construction of a neoclassical mansion known as Monticello which overlooked the hamlet of his former home in Shadwell 7 As an attorney Jefferson represented people of color as well as whites In 1770 he defended a young mixed race male slave in a freedom suit on the grounds that his mother was white and freeborn By the colony s law of partus sequitur ventrem that the child took the status of the mother the man should never have been enslaved He lost the suit 12 In 1772 Jefferson represented George Manly the son of a free woman of color who sued for freedom after having been held as an indentured servant three years past the expiration of his term The Virginia colony at the time bound illegitimate mixed race children of free women as indentured servants until age 31 for males with a shorter term for females 13 Once freed Manly worked for Jefferson at Monticello for wages 13 In 1773 the year after Jefferson married the young widow Martha Wayles Skelton her father died She and Jefferson inherited his estate including 11 000 acres 135 slaves and 4 000 of debt With this inheritance Jefferson became deeply involved with interracial families and financial burden As a widower his father in law John Wayles had taken his mixed race slave Betty Hemings as a concubine and had six children with her during his last 12 years 14 These additional forced laborers made Jefferson the second largest slaveholder in Albemarle County In addition he held nearly 16 000 acres of land in Virginia He sold some people to pay off the debt of Wayles estate 7 From this time on Jefferson owned and supervised his large chattel estate primarily at Monticello although he also developed other plantations in the colony Slavery supported the life of the planter class in Virginia 15 In collaboration with Monticello now the major public history site on Jefferson the Smithsonian opened on the National Mall an exhibit Slavery at Jefferson s Monticello The Paradox of Liberty January October 2012 at the National Museum of American History in Washington D C It covered Jefferson as a slaveholder and the roughly 600 enslaved people who lived at Monticello over the decades with a focus on six enslaved families and their descendants It was the first national exhibit on the Mall to address these issues In February 2012 Monticello opened a related new outdoor exhibition Landscape of Slavery Mulberry Row at Monticello which brings to life the stories of the scores of people enslaved and free who lived and worked on Jefferson s 5 000 acre plantation 16 Shortly after ending his law practice in 1774 Jefferson wrote A Summary View of the Rights of British America which was submitted to the First Continental Congress In it he argued Americans were entitled to all the rights of British citizens and denounced King George for wrongfully usurping local authority in the colonies In regard to slavery Jefferson wrote The abolition of domestic slavery is the great object of desire in those colonies where it was unhappily introduced in their infant state But previous to the enfranchisement of the slaves we have it is necessary to exclude all further importations from Africa yet our repeated attempts to effect this by prohibitions and by imposing duties which might amount to a prohibition have been hitherto defeated by his majesty s negative Thus preferring the immediate advantages of a few African corsairs to the lasting interests of the American states and to the rights of human nature deeply wounded by this infamous practice 17 Revolutionary period 1775 1783 editFurther information American Revolutionary War and United States Declaration of Independence nbsp In the original draft of the Declaration of Independence Jefferson accused King George III of forcing the slave trade onto the American colonies and encouraging slave revolts In 1775 Thomas Jefferson joined the Continental Congress as a delegate from Virginia when he and others in Virginia began to rebel against the Royal Governor of Virginia Lord Dunmore Trying to reassert British authority over the area Dunmore issued a Proclamation in November 1775 that offered freedom to slaves who abandoned their Patriot masters and joined the British 18 Dunmore s action led to a mass exodus of tens of thousands of forced laborers from plantations across the South during the war years some of the people Jefferson held as slaves also took off as runaways 19 The colonists opposed Dunmore s action as an attempt to incite a massive slave rebellion In 1776 when Jefferson co authored the Declaration of Independence he referred to the Lord Governor when he wrote He has excited domestic insurrections among us though the institution of slavery itself was never mentioned by name at any point in the document 20 21 In the original draft of the Declaration Jefferson inserted a clause condemning King George III for forcing the slave trade onto the American colonies and inciting enslaved African Americans to rise in arms against their masters He has waged cruel war against human nature itself violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him captivating amp carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither This piratical warfare the opprobrium of infidel powers is the warfare of the Christian King of Great Britain Determined to keep open a market where Men should be bought amp sold he has prostituted his negative for suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or restrain this execrable commerce And that this assemblage of horrors might want no fact of distinguished die he is now exciting those very people to rise in arms among us and to purchase that liberty of which he has deprived them by murdering the people on whom he has obtruded them thus paying off former crimes committed against the Liberties of one people with crimes which he urges them to commit against the lives of another BlackPast The Declaration of Independence and the Debate Over Slavery 22 The Continental Congress however due to Southern opposition forced Jefferson to delete the clause in the final draft of the Declaration 23 24 25 26 27 Jefferson did manage to make a general criticism against slavery by maintaining all men are created equal 23 Jefferson did not directly condemn domestic slavery as such in the Declaration as Jefferson himself was a slaveowner According to Finkelman The colonists for the most part had been willing and eager purchasers of slaves 28 Researcher William D Richardson proposed that Thomas Jefferson s use of MEN in capital letters would be a repudiation of those who may believe that the Declaration was not including slaves with the word Mankind 29 That same year Jefferson submitted a draft for the new Virginia Constitution containing the phrase No person hereafter coming into this country shall be held within the same in slavery under any pretext whatever His proposal was not adopted 30 In 1778 with Jefferson s leadership and probably authorship the Virginia General Assembly banned importing people to be used as slaves into Virginia It was one of the first jurisdictions in the world to ban the international slave trade and all other states except South Carolina eventually followed prior to the Congress banning the trade in 1807 31 32 33 As governor of Virginia for two years during the Revolution Jefferson signed a bill to promote military enlistment by giving white men land a healthy sound Negro or 60 in gold or silver 34 As was customary he brought some of the household workers he held in slavery including Mary Hemings to serve in the governor s mansion in Richmond Facing a British invasion in January 1781 Jefferson and the Assembly members fled the capital and moved the government to Charlottesville leaving the workers enslaved by Jefferson behind Hemings and other enslaved people were taken by the British as prisoners of war they were later released in exchange for captured British soldiers In 2009 the Daughters of the Revolution DAR honored Mary Hemings as a Patriot making her female descendants eligible for membership in the heritage society 35 In June 1781 the British arrived at Monticello Jefferson had escaped before their arrival and gone with his family to his plantation of Poplar Forest to the southwest in Bedford County most of those he held as slaves stayed at Monticello to help protect his valuables The British did not loot or take prisoners there 36 By contrast Lord Cornwallis and his troops occupied and looted another planation owned by Jefferson Elkhill in Goochland County Virginia northwest of Richmond Of the 30 enslaved people they took as prisoners Jefferson later claimed that at least 27 had died of disease in their camp 37 While claiming since the 1770s to support gradual emancipation as a member of the Virginia General Assembly Jefferson declined to support a law to ask that saying the people were not ready After the United States gained independence in 1782 the Virginia General Assembly repealed the slave law of 1723 and made it easier for slaveholders to manumit slaves Unlike some of his planter contemporaries such as Robert Carter III who freed nearly 500 people held slaves in his lifetime or George Washington who freed all the enslaved people he legally owned in his will of 1799 Jefferson formally freed only two people during his life in 1793 and 1794 38 39 Virginia did not require freed people to leave the state until 1806 40 From 1782 to 1810 as numerous slaveholders freed enslaved people the proportion of free blacks in Virginia increased