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Thomas
Jefferson
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1743-1826 |
Thomas
Jefferson was born
April
13, 1743
,
in
Shadwell
,
Virginia
.
His father, Peter Jefferson, was a surveyor who
built a substantial estate including approximately
60 African-American slaves; he died in 1757. His
mother, the former Jane Randolph, was a member of
one of
Virginia
’s
most prominent families.
Jefferson
was the eldest of two sons; he also had six sisters.
In
1760,
Jefferson
entered the
College
of
William
& Mary in
Williamsburg
,
Virginia
.
He studied law with the state’s leading legal
scholar, George Wythe (later a member of the
Constitutional Convention), from 1762 to 1767, then
began practicing, mostly handling cases involving
land claims. In 1768,
Jefferson
designed and built a home of his own, which he eventually
named
Monticello
, atop an 867-foot-high mountain near his birthplace in
Shadwell. That same year, he won a seat in the
Virginia
legislature, then called the House of Burgesses.
Jefferson
’s
marriage in 1772 to Martha Wayles Skelton, a young
widow with an impressive dowry, more than doubled
his holdings in land and slaves. He and Martha would
have six children, only two of whom survived until
adulthood. In
1773 Thomas Jefferson and his wife, Martha, would
inherited a 4,819-acre plantation known as
Poplar Forest
from the estate of John Wayles, Martha’s father.
Jefferson
discovered that the
Poplar
Forest
property was a working plantation providing him with
cash income through the cash crops of tobacco and
wheat. It
will be here that he will finally build the retreat
that he sought after for most of his life.
In 1806, during his presidency,
Jefferson
would travel to the
Bedford
County
property to oversee the laying of the foundation for
an octagonal villa retreat of his own design.
In
the years leading up to the American Revolution,
Jefferson
was a prominent voice in the growing opposition within
Virginia
to
the British Parliament’s taxation policies and
Britain
’s
general control over the American colonies. In a
treatise entitled A Summary View of the Rights of
British America (published without his
permission in 1774), Jefferson argued that
America’s bonds to Britain and King George III
were wholly voluntary.
In
the spring of 1775,
Jefferson
was appointed as a delegate to the Second
Continental Congress in
Philadelphia
,
Pennsylvania
. A
shy and soft-spoken man, he was regarded as a
superior writer and was named to a five-person
committee [along with John Adams, Benjamin Franklin,
Roger Sherman and Robert Livingston] charged with
drafting a formal statement of the reasons for the
colonies’ impending break with Britain. In just a
few days, Jefferson wrote the first draft of the
document that would become the Declaration of
Independence, listing the grievances against George
III and offering this seminal statement of
democratic values: “We hold these truths to be
self-evident; that all men are created equal; that
they are endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights; that among these are life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure
these rights, governments are instituted among men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the
governed.”
Upon
his return to
Virginia
in
October 1776,
Jefferson
began his efforts to reform the state’s legal code
in order to bring it more in line with the
revolutionary principles of equality, especially in
the areas of distribution of property and education.
In addition,
Jefferson
caused a good deal of controversy with his strong advocacy
of religious freedom and the separation between
church and state. In 1779,
Jefferson
was elected governor of
Virginia
.
He had a difficult tenure, earning harsh criticism
on account of the embarrassing collapse of the
state’s defenses during the British invasion of
Virginia
in
1780-1781. In addition to his professional
frustrations during this period, personal tragedy
struck
Jefferson
in
September 1782, when his wife Martha died after the
difficult birth of their third daughter several
months earlier.
As
the Revolutionary War drew to a close,
Jefferson
was called upon to serve as a delegate to the Continental Congress in
December 1782, during which he drafted the policy
regarding the entrance of the Western territories
into the new
United
States
.
Shortly thereafter, he agreed to succeed Benjamin
Franklin as the American minister to
France
,
moving to
Paris
in
1784.
Jefferson
was unable to accomplish much diplomatically during
these years, not in the least because
France
was simmering with its own revolutionary and class
conflict in the wake of
America
’s
triumph over
Britain
.
For his part,
Jefferson
was fortunate enough to leave
France
in
late 1789, just before
Paris
erupted into mob violence. Upon his return to
America
,
he took office as the first secretary of state,
under George Washington, the heroic Revolutionary
general and newly elected president of the
United
States
.
