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{{Short description|Slave of Thomas Jefferson (c. 1773–1835)}} | |||
'''Sally Hemings''' (], ], circa ] or ] – ], ]) was a ] ] owned by ]. It has intermittently been claimed since 1802 that Jefferson was the father of one or more of her children . Her mother, Betty Hemings, daughter of a Captain Hemings and a black slave woman brought from Africa, and other members of her family, were owned by Jefferson's father-in-law, John Wayles, who died in 1773, leaving nearly all of the Hemings to his daughter ], wife of Thomas Jefferson. Most historians believe that Martha and Sally were half-sisters, both fathered by John Wayles. Martha Jefferson died in 1782, leaving Sally to Thomas. | |||
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{{Use American English|date=October 2020}} | |||
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{{Infobox person | |||
| name = Sally Hemings | |||
| image_size = | |||
| caption = Caricature of Hemings by James Akin, c. 1804 | |||
| birth_name = Sarah Hemings | |||
| birth_date = {{circa}} 1773 | |||
| birth_place = ], Virginia, British America | |||
| death_date = {{Death year and age|1835|1773}} | |||
| death_place = ], U.S. | |||
| death_cause = | |||
| resting_place = | |||
| education = | |||
| alma_mater = | |||
| occupation = | |||
| employer = | |||
| known_for = Slave owned by ], alleged mother to his ] | |||
| spouse = | |||
| children = 6, including ], ], ], and ] | |||
| parents = ]<br />] | |||
| relatives = ] | |||
| website = | |||
| signature = | |||
| footnotes = | |||
}} | |||
'''Sarah''' "'''Sally'''" '''Hemings''' ({{circa}} 1773 – 1835) was a woman ] to third ] ], inherited among many others from his father-in-law, ]. | |||
In 1784, Thomas Jefferson took up residence in ] as the American envoy to ]. In 1787, Jefferson sent for his daughter, nine-year-old Maria (Polly) Jefferson, to come live with him. He asked that Isabel, an older woman, be sent as a companion for Polly, but because Isabel was pregnant, the teen-aged Sally Hemings accompanied her instead. Hemings returned to the United States with Jefferson in 1789. She lived the rest of her life at Monticello or in nearby Charlottesville, where she moved after Jefferson's death. According to Jefferson's records, she bore seven children: | |||
Hemings' mother was ],<ref></ref> the ] and an English captain, John Hemings. Sally's father, the owner of Betty, John Wayles, was also the father of Jefferson's wife, ]. Therefore, Sally was half-sister to Jefferson's wife and was of (at least) three quarters English descent, making her a ] according to then-contemporary racial classification. Martha died during her marriage in 1782. In 1787, when she was 14, Sally Hemings accompanied Jefferson's daughter, also named ], to Paris where they joined Thomas Jefferson. There, Sally was a legally free and paid servant as slavery was not legal in France. At some time during her 26 months in Paris, the widower Jefferson is believed to have begun intimate relations with her. | |||
* Harriet Hemings (I) (October 5, 1795 - December 7, 1797) | |||
* Beverly Hemings ''(possibly born William Beverly Hemings)'' (April 1, 1798 - after 1873) | |||
* daughter ''(possibly named Thenia, after Hemings's deceased sister)'' (December 7, 1799 - ca. 1802) | |||
* Harriet Hemings (II) (May 22, 1801 - after 1863) | |||
* ] ''(possibly born James Madison Hemings)'' (January 19, 1805 - 1877) | |||
* Eston Hemings ''(possibly born Thomas Eston Hemings)'' (May 21, 1808 - 1856) | |||
Sally Hemings served as chambermaid at Monticello. As an adult she lived in a room which was accessible to the Monticello mansion through a covered passageway. Hemings was never officially freed, perhaps because the laws at that time required freed slaves to leave the state within a year{{Fact|date=February 2007}}; Jefferson's daughter Martha Randolph is believed to have given Hemings her "time", a form of unofficial freedom{{Fact|date=February 2007}}. | |||
As attested by her son, ], Sally later agreed with Jefferson that she would return to Virginia and resume her life in slavery, as long as all their children would be freed when they came of age. Multiple lines of evidence, including modern ] analyses, indicate that Jefferson impregnated Hemings several times over years while they lived together on Jefferson's ] estate, and historians now broadly agree that he was the father of her six children.<ref name="stockman">{{Cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/16/us/sally-hemings-exhibit-monticello.html |title=Monticello Is Done Avoiding Jefferson's Relationship With Sally Hemings |last=Stockman |first=Farah |date=June 16, 2018 |work=] |access-date=July 15, 2018}}</ref> Whether this should be described as rape remains a matter of controversy by historians, as there is no evidence that Jefferson sexually assaulted her, but due to his near-complete control over her life, and that she was a teenager, between 14 and 16 years, when he was in his 40s, the circumstances for coercion are present.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rothman |first=Joshua D. |title=Notorious in the neighborhood: sex and families across the color line in Virginia, 1787-1861 |date=2003 |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-0-8078-5440-2 |location=Chapel Hill, NC |pages=19–20}}</ref> Four of Hemings' children survived into adulthood and were freed as they came of age during Thomas Jefferson's life or in his will.<ref name="Gordon-Reed 1997 217">{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1997|page=217}}</ref> Hemings died in ], in 1835 in the home of her freed sons.<ref name = monticello>{{cite web |title=Sally Hemings |url= https://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/sally-hemings |department=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=April 29, 2018}}</ref> | |||
Descendants of ] long claimed that he was Sally Hemings' son, and that he had had been fathered by Thomas Jefferson. This claim was conclusively disproved by DNA testing in 1998. However, the same DNA testing strongly indicated that Sally's last child, Eston Hemings, was a male line descendant of Jefferson's paternal grandfather, which means that Eston was fathered by one of 25 patrilineal candidates. | |||
The historical question of whether Jefferson was the father of Hemings' children is the subject of the ]. Following renewed historical analysis in the late 20th century, the ] empaneled a commission of scholars and scientists who worked with a 1998–1999 ] that found a match between the Jefferson male line and a descendant of Hemings' youngest son, ].<ref name="monticelloreport" /><ref></ref> The Foundation's panel concluded that Jefferson fathered Eston and likely her other five children as well.<ref name="Brief" /> A rival society was then founded, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, which commissioned another panel of scholars in 2001 that found that it had not been proven that Thomas Jefferson fathered Sally Hemings' children.<ref name=JHSC>{{cite web |title=The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission |editor-first=Robert F. |editor-last=Turner |publisher=Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society / Carolina Academic Press |url= https://www.tjheritage.org/scholars-commission-pdf |format=] |quote=The question of whether Thomas Jefferson fathered one or more children by his slave Sally Hemings is an issue about which honorable people can and do disagree. After a careful review of all of the evidence, the commission agrees unanimously that the allegation is by no means proven; and we find it regrettable that public confusion about the 1998 DNA testing and other evidence has misled many people. With the exception of one member, whose views are set forth both below and in his more detailed appended dissent, our individual conclusions range from serious skepticism about the charge to a conviction that it is almost certainly false. |orig-year=2001 |date=February 2011}}</ref> In 2018, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation of Monticello announced its plans to have an exhibit titled ''Life of Sally Hemings'', and affirmed that it was treating as a settled issue that Jefferson was the father of her known children.<ref name="settled">{{cite web |url= https://www.monticello.org/thomas-jefferson/jefferson-slavery/thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings-a-brief-account/monticello-affirms-thomas-jefferson-fathered-children-with-sally-hemings/ |title=Monticello Affirms Thomas Jefferson Fathered Children with Sally Hemings |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=August 12, 2019 |date=2018}}</ref> | |||
==Early life== | |||
==Controversy over Sally Hemings's children== | |||
Sally Hemings was born about 1773 to the enslaved ] and her mother's owner, ]. Betty's parents were a "full-blooded African" slave and a white English sea captain surnamed Hemings. Captain Hemings tried to purchase the mother and his daughter Betty from their enslaver, Francis Eppes, but the planter refused out of curiosity about how the mixed ethnicities would turn out in Betty.<ref name="madisonstatement">{{Cite web |date=2000 |title=Jefferson's Blood – The Memoirs of Madison Hemings |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1873march.html |work=] |publisher=] / ]}}</ref> Upon Eppes' death his daughter, Martha Eppes, inherited Betty, and took her as a personal slave upon her marriage to Wayles. | |||
In ], ], a Richmond newspaper reporter, published the first claim that Thomas Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings's son, Tom. | |||
Wayles was born to Edward and Ellen (née Ashburner) Wayles, in ].{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=59|2008}} Following Martha's death,{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=77|2008}} Wayles remarried and was widowed twice more.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=80|2008}} Several sources assert that Wayles took Betty Hemings as his ] and that Sally was the youngest of the six children they had during the last 12 years of his life.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/elizabeth-hemings |title=Elizabeth Hemings |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=January 7, 2012}} Says that Betty Hemings's children by John Wayles were Robert, James, Thenia, Critta, Peter, and Sally.</ref>{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=80|2008}} These children were younger half-siblings to his daughters by his wives. His first child, Martha Wayles (named after her mother, Wayles' first wife), married the young planter and future president ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson |url=https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/first-families/martha-wayles-skelton-jefferson/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210120171332/https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/first-families/martha-wayles-skelton-jefferson/ |archive-date=January 20, 2021 |access-date=2024-08-26 |website=The White House |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
In 1798, Callender had been incarcerated by President John Adams under the Sedition Act. Three years later, after Callendar had been released and Jefferson had been elected president, Callender asked Jefferson to appoint him Postmaster of ]. When Jefferson refused, Callender published his accusation in retaliation. | |||
The children of Betty Hemings and John Wayles were three-quarters European in ancestry and fair-skinned.<ref name = monticello/> According to the 1662 Virginia Slave Law, children born to slave mothers were considered slaves under the principle of {{lang|la|]}}: the enslaved status of a child followed that of the mother. Betty and her children, including Sally Hemings and all Sally's children, were legally slaves even though the fathers were their white enslavers and the children were of majority-European ancestry.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=81|2008}}<ref name="autogenerated3">{{cite web |url=http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/John_Wayles |title=John Wayles |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=January 25, 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120722015323/http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/John_Wayles |archive-date=July 22, 2012 }}</ref> | |||
In 2007, Keshia Jones claimed she was a decendent of Sally Hemmings. Later Marcus Gladden and Kyle Leverett proved that was false as well. | |||
John Wayles died in 1773 and the next year his daughter Martha and her husband, Thomas Jefferson, inherited the Hemings family among a total of 135 slaves from Wayles' estate, along with {{convert|11000|acres|ha}} of land.<ref>{{Cite web |date= |title=Farm Book, 1774-1824, page 11, by Thomas Jefferson |url=https://www.masshist.org/thomasjeffersonpapers/doc?id=farm_11&mode=lgImg |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211023082636/https://www.masshist.org/thomasjeffersonpapers/doc?id=farm_11&mode=lgImg |archive-date=October 23, 2021 |access-date=2024-08-27 |website=Massachusetts Historical Society |at=Page linked shows date. Betty's children are listed under "Elizabeth" on page 13.}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated3" />{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=92|2008}} Sally was an infant that year and about 25 years younger than Martha.<ref name="autogenerated3" /> She, her siblings, their mother Betty, and various other slaves were brought to ], Jefferson's home.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2014-03-01 |title=Farm Book, 1774-1824, page 13, by Thomas Jefferson |url=https://www.masshist.org/thomasjeffersonpapers/doc?id=farm_13&mode=lgImg |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140301041842/https://www.masshist.org/thomasjeffersonpapers/doc?id=farm_13&mode=lgImg |archive-date=March 1, 2014 |access-date=2024-08-27 |website=Massachusetts Historical Society}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated3" /> The ] Wayles-Hemings children grew up at Monticello at the top of the enslaved hierarchy, and as such were trained and given assignments as skilled ]s and domestic servants. Betty Hemings' other children and their descendants, also mixed race, were bestowed privileged assignments as well. None worked in the fields.<ref name="reed160">{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1998|page=160}}</ref> | |||
], one of Sally's sons, stated in an 1873 interview that Thomas Jefferson was his father and the father of all of Sally's children, but this was proven to be false by DNA testing in 1998. | |||
=== Appearance === | |||
Around 1900, descendants of Thomas Woodson began to publish claims that he was Sally Hemings's son by Thomas Jefferson, conceived in France and born at Monticello in 1790. | |||
The former slave ] described Hemings' physical appearance as "Sally was mighty near white. Sally was very handsome, long straight hair down her back". Jefferson's grandson ] recalled her as "Light colored and decidedly good looking".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sally Hemings {{!}} Life of Sally Hemings |url=https://www.monticello.org/sallyhemings/#:~:text=There%20are%20no%20known%20images,straight%20hair%20down%20her%20back.%E2%80%9D&text=%E2%80%9CLight%20colored%20and%20decidedly%20good%20looking.%E2%80%9D |access-date=2024-03-06 |website=www.monticello.org |language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Hemings in Paris== | |||
The truth of these rumors was long debated. Evidence advanced in support of the claim included (1) the fact that Hemings was living with Jefferson, either in Paris or at ], at the time of the conceptions of all of her children; (2) statements made by Madison Hemings and another former slave from Monticello who agreed with his account; (3) claims that Hemings's children strongly resembled Jefferson physically; and (4) the fact that Hemings's children were either manumitted or allowed to slip away from Monticello by Jefferson's descendants. | |||
{{Quote box|title=Sally Heming's son, Madison Hemings, on Hemings and Jefferson|quote=My mother accompanied her as her body servant. When Mr. Jefferson went to France Martha was a young woman grown, my mother was about her age, and Maria was just budding into womanhood. Their stay (my mother and Maria's) was about eighteen months. But during that time my mother became Mr. Jefferson's concubine, and when he was called home she was ''enceinte'' by him. He desired to bring my mother back to Virginia with him but she demurred. She was just beginning to understand the French language well, and '''in France she was free, while if she returned to Virginia she would be re-enslaved'''. So she refused to return with him. To induce her to do so he promised her extraordinary privileges, and made a solemn pledge that her children should be freed at the age of twenty-one years. '''In consequence of his promises, on which she implicitly relied, she returned with him to Virginia.'''|author=Madison Hemings|source=Madison Hemings recollections, Pike County Republican, 13 Mar. 1873|align=right|width=33%}} | |||
In 1784, Thomas Jefferson was appointed the American ] to France; he took his eldest daughter Martha (Patsy) with him to ], as well as several of his slaves. Among them was Sally's elder brother ], who became a chef trained in French cuisine.<ref>{{harvnb|Brodie|1974|p=85}}</ref> Jefferson left his two younger daughters in the care of their aunt and uncle, Francis and Elizabeth Wayles Eppes of Eppington in Chesterfield County, Virginia. After his youngest daughter, Lucy Elizabeth, died in 1784 while Jefferson was away,<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.monticello.org/site/jefferson/lucy-jefferson-1782-1784 |title=Lucy Jefferson (1782–1784) |work=Monticello.org |publisher=]}}</ref> Jefferson sent for his surviving daughter, nine-year-old ], to live with him. The teenage slave, Sally Hemings, was chosen to accompany Polly to France after an older female slave became pregnant and could not make the journey.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|pp=191–192|2008}} Correspondence between Jefferson and ] indicates that Jefferson originally arranged for Polly to "be in the care of her nurse, a black woman, to whom she is confided with safety";<ref>Letter from Thomas Jefferson to ], December 21, 1786. {{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|p=194|2008}}</ref> Adams wrote back: "The old Nurse whom you expected to have attended her, was sick and unable to come. She has a Girl about 15 or 16 with her."<ref>Letter from Abigail Adams to Thomas Jefferson, June 26, 1787. {{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|p=194|2008}}</ref> | |||
