Jefferson-Hemings controversy

Jefferson-Hemings controversy

The Jefferson-Hemings controversy concerns the question of whether there was an intimate relationship between Thomas Jefferson and his mixed-race slave, Sally Hemings. The controversy started as early as the 1790s. While some historians of the late twentieth century started reanalyzing the body of evidence, for many consensus was not reached until after the results of the DNA analysis in 1998 that showed a match between the Jefferson male line and a Hemings descendant.

The historiography of the controversy showed that historians had valued the testimony of the Jefferson family over that of their slaves, including one of Jefferson's natural sons. They failed to check the facts thoroughly and allowed their own biases and preservation of Jefferson as an icon to prevent them from evaluating significant evidence. The relation between the power of white slave masters, their interracial affairs with enslaved women, and the resulting mixed-race children has been at the heart of some of the complex history in the United States during and since its years as a slave society. According to the principle of partus sequitur ventrem, incorporated into law since 1662 in Virginia, children took the social and legal status of the mother (i.e., children of slave mothers were born slaves) in contrast to English common law. This law enabled white men to avoid social and financial responsibility for the children they fathered with slave women.

Contents

Background

Jefferson became a widower at age 40 in 1783, and remained so to his death in 1826. He is believed to have had a relationship with Sally Hemings that lasted nearly four decades, until his death, and six children with her. As the Monticello Website says:

"Through his celebrity as the eloquent spokesman for liberty and equality as well as the ancestor of people living on both sides of the color line, Jefferson has left a unique legacy for descendants of Monticello's enslaved people as well as for all Americans."[1]

"Based on the documentary, scientific, statistical, and oral history evidence, the TJF Research Committee Report on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings (January 2000) remains the most comprehensive analysis of this historical topic. Ten years later, TJF 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.[2]

In the antebellum period, the Hemingses would have been called a "shadow family". Sally Hemings was three-fourths white and believed to be a half-sister to Jefferson's late wife, as her father was also John Wayles. As a widower, Wayles had six children by his 12-year liaison with his slave Betty Hemings; the youngest was Sally. As the historians Philip D. Morgan and Joshua D. Rothman have written, this was one of numerous interracial relationships in the Wayles-Hemings-Jefferson families, Albemarle County and Virginia, often with multiple generations repeating the pattern.[3][4]

Colonel John Wayles Jefferson

Son of Eston Hemings Jefferson, grandson of Thomas Jefferson

Hemings' children were seven-eighths European in ancestry and legally white according to Virginia law of the time. (The "one-drop rule" did not become law until 1924.) Of the four who survived to adulthood: William Beverley, Harriet Hemings, Madison Hemings and Eston Hemings, all but Madison eventually identified as white and lived as adults in white communities.

In 1997, Annette Gordon-Reed published a book that analyzed the historiography of the controversy, demonstrating how historians since the nineteenth century had accepted early assumptions and failed to note all the facts.[5] Since 1998 and the DNA study, most historians have accepted that the widower Jefferson had a long intimate relationship with Hemings, and fathered six children with her, four of whom survived to adulthood. The Thomas Jefferson Foundation (TJF), which runs Monticello, conducted an independent historic review in 2000, as did the National Genealogical Society in 2001; both were among those that concluded Jefferson was likely the father of all Hemings' children.[6][7] Scholars have based their conclusions on interpretation of the body of evidence; added to that, the DNA study showed a match of the Jefferson male line with a descendant of one of Sally Hemings' children. Prominent historians and biographers such as Joseph Ellis, Andrew Burstein and Philip D. Morgan have said that such studies had led to their accepting his paternity. Since then, the Jeffersonian scholarship has changed to acknowledge his paternity; other scholars have studied more closely the interracial societies of many plantations and nearby towns.

Controversy

As early as the 1790s, neighbors talked about Jefferson's connection to Hemings. In 1802 the journalist James T. Callender, after being refused an appointment to a Postmaster position by Jefferson and issuing veiled threats of "consequences," reported that Jefferson had fathered several children with Sally Hemings. Jefferson never responded publicly, but his family denied the issue.