dramatically from less than 1 to 7 2 of blacks 41 Following the Revolution 1784 1800 editSome historians have claimed that as a Representative to the Continental Congress Thomas Jefferson wrote an amendment or bill that would abolish slavery But according to Finkelman he never did propose this plan and Jefferson refused to propose either a gradual emancipation scheme or a bill to allow individual masters to free their slaves 42 He refused to add gradual emancipation as an amendment when others asked him to he said better that this should be kept back 42 In 1785 Jefferson wrote to one of his colleagues that black people were mentally inferior to white people claiming the entire race was incapable of producing a single poet 43 On March 1 1784 in defiance of southern slave society Jefferson submitted to the Continental Congress the Report of a Plan of Government for the Western Territory 44 The provision would have prohibited slavery in all new states carved out of the western territories ceded to the national government established under the Articles of Confederation 45 Slavery would have been prohibited extensively in both the North and South territories including what would become Alabama Mississippi and Tennessee 44 His Ordinance of 1784 would have prohibited slavery completely by 1800 in all territories but was rejected by the Congress by one vote due to an absent representative from New Jersey 45 44 On April 23 Congress accepted Jefferson s 1784 Ordinance but removed the clause prohibiting slavery in all the territories Jefferson said that southern representatives defeated his original proposal Jefferson was only able to obtain one southern delegate to vote for the prohibition of slavery in all territories 44 The Library of Congress notes The Ordinance of 1784 marks the high point of Jefferson s opposition to slavery which is more muted thereafter 46 47 In 1786 Jefferson bitterly remarked The voice of a single individual of the state which was divided or of one of those which were of the negative would have prevented this abominable crime from spreading itself over the new country Thus we see the fate of millions unborn hanging on the tongue of one man amp heaven was silent in that awful moment 48 Jefferson s Ordinance of 1784 did influence the Ordinance of 1787 that prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory It would also serve as inspiration and citation for future attempts to restrict slavery s domestic expansion In 1848 senator David Wilmot cited it while trying to build support for the Wilmot Proviso which would have banned slavery in territory captured during the Mexican American War In 1860 Presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln cited it to make his case that banning slavery in the federal territories was constitutional 49 But the effect of Jefferson s nearly accomplished plan to ban slavery outright in any new state would have been a huge and likely fatal blow to the institution 44 In 1785 Jefferson published his first book Notes on the State of Virginia In it he argued that blacks were inferior to whites and this inferiority could not be explained by their condition of slavery He also stated that these arguments were not certain see section on this book below Jefferson stated emancipation and colonization away from America would be the best policy on how to treat blacks and added a warning about the potential for slave revolutions in the future I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just that his justice cannot sleep for ever that considering numbers nature and natural means only a revolution of the wheel of fortune an exchange of situation is among possible events that it may become probable by supernatural interference The almighty has no attribute which can take side with us in such a contest 50 From the 1770s on Jefferson wrote of supporting gradual emancipation based on slaves being educated freed after 18 for women and 21 for men later he changed this to age 45 when their masters had a return on investment and transported for resettlement to Africa All of his life he supported the concept of colonization of Africa by American freedmen The historian Peter S Onuf suggested that after having children with his slave Sally Hemings Jefferson may have supported colonization because of concerns for his unacknowledged shadow family 51 In addition Onuf asserts that Jefferson believed at this point that slavery was equal to tyranny 52 The historian David Brion Davis stated that in the years after 1785 and Jefferson s return from Paris the most notable thing about his position on slavery was his immense silence 53 Davis believed that in addition to having internal conflicts about slavery Jefferson wanted to keep his personal situation private for this reason he chose to back away from working to end or ameliorate slavery 53 As U S Secretary of State Jefferson issued in 1795 with President Washington s authorization 40 000 in emergency relief and 1 000 weapons to French slave owners in Saint Domingue modern day Haiti in order to suppress a slave rebellion President Washington gave the slave owners in Saint Domingue Haiti 400 000 as repayment for loans the French had granted to the Americans during the American Revolutionary War 54 On September 15 1800 Virginia governor James Monroe sent a letter to Jefferson informing him of a narrowly averted slave rebellion by Gabriel Prosser Ten of the conspirators had already been executed and Monroe asked Jefferson s advice on what to do with the remaining ones 55 Jefferson sent a reply on September 20 urging Monroe to deport the remaining rebels rather than execute them Most notably Jefferson s letter implied that the rebels had some justification for their rebellion in seeking freedom stating The other states amp the world at large will for ever condemn us if we indulge a principle of revenge or go one step beyond absolute necessity They cannot lose sight of the rights of the two parties amp the object of the unsuccessful one 56 By the time Monroe received Jefferson s letter twenty of the conspirators had been executed Seven more would be executed after Monroe received the letter on September 22 including Prosser himself but an additional 50 defendants charged for the failed rebellion would be acquitted pardoned or have their sentences commuted 57 As President 1801 1809 editIn 1800 Jefferson was elected as President of the United States over John Adams He won more electoral votes than Adams aided by southern power The Constitution provided for the counting of slaves as three fifths of their total population to be added to a state s total population for purposes of apportionment and the electoral college States with large slave populations therefore gained greater representation even though the number of voting citizens was smaller than that of other states It was due only to this population advantage that Jefferson won the election 58 59 Moved slaves to White House edit Jefferson brought slaves from Monticello to work at the White House a He brought Edith Hern Fossett and Fanny Hern to Washington D C in 1802 and they learned to cook French cuisine at the President s House by Honore Julien Edith was 15 years old and Fanny was 18 63 64 Margaret Bayard Smith remarked of the French fare The excellence and superior skill of his Jefferson s French cook was acknowledged by all who frequented his table for never before had such dinners been given in the President s House 65 Edith and Fanny were the only slaves from Monticello to regularly live in Washington 66 They did not receive a wage but earned a two dollar gratuity each month 63 They worked in Washington for nearly seven years and Edith gave birth to three children while at the President s House James Maria and a child who did not survive to adulthood Fanny had one child there Their children were kept with them at the President s House 65 Haitian independence edit Further information Haitian Revolution nbsp Jefferson feared a violent slave revolt that was taking place in Haiti could spread into the United States After Toussaint Louverture had become governor general of Saint Domingue following a slave revolt in 1801 Jefferson supported French plans to take back the island 67 He agreed to loan France 300 000 6 46 million in 2022 for relief of whites on the island 68 Jefferson wanted to alleviate the fears of southern slave owners who feared a similar rebellion in their territory 69 Prior to his election Jefferson wrote of the revolution If something is not done and soon we shall be the murderers of our own children 68 By 1802 when Jefferson learned that France was planning to re establish its empire in the western hemisphere including taking the Louisiana territory and New Orleans from the Spanish he declared the neutrality of the US in the Caribbean conflict 70 While refusing credit or other assistance to the French he allowed contraband goods and arms to reach Haiti and thus indirectly supported the Haitian Revolution 70 This was to further US interests in Louisiana 68 That year and once the Haitians declared independence in 1804 President Jefferson had to deal with strong hostility to the new nation by his southern dominated Congress He shared planters fears that the success of Haiti would encourage similar slave rebellions and widespread violence in the South Historian Tim Matthewson noted that Jefferson faced a Congress hostile to Haiti and that he acquiesced in southern policy the embargo of trade and