Thomas Jefferson himself never commented directly on the issue, though some of his remarks have been interpreted as indirect denials. For example, he publicly stated his opposition to ] (a word not yet coined at the time): "Their amalgamation with the other color," he wrote, "produces a degradation to which no lover of his country, no lover of excellence in the human character, can innocently consent."<ref>http://www.buckinghamhemmings.com/</ref> | |||
{{Quote box|title=Annette Gordon-Reed on Jefferson and Hemings|quote=That a black woman in slavery would seek out a relationship with a slave master, or if not seek it out, not run away from it, is not a particularly attractive idea. Some view such a person as a traitor, giving the ultimate aid and comfort to the enemy. Our notions about women and sexuality probably play a major role in our discomfort about these situations. Sex between a slave master and a woman who was a slave has always been seen differently than sex between a slave mistress and a man who was a slave, both by whites and blacks. Whites tolerated the former because it posed no real threat to the established order. They claimed it did, but they did not react against it with the same vehemence that they did to relationships between slave males and white women, which were seen as threatening the social order and could never be tolerated. | |||
Two of Jefferson's grandchildren stated long after Jefferson's death that the resemblance to Jefferson was because the Hemings children had been fathered by either Samuel or Peter Carr, the sons of Jefferson's sister. One grandchild insisted all of the Hemings children were Samuel's; the other said they were all Peter's. In 1998, ] ruled out the possibility that the Carrs could have fathered Hemings's child Eston but confirmed that Eston Hemings was a male line descendant of Thomas Jefferson's uncle, Field Jefferson. | |||
.... | |||
Most blacks probably would consider a slave woman who voluntarily joined a relationship with her master as a collaborator. On the other hand, they might see a black man who had a relationship with a white mistress as a rebel who was striking at the heart of the slave system. These ideas, rooted in our visions of sex roles, may have some validity as far as generalizations go. They do not take into account the differing circumstances and contexts in which such relationships could arise. Therefore, we should not allow them to control any serious consideration of an individual case.|author=Annette Gordon-Reed|source=Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy p. 191 Kindle edition|align=right|width=33%}} | |||
In 1787, Sally, aged 14 (although she looked older to Adams),<ref name="Sarah">{{cite web |title=Sally Hemings |url= http://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/sally-hemings |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=September 23, 2013}}</ref> accompanied Polly to London and then to Paris. In London, they stayed with Abigail and ] from June 26 until July 10, 1787. Jefferson's associate, a Mr. Petit, arranged transportation and escorted the girls to Paris. In a letter to Jefferson on June 27, 1787, Abigail wrote: {{blockquote|The Girl who is with is quite a child, and Captain Ramsey is of opinion will be of so little Service that he had better carry her back with him. But of this you will be a judge. She seems fond of the child and appears good natured." On July 6, Abigail wrote to Jefferson, "The Girl she has with her, wants more care than the child, and is wholy incapable of looking properly after her, without some superiour to direct her.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=194|2008}}}} | |||
==The historians' debate== | |||
Through most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, biographers of Thomas Jefferson dismissed suggestions that he had fathered children by a slave, if they mentioned the issue at all. They generally called Callender's charges too politically motivated to be worth examining, and derided Madison Hemings's statement as an attempt to puff up his status by claiming a famous father. During a visit to Monticello in the 1850s, the biographer Henry Randall interviewed Thomas Jefferson's grandson, who suggested that Jefferson's nephew Peter Carr had fathered the Hemings children; but Randall kept that information confidential at the grandson's request. Some of the grandson's statements about life at Monticello are demonstrably incorrect and cast doubt on his veracity, or at least on the accuracy of his memory. | |||
The widowed Jefferson, aged 44 at the time, was serving as the ]. Hemings spent two years there and most historians believe Jefferson and Hemings' sexual relationship began while they were in France or soon after their return to ].<ref name="Gordon-Reed 1997 217" /> The exact nature of their relationship remains unclear. The ] exhibition on Hemings acknowledged this uncertainty, while noting the power imbalance inherent in an intimate relationship between a successful, wealthy white male and a quarter-black female slave 30 years his junior. The president of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation said, "We really can't know what the dynamic was. Was it rape? Was there affection? We felt we had to present a range of views, including the most painful one."<ref name="stockman" /> Hemings remained enslaved in Jefferson's house until his death in 1826. In 2017, a room identified as her quarters at Monticello, under the south terrace, was discovered in an archeological examination. It is being restored and refurbished.<ref name="nbc">, '']'', July 3, 2017. Retrieved February 4, 2018</ref><ref name="wapost">{{cite news |first=Krissah |last=Thompson |url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/for-decades-they-hid-jeffersons-mistress-now-monticello-is-making-room-for-sally-hemings/2017/02/18/d410d660-f222-11e6-8d72-263470bf0401_story.html |title=For decades they hid Jefferson's relationship with her. Now Monticello is making room for Sally Hemings |newspaper=] |date=February 18, 2017 |access-date=February 4, 2018}}</ref> | |||
In his monumental history of early American race relations, ''White Over Black'' (1968), Winthrop Jordan treated the Hemings-Jefferson link as plausible and worth consideration, noting that Jefferson was at Monticello every time Sally Hemings became pregnant. ]'s 1974 biography of Jefferson assembled additional evidence about the Hemings family and the timing of Hemings's pregnancies; but some critics strongly objected to Brodie's psychoanalytic approach to Jefferson. ], Douglass Adair, ], and other authors produced rebuttals to Brodie's argument, pointing to the Jefferson family's statements about the Carr brothers. While fictional portrayals of the relationship such as ]'s ''Sally Hemings'' and the ] film ''Jefferson in Paris'' reached large audiences and persuaded many, most mainstream historians continued to assert that Jefferson was unlikely to have had a sexual relationship with any slave. | |||
Sally Hemings remained in France for 26 months. Slavery had been abolished in that country after the ] in 1789; Jefferson paid wages to her and James while they were in Paris. He paid her the equivalent of $2 a month. In comparison, he paid James Hemings $4 a month as chef-in-training, and his Parisian ] $2.50 a month; the other French servants earned from $8 to $12 a month.<ref name="monticelloreport" /> Toward the end of their stay, James used his money to pay for a French tutor and to learn the language, and Sally was also learning French.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> There is no record of where she lived: it may have been with Jefferson and her brother in the ] on the ], or at the convent ] where the girls Maria and Martha were schooled. Whatever the weekday arrangements, Jefferson and his retinue spent weekends together at his villa.<ref>Randall, Willard S.; ''Thomas Jefferson: A Life''; New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1993, p. 475</ref> Jefferson purchased some fine clothing for Hemings, which suggests that she accompanied Martha as a lady's maid to formal events.<ref name="G-RInterview">{{cite web |url= https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/interviews/reed.html |title=Jefferson's Blood – Interview: Annette Gordon-Reed |work=] |publisher=] / ] |date=2000}}</ref>{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=259|2008}} | |||
In 1997, however, law professor Annette Gordon-Reed published a thorough examination of the arguments and available evidence, ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy.'' She pointed out how most historians had used double standards to evaluate the evidence for and against the statement of Madison Hemings. For example, Hemings's statement about his father was labeled unreliable "oral history" while the tales passed down in the Jefferson family were treated as trustworthy even though they contradicted each other and the documentary record. Historians accepted statements about Sally's father being John Wayles based on little evidence, but insisted on much more proof about Sally's children. | |||
According to her son Madison's memoir, Hemings became pregnant by Jefferson in Paris. She was about 16 at the time. Under French law, Sally and James were free and could have petitioned to stay; a return to Virginia meant a return to slavery.<ref>{{cite book |last=Lovejoy |first=Paul E. |url=https://archive.org/details/transformationsi0000love |title=Transformations in Slavery |date=2000 |publisher=] |edition=2nd |page= |url-access=registration}}</ref> She agreed to return with him to the United States in exchange for his promise to free her children when they came of age (at 21).<ref name="madisonstatement" /><ref name="Schwabach, Aaron 2010">Schwabach, Aaron. "Thomas Jefferson, Slavery, and Slaves." ''Thomas Jefferson Law Review'' 33, no. 1 (Fall 2010): 1–60. Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed October 16, 2014).</ref> Hemings' strong ties to her mother, siblings, and extended family likely drew her back to Monticello.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=352|2008}}{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|p=374|2008}} | |||
Gordon-Reed did not argue that documentary records proved Madison Hemings's claim, only that authors had unfairly dismissed it. As to the Hemings children's paternity, she wrote, the answer might lie in developing more evidence through DNA analysis. | |||
==Return to the United States and children's freedom== | |||
==November 1998 ''Nature'' article== | |||
] | |||
The ], ], issue of the British scientific journal '']'' contained a study on the available ] evidence by a team led by Eugene A. Foster. The study compared the ] of four groups of men: descendants of Thomas Jefferson's grandfather; of Thomas Woodson; of Madison Hemings's brother Eston Hemings (who later took the name Eston Jefferson); and of John Carr, grandfather of the Carr brothers. The DNA data from the study is available in more detail ]. | |||
In 1789, Sally and James Hemings returned to the United States with Jefferson, who was 46 years old and seven years a widower. As shown by Jefferson's father-in-law, John Wayles, sexual relationships between wealthy Virginia widowers and female slaves were not unknown. White society simply expected such men to be discreet about them.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Rothman|first=Joshua D.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sOU3BxRPX58C|title=Notorious in the Neighborhood: Sex and Families across the Color Line in Virginia, 1787-1861|date=2003-12-04|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-8078-6312-1|pages=18–19|language=en}}</ref> | |||
In each case, the men had to be patrilineal descendants: sons of sons of sons. Only in those lines did the original Y chromosomes survive. As a result, no direct descendants of Thomas and Martha Jefferson could be included in the study, nor descendants of Madison Hemings. No patrilineal descendants in those lines could be identified. | |||
According to Madison Hemings, Sally's first child died soon after her return from Paris. Hemings had six children after this; their complete names are in some cases uncertain:<ref name="Brief">{{cite web|url=http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings-jefferson_contro.html|title=Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account|work=Monticello.org|publisher=]|quote=Ten years later , and most historians now believe that, years after his wife's death, Thomas Jefferson was the father of the six children of Sally Hemings mentioned in Jefferson's records, including Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston Hemings.|access-date=June 22, 2011}}</ref> | |||
The study's major findings were that the Y chromosome of the Jefferson family matched that of Eston Hemings family, while the Y chromosomes of the Woodson and Carr families were each different. The implications for the paternity question were clear. The Jefferson grandchildren's contention that Sally Hemings's children had been fathered by one or the other Carr brother was not tenable. Neither was the Woodson family's claim to have been descended from Jefferson. On the other hand, Eston Hemings was undoubtedly the son of a Jefferson. | |||
* Harriet Hemings (October 5, 1795 – December 1797)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
* Beverly Hemings, possibly William Beverley Hemings (April 1, 1798 – after 1873)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
* Daughter, possibly named Thenia Hemings after Sally's sister (born in 1799 and died in infancy)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
* ] (May 1801 – Unknown)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
* ], possibly James Madison Hemings (January 19, 1805 – November 28, 1877)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
* ], possibly named Thomas Eston Hemings (May 21, 1808 – January 3, 1856)<ref name="Brief" /> | |||
Jefferson recorded births of slaves in his Farm Book. Unlike his practice in recording births of other slaves, he did not identify the father of Sally Hemings' children.<ref name="appleby">Oldham Appleby, Joyce; Schlesinger, Arthur. ''Thomas Jefferson''. New York: Macmillan, 2003, pp. 75–77.</ref> | |||
Of all the accounts of the Hemings children published before 1998, only Madison Hemings's was completely consistent with the DNA tests. ''Nature'' therefore headlined the study "Jefferson fathered slave’s last child."<ref> The title of the article was described as "incorrect" by its authors and the following letter appeared in the Wall Street Journal March 11, 1999, page A23: | |||
Sally Hemings' documented duties at Monticello included being a nursemaid-companion, lady's maid, chambermaid, and seamstress. It is not known whether she was literate, and she left no known writings.<ref name="Brief" /> She was described as very fair.<ref name="reed160" /> She is believed to have lived as an adult in a room in Monticello's "South Dependencies", a wing of the mansion accessible to the main house through a covered passageway.<ref name="autogenerated5">{{cite web|url=http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html|title=Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children|work=Monticello.org|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
::In regard to your editorial "Founding Fatherhood" (Taste page, Weekend Journal, Feb. 26): I assisted Dr. E.A.Foster with the Jefferson/Hemings DNA study and I am aware of a glaring error in data in the British scientific journal Nature of Nov. 5, 1998. The mainstream media took the false headline "Jefferson Fathered Slave's Last Child" and distributed it to the world. Please take this inside information from me: I arranged for the Jefferson blood donors and other family historical information and the DNA results do not indicate Thomas Jefferson. | |||
In 2017, the Monticello Foundation announced that what they believe to be Hemings' room, adjacent to Jefferson's bedroom, had been found through an archeological excavation, as part of the Mountaintop Project. It was space that had been converted to other public uses in 1941. Hemings' room will be restored and refurbished as part of a major restoration project for the complex. Its goals include telling the stories of all the families at Monticello, both enslaved and free.<ref name="nbc" /><ref name="wapost" /> | |||
::Dr. Foster denied Nature valuable historical data that would have resulted in an accurate headline, which would have read "DNA indicates that any one of eight Jeffersons could be the father of Eston Hemings." As a Jefferson family historian for 25 years, my research shows that Thomas Jefferson did not father any Hemings child and he denied that he did. Ask Dr. Foster and Nature if that headline was correct - they both told me it was not correct due to the haste of a media release data. | |||
Hemings never married. Virginia law did not recognize the marriages of enslaved people, but many forced laborers at Monticello had recognized stable relationships with partners in ]s. But unlike those others, Monticello records document Hemings in no such partnership, at any time. But she kept her children near her. According to her son Madison, while young, the children "were permitted to stay about the 'great house', and only required to do such light work as going on errands".<ref name="madisonstatement" /> At the age of 14, each of the children began their training: the brothers with the plantation's skilled master of carpentry, and Harriet as a spinner and weaver. The three boys were all taught and learned to play the ], which Jefferson himself played.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> | |||
::::HERBERT BARGER | |||
::::Ft. Washington, Md. | |||
In 1822, at the age of 24, Beverley left or "ran away" from Monticello and was not pursued. His sister Harriet Hemings, 21, followed in the same year, apparently with at least tacit permission. The overseer, ], said that he gave her $50 ($1,131 in 2021) and put her on a stagecoach to the North, presumably to join her brother.<ref name="monticelloreport">{{cite web|title=Report of the Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings|date=January 26, 2000|editor-first=Daniel P.|editor-last=Jordan|work=Monticello.org |publisher=] (then Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation)|url=http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/jefferson-hemings_report.pdf|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070713105024/http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/jefferson-hemings_report.pdf|archive-date=July 13, 2007|access-date=October 19, 2020}}</ref> In his memoir, published posthumously, Bacon said Harriet was "near white and very beautiful", and that people said Jefferson freed her because she was his daughter. However, Bacon did not believe this to be true, citing someone else coming out of Sally Hemings' bedroom. The name of this person was left out by Rev. Hamilton W. Pierson in his 1862 book because he did not wish to cause pain to anyone living at that time.<ref>''Jefferson at Monticello: Recollections of a Monticello Slave and a Monticello Overseer''. Edited by James Adam Bear, Jr., Charlottesville, Virginia: 1967. This book includes recollections of Isaac Jefferson, c. 1847, a former Monticello slave, and Edmund Bacon.</ref> | |||