Others privately or publicly made the claim.[8] Elijah Fletcher, the headmaster of the New Glasgow Academy (Amherst County, Virginia) visited Jefferson in 1811 and reported that:

"The story of black Sal is no farce — That he cohabits with her and has a number of children by her is a sacred truth — and the worst of it is he keeps the same children slaves — an unnatural crime which is very common in these parts."[9]

The controversy has referred to the family's and historians' denial of Jefferson's paternity for nearly 200 years, and disagreements over how to interpret limited documentation related to the issue. Jefferson's daughter Martha reportedly told her son Thomas Randolph that Jefferson had been away from Monticello for 15 months before one of Hemings' children was born. He repeated this to the historian Henry Randall. Thomas Randolph was also quoted as noting that the source of the rumors was the strong physical resemblance of Hemings' children to Thomas Jefferson:

"she [Hemings] had children which resembled Mr. Jefferson so closely that it was plain that they had his blood in their veins." [10]

According to Randall, to explain this 'startling' close resemblance that everyone who visited Monticello could see, Jefferson's grandson told him that the late Peter Carr, Jefferson's nephew and a married man, had fathered Hemings' children. Gordon-Reed noted that Randolph was violating a social taboo by naming a white man as the father of slave children, and suggested he would only have done so for a compelling reason, to protect his grandfather.[11] Because of the social taboo, Randall admitted that he suppressed, at Randolph's request, any mention of Hemings in his three volume "Life of Thomas Jefferson" (1858)[12] However, Randall did pass on this family testimony onto the historian James Parton, while strengthening his account by suggesting he had personally seen records supporting it - but no such record existed. Randall's letter was a "pillar" of later historians' defenses of Jefferson.[13]

Then, in 1873, the allegation was again made public: Sally's son, Madison Hemings, claimed Jefferson as his and his siblings' father in a memoir recounting his family life at Monticello. He said Jefferson promised Sally Hemings when they were still in Paris and she was pregnant, to free her children when they came of age.[14] In 1873, Israel Jefferson, also a former slave of Monticello, confirmed the account of Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children in his own memoir published that year by the same newspaper.

The 19th-century historian James Parton, who published a biography of Jefferson in 1874, generally attacked Hemings' account and noted the political intentions of the journalist who interviewed him. He and other critics essentially discounted the content of the memoir and projected negative assumptions about Hemings' motives in telling his story. (But, the 20th-century historian Merrill Peterson noted Hemings' details about events early in his life were mostly accurate.) Parton repeated the family's Carr paternity thesis and the assertion that Jefferson was absent during one of the conceptions.[15][16]

Succeeding 20th-century historians, such as Merrill Peterson and Douglass Adair, relied on Parton's book as it related to the question of Jefferson's paternity.[17] In turn, Dumas Malone adopted their position. In the 1970s, he was the first to publish a letter by Ellen Randolph Coolidge, Randolph's sister, who claimed the late Samuel Carr (also married), rather than his brother Peter, had fathered Hemings' children. Briefly, the above 20th-century historians and others such as Joseph Ellis and Andrew Burstein "defended" Jefferson on the following grounds, based on the family testimony: he was absent at the conception of one Hemings child; and the family identified Peter or Samuel Carr as father(s).[18]) In addition, these historians interpreted Jefferson's character and his expressed antipathy to blacks from his writings, as precluding his having such a relationship (although the prevalence of such arrangements among planters was well known and Sally Hemings was of mixed race, his wife's half sister, described as "mostly white" and "decidedly attractive"). They discounted accounts from former slaves, including Madison Hemings, and did not cross-check the facts to determine whose account was best supported by the evidence. For instance, Madison Hemings' account was supported by the fact that Jefferson freed all of Sally Hemings' children, although he was deeply in debt.[19]

In her book, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy (1997), Annette Gordon-Reed wrote,

"It is my belief that those who are considered Jefferson scholars have never made a serious and objective attempt to get at the truth of this matter. . . The failure to look more closely into the identities of the parties involved, the too ready acceptance and active promotion of the Carr brothers story, the reliance upon stereotypes in the place of investigation and analysis, all indicate that most Jefferson scholars decided from the outset that this story was not true and that if they had anything to do with it, no one would come to think otherwise. In the most fundamental sense, the enterprise of defense has had little to do with expanding people's knowledge of Thomas Jefferson or the other participants in the story. The goal has been quite the opposite: to restrict knowledge as a way of controlling the allowable discourse on this subject."