nonrecognition the defense of slavery internally and the denigration of Haiti abroad 71 Jefferson discouraged emigration by American free blacks to the new nation 68 European nations also refused to recognize Haiti when the new nation declared independence in 1804 72 73 74 In his short biography of Jefferson in 2005 Christopher Hitchens noted the president was counterrevolutionary in his treatment of Haiti and its revolution 75 Jefferson expressed ambivalence about Haiti During his presidency he thought sending free blacks and contentious slaves to Haiti might be a solution to some of the United States problems He hoped that Haiti would eventually demonstrate the viability of black self government and the industriousness of African American work habits thereby justifying freeing and deporting the slaves to that island 76 This was one of his solutions for separating the populations In 1824 book peddler Samuel Whitcomb Jr visited Jefferson in Monticello and they happened to talk about Haiti This was on the eve of the greatest emigration of U S Blacks to the island nation Jefferson told Whitcomb that he had never seen Blacks do well in governing themselves and thought they would not do it without the help of Whites 77 Virginia emancipation law modified edit In 1806 with concern developing over the rise in the number of free black people the Virginia General Assembly modified the 1782 slave law to discourage free black people from living in the state It permitted re enslavement of freedmen who remained in the state for more than 12 months This forced newly freed black people to leave enslaved kin behind As slaveholders had to petition the legislature directly to gain permission for manumitted freedmen to stay in the state there was a decline in manumissions after this date 78 79 Ended international slave trade edit nbsp Jefferson banned the international slave trade on March 2 1807 In 1808 Jefferson denounced the international slave trade and called for a law to make it a crime He told Congress in his 1806 annual message such a law was needed to withdraw the citizens of the United States from all further participation in those violations of human rights which the morality the reputation and the best interests of our country have long been eager to proscribe Congress complied and on March 2 1807 Jefferson signed the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves into law it took effect 1 January 1808 and made it a federal crime to import or export slaves from abroad 80 81 By 1808 every state but South Carolina had followed Virginia s lead from the 1780s in banning importation of slaves By 1808 with the growth of the domestic slave population enabling development of a large internal slave trade slaveholders did not mount much resistance to the new law presumably because the authority of Congress to enact such legislation was expressly authorized by the Constitution 82 and was fully anticipated during the Constitutional Convention in 1787 The end of international trade also increased the monetary value of existing slaves Jefferson did not lead the campaign to prohibit the importation of slaves 83 Historian John Chester Miller rated Jefferson s two major presidential achievements as the Louisiana Purchase and the abolition of the international slave trade 84 Retirement 1810 1826 editIn 1819 Jefferson strongly opposed a Missouri statehood application amendment that banned domestic slave importation and freed slaves at the age of 25 believing it would destroy or break up the union 85 By 1820 Jefferson objected to what he viewed as Northern meddling with Southern slavery policy On April 22 Jefferson criticized the Missouri Compromise because it might lead to the breakup of the Union Jefferson said slavery was a complex issue and needed to be solved by the next generation Jefferson wrote that the Missouri Compromise was a fire bell in the night and the knell of the Union Jefferson said that he feared the Union would dissolve stating that the Missouri question aroused and filled me with alarm In regard to whether the Union would remain for a long period of time Jefferson wrote I now doubt it much 86 87 In 1823 in a letter to Supreme Court Justice William Johnson Jefferson wrote this case is not dead it only sleepeth the Indian chief said he did not go to war for every petty injury by itself but put it into his pouch and when that was full he then made war 88 nbsp Tadeusz KosciuszkoIn 1798 Jefferson s friend from the Revolution Tadeusz Kosciuszko a Polish nobleman and revolutionary visited the United States to collect back pay from the government for his military service He entrusted his assets to Jefferson with a will directing him to spend the American money and proceeds from his land in the U S to free and educate slaves including Jefferson s and at no cost to Jefferson Kosciuszko revised will states I hereby authorise my friend Thomas Jefferson to employ the whole thereof in purchasing Negroes from among his own or any others and giving them Liberty in my name Kosciuszko died in 1817 but Jefferson never carried out the terms of the will At age 77 he pleaded an inability to act as executor due to his advanced age 89 and the numerous legal complexities of the bequest the will was contested by several family members and was tied up in the courts for years long after Jefferson s death 90 Jefferson recommended his friend John Hartwell Cocke who also opposed slavery as executor but Cocke likewise declined to execute the bequest 91 In 1852 the U S Supreme Court awarded the estate by then worth 50 000 to Kosciuszko s heirs in Poland having ruled that the will was invalid 92 Jefferson continued to struggle with debt after serving as president He used some of his hundreds of slaves as collateral to his creditors This debt was due to his lavish lifestyle long construction and changes to Monticello imported goods art and lifelong issues with debt from inheriting the debt of father in law John Wayles to signing two 10 000 notes late in life to assist dear friend Wilson Cary Nicholas which proved to be his coup de grace Yet he was merely one of numerous others who suffered crippling debt around 1820 He also incurred debt in helping support his only surviving daughter Martha Jefferson Randolph and her large family She had separated from her husband who had become abusive from alcoholism and mental illness according to different sources and brought her family to live at Monticello 93 In August 1814 the planter Edward Coles and Jefferson corresponded about Coles ideas on emancipation Jefferson urged Coles not to free his slaves but the younger man took all his slaves to the Illinois and freed them providing them with land for farms 94 95 In April 1820 Jefferson wrote to John Holmes giving his thoughts on the Missouri compromise Concerning slavery he said there is not a man on earth who would sacrifice more than I would to relieve us from this heavy reproach slavery we have the wolf by the ear and we can neither hold him nor safely let him go Justice is in one scale and self preservation in the other 96 97 Jefferson may have borrowed from Suetonius a Roman biographer the phrase wolf by the ears as he held a book of his works Jefferson characterized slavery as a dangerous animal the wolf that could not be contained or freed He believed that attempts to end slavery would lead to violence 98 Jefferson concluded the letter lamenting I regret that I am now to die in the belief that the useless sacrifice of themselves by the generation of 76 to acquire self government and happiness to their country is to be thrown away by the unwise and unworthy passions of their sons and that my only consolation is to be that I live not to weep over it Following the Missouri Compromise Jefferson largely withdrew from politics and public life writing with one foot in the grave I have no right to meddle with these things 88 In 1821 Jefferson wrote in his autobiography that he felt slavery would inevitably come to an end though he also felt there was no hope for racial equality in America stating Nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate than that these people negros are to be free Nor is it less certain that the two races equally free cannot live in the same government Nature habit opinion has drawn indelible lines of distinction between them It is still in our power to direct the process of emancipation and deportation peaceably and in such slow degrees as that the evil will wear off insensibly and their places be pari passu filled up by free white laborers If on the contrary it is left to force itself on human nature must shudder at the prospect held up 99 The U S Congress finally implemented colonization of freed African American slaves by passing the Slave Trade Act of 1819 signed into law by President James Monroe The law authorized funding to colonize the coast of Africa with freed African American slaves In 1824 Jefferson proposed an overall emancipation plan that would free slaves born after a certain date 100 Jefferson proposed that African American children born in America be bought by the federal government for 12 50 and that these slaves be sent to Santo Domingo 100 Jefferson admitted that his plan would be liberal and may even be unconstitutional but he suggested a constitutional amendment to allow congress to buy slaves He also realized that separating children from slaves would have a humanitarian cost Jefferson believed that his overall plan was worth implementing