</ref> | |||
Jefferson ] two slaves while he was alive: Sally's older brothers Robert, who bought his freedom, and ], who was required to train his brother Peter as a chef for three years to get his freedom. Jefferson eventually (including posthumously, through his ]) freed all of Sally's surviving children,<ref name="Gordon-Reed 1997 52">{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1997|page=52}}</ref> Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston, as they ]. (Harriet was the only female slave Jefferson allowed to go free, and these were the only slaves freed as they came of age.) Of the hundreds of slaves he legally owned, Jefferson freed only five in his will, all men from the Hemings family.<ref>{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1997|pp=210–223}}</ref> They were also the only slave family group freed by Jefferson. Sally Hemings' children were seven-eighths European in ancestry, and three of the four ] after gaining their freedom; their descendants likewise identified as white.<ref name="Hemingses">{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/last-will-and-testament |title=Thomas Jefferson's Last Will & Testament |work=Monticello.org |publisher=]}} His will specified Sally Hemings's two younger children be assigned as apprentices to their uncle John Hemings, who was also freed, "... until their respective ages of twenty one years, at which period respectively, I give them their freedom."</ref> His will also petitioned the legislature to allow the freed Hemingses to stay in the state.<ref name="appleby" /><ref name="autogenerated5" /> | |||
==The Foundation and Commission reports== | |||
No documentation has been found for Sally Hemings' own ]. Jefferson's daughter ] at least informally freed the elderly Hemings after Jefferson's death, by giving her "her time", as was a custom. As the historian ] has noted, "Hemings herself was withheld from auction and freed at last by Jefferson's daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph, who was, of course, her niece," as Sally was a half-sister to Martha's mother, Jefferson's deceased wife.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2008/jun/26/jefferson-betrayal/|first=Edmund S.|last=Morgan|title=Jefferson & Betrayal|website=New York Review of Books|date=June 26, 2008|access-date=March 10, 2012}}</ref> This informal freedom allowed Hemings to live in Virginia with her two youngest sons in nearby ] for the next nine years until her death.<ref name="monticelloreport" /> In the Albemarle County 1833 census, all three were recorded as free persons of color.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1999/08/02/opinion/editorial-observer-fighting-for-space-at-the-jefferson-family-table.html|title=Fighting for Space at the Jefferson Family Table|work=]|date=August 2, 1999|access-date=February 28, 2011|first=Brent|last=Staples}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-AFRICAN/1999-05/0926888695|title=Rift runs through Jefferson family reunion|access-date=April 12, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110415145618/http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-AFRICAN/1999-05/0926888695|archive-date=April 15, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> Hemings lived to see a grandchild born in a house that her sons owned.<ref name="Egypt">{{cite web |url=http://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/bringing-children-out-egypt|title=Bringing Children Out of Egypt|work=Monticello.org|publisher=]|access-date=January 9, 2012|archive-date=August 13, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170813054741/https://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/bringing-children-out-egypt|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Following the ''Nature'' article, the controversy continued to grow, and in ] and ] two major studies of the Jefferson-Hemings allegations were released. Both studies drew from a range of sources, including both scientific and historical, to arrive at their conclusions. | |||
Although Jefferson ] great wealth at a young age, he was ] by the time he died. His estate, including his slaves (besides the Hemings), was sold at auction by his daughter Martha to repay his debts.<ref name="Schwabach, Aaron 2010" /> | |||
In January ], a group of specialists from the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which owns and operates Monticello, produced a study on the controversy initiated soon after the ''Nature'' paper. Their near-unanimous <ref>http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/minority_report.html</ref> report <ref>http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixj.html</ref> stated that "although paternity cannot be established with absolute certainty, our evaluation of the best evidence available suggests the strong likelihood that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had a relationship over time that led to the birth of one, and perhaps all, of the known children of Sally Hemings." <ref>http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/reportstatement.html</ref> One member of the committee, White Wallenborn, dissented, noting that "the historical evidence is not substantial enough to confirm nor for that matter to refute his paternity of any of the children of Sally Hemings." | |||
==Jefferson–Hemings controversy== | |||
Later in ], the newly formed Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society created a "Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission" to examine the paternity question . On ], ], they issued a report; at 565 pages, it was far longer than the Foundation report, though many of those pages were devoted to a review of the evidence that the Thomas Jefferson Foundation study examined. The conclusion of most of the Scholars Commission was that "the Jefferson-Hemings allegation is by no means proven"; those members' individual conclusions ranged from "serious skepticism about the charge" to "a conviction that it is almost certainly false" . The majority suggested the most likely alternative is that ], Thomas's younger brother, was the father of Eston—a possibility that had not been raised by Jefferson's grandchildren or anyone else in the nineteenth century. (The first person to publicly link Randolph Jefferson to Sally Hemings was playwright Karyn Traut in 1988; her husband, biologist Thomas Traut, became a member of the Scholars Commission.) | |||
{{Main|Jefferson–Hemings controversy}} | |||
].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.americanantiquarian.org/Exhibitions/View/8/fig8_16.htm|title=Akin, the Philosophic Cock - A View at the Bicentennial}}</ref>]] | |||
The Jefferson–Hemings controversy is the question of whether Jefferson impregnated Sally Hemings and fathered any or all of her six children of record. There were rumors as early as the 1790s. Jefferson's sexual relationship with Hemings was first publicly reported in 1802 by one of Jefferson's enemies, a political journalist named ], after he noticed several light-skinned enslaved people at Monticello.<ref name="Belz, Herman 2012">Belz, Herman. "The Legend of Sally Hemings" ''Academic Questions'' Vol. 25, No. 2 (June 2012), pp. 218–227. Via: Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed October 16, 2014).</ref> He wrote that Jefferson "kept, as his concubine, one of his own slaves" and had "several children" by her. After that the story became widespread, spread by newspapers and by Jefferson's Federalist opponents.<ref name="Brief" /> Jefferson himself is never recorded to have publicly denied this allegation.<ref name="Belz, Herman 2012" /> However, several members of his family did. In the 1850s, Jefferson's eldest grandson, ], said that ], a nephew of Jefferson, had fathered Hemings' children, rather than Jefferson himself. This information was published and became the common wisdom, with major historians of Jefferson denying Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children for the next 150 years.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Looney |first1=J. Jefferson |title=Peter Carr (1770–1815) |url= http://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Carr_Peter_1770-1815 |encyclopedia=] |publisher=] |access-date=July 13, 2015}} {{tertiary source|date=May 2024}}</ref> | |||
The lone dissenter on the Scholars Commission, Paul Rahe, wrote that he considered "it somewhat more likely than not that Thomas Jefferson was the father of Eston Hemings," <ref>http://www.tjheritage.org/documents/SCReport9.pdf</ref>, and added "there is ... one thing that we do know, and it is damning enough. Despite the distaste he expressed for the propensity of slaveholders and their relatives to abuse their power, Jefferson either engaged in such abuse himself or tolerated it on the part of one or more members of his extended family." | |||
{{external media |width=210px |float=right |headerimage= |video1=, ]<ref name="cspan">{{cite web |title=Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings |work=Booknotes |publisher=] |date=February 21, 1999 |url= https://www.c-span.org/video/?119003-1/thomas-jefferson-sally-hemings |access-date=March 14, 2017}}</ref>}} | |||
], who chaired the commission, suggested that evidence for a sexual relationship between Jefferson and Hemings had been "rushed to press" because of the political climate surrounding the impeachment of Bill Clinton <ref>http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=95000747</ref>, as did David Mayer, a commission member, who was also scathingly critical of the ''Foundation'' report. <ref>http://www.ashbrook.org/articles/mayer-hemings.html#VB</ref> | |||
In the late 20th century, historians began re-analyzing the body of evidence. In 1997, ] published a book, ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy'', that analyzed the historiography of the debate, demonstrating how historians since the 19th century had accepted early assumptions. They favored Jefferson family testimony while criticizing Hemings family testimony as "oral history", and failed to note all the facts.<ref>{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1998}}</ref> A consensus began to emerge after the results of a ],<ref name="Nature1998" /><ref>{{cite journal |title=Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and the Question of Race: An Ongoing Debate |first=Peter |last=Nicolaisen |journal=Journal of American Studies |volume=37 |number=1 |date=2003 |pages=99–118 |doi=10.1017/S0021875803007023 |jstor=27557256 |s2cid=143875543 |quote=Historians, as is their wont, have usually been more reserved in their evaluation of the Jefferson-Hemings relationship than most journalists. Nonetheless, as the conferences and publications devoted to the topic attest, the DNA revelations have strongly resonated among Jefferson scholars as well. Like the media, most historians now no longer seem to question the 'truth' of the Jefferson-Hemings relationship; the questions raised almost invariably deal with the way we respond to such truth.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |first=Jan |last=Lewis |title= Forum: Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings Redux |journal=The William and Mary Quarterly |volume=57 |number=1 |pages=121–124 |date=2000 |jstor=2674360 |quote=With the publication of E. A. Foster et al.'s study in ''Nature'' on October 31, 1998, what once was rumor now seems to be, if not proven, at least sufficiently probable that virtually all professional historians will accept that Jefferson was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings's children, her son Eston (the only one who left male-line descendants whose DNA might be tested)}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |first=Mia |last=Bay |title=In search of Sally Hemings in the post-DNA era |journal=Reviews in American History |volume=34 |date=2006 |issue=4 |pages=407–426 |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |doi=10.1353/rah.2006.0000 |jstor=30031502 |s2cid=144686299 |author-link=Mia Bay}}</ref><ref name="PBS">{{cite web |url= https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/true/ |title=Jefferson's Blood – Is It True? |work=] |publisher=] / ] |date=2000 |access-date=March 10, 2012 |quote=Now, the 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.}}</ref> commissioned in 1998 by Daniel P. Jordan, president of the ],<ref name="Ken Wallenborn">{{cite web |title= Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming |first=White McKenzie (Ken) |last=Wallenborn |date=April 12, 1999 |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |url= https://www.monticello.org/thomas-jefferson/jefferson-slavery/thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings-a-brief-account/research-report-on-jefferson-and-hemings/minority-report-of-the-monticello-research-committee-on-thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings/ |access-date=October 19, 2020}}</ref> which operates Monticello as a ] and archive. The DNA evidence showed no match between the Carr male line, proposed for more than 150 years as the father(s), and the one Hemings descendant tested. It did show a match between the Jefferson male line and the Eston Hemings descendant.<ref name="Assessment">{{cite web |title=Assessment of DNA Study |url= http://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/ii-assessment-dna-study |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=March 17, 2014}}</ref> | |||
Since 1998 and the DNA study,<ref name="Nature1998">{{cite journal |first=E. A. |last=Foster |display-authors=etal |title=Jefferson fathered slave's last child |journal=Nature |issue=6706 |pages=27–28 |date=November 5, 1998 |volume=396 |doi=10.1038/23835 |pmid=9817200|bibcode=1998Natur.396...27F |s2cid=4424562 }}</ref> several historians have concluded that Jefferson maintained a long sexual relationship with Hemings and fathered six children with her, four of whom survived to adulthood. In an article that appeared in ''Science'',<ref>{{cite journal |first=Eliot |last=Marshall |title=Which Jefferson Was the Father |journal=Science |date=January 8, 1999 |volume=283 |issue=5399 |pages=153–155 |doi=10.1126/science.283.5399.153a |pmid=9925468|s2cid=38586063 }}</ref> eight weeks after the DNA study, Eugene Foster, the lead co-author of the DNA study, is reported to have "made it clear that Thomas was only one of eight or more Jeffersons who may have fathered ]".<ref name="Study">{{cite web |title=Background DNA Study: The Jefferson-Hemings DNA Study as told by Herbert Barger, Jefferson Family Historian |orig-year=1999 |date=August 30, 2000 |url= http://jeffersondnastudy.com/background-dna-study/ |work=JeffersonDNAStudy.com |publisher=Herbert Barger (self-published) |access-date=October 19, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Thomas Jefferson's Y Chromosome Belongs to a Rare European Lineage |first1=Turi E. |last1=King |first2=Georgina R. |last2=Bowden |first3=Patricia L. |last3=Balaresque |first4=Susan M. |last4=Adams |first5=Morag E. |last5=Shanks |first6=Mark A. |last6=Jobling |journal=American Journal of Physical Anthropology |volume=132 |pages=584–589 |date=2007 |issue=4 |doi=10.1002/ajpa.20557 |pmid=17274013 |url= https://www.csueastbay.edu/museum/files/docs/exhibit/dna/dna-thomas-jeffersons-chromosome.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200719173158/https://www.csueastbay.edu/museum/files/docs/exhibit/dna/dna-thomas-jeffersons-chromosome.pdf |archive-date=2020-07-19 |url-status=live }}</ref> The Thomas Jefferson Foundation (TJF) published in 2000 an independent historic review in combination with the DNA data,<ref name="monticelloreport" /><ref name="Assessment" /> as did the ] in 2001; scholars involved mostly concluded Jefferson was probably the father of all Hemings' children.<ref name="Brief" /><ref>{{cite journal |first=Helen F. M. |last=Leary |journal=National Genealogical Society Quarterly |volume=89 |issue=3 |date=September 2001 |pages=207, 214–218 |title=Sally Hemings' Children: A Genealogical Analysis of the Evidence |postscript={{spaced ndash}}Leary concluded that "the chain of evidence securely fastens Sally Hemings' children to their father, Thomas Jefferson."}}</ref> | |||
==Further findings== | |||
In an interview in 2000, the historian Annette Gordon-Reed said of the change in historical scholarship about Jefferson and Hemings: "Symbolically, it's tremendously important for people ... as a way of inclusion. ] said that the Sally Hemings story was a way of establishing black people's birthright to America."<ref name="G-RInterview" /> | |||
Further studies have been conducted. The ''William & Mary Quarterly'' published a probabilistic analysis of the timing of Jefferson's visits to Monticello and Hemings's pregnancies which concluded that it was highly likely that the two series of events were related. The ''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' of September ] concluded that four children of Sally Hemings were fathered by Thomas Jefferson. Its article was explicitly critical of the Scholars Commission report.<ref>http://www.listlva.lib.va.us/cgi-bin/wa.exe?A2=ind0111&L=va-roots&P=1223</ref> The Woodson family continues to press their case in the book ''A President in the Family.'' The book points out: (1) an erasure in Jefferson's farm book in the section on slaves born in 1790, (2) Thomas Jefferson's record of gifts in the years 1800 and 1801 to a 'servant' named Thomas. (Callender's "Tom" would have been ten years old at the time of the gifts.),(3) the unethical nature of Ellis' early entry into the reporting process. Dr. Foster, the DNA test organizer, had promised the DNA test participants that historians would not be involved with the test or the reporting, but he lost control of the process. <ref> Byron Woodson, ''A President in The Family,'' Praeger, 217,246, 222-229. </ref> | |||