Facts

The historian Winthrop Jordan noted that Jefferson was at Monticello "nine months prior to each birth" of Hemings' children, during a 13-year period when he was often away for months at a time.[20][21] The source for the birth dates of the children is Jefferson's Farm Book. There are no records which reflect whether Sally Hemings was at Monticello during the conception period, but Dumas Malone documented Jefferson's activities. It was his timeline that showed Jefferson was at Monticello for each of Hemings' conceptions, and she never conceived when he wasn't there. Martha Randolph, Jefferson's daughter, made a deathbed claim that Jefferson was away over a 15-month period during which one of the Hemings children was conceived. This was disproved by Malone's documentation.[22][23] In the early 21st century, a statistical analysis of the conception data and Jefferson's residencies found a 99 percent chance that he was the father of all her children.[24]. This analysis, commonly referred to as a Monte Carlo study, was done by the head of archaeology at Monticello, and has been criticized by the Scholars Commission Report.[25][26].

The Hemings children were named for people in the Randolph-Jefferson family or important to Jefferson, rather than for people in the Hemings family.[27] Jefferson gave the Sally Hemings family special treatment: the three boys, while young had very light household duties, and then were each apprenticed to the master carpenter of the estate, the most skilled artisan. This would provide them with skills to make a good living.[27]

Most importantly, Jefferson freed all the Hemings children; this was the only slave family to go free from Monticello, and Harriet Hemings was the only female slave whom he ever freed.[28] He allowed Beverley (male) and Harriet to "escape" in 1822 at ages 23 and 21, although Jefferson was already struggling financially and would be $100,000 in debt at his death.[27] Jefferson avoided publicity this way, but the young adults were legally fugitive slaves and at risk under the law until Emancipation. The gentry noted their absences at the time; the Monticello overseer Edmund Bacon mentioned in his memoir that people were talking about Harriet's having left, saying that she was Jefferson's daughter.[28][29] In his 1826 will, Jefferson freed the younger brothers Madison and Eston Hemings, who were approaching the age of 21. As required by the law for manumitted slaves, the will petitioned the legislature to permit them and three older Hemings males, who were also freed in his will after serving him for decades, to stay in the state with their families.[30] His daughter Martha Randolph gave Sally Hemings "her time" after Jefferson's death, and she lived freely with her two younger sons in nearby Charlottesville for a decade.[28]

In 1997 Annette Gordon-Reed identified errors of fact in the Jefferson family testimony, noted that Randall had suggested he had seen material which did not exist, and showed that Parton, Malone, and Peterson had failed to assess critical evidence. She noted the significance of Jefferson's actions related to the Sally Hemings' family, which he took for no other.[31] For 180 years, historians represented Peter or Samuel Carr as the likely father(s) of all of Sally Hemings' children. This was conclusively disproved in the 1998 DNA study (see below) of the Y-chromosome of direct male descendants of the Jefferson male line, the Carr line, and an Eston Hemings descendant.[32] In the same study, the team found a match between the Eston Hemings descendant and the Jefferson male line.[32][33] While another Jefferson male from his line would have had the same DNA as Thomas Jefferson, no other candidate from his male line had ever been identified during the decades of the historic controversy as a possible father; as noted above, the Carrs had been considered candidates.[34] No other Jefferson had the same degree of access to Hemings as did Thomas Jefferson.

DNA study

Jefferson DNA data was tested in 1998 in an attempt to end the long controversy after the Gordon-Reed book was published. Researchers tested Y-chromosomal DNA from living male claimed descendants of Jefferson and Hemings. The study concluded that the descendants of Eston Hemings Jefferson matched the Y chromosome of the Jefferson male line, and that Thomas Jefferson was the likely father of Eston. In addition, the study proved that Jefferson's Carr nephews (identified by the president's grandson and granddaughter as father(s) of Hemings' children) were not genetically connected to Eston Hemings.[35][36][37]

Descendants of Thomas Woodson were also tested, as they had a long family tradition of descent from Hemings and Jefferson. Callender had referred to a "Tom" as one of Jefferson's children with Sally. The Thomas Jefferson Foundation had earlier noted that historic evidence regarding Thomas Woodson suggested he could not have been a descendant, but the family persisted in their belief. The DNA study showed conclusively that there was no match between Woodson descendants and the Jefferson male line, although most of Woodson' male descendants who were tested had a haplotype typical of European origin.