and that setting over a million slaves free was worth the financial and emotional costs 100 Posthumous 1827 1830 editAt his death Jefferson was greatly in debt in part due to his continued construction program 101 The debts encumbered his estate and his family sold 130 slaves virtually all the members of every slave family from Monticello to pay his creditors 102 103 104 105 106 Slave families who had been well established and stable for decades were sometimes split up Most of the sold slaves either remained in Virginia or were relocated to Ohio 107 Jefferson freed five slaves in his will all males of the Hemings family Those were his two natural sons and Sally s younger half brother John Hemings and her nephews Joseph Joe Fossett and Burwell Colbert 108 109 He gave Burwell Colbert who had served as his butler and valet 300 for purchasing supplies used in the trade of painter and glazier He gave John Hemings and Joe Fossett each an acre on his land so they could build homes for their families His will included a petition to the state legislature to allow the freedmen to remain in Virginia to be with their families who remained enslaved under Jefferson s heirs 108 Jefferson freed Joseph Fossett in his will but Fossett s wife Edith Hern Fossett and their eight children were sold at auction Fossett was able to get enough money to buy the freedom of his wife and two youngest children The remainder of their ten children were sold to different slaveholders The Fossetts worked for 23 years to purchase the freedom of their remaining children 110 Born and reared as free not knowing that I was a slave then suddenly at the death of Jefferson put upon an auction block and sold to strangers Peter Fossett 111 In 1827 the auction of 130 slaves took place at Monticello The sale lasted for five days despite the cold weather The slaves brought prices over 70 of their appraised value Within three years all of the black families at Monticello had been sold and dispersed 112 Sally Hemings and her children editMain article Jefferson Hemings controversy For two centuries the claim that Thomas Jefferson fathered children by his slave Sally Hemings has been a matter of discussion and disagreement In 1802 the journalist James T Callender after being denied a position as postmaster by Jefferson published allegations that Jefferson had taken Hemings as a concubine and had fathered several children with her 113 John Wayles held her as a slave and was also her father as well as the father of Jefferson s wife Martha Sally was three quarters white and strikingly similar in looks and voice to Jefferson s late wife 114 In 1998 in order to establish the male DNA line a panel of researchers conducted a Y DNA study of living descendants of Jefferson s uncle Field and of a descendant of Sally s son Eston Hemings The results published in the journal Nature 115 showed a Y DNA match with the male Jefferson line In 2000 the Thomas Jefferson Foundation TJF assembled a team of historians whose report concluded that together with the DNA and historic evidence there was a high probability that Jefferson was the father of Eston and likely of all Hemings children W M Wallenborn who worked on the Monticello report disagreed claiming the committee had already made up their minds before evaluating the evidence was a rush to judgement and that the claims of Jefferson s paternity were unsubstantiated and politically driven 116 Since the DNA tests were made public most biographers and historians have concluded that the widower Jefferson had a long term relationship with Hemings 117 and fathered at least some and probably all of her children 118 119 A minority of scholars including a team of professors associated with the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society maintain that the evidence is insufficient to conclude Thomas Jefferson s paternity and note the possibility that other Jeffersons including Thomas s brother Randolph Jefferson and his five sons who were alleged to have raped enslaved women could have fathered Hemings children 120 121 Jefferson allowed two of Sally s children to leave Monticello without formal manumission when they came of age five other slaves including the two remaining sons of Sally were freed by his will upon his death Although not legally freed Sally left Monticello with her sons They were counted as free whites in the 1830 census 122 123 Madison Hemings in an article titled Life Among the Lowly in small Ohio newspaper called Pike County Republican claimed that Jefferson was his father 124 125 Monticello slave life edit nbsp Isaac Jefferson 1845 was a slave blacksmith at Monticello Jefferson ran every facet of the four Monticello farms and left specific instructions to his overseers when away or traveling Slaves in the mansion mill and nailery reported to one general overseer appointed by Jefferson and he hired many overseers some of whom were considered cruel at the time Jefferson made meticulous periodical records on his slaves plants and animals and weather 126 127 Jefferson in his Farm Book journal visually described in detail both the quality and quantity of purchased slave clothing and the names of all slaves who received the clothing 128 In a letter written in 1811 Jefferson described his stress and apprehension in regard to difficulties in what he felt was his duty to procure specific desirable blankets for those poor creatures his slaves 129 Some historians have noted that Jefferson maintained many slave families together on his plantations historian Bruce Fehn says this was consistent with other slave owners at the time There were often more than one generation of family at the plantation and families were stable Jefferson and other slaveholders shifted the cost of reproducing the workforce to the workers themselves He could increase the value of his property without having to buy additional slaves 130 He tried to reduce infant mortality and wrote A woman who brings a child every two years is more profitable than the best man on the farm 131 Jefferson encouraged the enslaved at Monticello to marry The enslaved could not marry legally in Virginia He would occasionally buy and sell slaves to keep families together In 1815 he said that his slaves were worth a great deal more due to their marriages 132 page needed Married slaves however had no legal protection or recognition under the law masters could separate slave husbands and wives at will 133 Thomas Jefferson recorded his strategy for employing children in his Farm Book Until the age of 10 children served as nurses When the plantation grew tobacco children were at a good height to remove and kill tobacco worms from the crops 134 Once he began growing wheat fewer people were needed to maintain the crops so Jefferson established manual trades He stated that children go into the ground or learn trades When girls were 16 they began spinning and weaving textiles Boys made nails from age 10 to 16 In 1794 Jefferson had a dozen boys working at the nailery 134 b The nail factory was on Mulberry Row After it opened in 1794 for the first three years Jefferson recorded the productivity of each child He selected those who were most productive to be trained as artisans blacksmiths carpenters and coopers Those who performed the worst were assigned as field laborers 136 While working at the nailery boys received more food and may have received new clothes if they did a good job 134 James Hubbard was an enslaved worker in the nailery who ran away on two occasions The first time Jefferson did not have him whipped but on the second Jefferson reportedly ordered him severely flogged Hubbard was likely sold after spending time in jail Stanton says children suffered physical violence When a 17 year old James was sick one overseer reportedly whipped him three times in one day Violence was commonplace on plantations including Jefferson s 137 Henry Wiencek cited within a Smithsonian Magazine article several reports of Jefferson ordering the whipping or selling of slaves as punishments for extreme misbehavior or escape 138 The Thomas Jefferson Foundation quotes Jefferson s instructions to his overseers not to whip his slaves but noted that they often ignored his wishes during his frequent absences from home 139 According to Stanton no reliable document portrays Jefferson as directly using physical correction 140 During Jefferson s time some other slaveholders also disagreed with the practices of flogging and jailing slaves 141 Slaves had a variety of tasks Davy Bowles was the carriage driver including trips to take Jefferson to and from Washington D C or the Virginia capital Betty Hemings a mixed race slave inherited from his father in law with her family was the matriarch and head of the house slaves at Monticello who were allowed limited freedom when Jefferson was away Four of her daughters served as house slaves Betty Brown Nance Critta and Sally Hemings The latter two were half sisters to Jefferson s wife and Sally bore him 6 children Another house slave was Ursula Granger whom he had purchased separately The general maintenance of the mansion was under the care of Hemings family members as well the master carpenter was Betty s son John Hemings His nephews Joe Fossett as blacksmith and Burwell Colbert as Jefferson s butler and painter also had important roles Wormley Hughes a grandson of Betty Hemings and gardener was given informal freedom after Jefferson s death 126 Memoirs of life at Monticello include those of