A vocal minority of critics,<ref>{{cite book |first=Francis D. |last=Cogliano |title=Thomas Jefferson: Reputation and Legacy |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |date=2006 |jstor=10.3366/j.ctt1r2623 |quote=For most of the twentieth century serious Jefferson scholars denied the likelihood of a sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings. That, by 2001, the primary 'defense' of Jefferson was maintained by a fringe group espousing reactionary politics and employing hysterical rhetoric is testimony to how quickly the historiographical consensus regarding the Jefferson-Hemings question shifted in 1997–8. |pages=183–184|isbn=9780748624997 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Life at Jefferson's Monticello, as His Slaves Saw It |work=NPR.org |publisher=] |first=Karen |last=Grigsby Bates |date=March 11, 2012 |url= https://www.npr.org/2012/03/11/148305319/life-at-jeffersons-monticello-as-his-slaves-saw-it}}</ref> such as the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS, founded shortly after the DNA study),<ref name="Martha Hodes">{{cite journal |first=Martha |last=Hodes |title=Sally Hemings: Founding Mother: Reviewed Work: Mongrel Nation: The America Begotten by Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings by Clarence E. Walker |journal=Reviews in American History |date=2010 |volume=38 |number=3 |pages=437–442 |doi=10.1353/rah.2010.0022 |jstor=40865440 |author-link=Martha Hodes |quote=The Thomas Jefferson Foundation which owns Monticello, embraced Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children in 2000, but a minority opinion stubbornly stuck by Jefferson's single cloak denial and the denials of descendants .... The next year, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (founded shortly after the Thomas Jefferson Foundation concurred with the DNA-based conclusions) sponsored a commission that refuted the scientific evidence, and published ''The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty'', an essay collection of considerable convolution and belligerence.}}</ref> dispute Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children.<ref name="stockman_monticello">{{cite news |last1=Stockman |first1=Farah |title=Monticello Is Done Avoiding Jefferson's Relationship with Sally Hemings |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/16/us/sally-hemings-exhibit-monticello.html |access-date=January 14, 2020 |work=] |date=June 16, 2018}}</ref> All but one of 13 TJHS scholars expressed considerable skepticism about the conclusions.<ref name=JHSC/> The TJHS report suggested that Jefferson's younger brother ] could have been the father – the DNA test cannot distinguish between Jefferson males. They also speculate that Hemings might have had consensual or non consensual sexual relations with multiple men.<ref name="JHSC" /> Three of the Hemings children were given names from the Randolph (surname) family, relatives of Thomas Jefferson through his mother. Herbert Barger, the founder and director-emeritus of the TJHS and the husband of a Jefferson descendant, assisted Foster in the DNA study.<ref name="Study" /> By contrast, all but one member of the DNA Study Committee commissioned by TJF thought that the DNA and documentary evidence combined made it probable that Thomas Jefferson was the father of one or more of the Hemings children. | |||
The current consensus among American historians appears to have undergone a sea-change. Once, most scholars dismissed the idea that Jefferson fathered Hemings's children without examining the evidence closely. Now most historians agree that the story is more likely than not, again without necessarily having read the full record. Scholars remain open to more evidence, but it is unclear where it might be found. | |||
{{Quote box|title=from review of book ''The Hemingeses of Monticello: An American Family'' by ]||fontsize=92%|quote=Until very recently, American historians were no more receptive to arguments about a sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings than '']'''s ] was to a romance between Jesus and Mary Magdalene. The goal of the historians was to protect their hero from charges of hypocrisy. ], the greatest in a long line of Jefferson hagiographers, established the common wisdom when he wrote that an interracial sexual affair was "distinctly out of character, being virtually unthinkable in a man of Jefferson's moral standards and habitual conduct." ] concluded that given Jefferson's documented horror of miscegenation, "It would indeed have been the height of hypocrisy for a man who entertained such views and expressed them over most of his adult life to have sired mulatto children." Case closed. In a review of ]'s ''Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History'' (1974), | |||
Among the public, the question of Thomas Jefferson's and Sally Hemings's relationship remains controversial. Members of the ], who claim descent from Jefferson through his eldest daughter Martha Jefferson Randolph, have voted not to admit Hemings's descendants. Nevertheless, through the quirks of history and biology, only one set of Americans can show both that their ancestors were born at Monticello and that they share a Y chromosome with the Jefferson family: the patrilineal male descendants of Eston Hemings, Sally Hemings's youngest son. | |||
which was the first scholarly work to credit the Jefferson-Hemings liaison, ] accepted the possibility of | |||
Jefferson having "sired" Sally Heming's seven children and saved his scorn for Brodie's contention that Jefferson and Hemings forged a deep emotional bond during an intimate relationship that lasted nearly forty years.|author=Jane Dailey|source=''Law and History Review'', November 2010, Vol. 28, No. 4|align=left|width=35%}} | |||
TJF committee participant W. McKenzie (Ken) Wallenborn wrote a late-1999 ] disagreeing with some aspects of the committee's full report (not made public until 2000; TJF also published this dissent in 2000).<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> While Wallenborn concurred with the validity of the ] and with the documentary research collected, he disputed some of the interpretation, and concluded: "The historical evidence is not substantial enough to confirm nor for that matter to refute paternity of any of the children of Sally Hemings."<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> He gave considerable weight to four pieces of non-genetic evidence. First are a pair of late letters of Jefferson to close associates which can be read as denials of adultery slanders spread by Federalist political enemies (though the letters do not specifically mention Hemings). Second is an unequivocal counterclaim made by Jefferson's foreman Edmund Bacon and published by H. W. Pierson (with the name of the alleged actual father redacted). Third is that Col. Thomas Jefferson Randolph, who was frequently in his grandfather Thomas Jefferson's household and who worked as his farm manager and was later his estate ], was reported to have denied that any relations between Jefferson and any of the Hemings women existed, but claimed that resident nephew Peter Carr was involved with Sally, while her niece Betsey was openly the mistress of his brother Samuel Carr (though this account is third-hand). Finally, some materials claimed that Martha (Jefferson) Randolph and her sons demonstrated that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had been separated for some fifteen months before the birth of the son "who most resembled" Jefferson (presumed by Wallenborn to be Eston Hemings).<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> In Wallenborn's view, it was thus quite possible that Sally Hemings bore children to multiple men in the Jefferson/Randolph/Carr clan, and that none of them was necessarily Thomas Jefferson, but that the children were just genetically close, a "Jefferson DNA Haplotype carrier" in at least one case. He conceded that the DNA results "enhance the possibility" of Jefferson's paternity of one or more of the Hemings children but do not prove it. This view is consistent with that expressed by the DNA study's lead, Eugene Foster, regarding what could or could not be concluded from the DNA evidence. While supporting TJF's continued education mission at Monticello, Wallenborn warned that "historical accuracy should never be overwhelmed by political correctness".<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> | |||
Lucia Cinder Stanton, writing for the majority of the committee, responded a month later with a rebuttal.<ref name="L. C. Stanton">{{cite web |first=Lucia Cinder |last=Stanton |title=Response to the Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming |date=April 2000 |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |url= https://www.monticello.org/thomas-jefferson/jefferson-slavery/thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings-a-brief-account/research-report-on-jefferson-and-hemings/response-to-the-minority-report/ |access-date=October 19, 2020}}</ref> She noted that the Jefferson, Bacon/Pierson, and Randolph material contained various ambiguities, partisanship, timeline errors, and contradictions or outright misrepresentations. She suggested that Madison Hemings probably knew who his father was, and there was no evidence that ghostwriter Wetmore injected fiction even if he polished the wording for print. She also indicated that the claim of a Jefferson–Hemings separation during one conception period cannot be sustained, and that Wallenborn did not correctly understand that material. Stanton stated outright that "Sally Hemings never conceived in Jefferson's absence."<ref name="L. C. Stanton" /> TJF president Jordan, though he had insisted on publication of the Wallenborn dissent,<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> endorsed the Stanton rebuttal.<ref name="L. C. Stanton" /> | |||
==Joseph Ellis and the Clinton impeachment== | |||
The controversy became even more heated because of a side issue: in 1998 Congress was conducting the ], and the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian ] defended Clinton by comparing him to Jefferson. Ellis had previously written that it would have been out of character for Jefferson to have had a sexual relationship with Hemings, but was convinced by the ] tests and documentary evidence. He now wrote: | |||
The next month, May 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS) emerged: {{blockquote|a group of concerned businessmen, historians, genealogists, scientists, and patriots formed ... as a response ... to efforts by many historical revisionists to portray Thomas Jefferson as a hypocrite, a liar, and a fraud." The new group's opening press release specifically accused the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation (TJMF, now Thomas Jefferson Foundation, TJF) and its report of "shallow and shoddy scholarship ... to achieve an apparently desired conclusion.<ref>{{cite web |title=Formation of the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society |date=May 2000 |work=TJHeritage.org |publisher=Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society |url= https://www.tjheritage.org/thomas-jefferson-heritage-society |access-date=October 28, 2020}}</ref>}} | |||
:President William Jefferson Clinton also has a vested interest in this revelation.... Jefferson has always been Clinton's favorite ]. Now, a sexually active, all-too-human Jefferson appears alongside his embattled protege. It is as if Clinton had called one of the most respected character witnesses in all of U.S. history to testify that the primal urge has a most distinguished presidential pedigree. The dominant effect of this news will be to make Clinton's sins seem less aberrant and more palatable. If a vote against Clinton is also a vote against Jefferson, the prospects for impeachment become even more remote. <ref>http://www.warbirdforum.com/ellis.htm</ref> | |||
Wallenborn (a former TJMF/TJF employee before his committee participate,<ref name="Ken Wallenborn 2" /> and now a director of TJHS<ref>{{cite web |title=Directors |work=TJHeritage.org |publisher=Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society |url= https://www.tjheritage.org/directors |access-date=October 19, 2020}}</ref>) produced in June a heated follow-up reply to Stanton's rebuttal.<ref name="Ken Wallenborn 2">{{cite web |title=Reply to the Response to the Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming |first=White McKenzie (Ken) |last=Wallenborn |date=June 29, 2000 |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |url= https://www.monticello.org/thomas-jefferson/jefferson-slavery/thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings-a-brief-account/research-report-on-jefferson-and-hemings/reply-to-the-response-to-the-minority-report/ |access-date=October 19, 2020}} Published July 29, 2000, with notes by Daniel P. Jordan.</ref> He claimed that many scholars agreed with his version, and that Jordan had contradicted his support of Stanton's, having expressing skepticism of a Jefferson–Hemings affair in a ] documentary (though it is unclear if this was recorded before the DNA research and subsequent report). Wallenborn repeated many of his original points in more detail; bolstered the potential reliability of Bacon while casting doubt of that of the Madison-via-Whetmore memoir; and insisted again that "the son of Sally that most resembled Thomas Jefferson" surely meant Eston (without any new evidence). He added the argument that Madison Hemings' probable date of conception was close to that of the death of Jefferson's daughter Maria (arguably not a likely inspiration for sexual involvement); and that during Jefferson's presidency, Sally Hemings' exact whereabouts did not survive in any records. Wallenborn attempted to use two sets of records to show gaps in Jefferson's known location during some of the conception periods – but editorial interpolation of footnotes by Jordan with additional records closed those gaps in every case, supporting Stanton's claim. Wallenborn added another new observation, of what he called "some striking coincidences", that Sally Hemings' known pregnancies stopped, despite Thomas Jefferson's presence, after both his brother Randolph and Randolph's son Thomas married women outside Monticello, c. 1808 or 1809.<ref name="Ken Wallenborn 2" /> Wallenborn accused TJF of rushing the report to finalization without accounting for his objections, and concluded his letter in a much more hostile tone than in his original minority report: "If the Thomas Jefferson Foundation and the DNA Study Committee majority had been seeking the truth and had used accurate legal and historical information rather than politically correct motivation" that it would have written "''it is still impossible to prove with absolute certainty whether Thomas Jefferson did or did not father any of Sally Hemings' five children''" (emphasis in original).<ref name="Ken Wallenborn 2" /> He continued: "This statement is accurate and honest and it would have helped discourage the campaign by leading universities (including Thomas Jefferson's own University of Virginia), magazines, university publications, national commercial and public TV networks, and newspapers to denigrate and destroy the legacy of one of the greatest of our founding fathers and one of the greatest of all of our citizens."<ref name="Ken Wallenborn 2" /> TJF did not publish any further back-and-forth disputation. | |||
Ellis's claims generated accusations of distortions. Stephen Goode wrote in ] that Ellis's statement that the DNA tests established a Jefferson-Hemings relation "beyond any reasonable doubt" was an exaggeration . Foster, principal author of the ''Nature'' paper, also asserted the DNA evidence was far from establishing proof of a specific father, though it eliminated other candidates. <ref>http://www.warbirdforum.com/ellis.htm</ref> | |||
In 2012, the ] and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation held a major exhibit at the ]: ''Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty''; it says that "the documentary and genetic evidence ... strongly support the conclusion that Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings' children."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130530094318/http://americanhistory.si.edu/exhibitions/exhibition.cfm?key=38&exkey=1669 |date=May 30, 2013 }}, January 27, 2012 – October 14, 2012, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved March 23, 2012. Quote: "The test results show a genetic link between the Jefferson and Hemings descendants: A man with the Jefferson Y chromosome fathered Eston Hemings (born 1808). While there were other adult males with the Jefferson Y chromosome living in Virginia at that time, several historians now believe that the documentary and genetic evidence, considered together, strongly support the conclusion that Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings's children."</ref> | |||
Of those who have accepted reports suggesting a Jefferson-Hemings relationship, some disagree with Ellis's claim that the relationship would indicate a "distinguished presidential pedigree". Writing about the relationship in the ], Molly Secours said "for us to call it anything but 'rape' is disingenuous and dangerous." In ], DeWayne Wickham wrote that "to imply that the sex between him and his slave was consensual, even in a TV movie, is a cruelly dishonest portrayal of the dirtiest secret of American slavery." <ref>http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/columnists/wickham/wick052.htm</ref> | |||
==Children's lives== | |||
==Descendants== | |||
In 2008, Gordon-Reed published '']'', which explored the extended family, including James's and Sally's lives in France, Monticello and Philadelphia, during Thomas Jefferson's lifetime.<ref>{{cite web |title=Jefferson's Other Family |url= http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2008/09/jeffersons_other_family.html |work=Slate |date= September 23, 2008 |access-date=September 24, 2015}}</ref> She was not able to find much new information about Beverley or ], who left Monticello as young adults, moving north and probably changing their names. | |||
At least three of Hemings's children ] as white. <ref>http://www.jessejacksonjr.org/query/creadpr.cgi?id=%22005024%22</ref> ] (1879-1952), her great-grandson, has the distinction of being the first person of known ] ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast. He served in the ] from 1919-1934. | |||