As secretary of state,
Jefferson
was largely responsible for the new nation’s
foreign policy; he took a decidedly pro-French
viewpoint in the long-running conflict between
Britain
and
France
.
Aside from foreign policy,
Jefferson
was extremely vocal in the debate surrounding the
new Constitution—his greatest concern about the
all-important document was that it made the federal
government too powerful, as it lacked a bill of
rights to protect the rights of states and
individuals from federal encroachment.
In
1793,
Jefferson
stepped down from the office of secretary of state
and returned to
Virginia
.
Three years later, he finished a close second in the
race for the presidency against old friend and
current political rival John Adams, all the while
denying publicly that he was even a candidate. As
the runner-up,
Jefferson
became
Adams
’ vice president. In that office, he continued his
opposition of the emphasis on a strong federal
government espoused by such men as Washington,
Adams, and Alexander Hamilton, who had become known
as Federalists. By the mid-1790s, two distinct camps
had emerged: the Federalists and the Republicans,
led by Jefferson and James Madison, which
essentially represented
America
’s
first opposition party. During this period, his
critics labeled Jefferson a traitor and hypocrite,
pointing out that even as he denounced divisions or
“factions” as destructive to government, he was
himself a divisive influence.
The
presidential election of 1800 proved to be an
extremely heated battle. As the electoral process
originally set down in the Constitution did not
allow voters to differentiate between their choices
for president and vice president, Jefferson and his
chosen vice presidential candidate, Aaron Burr, a
U.S.
senator from
New
York
,
tied for the most votes, although
Jefferson
was clearly the voters’ choice for president. The
election was thus thrown into the House of
Representatives, where
Jefferson
proved victorious after several weeks of debate.
Jefferson’s
election as president marked the first ever transfer
of power from one “party” to another in the
history of the young nation. Many feared that a
Jefferson
presidency, with its emphasis on the rights of
states and individuals over the authority of the
central government, would be dangerous, perhaps
fatal, to the nascent federal institutions created
by the Constitution. In his inaugural address on
March
4, 1801
,
Jefferson
sounded a strong conciliatory note, stating famously
that “we are all republicans—we are all
federalists.” In addition, the new president
voiced his desire to return to the principles of the
Revolution and of the Declaration of Independence
and articulated his faith in the power of human
reason as the guiding principle of self-government.
His emphasis, as always, was on the necessity of
limited central authority and protection of
individual rights.
The
major accomplishment of
Jefferson
’s
first term undoubtedly came in 1803, when
France
sold the
United
States
the entire
Louisiana
region—an expanse of land stretching from the
Mississippi
Valley
to
the
Rocky
Mountains
—for
$15 million. The
Louisiana
Purchase
,
along with the subsequent exploratory journey
throughout the new territory led by
Jefferson
’s
private secretary Meriwether Lewis and William
Clark, would go down in history as one of the
boldest executive actions ever. Although a
tremendous bargain by any standards, the deal
substantially increased the national debt;
nonetheless,
Jefferson
could not turn down the chance to double
America
’s
domain and remove the threat of
France
from the nation’s borders. More importantly, the
idealistic
Jefferson
saw in the Western territories the future of his republican
vision—the West was the place where
Jefferson
’s optimistic dreams of the small independent farmer
and the unlimited power of his individuality and
autonomy would replay themselves again and again.
Reelected
by a landslide in 1804,
Jefferson
nonetheless faced lingering attacks on his
administration from the small but vocal groups of
Federalist opponents that remained. His second term
was marred by the highly unpopular Embargo Act
(1807), which prohibited
U.S.
exports in order to protest British and French
violations of American neutrality following the
resumption of the Napoleonic Wars. The embargo hurt
the
U.S.
far more than
England
or
France
,
as it stunted the younger nation’s budding economy
and had little effect on the two established
superpowers.
Jefferson
declined to seek a third term in 1808, instead
retiring to his beloved
Virginia
to
continue his intellectual, philosophical, and
architectural pursuits. President of the American
Philosophical Society from 1797 to 1815,
Jefferson
enjoyed his intellectual and philosophical life far
more than his impressive record of legislative and
executive achievements. Over the next 17 years, the
much-relieved Jefferson concentrated on his home and
lush gardens at Monticello, the building of his
retreat home
Poplar Forest
in Bedford County and the overseeing of the plantation, his
voluminous correspondence (one year he reportedly
wrote over 1,200 letters), and various other
intellectual pursuits.