Isaac Jefferson published 1843 Madison Hemings and Israel Jefferson both published 1873 Isaac was an enslaved blacksmith who worked on Jefferson s plantation 142 143 The last surviving recorded interview of a former slave was with Fountain Hughes then 101 in Baltimore Maryland in 1949 It is available online at the Library of Congress and the World Digital Library 144 Born in Charlottesville Fountain was a descendant of Wormley Hughes and Ursula Granger his grandparents were among the house slaves owned by Jefferson at Monticello 145 Notes on the State of Virginia 1785 editMain article Notes on the State of Virginia In 1780 Jefferson began answering questions on the colonies asked by French minister Francois de Marboias He worked on what became a book for five years having it printed in France while he was there as U S minister in 1785 146 The book covered subjects such as mountains religion climate slavery and race 147 Views on race editIn Query XIV of his Notes Jefferson analyses the nature of Blacks He stated that Blacks lacked forethought intelligence tenderness grief imagination and beauty that they had poor taste smelled bad and were incapable of producing artistry or poetry but conceded that they were the moral equals of all others 148 149 Jefferson believed that the bonds of love for blacks were weaker than those for whites 150 Jefferson never settled on whether differences were natural or nurtural but he stated unquestionably that his views ought to be taken cum grano salis The opinion that they are inferior in the faculties of reason and imagination must be hazarded with great diffidence To justify a general conclusion requires many observations even where the subject may be submitted to the Anatomical knife to Optical glasses to analysis by fire or by solvents How much more then where it is a faculty not a substance we are examining where it eludes the research of all the senses where the conditions of its existence are various and variously combined where the effects of those which are present or absent bid defiance to calculation let me add too as a circumstance of great tenderness where our conclusion would degrade a whole race of men from the rank in the scale of beings which their Creator may perhaps have given them To our reproach it must be said that though for a century and a half we have had under our eyes the races of black and of red men they have never yet been viewed by us as subjects of natural history I advance it therefore as a suspicion only that the blacks whether originally a distinct race or made distinct by time and circumstances are inferior to the whites in the endowments both of body and mind It is not against experience to suppose that different species of the same genus or varieties of the same species may possess different qualifications 148 In 1808 French abolitionist Henri Gregoire sent Jefferson a copy of his book An Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral Faculties and Literature of Negroes In the book Gregoire responded to and challenged Jefferson s arguments of Black inferiority in Notes on the State of Virginia by citing the advanced civilizations Africans had developed as evidence of their intellectual competence 151 152 Jefferson replied to Gregoire that the rights of African Americans should not depend on intelligence and that Black people had respectable intelligence 153 Jefferson wrote of Black people that but whatever be their degree of talent it is no measure of their rights Because Sir Isaac Newton was superior to others in understanding he was not therefore lord of the person or property of others On this subject they are gaining daily in the opinions of nations and hopeful advances are making towards their re establishment on an equal footing with the other colors of the human family 153 154 Dumas Malone Jefferson s biographer explained Jefferson s contemporary views on race as expressed in Notes were the tentative judgements of a kindly and scientifically minded man Merrill Peterson another Jefferson biographer claimed Jefferson s racial bias against African Americans was a product of frivolous and tortuous reasoning and bewildering confusion of principles Peterson called Jefferson s racial views on African Americans folk belief 155 In a reply in The Papers of Thomas Jefferson vol 10 22 June 31 December 1786 ed Julian P Boyd p 20 29 to Jean Nicolas DeMeunier s inquiries concerning the Paris publication of his Notes On The State of Virginia 1785 Jefferson described the Southern slave plantation economy as a species of property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London Virginia certainly owed two millions sterling to Great Britain at the conclusion of the Revolutionary war This is to be ascribed to peculiarities in the tobacco trade The advantages profits made by the British merchants on the tobaccoes consigned to them were so enormous that they spared no means of increasing those consignments A powerful engine for this purpose was the giving good prices and credit to the planter till they got him more immersed in debt than he could pay without selling his lands or slaves They then reduced the prices given for his tobacco so that let his shipments be ever so great and his demand of necessaries ever so economical they never permitted him to clear off his debt These debts had become hereditary from father to son for many generations so that the planters were a species of property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London After the Revolution this subjection of the Southern plantation economy to absentee finance commodities brokers import export merchants and wholesalers continued with the center of finance and trade shifting from London to Manhattan where up until the Civil War banks continued to write mortgages with slaves as collateral and foreclose on plantations in default and operate them in their investors interests as discussed by Philip S Foner 156 Support for colonization plan edit In his Notes Jefferson wrote of a plan he supported in 1779 in the Virginia legislature that would end slavery through the colonization of freed slaves 157 158 This plan was widely popular among the French people in 1785 who lauded Jefferson as a philosopher According to Jefferson this plan required enslaved adults to continue in slavery but their children would be taken from them and trained to have a skill in the arts or sciences These skilled women at age 18 and men at 21 would be emancipated given arms and supplies and sent to colonize a foreign land 157 Jefferson believed that colonization was the practical alternative 159 while freed blacks living in a white American society would lead to a race war It will probably be asked Why not retain and incorporate the blacks into the state and thus save the expense of supplying by importation of white settlers the vacancies they will leave Deep rooted prejudices entertained by the whites ten thousand recollections by the blacks of the injuries they have sustained new provocations the real distinctions which nature has made and many other circumstances will divide us into parties and produce convulsions which will probably never end but in the extermination of the one or the other race 160 Criticism for effects of slavery editIn Notes Jefferson criticized the effects slavery had on both white and African American slave society 161 He writes There must doubtless be an unhappy influence on the manners of our people produced by the existence of slavery among us The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions the most unremitting despotism on the one part and degrading submissions on the other Our children see this and learn to imitate it for man is an imitative animal This quality is the germ of all education in him From his cradle to his grave he is learning to do what he sees others do If a parent could find no motive either in his philanthropy or his self love for restraining the intemperance of passion towards his slave it should always be a sufficient one that his child is present But generally it is not sufficient The parent storms the child looks on catches the lineaments of wrath puts on the same airs in the circle of smaller slaves gives a loose to his worst of passions and thus nursed educated and daily exercised in tyranny cannot but be stamped by it with odious peculiarities The man must be a prodigy who can retain his manners and morals undepraved by such circumstances And with what execration should the statesman be loaded who permitting one half the citizens thus to trample on the rights of the other transforms those into despots and these into enemies destroys the morals of the one part and the amor patriae of the other Evaluations by historians editAccording to James W Loewen Jefferson s character wrestled with slavery even though in the end he lost Loewen says that understanding Jefferson s relationship with slavery is significant in understanding current American social problems 162 Important 20th century Jefferson biographers including Merrill Peterson support the view that Jefferson was strongly opposed to slavery Peterson said that Jefferson s ownership of slaves all his adult life has placed him at odds with his moral and political principles Yet there can be no question of his genuine hatred of slavery or indeed of the efforts he made to curb and eliminate it 163 Peter Onuf stated that Jefferson was well known for his opposition to slavery most famously expressed in his Notes on the State