]' memoir (edited and put into written form by journalist S. F. Wetmore in the ''Pike County Republican'' in 1873)<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> and other documentation, including a wide variety of historical records, and newspaper accounts, has revealed some details of the lives of the Beverley and Harriet, and younger sons Madison and ] (later Eston Jefferson), and of their descendants.{{sfn|Gordon-Reed|2008}} Eventually, three of Sally Hemings' four surviving children (Beverley, Harriet, and Eston, but not Madison) ] white adults in the North; they were seven-eighths European in ancestry, and this was consistent with their appearance.<ref>{{cite book |last=Nowla |first=Robert A. |title=The American Presidents, Washington to Tyler: What They Did, What They Said, What Was Said About Them, with Full Source Notes |date=2012 |page=117 |publisher=McFarland |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MlNWU1e9ppUC&pg=PA117 |access-date=August 28, 2014 |isbn=978-1-4766-0118-2}}</ref> Harriet was described by Edmund Bacon, the longtime Monticello overseer, as "nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful".<ref name="halliday">Halliday, E. M. ''Understanding Thomas Jefferson''. ], 2001. {{ISBN|0-06-095761-1}}. pp. 120–122</ref> In his memoir, Madison wrote that both Beverley and Harriet married well in the white community in the Washington, D.C., area.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> For some time, Madison wrote to Beverley and Harriet and learned of their marriages. He knew that Harriet had children and was living in Maryland. But gradually she and Beverley stopped responding to his letters, and the siblings lost touch.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> Madison also claimed publicly in the 1873 memoir that he was Thomas Jefferson's son, and he had done likewise on the ].<ref name="Ken Wallenborn" /> | |||
Both Madison and Eston married ] in Charlottesville. After their mother's death in 1835, they and their families moved to ] in the free state of ]. Census records classified them as "]", at that time meaning mixed-race. The census enumerator, usually a local person, classified individuals in part according to who their neighbors were and what was known of them.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sally Hemings & Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture |date=1999 |publisher=University of Virginia Press |page=182}}</ref> Around 60 years later, a Chillicothe newswriter reminisced in 1902 about his acquaintance with Eston (then a well-known local musician), whom he described as "a remarkably fine looking colored man" with a "striking resemblance to Jefferson" recognized by others, who had already heard a rumors of his paternity and were credulous of it.<ref name="autogenerated2">{{cite news |title=The Gazette's Delver into the Past Brings up a Romantic Story... Was Natural Son of the Sage of Monticello; Had the Traits of Good Training |work=Scioto Gazette |location=Chillicothe, Ohio |date=August 1, 1902}} Republished in: {{cite web |url= https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1902sprig.html |title=Jefferson's Blood – 'A Sprig of Jefferson Was Eston Hemings' |work=] |publisher=] / ] |date=2000}}</ref> | |||
High demand for slaves in the ] and passage of the ] heightened the risk for free black people of being kidnapped by ]s, as they needed little documentation to claim black people as fugitives. Legally free people of color, Eston and his family later moved to ], to be farther away from slave catchers. There he changed his name to "Eston H. Jefferson" to acknowledge his paternity, and all his family adopted the surname. From then on, the Jeffersons lived in the white community. | |||
Madison's family were the only Monticello Hemings descendants who continued to identify with the black community. They intermarried within the community of free people of color before the Civil War. Over time, some of their descendants passed into the white community, while many others continued within the black community.<ref>{{harvnb|Gordon-Reed|1998|page=148}}</ref> | |||
Both Eston and Madison achieved some success in life, were well-respected by their contemporaries, and had children who built on their successes.<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/odd/archives/001068.asp |title=Jefferson's Black Descendants in Wisconsin |website=Wisconsin Historical Society |access-date=February 8, 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20050312111622/https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/odd/archives/001068.asp |archive-date=March 12, 2005}}</ref> They worked as carpenters, and Madison also had a small farm.<ref name="autogenerated5" /> Eston became a professional musician and bandleader, "a master of the violin, and an accomplished 'caller' of dances", who "always officiated at the 'swell' entertainments of Chillicothe".<ref name="autogenerated2" /> He was in demand across southern Ohio. The aforementioned journalist neighbor in Chillicothe described him thus: "Quiet, unobtrusive, polite and decidedly intelligent, he was soon very well and favorably known to all classes of our citizens, for his personal appearance and gentlemanly manners attracted everybody's attention to him."<ref name="autogenerated2" /> | |||
==Grandchildren and other descendants== | |||
===Madison's descendants=== | |||
Madison's sons fought on the Union side in the Civil War. Thomas Eston Hemings enlisted in the ] (USCT); captured, he spent time at the ] and died in a POW camp in ]. According to a Hemings descendant, his brother James attempted to cross Union lines and "]" as a white man to enlist in the Confederate army to rescue him.<ref>, Brady Research</ref> Later, James Hemings was rumored to have moved to Colorado and perhaps passed into white society. Like some others in the family, he disappeared from the record, and the rest of his biography remains unknown.<ref name="Brodie" /> | |||
A third son, William Hemings, enlisted in the regular Union Army as a white man.<ref name="Brodie" /> Madison's last known male-line descendant, William, never married and was not known to have had children. He died in 1910 in a veterans' hospital.<ref name="memory" /> | |||
Some of Madison Hemings' children and grandchildren who remained in Ohio suffered from the limited opportunities for blacks at that time, working as laborers, servants, or small farmers. They tended to marry within the mixed-race community in the region, who eventually became established as people of education and property.<ref>Stanton and Swann-Dwight, ''Bonds of Memory'', pp. 161–170</ref> | |||
Madison's daughter, Ellen Wayles Hemings, married Alexander Jackson Roberts, a graduate of ]. When their first son was young, they moved to ], where the family and its descendants became leaders in the 20th century. Their first son, ] (1879–1952) – Sally Hemings' and Jefferson's great-grandson – was the first person of known black ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast: he served for nearly 20 years in the ] from 1919 to 1934. Their second son, William Giles Roberts, was also a civic leader.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ellen Hemings Roberts |url= http://www.monticello.org/getting-word/people/ellen-hemings-roberts |work=Monticello.org |publisher=] |access-date=March 17, 2014}}</ref> Their descendants have had a strong tradition of college education and public service.<ref name="AHM-Brodie">{{cite magazine |url= http://www.americanheritage.com/content/thomas-jefferson%E2%80%99s-unknown-grandchildren |first=Fawn M. |last=Brodie |title=Thomas Jefferson's Unknown Grandchildren: A Study in Historical Silences |magazine=] |date=June 1976 |volume=27 |issue=6 |access-date=March 26, 2014}}</ref> | |||
===Eston's descendants=== | |||
], a grandson of Hemings, through her son ]]] | |||
Eston's sons also enlisted in the Union Army, both as white men from ]. His first son ] had red hair and gray eyes like his grandfather Jefferson. By the 1850s, John Jefferson in his twenties was the proprietor of the American Hotel in Madison. At one time he operated it with his younger brother Beverley. He was commissioned as a ] officer during the Civil War, during which he was promoted to the rank of Colonel and served at the ]. He wrote letters about the war to the newspaper in Madison for publication.<ref name="jwjeff">, Wisconsin State Historical Society</ref> After the war, John Jefferson returned to Wisconsin, where he frequently wrote for newspapers and published accounts about his war experiences. He later moved to ], where he became a successful and wealthy cotton broker. He never married or had known children,<ref name="Brodie">{{cite magazine |url= http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1976/6/1976_6_28.shtml |title=Thomas Jefferson's unknown grandchildren |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080618171703/http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1976/6/1976_6_28.shtml |archive-date=June 18, 2008 |first=Fawn |last=Brodie |magazine=] |date=October 1976}}</ref><ref name="memory">Lewis, Jan. ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture''. University of Virginia Press (1999), p. 169.</ref> and left a sizeable estate.<ref name="BJobit" /> | |||
Eston's second son, Beverley Jefferson, also served in the regular Union Army, as a white man. After operating the American Hotel with his brother John, he later separately operated the Capital Hotel. He also built a successful horse-drawn "omnibus" business. He and his wife Anna M. Smith had five sons, three of whom reached the professional class as a physician, attorney, and manager in the railroad industry.<ref name="BJobit" /> According to his 1908 obituary, Beverley Jefferson was "a likeable character at the Wisconsin capital and a familiar of statesmen for half a century".<ref name="BJobit">, Wisconsin History</ref> His friend Augustus J. Munson wrote, "Beverley Jefferson death deserves more than a passing notice, as he was a grandson of Thomas Jefferson .... was one of God's noblemen – gentle, kind, courteous, charitable."<ref name="autogenerated1">''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'', Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 216</ref> Beverley and Anna's great-grandson John Weeks Jefferson is the Eston Hemings descendant whose DNA was tested in 1998; it matched the Y-chromosome of the Thomas Jefferson male line.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/01/us/dna-test-finds-evidence-of-jefferson-child-by-slave.html |first1=Dinitia |last1=Smith |first2=Nicholas |last2=Wade |title=DNA Test Finds Evidence Of Jefferson Child by Slave |work=] |date=November 1998}}</ref> | |||
There are known male-line descendants of Eston Hemings Jefferson, and known female-line descendants of Madison Hemings' three daughters: Sarah, Harriet, and Ellen.<ref name="monticelloreport" /><ref>{{cite news |title=Jefferson Descendants Reconcile Family History |url= http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2011/February/Jefferson-Descendants-Heal-Family-Division/ |access-date=September 24, 2015 |work=CBN.com |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
==Cultural depictions of Sally Hemings== | |||
{{Main|Cultural depictions of Sally Hemings}} | |||
Sally Hemings has been the main subject of a novel, a television mini-series, a stage play, two operas, and an operatic oratorio. She is also the subject of the second half of the film '']''. She has also appeared as a supporting character or a subject of discussion in many other shows and stage productions. | |||
The power dynamic between Hemings and Thomas Jefferson is portrayed in Titus Kaphar's "Behind the Myth of Benevolence",<ref>Titus Kaphar. Behind the Myth of Benevolence, 2014. Oil on canvas, 59 x 34 x 6 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York ©Titus Kaphar.</ref> a portrait of the founding father peeling back to reveal the nude figure of Hemings. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|United States}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Sources== | |||
* {{cite book |first=Fawn M. |last=Brodie |author-link=Fawn M. Brodie |title=Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History |url= https://archive.org/details/thomasj_bro_1974_00_7057 |url-access=registration |publisher=W. W. Norton |date=1974 |isbn=0-393-33833-9 }} | |||
* {{cite book |first=Annette |last=Gordon-Reed |author-link=Annette Gordon-Reed |date=1997 |title=Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy |publisher=University of Virginia Press |isbn=978-0-8139-1833-4 }} | |||
** {{cite book |first=Annette |last=Gordon-Reed |date=1998 |title=Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy |publisher=University of Virginia Press |isbn=978-0-8139-1698-9}} Reprint edition with new foreword. | |||
* Thomas Jefferson, ''Thomas Jefferson's Farm Book'' (Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2002) {{ISBN|1-882886-10-0}} | |||
* , (electronic edition) Thomas Jefferson Papers: An Electronic Archive. Boston, Mass.: Massachusetts Historical Society, 2003 | |||
* {{cite book |last=Gordon-Reed |first=Annette |author-link=Annette Gordon-Reed |date=2008 |title=The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family |publisher=W. W. Norton |isbn=978-0-393-33776-1 }} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
* ], ''Thomas Jefferson''. (Oxford University Press, 2003). {{ISBN|978-0-19-518130-2}} | |||
* ], ''Sally Hemings: A Novel (Rediscovered Classics).'' Chicago Review Press; Reprint edition. (2009) {{ISBN|978-1-55652-945-0}}. | |||
* Coates, Eyler Robert Sr. (ed.), ''The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty'' (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001) {{ISBN|0-934211-66-3}} | |||
* Crawford, Alan Pell, ''Twilight at Monticello'', 2008. | |||
* Drew, Bernard A., ''100 Most Popular African American Authors: Biographical Sketches and Bibliographies.'' Libraries Unlimited. (2006) {{ISBN|978-1591583226}} | |||
* , review of Annette Gordon-Reed, ''The Hemingses of Monticello'', ''Slate'', September 23, 2008 | |||
* Hyland, William G. Jr., ''In Defense of Thomas Jefferson'' (St. Martins, 2009).{{ISBN|0-312-56100-8}} | |||
* Ledgin, N. M., ''Sally of Monticello: Founding Mother.'' Amazon Digital Services. (2012) | |||
* Lewis, Jan E.; Onuf, Peter S. (eds.); ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture'' (University Press of Virginia, 1999) | |||
* ], ''Jefferson and His Time'': (Little, Brown; 1948–1981), six volumes | |||
* McMurry, Rebecca L.; McMurry, James F. Jr.; , (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2002) | |||
* Pierson, Hamilton, , New York: Charles Scribner, 1862; digital text of book drawn from reminiscences of Edmund Bacon, Jefferson's overseer; via: University of Michigan. | |||
* , Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001 | |||
* Scharff, Virginia, ''The Women Jefferson Loved'', New York: HarperCollins, 2010. | |||
* Stanton, Lucia, ''Free Some Day: The African-American Families of Monticello'', Charlottesville: Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2000. {{ISBN|978-1-882886-14-2}} | |||
* , 2000, ''Monticello.org'', ] | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
===For young readers=== | |||
* Jane Feldman, Shannon Lanier, ''Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family'': (Random House, 2001), for ages 10 and up | |||
* ], "Jefferson's Sons": (Dial Books for Young Readers, 2011), historical fiction for ages 10 and up | |||
==External links== | |||
*''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy'': Annette Gordon-Reed (University Press of Virginia, 1997) | |||
* , ] (TJF) | |||
*''Jefferson Vindicated: Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions In the Jefferson Genealogical Search'': Cynthia H. Burton (self-published, 2005) | |||
** , ''Monticello.org'', TJF | |||
*''A President in the Family: Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and Thomas Woodson'': Byron W. Woodson, Sr. (Praeger, 2001) | |||
* |
* , Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS) | ||
* (author of ''Twilight at Monticello''), at '']'', 2008 | |||
*"Anatomy of a Scandal, Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Story": Rebecca L. and James F. McMurry, Jr. (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2002) and | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia |url= http://encyclopediavirginia.org/Hemings_Sally_1773-1835#start_entry |title=Sally Hemings (1773–1835) |publisher=] |encyclopedia=] |date=October 3, 2014 |access-date=January 2, 2015 |last=Scharff |first=Virginia}} | |||
*"Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission Report" (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001) | |||
*''Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History'': ] (W. W. Norton, 1974) | |||
*Six-volume biography of Thomas Jefferson: ] (Little, Brown, 1948-1981) | |||
*''Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family'': Jane Feldman, Shannon Lanier (Random House, 2001) | |||
* | |||
* | |||
*''The Slave Children of Thomas Jefferson'': ] (Kiseido, 1992) ISBN 4-906574-00-9 | |||
*''Thomas Jefferson's Farm Book'': Thomas Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2002) ISBN 1-882886-10-0 | |||
*''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture'': Jan Lewis, Peter S. Onuf, editors (University Press of Virginia, 1999) | |||
* | |||
{{Thomas Jefferson|state=collapsed}} | |||
==Footnotes and citations== | |||
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Latest revision as of 15:39, 1 January 2025
Slave of Thomas Jefferson (c. 1773–1835)
Sally Hemings | |
---|---|
Born | Sarah Hemings c. 1773 Charles City County, Virginia, British America |
Died | 1835 (aged 61–62) Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S. |
Known for | Slave owned by Thomas Jefferson, alleged mother to his shadow family |
Children | 6, including Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston |
Parent(s) | Betty Hemings John Wayles |
Relatives | Hemings family |
Sarah "Sally" Hemings (c. 1773 – 1835) was a woman enslaved to third President of the United States Thomas Jefferson, inherited among many others from his father-in-law, John Wayles.
Hemings' mother was Betty Hemings, the daughter of an enslaved woman and an English captain, John Hemings. Sally's father, the owner of Betty, John Wayles, was also the father of Jefferson's wife, Martha. Therefore, Sally was half-sister to Jefferson's wife and was of (at least) three quarters English descent, making her a quadroon according to then-contemporary racial classification. Martha died during her marriage in 1782. In 1787, when she was 14, Sally Hemings accompanied Jefferson's daughter, also named Martha, to Paris where they joined Thomas Jefferson. There, Sally was a legally free and paid servant as slavery was not legal in France. At some time during her 26 months in Paris, the widower Jefferson is believed to have begun intimate relations with her.