Jefferson
’s
passionate love for architecture, philosophy, and
education came together in the founding of the
University of Virginia (UVA) at
Charlottesville
,
chartered in 1819. His influence on the school was
far-reaching, as he designed the buildings, planned
the curriculum, and selected the faculty. At the
time of its opening in 1825, UVA was unique among
American universities, in that it had no religious
affiliation or requirements and no president or
administration, except for a self-enforced honor
system.
Jefferson’s
devotion to neoclassical architecture (stately white
columns abound at UVA) also showed itself in his
constant renovations of Monticello, the impressive
home that he had designed to reflect the democratic
principles that he held so dear. He also worked
tirelessly on his smaller, more private residence in
Bedford
[
Poplar
Forest
],
about 90 miles away, where he would often retreat
from his constant visitors at
Monticello
.
In the later years of his life, his expensive
lifestyle began to take its toll, and
Jefferson
sank deeper and deeper into debt.
Jefferson
owned as many of 200 slaves at any one point,
probably a total of 600 in his lifetime.
Monticello
—along
with most of his slaves—were auctioned off after
his death in order to pay the family’s debts.
A
complex and sometimes enigmatic figure,
Jefferson
’s inconsistencies are nowhere more visible than in his views on
slavery. In the fall of 1781, while serving as
governor of
Virginia
,
Jefferson
published a treatise called Notes on the State of
Virginia
(written at
Poplar
Forest
),
in which he explicitly discussed slavery. While he
asserted that the institution of slavery violated
the principles of the Declaration of Independence
and that it would eventually have to be abolished,
Jefferson
also explicitly delineated the reasons why blacks were inferior to
whites. With the controversial Notes,
Jefferson
established himself as one of the more progressive
voices in the South on the issue of slavery,
particularly among wealthy planters.
From
1789 on, after he returned from
Paris
,
Jefferson
’s position changed. He became less of a leader on the
slavery issue, holding that while ultimately slavery
should be abolished, for the present it was
impossible. In 1819, during congressional debate
over
Missouri
’s
admission into the union of states,
Jefferson
advocated the extension of slavery into the Western
territories, a reversal of his view during the
1780s.
Jefferson
was one of many Southerners who criticized the
Missouri Compromise—which admitted
Missouri
as
a slave state and
Maine
as
a
free
state
but ruled out slavery in the rest of the
Louisiana
Purchase
north of latitude 36°30—as an undemocratic abuse
of power by the federal government. Writing to
Congressman John Holmes,
Jefferson
saw portents of civil war and expressed his own, and
the nation's, dilemma over slavery: "We have
the wolf by the ears, and we can neither hold him,
nor safely let him go.” (Ironically, 37 years
later, by agreeing with
Jefferson
and ruling in Dred Scott v. Sandford that the
Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional, the
Supreme Court hastened the arrival of the conflict
he feared.)
Apart
from
Jefferson
’s
philosophical stance on slavery, there was the
paradox inherent in his own life. Though he
undoubtedly believed that slavery violated the
principles of natural law he had included in the
Declaration of Independence, he was a wealthy slave
owner whose lifestyle depended upon the institution.
Jefferson
viewed himself and his slaves as victims of mankind’s
failure to rid itself of this terrible institution,
and he contented himself with the idea that he would
be a benevolent master to those he owned, until the
“peculiar institution” met with its rightful
end.
Despite
his inconsistencies and imperfections, Thomas
Jefferson was a man of high ideals—he valued his
achievements in the realm of political thought and
philosophy above any legislative triumphs. In 1812,
he began a famous correspondence with his old
friend, political rival, and fellow champion of the
American Revolution—John Adams. Their exchange of
words and ideas continued for the next 14 years,
until their deaths, only hours apart—Jefferson at
his beloved Monticello, Adams at home in Quincy,
Massachusetts—on July 4, 1826, the 50th
anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of
Independence. In his chosen epitaph, Jefferson made
no mention of his eight years as America’s
president, leaving behind a vision of this deeply
complex man the way he himself wanted to be
remembered: “Thomas Jefferson: Author of the Declaration
of American Independence, of the Statute
of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and Father of
the University
of Virginia.”
Writings
Declaration
of Independence
Statute
of Virginia for Religious Freedom
Adapted
from Biography.Com Online Database.
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