of Virginia 164 Onuf and his collaborator Ari Helo inferred from Jefferson s words and actions that he was against the cohabitation of free blacks and whites 165 This they argued is what made immediate emancipation so problematic in Jefferson s mind As Onuf and Helo explained Jefferson opposed the mixing of the races not because of his belief that blacks were inferior although he did provisionally believe this but because he feared that instantly freeing the slaves in white territory would trigger genocidal violence He could not imagine the blacks living in harmony with their former oppressors Jefferson was sure that the two races would be in constant conflict Onuf and Helo asserted that Jefferson was consequently a proponent of freeing the Africans through expulsion which he thought would have ensured the safety of both the whites and blacks Biographer John Ferling said that Thomas Jefferson was zealously committed to slavery s abolition 166 Starting in the early 1960s some academics began to challenge Jefferson s position as an anti slavery advocate having reevaluated both his actions and his words 167 168 Paul Finkelman wrote in 1994 that earlier scholars particularly Peterson Dumas Malone and Willard Randall engaged in exaggeration or misrepresentation to advance their argument of Jefferson s anti slavery position saying they ignore contrary evidence and paint a false picture to protect Jefferson s image on slavery 169 In 2012 author Henry Wiencek highly critical of Jefferson concluded that Jefferson tried to protect his legacy as a Founding Father by hiding slavery from visitors at Monticello and through his writings to abolitionists 170 According to Wiencek s view Jefferson made a new frontage road to his Monticello estate to hide the overseers and slaves who worked the agriculture fields Wiencek believed that Jefferson s soft answers to abolitionists were to make himself appear opposed to slavery 170 Wiencek stated that Jefferson held enormous political power but did nothing to hasten slavery s end during his terms as a diplomat secretary of state vice president and twice elected president or after his presidency 170 According to Greg Warnusz Jefferson held typical 19th century beliefs that blacks were inferior to whites in terms of potential for citizenship and he wanted them recolonized to independent Liberia and other colonies His views of a democratic society were based on a homogeneity of white working men He claimed to be interested in helping both races in his proposal He proposed gradually freeing slaves after the age of 45 when they would have repaid their owner s investment and resettling them in Africa This proposal did not acknowledge how difficult it would be for freedmen to be settled in another country and environment after age 45 Jefferson s plan envisioned a whites only society without any blacks 25 Concerning Jefferson and race author Annette Gordon Reed stated the following Of all the Founding Fathers it was Thomas Jefferson for whom the issue of race loomed largest In the roles of slaveholder public official and family man the relationship between blacks and whites was something he thought about wrote about and grappled with from his cradle to his grave 171 Paul Finkelman claims that Jefferson believed that Blacks lacked basic human emotions 172 According to historian Jeremy J Tewell although Jefferson s name had been associated with the anti slavery cause during the early 1770s in the Virginia legislature Jefferson viewed slavery as a Southern way of life similar to mainstream Greek and antiquity societies In agreement with the Southern slave society Tewell says Jefferson believed that slavery served to protect blacks whom he viewed as inferior or incapable of taking care of themselves 173 According to Joyce Appleby Jefferson had opportunities to disassociate himself from slavery In 1782 after the American Revolution Virginia passed a law making manumission by the slave owner legal and more easily accomplished and the manumission rate rose across the Upper South in other states as well Northern states passed various emancipation plans Jefferson s actions did not keep up with those of the antislavery advocates 158 On September 15 1793 Jefferson agreed in writing to free James Hemings his mixed race slave who had served him as chef since their time in Paris after the slave had trained his younger brother Peter as a replacement chef Jefferson finally freed James Hemings in February 1796 According to one historian Jefferson s manumission was not generous he said the document undermines any notion of benevolence 174 With freedom Hemings worked in Philadelphia and traveled to France 175 In contrast a sufficient number of other slaveholders in Virginia freed slaves in the first two decades after the Revolution so that the proportion of free blacks in Virginia compared to the total black population rose from less than 1 in 1790 to 7 2 in 1810 176 See also editList of presidents of the United States who owned slaves Memorial to Enslaved Laborers People from Monticello including enslaved people with the surnames Colbert Fossett Hemings and Jefferson Thomas Jefferson and Native AmericansNotes edit He offered James Hemings his former slave freed in 1796 the position of White House chef Hemings refused although his kin were still held at Monticello Hemings later became depressed and turned to drinking He committed suicide at age 36 perhaps in a fit of inebriation 60 61 62 Jefferson s nail factory was in competition with the Virginia State Penitentiary and Catharine Flood McCall s Alexandria blacksmith shop and nail factory the latter of which was staffed by enslaved and free laborers The Penitentiary staffed by inmates became profitable in 1807 from prisoner made nails and other products By 1815 it undercut McCall s and Jefferson s businesses both of which ultimately closed down 135 References edit Sloan offset 1995 Principle and Interest Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Debt p 14 Howe Daniel W 1997 Making the American Self Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln p 74 William Cohen Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Slavery Journal of American History 56 no 3 1969 503 26 p 510 Jackson Fossett Dr Judith June 27 2004 Forum Thomas Jefferson Time Archived from the original on July 6 2004 Retrieved December 4 2010 John B Boles Thomas Jefferson Architect of American Liberty pp 117 2017 Ira Berlin Many Thousands Gone The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 1998 pp 7 13 a b c Thomas Jefferson edited by David Waldstreicher Notes on the State of Virginia pp 214 2002 Malone TJ 1 114 437 39 McLoughlin Jefferson and Monticello 34 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 Halliday 2001 Understanding Thomas Jefferson pp 141 42 a b Indentured Servants Monticello accessed 25 March 2011 John Wayles Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia Monticello accessed 10 March 2011 Sources cited on page Madison Hemings Life Among the Lowly Pike County Republican March 13 1873 Letter of December 20 1802 from Thomas Gibbons a Federalist planter of Georgia to Jonathan Dayton states that Sally Hemings is half sister to his Jefferson s first wife Halliday 2001 Understanding Thomas Jefferson p 143 Mulberry Row Slavery at Monticello Archived from the original on 2012 05 04 Retrieved 2012 04 06 Avalon Project Summary View of the Rights of British America Russell David Lee 2000 11 01 David Lee Russell The American Revolution in the Southern Colonies 2000 pp 63 69 McFarland ISBN 9780786407835 Retrieved 2012 02 19 John Hope Franklin Rebels Runaways and Heroes The Bitter Years of Slavery Life November 22 1968 Becker 1922 Declaration of Independence p 5 The Spirit of the Revolution John Fitzpatrick 1924 p 6 1776 the Deleted Passage of the Declaration of Independence 10 August 2009 a b Forret 2012 p 7 Thomas Jefferson The Papers of Thomas Jefferson 1 1760 1776 ed Julian P Boyd Princeton Princeton U Press 1950 417 18 a b Greg Warnusz Summer 1990 This Execrable Commerce Thomas Jefferson and Slavery Retrieved 2009 08 18 4 December 1818 letter to Robert Walsh in Saul K Padover ed A Jefferson Profile As Revealed in His Letters New York 1956 300 John Chester Miller The Wolf by the Ears Thomas Jefferson and Slavery New York Free Press 1977 8 Finkleman 2008 379 Richardson William D Thomas Jefferson amp Race The Declaration amp Notes on the State of Virginia Polity vol 16 no 3 1984 pp 447 466 Jefferson and Slavery Historians report in all likelihood Jefferson composed the law although the evidence is not conclusive John E Selby and Don Higginbotham The Revolution in Virginia 1775 1783 2007 p 158 October 1778 ACT I An act for preventing the farther importation of Slaves Retrieved 2009 07 24 Dubois 14 Ballagh A History of Slavery in Virginia 23 John Chester Miller The Wolf by the Ears Thomas Jefferson and Slavery New York Free Press 1977 p 24 American Spirit Magazine Daughters of the American Revolution January February 2009 p 4 Stanton 2000 pp 56 57 Places Elkhill Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia Monticello accessed 10 January 2012 Paul Finkelman Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery The Myth Goes On Virginia Magazine of History amp Biography 1994 May 1782 ACT XXI An act to authorize the manumission of slaves Retrieved 2009 07 23 An ACT to amend the several laws concerning slaves 1806 Virginia General Assembly Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1865 