As attested by her son, Madison Hemings, Sally later agreed with Jefferson that she would return to Virginia and resume her life in slavery, as long as all their children would be freed when they came of age. Multiple lines of evidence, including modern DNA analyses, indicate that Jefferson impregnated Hemings several times over years while they lived together on Jefferson's Monticello estate, and historians now broadly agree that he was the father of her six children. Whether this should be described as rape remains a matter of controversy by historians, as there is no evidence that Jefferson sexually assaulted her, but due to his near-complete control over her life, and that she was a teenager, between 14 and 16 years, when he was in his 40s, the circumstances for coercion are present. Four of Hemings' children survived into adulthood and were freed as they came of age during Thomas Jefferson's life or in his will. Hemings died in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 1835 in the home of her freed sons.
The historical question of whether Jefferson was the father of Hemings' children is the subject of the Jefferson–Hemings controversy. Following renewed historical analysis in the late 20th century, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation empaneled a commission of scholars and scientists who worked with a 1998–1999 genealogical DNA test that found a match between the Jefferson male line and a descendant of Hemings' youngest son, Eston Hemings. The Foundation's panel concluded that Jefferson fathered Eston and likely her other five children as well. A rival society was then founded, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, which commissioned another panel of scholars in 2001 that found that it had not been proven that Thomas Jefferson fathered Sally Hemings' children. In 2018, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation of Monticello announced its plans to have an exhibit titled Life of Sally Hemings, and affirmed that it was treating as a settled issue that Jefferson was the father of her known children.
Early life
Sally Hemings was born about 1773 to the enslaved Elizabeth "Betty" Hemings and her mother's owner, John Wayles. Betty's parents were a "full-blooded African" slave and a white English sea captain surnamed Hemings. Captain Hemings tried to purchase the mother and his daughter Betty from their enslaver, Francis Eppes, but the planter refused out of curiosity about how the mixed ethnicities would turn out in Betty. Upon Eppes' death his daughter, Martha Eppes, inherited Betty, and took her as a personal slave upon her marriage to Wayles.
Wayles was born to Edward and Ellen (née Ashburner) Wayles, in Lancaster, England. Following Martha's death, Wayles remarried and was widowed twice more. Several sources assert that Wayles took Betty Hemings as his concubine and that Sally was the youngest of the six children they had during the last 12 years of his life. These children were younger half-siblings to his daughters by his wives. His first child, Martha Wayles (named after her mother, Wayles' first wife), married the young planter and future president Thomas Jefferson.
The children of Betty Hemings and John Wayles were three-quarters European in ancestry and fair-skinned. According to the 1662 Virginia Slave Law, children born to slave mothers were considered slaves under the principle of partus sequitur ventrem: the enslaved status of a child followed that of the mother. Betty and her children, including Sally Hemings and all Sally's children, were legally slaves even though the fathers were their white enslavers and the children were of majority-European ancestry.
John Wayles died in 1773 and the next year his daughter Martha and her husband, Thomas Jefferson, inherited the Hemings family among a total of 135 slaves from Wayles' estate, along with 11,000 acres (4,500 ha) of land. Sally was an infant that year and about 25 years younger than Martha. She, her siblings, their mother Betty, and various other slaves were brought to Monticello, Jefferson's home. The mixed-race Wayles-Hemings children grew up at Monticello at the top of the enslaved hierarchy, and as such were trained and given assignments as skilled artisans and domestic servants. Betty Hemings' other children and their descendants, also mixed race, were bestowed privileged assignments as well. None worked in the fields.
Appearance
The former slave Isaac (Granger) Jefferson described Hemings' physical appearance as "Sally was mighty near white. Sally was very handsome, long straight hair down her back". Jefferson's grandson Thomas Jefferson Randolph recalled her as "Light colored and decidedly good looking".
Hemings in Paris
Sally Heming's son, Madison Hemings, on Hemings and JeffersonMadison Hemings, Madison Hemings recollections, Pike County Republican, 13 Mar. 1873My mother accompanied her as her body servant. When Mr. Jefferson went to France Martha was a young woman grown, my mother was about her age, and Maria was just budding into womanhood. Their stay (my mother and Maria's) was about eighteen months. But during that time my mother became Mr. Jefferson's concubine, and when he was called home she was enceinte by him. He desired to bring my mother back to Virginia with him but she demurred. She was just beginning to understand the French language well, and in France she was free, while if she returned to Virginia she would be re-enslaved. So she refused to return with him. To induce her to do so he promised her extraordinary privileges, and made a solemn pledge that her children should be freed at the age of twenty-one years. In consequence of his promises, on which she implicitly relied, she returned with him to Virginia.
In 1784, Thomas Jefferson was appointed the American envoy to France; he took his eldest daughter Martha (Patsy) with him to Paris, as well as several of his slaves. Among them was Sally's elder brother James Hemings, who became a chef trained in French cuisine. Jefferson left his two younger daughters in the care of their aunt and uncle, Francis and Elizabeth Wayles Eppes of Eppington in Chesterfield County, Virginia. After his youngest daughter, Lucy Elizabeth, died in 1784 while Jefferson was away, Jefferson sent for his surviving daughter, nine-year-old Mary (Polly), to live with him. The teenage slave, Sally Hemings, was chosen to accompany Polly to France after an older female slave became pregnant and could not make the journey. Correspondence between Jefferson and Abigail Adams indicates that Jefferson originally arranged for Polly to "be in the care of her nurse, a black woman, to whom she is confided with safety"; Adams wrote back: "The old Nurse whom you expected to have attended her, was sick and unable to come. She has a Girl about 15 or 16 with her."
Annette Gordon-Reed on Jefferson and HemingsAnnette Gordon-Reed, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy p. 191 Kindle editionThat a black woman in slavery would seek out a relationship with a slave master, or if not seek it out, not run away from it, is not a particularly attractive idea. Some view such a person as a traitor, giving the ultimate aid and comfort to the enemy. Our notions about women and sexuality probably play a major role in our discomfort about these situations. Sex between a slave master and a woman who was a slave has always been seen differently than sex between a slave mistress and a man who was a slave, both by whites and blacks. Whites tolerated the former because it posed no real threat to the established order. They claimed it did, but they did not react against it with the same vehemence that they did to relationships between slave males and white women, which were seen as threatening the social order and could never be tolerated. .... Most blacks probably would consider a slave woman who voluntarily joined a relationship with her master as a collaborator. On the other hand, they might see a black man who had a relationship with a white mistress as a rebel who was striking at the heart of the slave system. These ideas, rooted in our visions of sex roles, may have some validity as far as generalizations go. They do not take into account the differing circumstances and contexts in which such relationships could arise. Therefore, we should not allow them to control any serious consideration of an individual case.
In 1787, Sally, aged 14 (although she looked older to Adams), accompanied Polly to London and then to Paris. In London, they stayed with Abigail and John Adams from June 26 until July 10, 1787. Jefferson's associate, a Mr. Petit, arranged transportation and escorted the girls to Paris. In a letter to Jefferson on June 27, 1787, Abigail wrote:
The Girl who is with is quite a child, and Captain Ramsey is of opinion will be of so little Service that he had better carry her back with him. But of this you will be a judge. She seems fond of the child and appears good natured." On July 6, Abigail wrote to Jefferson, "The Girl she has with her, wants more care than the child, and is wholy incapable of looking properly after her, without some superiour to direct her.
The widowed Jefferson, aged 44 at the time, was serving as the United States Minister to France. Hemings spent two years there and most historians believe Jefferson and Hemings' sexual relationship began while they were in France or soon after their return to Monticello. The exact nature of their relationship remains unclear. The Monticello exhibition on Hemings acknowledged this uncertainty, while noting the power imbalance inherent in an intimate relationship between a successful, wealthy white male and a quarter-black female slave 30 years his junior. The president of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation said, "We really can't know what the dynamic was. Was it rape? Was there affection? We felt we had to present a range of views, including the most painful one." Hemings remained enslaved in Jefferson's house until his death in 1826. In 2017, a room identified as her quarters at Monticello, under the south terrace, was discovered in an archeological examination. It is being restored and refurbished.
Sally Hemings remained in France for 26 months. Slavery had been abolished in that country after the Revolution in 1789; Jefferson paid wages to her and James while they were in Paris. He paid her the equivalent of $2 a month. In comparison, he paid James Hemings $4 a month as chef-in-training, and his Parisian scullion $2.50 a month; the other French servants earned from $8 to $12 a month. Toward the end of their stay, James used his money to pay for a French tutor and to learn the language, and Sally was also learning French. There is no record of where she lived: it may have been with Jefferson and her brother in the Hôtel de Langeac on the Champs-Elysées, or at the convent Abbaye de Penthemont where the girls Maria and Martha were schooled. Whatever the weekday arrangements, Jefferson and his retinue spent weekends together at his villa. Jefferson purchased some fine clothing for Hemings, which suggests that she accompanied Martha as a lady's maid to formal events.
According to her son Madison's memoir, Hemings became pregnant by Jefferson in Paris. She was about 16 at the time. Under French law, Sally and James were free and could have petitioned to stay; a return to Virginia meant a return to slavery. She agreed to return with him to the United States in exchange for his promise to free her children when they came of age (at 21). Hemings' strong ties to her mother, siblings, and extended family likely drew her back to Monticello.
Return to the United States and children's freedom
In 1789, Sally and James Hemings returned to the United States with Jefferson, who was 46 years old and seven years a widower. As shown by Jefferson's father-in-law, John Wayles, sexual relationships between wealthy Virginia widowers and female slaves were not unknown. White society simply expected such men to be discreet about them.
According to Madison Hemings, Sally's first child died soon after her return from Paris. Hemings had six children after this; their complete names are in some cases uncertain:
- Harriet Hemings (October 5, 1795 – December 1797)
- Beverly Hemings, possibly William Beverley Hemings (April 1, 1798 – after 1873)
- Daughter, possibly named Thenia Hemings after Sally's sister (born in 1799 and died in infancy)
- Harriet Hemings (May 1801 – Unknown)
- Madison Hemings, possibly James Madison Hemings (January 19, 1805 – November 28, 1877)
- Eston Hemings, possibly named Thomas Eston Hemings (May 21, 1808 – January 3, 1856)
Jefferson recorded births of slaves in his Farm Book. Unlike his practice in recording births of other slaves, he did not identify the father of Sally Hemings' children.
Sally Hemings' documented duties at Monticello included being a nursemaid-companion, lady's maid, chambermaid, and seamstress. It is not known whether she was literate, and she left no known writings. She was described as very fair. She is believed to have lived as an adult in a room in Monticello's "South Dependencies", a wing of the mansion accessible to the main house through a covered passageway.
In 2017, the Monticello Foundation announced that what they believe to be Hemings' room, adjacent to Jefferson's bedroom, had been found through an archeological excavation, as part of the Mountaintop Project. It was space that had been converted to other public uses in 1941. Hemings' room will be restored and refurbished as part of a major restoration project for the complex. Its goals include telling the stories of all the families at Monticello, both enslaved and free.
Hemings never married. Virginia law did not recognize the marriages of enslaved people, but many forced laborers at Monticello had recognized stable relationships with partners in common-law marriages. But unlike those others, Monticello records document Hemings in no such partnership, at any time. But she kept her children near her. According to her son Madison, while young, the children "were permitted to stay about the 'great house', and only required to do such light work as going on errands". At the age of 14, each of the children began their training: the brothers with the plantation's skilled master of carpentry, and Harriet as a spinner and weaver. The three boys were all taught and learned to play the violin, which Jefferson himself played.
In 1822, at the age of 24, Beverley left or "ran away" from Monticello and was not pursued. His sister Harriet Hemings, 21, followed in the same year, apparently with at least tacit permission. The overseer, Edmund Bacon, said that he gave her $50 ($1,131 in 2021) and put her on a stagecoach to the North, presumably to join her brother. In his memoir, published posthumously, Bacon said Harriet was "near white and very beautiful", and that people said Jefferson freed her because she was his daughter. However, Bacon did not believe this to be true, citing someone else coming out of Sally Hemings' bedroom. The name of this person was left out by Rev. Hamilton W. Pierson in his 1862 book because he did not wish to cause pain to anyone living at that time.
Jefferson formally freed two slaves while he was alive: Sally's older brothers Robert, who bought his freedom, and James, who was required to train his brother Peter as a chef for three years to get his freedom. Jefferson eventually (including posthumously, through his will) freed all of Sally's surviving children, Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston, as they came of age. (Harriet was the only female slave Jefferson allowed to go free, and these were the only slaves freed as they came of age.) Of the hundreds of slaves he legally owned, Jefferson freed only five in his will, all men from the Hemings family. They were also the only slave family group freed by Jefferson. Sally Hemings' children were seven-eighths European in ancestry, and three of the four entered white society after gaining their freedom; their descendants likewise identified as white. His will also petitioned the legislature to allow the freed Hemingses to stay in the state.
No documentation has been found for Sally Hemings' own manumission. Jefferson's daughter Martha (Patsy) Randolph at least informally freed the elderly Hemings after Jefferson's death, by giving her "her time", as was a custom. As the historian Edmund S. Morgan has noted, "Hemings herself was withheld from auction and freed at last by Jefferson's daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph, who was, of course, her niece," as Sally was a half-sister to Martha's mother, Jefferson's deceased wife. This informal freedom allowed Hemings to live in Virginia with her two youngest sons in nearby Charlottesville for the next nine years until her death. In the Albemarle County 1833 census, all three were recorded as free persons of color. Hemings lived to see a grandchild born in a house that her sons owned.
Although Jefferson inherited great wealth at a young age, he was bankrupt by the time he died. His estate, including his slaves (besides the Hemings), was sold at auction by his daughter Martha to repay his debts.
Jefferson–Hemings controversy
Main article: Jefferson–Hemings controversyThe Jefferson–Hemings controversy is the question of whether Jefferson impregnated Sally Hemings and fathered any or all of her six children of record. There were rumors as early as the 1790s. Jefferson's sexual relationship with Hemings was first publicly reported in 1802 by one of Jefferson's enemies, a political journalist named James T. Callender, after he noticed several light-skinned enslaved people at Monticello. He wrote that Jefferson "kept, as his concubine, one of his own slaves" and had "several children" by her. After that the story became widespread, spread by newspapers and by Jefferson's Federalist opponents. Jefferson himself is never recorded to have publicly denied this allegation. However, several members of his family did. In the 1850s, Jefferson's eldest grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, said that Peter Carr, a nephew of Jefferson, had fathered Hemings' children, rather than Jefferson himself. This information was published and became the common wisdom, with major historians of Jefferson denying Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children for the next 150 years.
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Booknotes interview with Gordon-Reed on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, February 21, 1999, C-SPAN |
In the late 20th century, historians began re-analyzing the body of evidence. In 1997, Annette Gordon-Reed published a book, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy, that analyzed the historiography of the debate, demonstrating how historians since the 19th century had accepted early assumptions. They favored Jefferson family testimony while criticizing Hemings family testimony as "oral history", and failed to note all the facts. A consensus began to emerge after the results of a DNA analysis, commissioned in 1998 by Daniel P. Jordan, president of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which operates Monticello as a house museum and archive. The DNA evidence showed no match between the Carr male line, proposed for more than 150 years as the father(s), and the one Hemings descendant tested. It did show a match between the Jefferson male line and the Eston Hemings descendant.
Since 1998 and the DNA study, several historians have concluded that Jefferson maintained a long sexual relationship with Hemings and fathered six children with her, four of whom survived to adulthood. In an article that appeared in Science, eight weeks after the DNA study, Eugene Foster, the lead co-author of the DNA study, is reported to have "made it clear that Thomas was only one of eight or more Jeffersons who may have fathered Eston Hemings". The Thomas Jefferson Foundation (TJF) published in 2000 an independent historic review in combination with the DNA data, as did the National Genealogical Society in 2001; scholars involved mostly concluded Jefferson was probably the father of all Hemings' children.
In an interview in 2000, the historian Annette Gordon-Reed said of the change in historical scholarship about Jefferson and Hemings: "Symbolically, it's tremendously important for people ... as a way of inclusion. Nathan Huggins said that the Sally Hemings story was a way of establishing black people's birthright to America."
A vocal minority of critics, such as the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS, founded shortly after the DNA study), dispute Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children. All but one of 13 TJHS scholars expressed considerable skepticism about the conclusions. The TJHS report suggested that Jefferson's younger brother Randolph Jefferson could have been the father – the DNA test cannot distinguish between Jefferson males. They also speculate that Hemings might have had consensual or non consensual sexual relations with multiple men. Three of the Hemings children were given names from the Randolph (surname) family, relatives of Thomas Jefferson through his mother. Herbert Barger, the founder and director-emeritus of the TJHS and the husband of a Jefferson descendant, assisted Foster in the DNA study. By contrast, all but one member of the DNA Study Committee commissioned by TJF thought that the DNA and documentary evidence combined made it probable that Thomas Jefferson was the father of one or more of the Hemings children.
from review of book The Hemingeses of Monticello: An American Family by Annette Gordon-ReedJane Dailey, Law and History Review, November 2010, Vol. 28, No. 4Until very recently, American historians were no more receptive to arguments about a sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings than The Da Vinci Code's Catholic Church was to a romance between Jesus and Mary Magdalene. The goal of the historians was to protect their hero from charges of hypocrisy. Dumas Malone, the greatest in a long line of Jefferson hagiographers, established the common wisdom when he wrote that an interracial sexual affair was "distinctly out of character, being virtually unthinkable in a man of Jefferson's moral standards and habitual conduct." Virginius Dabney concluded that given Jefferson's documented horror of miscegenation, "It would indeed have been the height of hypocrisy for a man who entertained such views and expressed them over most of his adult life to have sired mulatto children." Case closed. In a review of Fawn Brodie's Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History (1974), which was the first scholarly work to credit the Jefferson-Hemings liaison, Garry Wills accepted the possibility of Jefferson having "sired" Sally Heming's seven children and saved his scorn for Brodie's contention that Jefferson and Hemings forged a deep emotional bond during an intimate relationship that lasted nearly forty years.
TJF committee participant W. McKenzie (Ken) Wallenborn wrote a late-1999 minority report disagreeing with some aspects of the committee's full report (not made public until 2000; TJF also published this dissent in 2000). While Wallenborn concurred with the validity of the genetic testing and with the documentary research collected, he disputed some of the interpretation, and concluded: "The historical evidence is not substantial enough to confirm nor for that matter to refute paternity of any of the children of Sally Hemings." He gave considerable weight to four pieces of non-genetic evidence. First are a pair of late letters of Jefferson to close associates which can be read as denials of adultery slanders spread by Federalist political enemies (though the letters do not specifically mention Hemings). Second is an unequivocal counterclaim made by Jefferson's foreman Edmund Bacon and published by H. W. Pierson (with the name of the alleged actual father redacted). Third is that Col. Thomas Jefferson Randolph, who was frequently in his grandfather Thomas Jefferson's household and who worked as his farm manager and was later his estate executor, was reported to have denied that any relations between Jefferson and any of the Hemings women existed, but claimed that resident nephew Peter Carr was involved with Sally, while her niece Betsey was openly the mistress of his brother Samuel Carr (though this account is third-hand). Finally, some materials claimed that Martha (Jefferson) Randolph and her sons demonstrated that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had been separated for some fifteen months before the birth of the son "who most resembled" Jefferson (presumed by Wallenborn to be Eston Hemings). In Wallenborn's view, it was thus quite possible that Sally Hemings bore children to multiple men in the Jefferson/Randolph/Carr clan, and that none of them was necessarily Thomas Jefferson, but that the children were just genetically close, a "Jefferson DNA Haplotype carrier" in at least one case. He conceded that the DNA results "enhance the possibility" of Jefferson's paternity of one or more of the Hemings children but do not prove it. This view is consistent with that expressed by the DNA study's lead, Eugene Foster, regarding what could or could not be concluded from the DNA evidence. While supporting TJF's continued education mission at Monticello, Wallenborn warned that "historical accuracy should never be overwhelmed by political correctness".
Lucia Cinder Stanton, writing for the majority of the committee, responded a month later with a rebuttal. She noted that the Jefferson, Bacon/Pierson, and Randolph material contained various ambiguities, partisanship, timeline errors, and contradictions or outright misrepresentations. She suggested that Madison Hemings probably knew who his father was, and there was no evidence that ghostwriter Wetmore injected fiction even if he polished the wording for print. She also indicated that the claim of a Jefferson–Hemings separation during one conception period cannot be sustained, and that Wallenborn did not correctly understand that material. Stanton stated outright that "Sally Hemings never conceived in Jefferson's absence." TJF president Jordan, though he had insisted on publication of the Wallenborn dissent, endorsed the Stanton rebuttal.
The next month, May 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS) emerged:
a group of concerned businessmen, historians, genealogists, scientists, and patriots formed ... as a response ... to efforts by many historical revisionists to portray Thomas Jefferson as a hypocrite, a liar, and a fraud." The new group's opening press release specifically accused the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation (TJMF, now Thomas Jefferson Foundation, TJF) and its report of "shallow and shoddy scholarship ... to achieve an apparently desired conclusion.
Wallenborn (a former TJMF/TJF employee before his committee participate, and now a director of TJHS) produced in June a heated follow-up reply to Stanton's rebuttal. He claimed that many scholars agreed with his version, and that Jordan had contradicted his support of Stanton's, having expressing skepticism of a Jefferson–Hemings affair in a PBS-TV documentary (though it is unclear if this was recorded before the DNA research and subsequent report). Wallenborn repeated many of his original points in more detail; bolstered the potential reliability of Bacon while casting doubt of that of the Madison-via-Whetmore memoir; and insisted again that "the son of Sally that most resembled Thomas Jefferson" surely meant Eston (without any new evidence). He added the argument that Madison Hemings' probable date of conception was close to that of the death of Jefferson's daughter Maria (arguably not a likely inspiration for sexual involvement); and that during Jefferson's presidency, Sally Hemings' exact whereabouts did not survive in any records. Wallenborn attempted to use two sets of records to show gaps in Jefferson's known location during some of the conception periods – but editorial interpolation of footnotes by Jordan with additional records closed those gaps in every case, supporting Stanton's claim. Wallenborn added another new observation, of what he called "some striking coincidences", that Sally Hemings' known pregnancies stopped, despite Thomas Jefferson's presence, after both his brother Randolph and Randolph's son Thomas married women outside Monticello, c. 1808 or 1809. Wallenborn accused TJF of rushing the report to finalization without accounting for his objections, and concluded his letter in a much more hostile tone than in his original minority report: "If the Thomas Jefferson Foundation and the DNA Study Committee majority had been seeking the truth and had used accurate legal and historical information rather than politically correct motivation" that it would have written "it is still impossible to prove with absolute certainty whether Thomas Jefferson did or did not father any of Sally Hemings' five children" (emphasis in original). He continued: "This statement is accurate and honest and it would have helped discourage the campaign by leading universities (including Thomas Jefferson's own University of Virginia), magazines, university publications, national commercial and public TV networks, and newspapers to denigrate and destroy the legacy of one of the greatest of our founding fathers and one of the greatest of all of our citizens." TJF did not publish any further back-and-forth disputation.
In 2012, the Smithsonian Institution and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation held a major exhibit at the National Museum of American History: Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty; it says that "the documentary and genetic evidence ... strongly support the conclusion that Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings' children."
Children's lives
In 2008, Gordon-Reed published The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family, which explored the extended family, including James's and Sally's lives in France, Monticello and Philadelphia, during Thomas Jefferson's lifetime. She was not able to find much new information about Beverley or Harriet Hemings, who left Monticello as young adults, moving north and probably changing their names.
Madison Hemings' memoir (edited and put into written form by journalist S. F. Wetmore in the Pike County Republican in 1873) and other documentation, including a wide variety of historical records, and newspaper accounts, has revealed some details of the lives of the Beverley and Harriet, and younger sons Madison and Eston Hemings (later Eston Jefferson), and of their descendants. Eventually, three of Sally Hemings' four surviving children (Beverley, Harriet, and Eston, but not Madison) chose to identify as white adults in the North; they were seven-eighths European in ancestry, and this was consistent with their appearance. Harriet was described by Edmund Bacon, the longtime Monticello overseer, as "nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful". In his memoir, Madison wrote that both Beverley and Harriet married well in the white community in the Washington, D.C., area. For some time, Madison wrote to Beverley and Harriet and learned of their marriages. He knew that Harriet had children and was living in Maryland. But gradually she and Beverley stopped responding to his letters, and the siblings lost touch. Madison also claimed publicly in the 1873 memoir that he was Thomas Jefferson's son, and he had done likewise on the 1870 U.S. census.
Both Madison and Eston married free women of color in Charlottesville. After their mother's death in 1835, they and their families moved to Chillicothe in the free state of Ohio. Census records classified them as "mulatto", at that time meaning mixed-race. The census enumerator, usually a local person, classified individuals in part according to who their neighbors were and what was known of them. Around 60 years later, a Chillicothe newswriter reminisced in 1902 about his acquaintance with Eston (then a well-known local musician), whom he described as "a remarkably fine looking colored man" with a "striking resemblance to Jefferson" recognized by others, who had already heard a rumors of his paternity and were credulous of it.
High demand for slaves in the Deep South and passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 heightened the risk for free black people of being kidnapped by slave catchers, as they needed little documentation to claim black people as fugitives. Legally free people of color, Eston and his family later moved to Madison, Wisconsin, to be farther away from slave catchers. There he changed his name to "Eston H. Jefferson" to acknowledge his paternity, and all his family adopted the surname. From then on, the Jeffersons lived in the white community.
Madison's family were the only Monticello Hemings descendants who continued to identify with the black community. They intermarried within the community of free people of color before the Civil War. Over time, some of their descendants passed into the white community, while many others continued within the black community.
Both Eston and Madison achieved some success in life, were well-respected by their contemporaries, and had children who built on their successes. They worked as carpenters, and Madison also had a small farm. Eston became a professional musician and bandleader, "a master of the violin, and an accomplished 'caller' of dances", who "always officiated at the 'swell' entertainments of Chillicothe". He was in demand across southern Ohio. The aforementioned journalist neighbor in Chillicothe described him thus: "Quiet, unobtrusive, polite and decidedly intelligent, he was soon very well and favorably known to all classes of our citizens, for his personal appearance and gentlemanly manners attracted everybody's attention to him."
Grandchildren and other descendants
Madison's descendants
Madison's sons fought on the Union side in the Civil War. Thomas Eston Hemings enlisted in the United States Colored Troops (USCT); captured, he spent time at the Andersonville POW camp and died in a POW camp in Meridian, Mississippi. According to a Hemings descendant, his brother James attempted to cross Union lines and "pass" as a white man to enlist in the Confederate army to rescue him. Later, James Hemings was rumored to have moved to Colorado and perhaps passed into white society. Like some others in the family, he disappeared from the record, and the rest of his biography remains unknown.
A third son, William Hemings, enlisted in the regular Union Army as a white man. Madison's last known male-line descendant, William, never married and was not known to have had children. He died in 1910 in a veterans' hospital.
Some of Madison Hemings' children and grandchildren who remained in Ohio suffered from the limited opportunities for blacks at that time, working as laborers, servants, or small farmers. They tended to marry within the mixed-race community in the region, who eventually became established as people of education and property.
Madison's daughter, Ellen Wayles Hemings, married Alexander Jackson Roberts, a graduate of Oberlin College. When their first son was young, they moved to Los Angeles, California, where the family and its descendants became leaders in the 20th century. Their first son, Frederick Madison Roberts (1879–1952) – Sally Hemings' and Jefferson's great-grandson – was the first person of known black ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast: he served for nearly 20 years in the California State Assembly from 1919 to 1934. Their second son, William Giles Roberts, was also a civic leader. Their descendants have had a strong tradition of college education and public service.
Eston's descendants
Eston's sons also enlisted in the Union Army, both as white men from Madison, Wisconsin. His first son John Wayles Jefferson had red hair and gray eyes like his grandfather Jefferson. By the 1850s, John Jefferson in his twenties was the proprietor of the American Hotel in Madison. At one time he operated it with his younger brother Beverley. He was commissioned as a Union officer during the Civil War, during which he was promoted to the rank of Colonel and served at the Battle of Vicksburg. He wrote letters about the war to the newspaper in Madison for publication. After the war, John Jefferson returned to Wisconsin, where he frequently wrote for newspapers and published accounts about his war experiences. He later moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where he became a successful and wealthy cotton broker. He never married or had known children, and left a sizeable estate.
Eston's second son, Beverley Jefferson, also served in the regular Union Army, as a white man. After operating the American Hotel with his brother John, he later separately operated the Capital Hotel. He also built a successful horse-drawn "omnibus" business. He and his wife Anna M. Smith had five sons, three of whom reached the professional class as a physician, attorney, and manager in the railroad industry. According to his 1908 obituary, Beverley Jefferson was "a likeable character at the Wisconsin capital and a familiar of statesmen for half a century". His friend Augustus J. Munson wrote, "Beverley Jefferson death deserves more than a passing notice, as he was a grandson of Thomas Jefferson .... was one of God's noblemen – gentle, kind, courteous, charitable." Beverley and Anna's great-grandson John Weeks Jefferson is the Eston Hemings descendant whose DNA was tested in 1998; it matched the Y-chromosome of the Thomas Jefferson male line.
There are known male-line descendants of Eston Hemings Jefferson, and known female-line descendants of Madison Hemings' three daughters: Sarah, Harriet, and Ellen.
Cultural depictions of Sally Hemings
Main article: Cultural depictions of Sally HemingsSally Hemings has been the main subject of a novel, a television mini-series, a stage play, two operas, and an operatic oratorio. She is also the subject of the second half of the film Jefferson in Paris. She has also appeared as a supporting character or a subject of discussion in many other shows and stage productions.
The power dynamic between Hemings and Thomas Jefferson is portrayed in Titus Kaphar's "Behind the Myth of Benevolence", a portrait of the founding father peeling back to reveal the nude figure of Hemings.
See also
References
- Betty Hemings - Monticello Explorer
- ^ Stockman, Farah (June 16, 2018). "Monticello Is Done Avoiding Jefferson's Relationship With Sally Hemings". The New York Times. Retrieved July 15, 2018.
- Rothman, Joshua D. (2003). Notorious in the neighborhood: sex and families across the color line in Virginia, 1787-1861. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-0-8078-5440-2.
- ^ Gordon-Reed 1997, p. 217
- ^ "Sally Hemings". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ Jordan, Daniel P., ed. (January 26, 2000). "Report of the Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings" (PDF). Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation (then Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation). Archived (PDF) from the original on July 13, 2007. Retrieved October 19, 2020.
- Link to report at Monticello.org
- ^ "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved June 22, 2011.
Ten years later , and most historians now believe that, years after his wife's death, Thomas Jefferson was the father of the six children of Sally Hemings mentioned in Jefferson's records, including Beverly, Harriet, Madison, and Eston Hemings.
- ^ Turner, Robert F., ed. (February 2011) . "The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission" (PDF). Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society / Carolina Academic Press.