New York Hill and Wang pp 73 77 81 a b Finkelman 1994 pp 210 11 Benjamin Quarles The Negro in the American Revolution Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1961 p 187 a b c d e Rodriguez Junius P 1997 The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery Volume 1 Volume 7 Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO Inc p 380 a b William Merkel Jefferson s Failed Anti Slavery Proviso of 1784 and the Nascence of Free Soil Constitutionalism Seton Hall Law Review Vol 38 No 2 2008 The Thomas Jefferson Timeline 1743 1827 Retrieved December 8 2010 Resolution on Western Territory Government March 1 1784 Retrieved December 8 2010 Extract from Thomas Jefferson s Observations on Jean Nicolas Demeunier s Article on the United States prepared for the Encyclopedie Methodique 22 June 1786 Quote Jefferson Quotes amp Family Letters Abraham Lincoln s Cooper Union Address Jefferson s notes on Slavery lt 1776 1785 lt Documents lt American History from Revolution to Reconstruction and beyond Onuf Peter S Every Generation Is An Independent Nation Colonization Miscegenation and the Fate of Jefferson s Children William and Mary Quarterly Vol LVII No 1 January 2000 JSTOR accessed 10 January 2012 subscription required Onuf Peter To Declare Them a Free and Independent People Race Slavery and National Identity in Jefferson s Thought Journal of the Early Republic vol 18 no 1 1998 pp 1 46 a b David Brion Davis Was Thomas Jefferson Anti Slavery New York Oxford University Press 1970 p 179 Alfred Hunt Haiti s Influence on Antebellum America p 31 Letter from James Monroe to Thomas Jefferson September 15 1800 Encyclopedia Virginia Letter from Thomas Jefferson to James Monroe September 20 1800 Encyclopedia Virginia Merkel William G 2003 To See Oneself as a Target of a Justified Revolution Thomas Jefferson and Gabriel s Uprising American Nineteenth Century History 4 2 1 31 doi 10 1080 14664650312331294294 S2CID 143290561 SSRN 959676 Finkelman 1994 p 206 Finkelman Paul qtd in Rosin Michael L The Three Fifths Rule and the Presidential Elections of 1800 and 1824 University of St Thomas Law Journal 2018 Vol 15 1 p 161 Retrieved 28 Jul 2021 Finkelman quote Thomas Jefferson s victory in the election of 1800 would be possible only because of the electoral votes the southern states gained on account of their slaves Rosin s article debates the merits of the argument put forth by Finkelman and others including John Adams himself and modern scholars The Thomas Jefferson Timeline 1743 1827 Library of Congress American Memory Project Retrieved December 9 2010 Finkelman Paul April 1994 Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery The Myth Goes On The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 102 2 193 228 JSTOR 4249430 Goodman Amy January 20 2009 Jesse Holland on How Slaves Built the White House and the U S Capitol Democracy Now Retrieved 17 May 2015 a b Edith Hern Fossett www monticello org Retrieved January 19 2020 Rhodes Jesse July 9 2012 Meet Edith and Fanny Thomas Jefferson s Enslaved Master Chefs Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved January 19 2020 a b Mann Lina Slavery and French Cuisine in Jefferson s Working White House The White House Historical Association Retrieved January 19 2020 Gordon Reed Annette Onuf Peter S 2016 04 13 Most Blessed of the Patriarchs Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination W W Norton amp Company pp PT63 ISBN 978 1 63149 078 1 Matthewson 1995 p 214 a b c d Scherr 2011 pp 251 Matthewson 1995 p 211 a b Matthewson 1995 p 221 Matthewson 1996 p 22 Wills Negro President p 43 Finkelman Slavery and the Founders Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson p 121 Shafer Gregory January February 2002 Another Side of Thomas Jefferson The Humanist 62 1 16 Ted Widmer Two Cheers for Jefferson Review of Christopher Hitchens Thomas Jefferson Author of America New York Times 17 July 2005 accessed 19 April 2012 Quote Hitchens gives us a measured sketch that faults Jefferson for his weaknesses but affirms his greatness as a thinker and president To his credit Hitchens does not gloss over Jefferson s dark side There is a dutiful bit on Sally Hemings and some thoughtful ruminations on the Haitian revolution which revealed how counterrevolutionary Jefferson could be Arthur Scherr Light at the End of the Road Thomas Jefferson s Endorsement of Free Haiti in His Final Years Journal of Haitian Studies Spring 2009 p 6 Peden William 1949 A Book Peddler Invades Monticello The William and Mary Quarterly 6 4 631 36 doi 10 2307 1916755 JSTOR 1916755 Dumas Malone Jefferson and His Time Volume Six The Sage of Monticello Boston Little Brown and Company 1981 p 319 Stroud A Sketch of the Laws Relating to Slavery pp 236 37 William Edward Burghardt Du Bois 1904 The Suppression of the African Slave trade to the United States of America 1638 1870 Longmans Green pp 95 96 Jim Powell 2008 Greatest Emancipations How the West Abolished Slavery St Martin s Press p 250 ISBN 9780230612983 U S Const art I s 9 cl 1 Stephen Goldfarb An Inquiry into the Politics of the Prohibition of the International Slave Trade Agricultural History Vol 68 No 2 Special issue Eli Whitney s Cotton Gin 1793 1993 A Symposium Spring 1994 pp 27 31 John Chester Miller The Wolf by the Ears Thomas Jefferson and Slavery 1980 p 142 Ferling 2000 pp 286 294 The Thomas Jefferson Timeline 1743 1827 Retrieved December 11 2010 Missouri Compromise Library of Congress Retrieved December 11 2010 a b Part 2 Wolf by the ear Jefferson and the Missouri Crisis Thomas Jefferson s Monticello Archived from the original on 2020 06 05 Retrieved 2020 06 05 Storozynski 2009 p 280 Nash Hodges Russell 2012 p 218 Storozynski 2009 p 280 Edmund S Morgan Jefferson amp Betrayal New York Review of Books 26 June 2008 accessed 10 March 2012 Holowchak M Andrew 2019 Thomas Jefferson Psychobiography of an American Lion London Brill pp chapter 9 Finkelman Paul April 1994 Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery The Myth Goes On PDF The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 102 2 205 Retrieved 16 June 2011 Twilight at Monticello Crawford 2008 Ch 17 p 101 Thomas Jefferson April 22 1820 Thomas Jefferson to John Holmes Library of Congress Retrieved July 7 2009 Miller John Chester 1977 The Wolf by the Ears Thomas Jefferson and Slavery New York Free Press p 241 Letter April 22 1820 to John Holmes former senator from Maine Wolf by the ears Archived from the original on 2011 02 07 Retrieved 2011 02 17 Quotations on the Jefferson Memorial Thomas Jefferson s Monticello a b c William Cohen December 1969 Thomas Jefferson And The Problem of Slavery Archived 2014 10 14 at the Wayback Machine The Journal of American History Vol 56 No 3 p 23 PDF Viewed on 10 08 2014 ArchitectureWeek The Orders 01 Retrieved 2009 07 20 Peter Onuf Thomas Jefferson 1743 1826 Archived from the original on 2011 08 31 Retrieved 2011 09 15 Stanton 1993 p 1 Herbert E Sloan Principle and Interest Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Debt 2001 pp 14 26 220 21 Paul Finkelman Slavery and the Founders Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson 978 0765604392 Finkelman Paul 1994 Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 102 2 African American families of monticello Thomas Jefferson Foundation Retrieved September 28 2014 a b Last Will and Testament March 17 1826 Retrieved 2010 11 15 Slavery at Jefferson s Monticello After Monticello Archived 2012 04 11 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian NMAAHC Monticello January October 2012 accessed 5 April 2012 The 1827 Slave Auction at Monticello www monticello org Retrieved 2021 06 05 Joseph Fossett www monticello org Retrieved January 20 2020 Stanton 1993 p 147 Hyland 2009 pp ix 2 3 Meacham 2012 p 55 Hyland 2009 p 4 Hyland 2009 pp 76 119 Helen F M Leary National Genealogical Society Quarterly Vol 89 No 3 September 2001 pp 207 214 18 Jefferson s Blood PBS Frontline 2000 Section Is It True Quote T he new scientific evidence has been correlated with the existing documentary record and a consensus of historians and other experts who have examined the issue agree that the question has largely been answered Thomas Jefferson fathered at least one of Sally Hemings children and quite probably all six accessed 26 September 2014 Slavery at Jefferson s Monticello Paradox of Liberty Archived 2017 03 14 at the Wayback Machine Exhibit 27 January 14 October 2012 Smithsonian Institution accessed 15 March 2012 The Scholars Commission on Jefferson Hemings Issue Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society 2001 Archived from the original on 2015 09 15 Hyland 2009 pp 30 31 Paul Finkelman 1981 pp 37 38 41 45 Gordon Reed 1997 p 209 Life Among the Lowly Reminiscences of Madison Hemings Ohio Memory Collection www ohiomemory org Retrieved 2017 04 13 Pike County Republican Retrieved 2017 04 13 a b Wilstach 1925 Jefferson and Monticello pp 124 128 Malone 2002 Jefferson A Reference Biography p 13 Monticello org 1999 Slave Clothing Jefferson and Slavery Manuscript Original Manuscripts and Primary Sources Shapell Manuscript Foundation permanent dead link Fehn Bruce Winter 2000 The Early Republic Thomas Jefferson and Slave Teaching an American Paradox OAH Magazine of History 14 2 24 28 doi 10 1093 maghis 14 2 24 JSTOR 25163342 Ira Berlin Many Thousands Gone The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America 1998 pp 126 27 Halliday Washington Reginald Spring 2005 Sealing the Sacred Bonds of Holy