The question of whether Thomas Jefferson fathered one or more children by his slave Sally Hemings is an issue about which honorable people can and do disagree. After a careful review of all of the evidence, the commission agrees unanimously that the allegation is by no means proven; and we find it regrettable that public confusion about the 1998 DNA testing and other evidence has misled many people. With the exception of one member, whose views are set forth both below and in his more detailed appended dissent, our individual conclusions range from serious skepticism about the charge to a conviction that it is almost certainly false.
- "Monticello Affirms Thomas Jefferson Fathered Children with Sally Hemings". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. 2018. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
- ^ "Jefferson's Blood – The Memoirs of Madison Hemings". Frontline. Public Broadcasting System / WGBH-TV. 2000.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 59.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 77.
- ^ Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 80.
- "Elizabeth Hemings". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved January 7, 2012. Says that Betty Hemings's children by John Wayles were Robert, James, Thenia, Critta, Peter, and Sally.
- "Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson". The White House. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 26, 2024.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 81.
- ^ "John Wayles". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
- "Farm Book, 1774-1824, page 11, by Thomas Jefferson [electronic edition]". Massachusetts Historical Society. Page linked shows date. Betty's children are listed under "Elizabeth" on page 13. Archived from the original on October 23, 2021. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 92.
- "Farm Book, 1774-1824, page 13, by Thomas Jefferson [electronic edition]". Massachusetts Historical Society. March 1, 2014. Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
- ^ Gordon-Reed 1998, p. 160
- "Sally Hemings | Life of Sally Hemings". www.monticello.org. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
- Brodie 1974, p. 85
- "Lucy Jefferson (1782–1784)". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, pp. 191–192.
- Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Abigail Adams, December 21, 1786. Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 194
- Letter from Abigail Adams to Thomas Jefferson, June 26, 1787. Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 194
- "Sally Hemings". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 194.
- ^ Michael Cottman, "Historians Uncover Slave Quarters of Sally Hemings at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello", NBC News, July 3, 2017. Retrieved February 4, 2018
- ^ Thompson, Krissah (February 18, 2017). "For decades they hid Jefferson's relationship with her. Now Monticello is making room for Sally Hemings". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 4, 2018.
- Randall, Willard S.; Thomas Jefferson: A Life; New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1993, p. 475
- ^ "Jefferson's Blood – Interview: Annette Gordon-Reed". Frontline. Public Broadcasting System / WGBH-TV. 2000.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 259.
- Lovejoy, Paul E. (2000). Transformations in Slavery (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 290.
- ^ Schwabach, Aaron. "Thomas Jefferson, Slavery, and Slaves." Thomas Jefferson Law Review 33, no. 1 (Fall 2010): 1–60. Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed October 16, 2014).
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 352.
- Gordon-Reed 2008, p. 374.
- Rothman, Joshua D. (December 4, 2003). Notorious in the Neighborhood: Sex and Families across the Color Line in Virginia, 1787-1861. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-0-8078-6312-1.
- ^ Oldham Appleby, Joyce; Schlesinger, Arthur. Thomas Jefferson. New York: Macmillan, 2003, pp. 75–77.
- ^ "Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation.
- Jefferson at Monticello: Recollections of a Monticello Slave and a Monticello Overseer. Edited by James Adam Bear, Jr., Charlottesville, Virginia: 1967. This book includes recollections of Isaac Jefferson, c. 1847, a former Monticello slave, and Edmund Bacon.
- Gordon-Reed 1997, p. 52
- Gordon-Reed 1997, pp. 210–223
- Gordon-Reed 2008
- "Thomas Jefferson's Last Will & Testament". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. His will specified Sally Hemings's two younger children be assigned as apprentices to their uncle John Hemings, who was also freed, "... until their respective ages of twenty one years, at which period respectively, I give them their freedom."
- Morgan, Edmund S. (June 26, 2008). "Jefferson & Betrayal". New York Review of Books. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
- Staples, Brent (August 2, 1999). "Fighting for Space at the Jefferson Family Table". The New York Times. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
- "Rift runs through Jefferson family reunion". Archived from the original on April 15, 2011. Retrieved April 12, 2008.
- "Bringing Children Out of Egypt". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Archived from the original on August 13, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
- "Akin, the Philosophic Cock - A View at the Bicentennial".
- ^ Belz, Herman. "The Legend of Sally Hemings" Academic Questions Vol. 25, No. 2 (June 2012), pp. 218–227. Via: Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed October 16, 2014).
- Looney, J. Jefferson. "Peter Carr (1770–1815)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities. Retrieved July 13, 2015. This tertiary source reuses information from other sources but does not name them.
- "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings". Booknotes. C-SPAN. February 21, 1999. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
- Gordon-Reed 1998
- ^ Foster, E. A.; et al. (November 5, 1998). "Jefferson fathered slave's last child". Nature. 396 (6706): 27–28. Bibcode:1998Natur.396...27F. doi:10.1038/23835. PMID 9817200. S2CID 4424562.
- Nicolaisen, Peter (2003). "Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and the Question of Race: An Ongoing Debate". Journal of American Studies. 37 (1): 99–118. doi:10.1017/S0021875803007023. JSTOR 27557256. S2CID 143875543.
Historians, as is their wont, have usually been more reserved in their evaluation of the Jefferson-Hemings relationship than most journalists. Nonetheless, as the conferences and publications devoted to the topic attest, the DNA revelations have strongly resonated among Jefferson scholars as well. Like the media, most historians now no longer seem to question the 'truth' of the Jefferson-Hemings relationship; the questions raised almost invariably deal with the way we respond to such truth.
- Lewis, Jan (2000). "Forum: Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings Redux". The William and Mary Quarterly. 57 (1): 121–124. JSTOR 2674360.
With the publication of E. A. Foster et al.'s study in Nature on October 31, 1998, what once was rumor now seems to be, if not proven, at least sufficiently probable that virtually all professional historians will accept that Jefferson was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings's children, her son Eston (the only one who left male-line descendants whose DNA might be tested)
- Bay, Mia (2006). "In search of Sally Hemings in the post-DNA era". Reviews in American History. 34 (4). Johns Hopkins University Press: 407–426. doi:10.1353/rah.2006.0000. JSTOR 30031502. S2CID 144686299.
- "Jefferson's Blood – Is It True?". Frontline. Public Broadcasting System / WGBH-TV. 2000. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
Now, the 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.
- ^ Wallenborn, White McKenzie (Ken) (April 12, 1999). "Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved October 19, 2020.
- ^ "Assessment of DNA Study". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
- Marshall, Eliot (January 8, 1999). "Which Jefferson Was the Father". Science. 283 (5399): 153–155. doi:10.1126/science.283.5399.153a. PMID 9925468. S2CID 38586063.
- ^ "Background DNA Study: The Jefferson-Hemings DNA Study as told by Herbert Barger, Jefferson Family Historian". JeffersonDNAStudy.com. Herbert Barger (self-published). August 30, 2000 . Retrieved October 19, 2020.
- King, Turi E.; Bowden, Georgina R.; Balaresque, Patricia L.; Adams, Susan M.; Shanks, Morag E.; Jobling, Mark A. (2007). "Thomas Jefferson's Y Chromosome Belongs to a Rare European Lineage" (PDF). American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 132 (4): 584–589. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20557. PMID 17274013. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 19, 2020.
- Leary, Helen F. M. (September 2001). "Sally Hemings' Children: A Genealogical Analysis of the Evidence". National Genealogical Society Quarterly. 89 (3): 207, 214–218 – Leary concluded that "the chain of evidence securely fastens Sally Hemings' children to their father, Thomas Jefferson."
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Cogliano, Francis D. (2006). Thomas Jefferson: Reputation and Legacy. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 183–184. ISBN 9780748624997. JSTOR 10.3366/j.ctt1r2623.
For most of the twentieth century serious Jefferson scholars denied the likelihood of a sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings. That, by 2001, the primary 'defense' of Jefferson was maintained by a fringe group espousing reactionary politics and employing hysterical rhetoric is testimony to how quickly the historiographical consensus regarding the Jefferson-Hemings question shifted in 1997–8.
- Grigsby Bates, Karen (March 11, 2012). "Life at Jefferson's Monticello, as His Slaves Saw It". NPR.org. National Public Radio.
- Hodes, Martha (2010). "Sally Hemings: Founding Mother: Reviewed Work: Mongrel Nation: The America Begotten by Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings by Clarence E. Walker". Reviews in American History. 38 (3): 437–442. doi:10.1353/rah.2010.0022. JSTOR 40865440.
The Thomas Jefferson Foundation which owns Monticello, embraced Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children in 2000, but a minority opinion stubbornly stuck by Jefferson's single cloak denial and the denials of descendants .... The next year, the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (founded shortly after the Thomas Jefferson Foundation concurred with the DNA-based conclusions) sponsored a commission that refuted the scientific evidence, and published The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty, an essay collection of considerable convolution and belligerence.
- Stockman, Farah (June 16, 2018). "Monticello Is Done Avoiding Jefferson's Relationship with Sally Hemings". The New York Times. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
- ^ Stanton, Lucia Cinder (April 2000). "Response to the Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved October 19, 2020.
- "Formation of the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society". TJHeritage.org. Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society. May 2000. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- ^ Wallenborn, White McKenzie (Ken) (June 29, 2000). "Reply to the Response to the Minority Report, Monticello Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Heming". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved October 19, 2020. Published July 29, 2000, with notes by Daniel P. Jordan.
- "Directors". TJHeritage.org. Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society. Retrieved October 19, 2020.
- Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello: The Paradox of Liberty Archived May 30, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, January 27, 2012 – October 14, 2012, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved March 23, 2012. Quote: "The test results show a genetic link between the Jefferson and Hemings descendants: A man with the Jefferson Y chromosome fathered Eston Hemings (born 1808). While there were other adult males with the Jefferson Y chromosome living in Virginia at that time, several historians now believe that the documentary and genetic evidence, considered together, strongly support the conclusion that Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings's children."
- "Jefferson's Other Family". Slate. September 23, 2008. Retrieved September 24, 2015.
- Gordon-Reed 2008.
- Nowla, Robert A. (2012). The American Presidents, Washington to Tyler: What They Did, What They Said, What Was Said About Them, with Full Source Notes. McFarland. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-4766-0118-2. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
- Halliday, E. M. Understanding Thomas Jefferson. HarperCollins, 2001. ISBN 0-06-095761-1. pp. 120–122
- Sally Hemings & Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture. University of Virginia Press. 1999. p. 182.
- ^ "The Gazette's Delver into the Past Brings up a Romantic Story... Was Natural Son of the Sage of Monticello; Had the Traits of Good Training". Scioto Gazette. Chillicothe, Ohio. August 1, 1902. Republished in: "Jefferson's Blood – 'A Sprig of Jefferson Was Eston Hemings'". Frontline. Public Broadcasting System / WGBH-TV. 2000.
- Gordon-Reed 1998, p. 148
- "Jefferson's Black Descendants in Wisconsin". Wisconsin Historical Society. Archived from the original on March 12, 2005. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
- "Mary Elizabeth Hemings Butler Lee Brady", Brady Research
- ^ Brodie, Fawn (October 1976). "Thomas Jefferson's unknown grandchildren". American Heritage Magazine. Archived from the original on June 18, 2008.
- ^ Lewis, Jan. Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture. University of Virginia Press (1999), p. 169.
- Stanton and Swann-Dwight, Bonds of Memory, pp. 161–170
- "Ellen Hemings Roberts". Monticello.org. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
- Brodie, Fawn M. (June 1976). "Thomas Jefferson's Unknown Grandchildren: A Study in Historical Silences". American Heritage Magazine. Vol. 27, no. 6. Retrieved March 26, 2014.
- "Letter from J. W. Jefferson", Wisconsin State Historical Society
- ^ Beverly Jefferson Obituary and photo, Wisconsin History
- National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 216
- Smith, Dinitia; Wade, Nicholas (November 1998). "DNA Test Finds Evidence Of Jefferson Child by Slave". The New York Times.
- "Jefferson Descendants Reconcile Family History". CBN.com. Christian Broadcasting Network. Retrieved September 24, 2015.
- Titus Kaphar. Behind the Myth of Benevolence, 2014. Oil on canvas, 59 x 34 x 6 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York ©Titus Kaphar.
Sources
- Brodie, Fawn M. (1974). Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-33833-9.
- Gordon-Reed, Annette (1997). Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-1833-4.
- Gordon-Reed, Annette (1998). Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-1698-9. Reprint edition with new foreword.
- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson's Farm Book (Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2002) ISBN 1-882886-10-0
- Thomas Jefferson, Farm Book, 1774–1824, (electronic edition) Thomas Jefferson Papers: An Electronic Archive. Boston, Mass.: Massachusetts Historical Society, 2003
- Gordon-Reed, Annette (2008). The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family. W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-33776-1.
Further reading
- Bernstein, R. B., Thomas Jefferson. (Oxford University Press, 2003). ISBN 978-0-19-518130-2
- Chase-Riboud, Barbara, Sally Hemings: A Novel (Rediscovered Classics). Chicago Review Press; Reprint edition. (2009) ISBN 978-1-55652-945-0.
- Coates, Eyler Robert Sr. (ed.), The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001) ISBN 0-934211-66-3
- Crawford, Alan Pell, Twilight at Monticello, 2008.
- Drew, Bernard A., 100 Most Popular African American Authors: Biographical Sketches and Bibliographies. Libraries Unlimited. (2006) ISBN 978-1591583226
- François Furstenberg, "Jefferson's Other Family: His concubine was also his wife's half-sister", review of Annette Gordon-Reed, The Hemingses of Monticello, Slate, September 23, 2008
- Hyland, William G. Jr., In Defense of Thomas Jefferson (St. Martins, 2009).ISBN 0-312-56100-8
- Ledgin, N. M., Sally of Monticello: Founding Mother. Amazon Digital Services. (2012)
- Lewis, Jan E.; Onuf, Peter S. (eds.); Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture (University Press of Virginia, 1999)
- Malone, Dumas, Jefferson and His Time: (Little, Brown; 1948–1981), six volumes
- McMurry, Rebecca L.; McMurry, James F. Jr.; "Anatomy of a Scandal: Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Story", (Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2002)
- Pierson, Hamilton, Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson, New York: Charles Scribner, 1862; digital text of book drawn from reminiscences of Edmund Bacon, Jefferson's overseer; via: University of Michigan.
- Scholars Commission Report, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001
- Scharff, Virginia, The Women Jefferson Loved, New York: HarperCollins, 2010.
- Stanton, Lucia, Free Some Day: The African-American Families of Monticello, Charlottesville: Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2000. ISBN 978-1-882886-14-2
- "Report of the Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings", 2000, Monticello.org, Thomas Jefferson Foundation
For young readers
- Jane Feldman, Shannon Lanier, Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family: (Random House, 2001), for ages 10 and up
- Kimberly Brubaker Bradley, "Jefferson's Sons": (Dial Books for Young Readers, 2011), historical fiction for ages 10 and up
External links
- Monticello.org, Thomas Jefferson Foundation (TJF)
- "Getting Word: Oral History Project", Monticello.org, TJF
- TJHeritage.org, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS)
- Interview with Alan Pell Crawford (author of Twilight at Monticello), at Reason.tv, 2008
- Scharff, Virginia (October 3, 2014). "Sally Hemings (1773–1835)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
- Sally Hemings
- 1770s births
- 1835 deaths
- Hemings family
- People from Monticello
- 18th-century American slaves
- 18th-century African-American women
- 18th-century African-American people
- 19th-century African-American women
- American people of English descent
- American women slaves
- People who were enslaved by Thomas Jefferson
- Enslaved concubines in the United States