Matrimony Freedmen s Bureau Marriage Records Prologue Magazine 7 1 Retrieved 2011 02 15 a b c The Dark Side of Thomas Jefferson Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 2021 05 09 Garrett Alexi 4 June 2020 Jefferson s Competition in the Nail Selling Business Mount Vernon and the University of Virginia at Charlottesville Retrieved 2021 10 19 Stanton 1993 pp 153 55 Stanton 1993 p 159 Wiencek Henry October 2012 The Dark Side of Thomas Jefferson A new portrait of the founding father challenges the long held perception of Thomas Jefferson as a benevolent slaveholder Smithsonian Magazine Smithsonian com Retrieved 21 March 2017 National Museum of African American History and Culture in Partnership with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello Life at the Monticello Plantation Treatment Slavery at Jefferson s Monticello Paradox of Liberty Exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture January 27 October 14 2012 Charlottesville Virginia Monticello org Archived from the original on March 11 2012 Retrieved 2012 02 11 Stating that it was his first wish that his slaves be well treated Jefferson struggled to balance humane treatment with a need for profit He tried to minimize the then common use of harsh physical punishment and used financial incentives rather than force to encourage his artisans He instructed his overseers not to whip slaves but his wishes were often ignored during his frequent absences from home Stanton 1993 p 158 Kolchin 1987 Unfree Labor American Slavery and Russian Serfdom p 292 Wilstach 1925 Jefferson and Monticello p 130 Isaac Jefferson Memoirs of a Monticello Slave 1951 reprint Ford Press 2007 Gordon Reed Annette 1999 Annette Gordon Reed Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings An American Controversy 1997 p 142 University of Virginia Press ISBN 9780813918334 Retrieved 2012 02 19 Interview with Fountain Hughes Baltimore Maryland June 11 1949 American Folklife Center Library of Congress World Digital Library accessed 26 May 2013 Hughes Hemings Getting Word Monticello Foundation accessed 26 May 2013 Wilson Douglas L 2004 The Evolution of Jefferson s Notes on the State of Virginia Contributors The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 112 2 98 Jefferson Thomas 1955 William Peden ed Notes on the State of Virginia Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press pp 139 42 162 ISBN 0 7391 1792 0 a b Jefferson Thomas Query XIV Notes on Virginia Gossett Thomas F Race The History of an Idea in America OUP 1963 1997 p 42 Jefferson Thomas 1955 William Peden ed Notes on the State of Virginia Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press pp 139 42 ISBN 0 7391 1792 0 Abbe Gregoire Digital Collections South Carolina State University Donatus Nwoga Humanitarianism and the Criticism of African Literature 1770 1810 Research in African Literatures Vol 3 No 2 Autumn 1972 pp 171 a b Jefferson February 25 1809 Letter of February 25 1809 from Thomas Jefferson to French author Monsieur Gregoire from The Writings of Thomas Jefferson H A Worthington ed Volume V p 429 Citation and quote from Morris Kominsky The Hoaxers pp 110 11 Halliday 2001 Understanding Thomas Jefferson pp 175 176 Philip S Foner Business amp Slavery The New York Merchants amp the Irrepressible Conflict University of North Carolina 1941 p 3 6 a b Weincek 2012 Master of the Mountain Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves pp 53 54 a b Joyce Oldham Appleby and Arthur Meier Schlesinger Thomas Jefferson pp 77 78 2003 Weincek 2012 Master of the Mountain Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves p 54 Jefferson on Slavery lt Thomas Jefferson lt Presidents lt American History From Revolution To Reconstruction and beyond www let rug nl Rutgers University Retrieved 16 January 2023 Jefferson Thomas 1785 Notes on the State of Virginia Prischard and Hall pp 172 173 Loewen James W 2007 10 16 Lies Across America What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong Simon amp Schuster pp 311 312 ISBN 978 0 7432 9629 8 Retrieved 2010 03 25 Merrill D Peterson Jefferson Thomas American National Biography Online 2000 Peter Onuf Jefferson Thomas in Macmillan Encyclopedia of World Slavery 1998 vol 1 p 446 Helo Ari and Peter S Onuf Jefferson Morality and the Problem of Slavery In The Mind of Thomas Jefferson edited by Peter S Onuf pp 236 70 Charlottesville University Press of Virginia 2007 Ferling 2000 Setting the World Ablaze p 161 Robert McColley Slavery and Jeffersonian Virginia Urbana 1964 p 124 William Cohen Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Slavery in The Journal of American History volume 56 No 3 Dec 1969 p 505 Paul Finkelman Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery The Myth Goes On The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography Vol 102 No 2 April 1994 pp 199 201 a b c Wiencek 2012 Master of the Mountain Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves pp 267 68 Annette Gordon Reed Thomas Jefferson Was the Sage a Hypocrite cover story TIME 4 July 2004 accessed 23 February 2012 Finkelman Paul 2012 12 01 The Monster of Monticello The New York Times p A25 Archived from the original on 2012 12 04 Retrieved 2012 12 02 Destroying families didn t bother Jefferson because he believed blacks lacked basic human emotions Tewell Summer 2011 p 235 Finkleman 1994 Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery pp 193 The Thomas Jefferson Timeline 1743 1827 Retrieved December 9 2010 Finkleman 1994 Thomas Jefferson and Antislavery pp 193 Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1865 p 81Bibliography editMain article Bibliography of Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson Papers 1606 to 1827 Library of Congress Appleby Joyce Thomas Jefferson 2003 Bernstein R B Thomas Jefferson 2003 Burstein Andrew Jefferson s Secrets Death and Desire at Monticello 2005 Cunningham Noble E In Pursuit of Reason 1988 Crawford Alan Pell Twilight at Monticello 2 Random House New York 2008 Ellis Joseph J American Sphinx The Character of Thomas Jefferson 1996 Finkelman Paul Slavery and the Founders Race and Liberty in the Age of Jefferson 2001 esp ch 6 7 Forret Jeff 2012 Ballard C Campbell ed Slavery in the United States Infobase Learning ISBN 978 0 8160 8115 8 Gordon Reed Annette 1997 Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings An American Controversy University of Virginia Press ISBN 0 8139 1698 4 Gordon Reed Annette The Hemingses of Monticello An American Family New York W W Norton 2007 Halliday E M 2002 Understanding Thomas Jefferson New York NY Perennial HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 019793 5 Hitchens C E Thomas Jefferson Author of America 2005 Malone Dumas Jefferson and His Time 6 vols 1948 82 Multi volume biography of TJ by leading expert A short version is online Malone Dumas Thomas Jefferson A Reference Biography 1986 2002 Peterson Merrill D ed Onuf Peter S ed 1993 Jeffersonian Legacies The University Press of Virginia ISBN 0 8139 1462 0 Peterson Merrill D 1975 Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation ISBN 0 19 501909 1 Root Erik S All Honor to Jefferson The Virginia Slavery Debates and the Positive Good Thesis Lexington Books 2008 argues Jefferson was committed to a timeless ideal of freedom and equality which was reversed by Virginia after his death Stanton Lucia 1993 Those Who Labor for My Happiness Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves In Onuf Peter S ed Jeffersonian Legacies University Press of Virginia pp 147 80 ISBN 0 8139 1462 0 Stanton Lucia 1996 Slavery at Monticello Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation ISBN 1 882886 02 X Stanton Lucia 2000 Free Some Day The African American Families of Monticello Charlottesville Virginia Thomas Jefferson Foundation ISBN 1 882886 14 3 Storozynski Alex 2009 The Peasant Prince Thaddeus Kosciuszko and the Age of Revolution New York St Martin s Press 352 pages ISBN 978 1 4299 6607 8 BookAcademic journals edit Finkelman Paul Regulating the African slave trade Civil War History 54 4 2008 379 Matthewson Tim Jefferson and Haiti The Journal of Southern History 61 1995 Pasley Jeffrey L Politics and the Misadventures of Thomas Jefferson s Modern Reputation a Review Essay Journal of Southern History 2006 72 4 871 908 ISSN 0022 4642 Fulltext in Ebsco Scherr Arthur Jefferson s Cannibals Revisited A Closer Look at His Notorious Phrase Journal of Southern History 77 2 2011 251 Tewell Jeremy J Assuring Freedom to the Free Jefferson s Declaration and the Conflict over Slavery Civil War History Mar 2012 58 1 pp 75 96 Primary edit To Henri Gregoire Washington February 25 1809 University of Groningen 2012 External links editThomas Jefferson Foundation Monticello website Thomas Jefferson Digital Archives A Plan of Emancipation Letter from TJ To Jared Sparks Monticello February 4 1824 Electronic Text Center University of Virginia Thomas Jefferson on Politics amp Government National Museum of African American History and Culture in Partnership with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello January 27 October 14 2012 Slavery at Jefferson s Monticello Paradox of Liberty Exhibition Smithsonian Institution National Museum of American History Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on April 13 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Jefferson and slavery amp oldid 1184283072, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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