Because the Jefferson male line was found to have the K2 (now T) haplotype, rare in Europe, there were additional studies to see if it was represented in other Jefferson males in England. After research, it was determined that Jefferson's family origin was in England. Researchers have speculated about the possible origins of the haplotype, more common in peoples of the Middle East and Africa. Researchers believe the haplotype was most likely carried to Europe and England in ancient migrations, but might have arrived with more recent migrations of Sephardic Jews in the 15th and 16th centuries.

1998 test

Dr. Eugene A. Foster and a team at the University of Leicester collected the material and conducted the testing in 1998. They announced results in a Nature article in November 1998.

Hemings and Woodson descendants for testing

The team located a male-line descendant of Sally Hemings' youngest son Eston Hemings for genealogical DNA testing. Hemings' eldest son Beverly Hemings had no male descendants. Male-line descendants of Hemings' other son Madison Hemings have been located, but have not been tested.

In addition, the team located male-line descendants of Thomas Woodson. They were included because of a persistent tradition, held by Woodson's descendants, that maintain that he was born in 1790 as a slave at Monticello and the eldest son of Jefferson and Hemings. There is no firm historical evidence to support this claim and much that opposes it; for instance, there is no record of Sally Hemings' having a surviving child born before 1795. Shown in the figure below is the genetic lineage of the one male-line descendant (H21) of Eston Hemings and the five male-line descendants (W55, W56, W69, W70, and W61) of Thomas Woodson.

Jefferson and Carr descendants

Thomas Jefferson did not have a surviving son from his marriage to Martha Wayles Skelton and thus did not have a surname-bearing, proven direct male descendant as a positive control. The team located male-line descendants of Thomas Jefferson's paternal uncle, Field Jefferson, who had the same Y-chromosomal DNA. Five such descendants (J41, J42, J47, J49, and J50) were located and their DNA was analyzed.

Because of family testimony by Jefferson's grandchildren, some historians considered Thomas Jefferson's Carr nephews by his sister to be possible biological fathers of Heming's children. Researchers were able to test three male-line descendants (C27, C29, and C31) of Samuel and Peter Carr, Jefferson's nephews.

Results

The results of the 14 descendants are shown. Differences are highlighted with bold font. The five descendants of Field Jefferson (which are proxies for Thomas Jefferson) have nearly identical Y-chromosome DNA alleles except for a single difference at J50. It is a reasonable assumption that this is a point mutation.

The descendant of Eston Hemings has the same set of Y-chromosome DNA alleles as the descendants of Field Jefferson. This supports the claim that Thomas Jefferson could have been the father of Eston Hemings. It is impossible to prove absolutely that no other Jefferson fathered the child. (1) That would be proving a negative, and (2) any male who had the same Y-chromosome as Thomas Jefferson (other descendants of a common male ancestor) could have been the father, provided that this person had relations with Sally Hemings nine months before the birth of Eston Hemings.

The study team said that Thomas Jefferson was most likely the father, as historians have concluded. He was documented at Monticello at the time of each of Sally Heming's conceptions, and other circumstantial evidence supports his paternity (see historiography discussion above).

The Carr descendants have similar DNA among themselves but are distinctly different from either the Jefferson or Hemings descendants.

Four of the descendants of Thomas Woodson are quite similar among themselves but distinctly different from Jefferson and Hemings. They do have similarities to the descendants of the Carr line and show European ancestry in their paternal line. One of the Woodson descendants is quite different from all of the other individuals, which suggests that one of his genetic ancestors was not in the direct male line from Thomas Woodson.

Family Pedigree Member Bi Allelic Markers Microsatellite STR Mini Satellite MSY1


Jefferson:

  • J41 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,15,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16
  • J42 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,15,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16
  • J47 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,15,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16
  • J49 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,15,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16
  • J50 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,16,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16

Hemings:

  • H21 0000001 15,12,4,11,3,9,11,10,15,13,7 (3)5, (1)14, (3)32, (4)16

Carr:

  • C27 0000011 14,12,5,12,3,10,11,10,13,13,7 (1)17, (3)36, (4)21
  • C29 0000011 14,12,5,11,3,10,11,10,13,13,7 (1)17, (3)37, (4)21
  • C31 0000011 14,12,5,12,3,10,11,10,13,13,7 (1)17, (3)36, (4)21

Woodson:

  • W55 0000011 14,12,5,11,3,10,11,13,13,13,7 (1)16, (3)27, (4)21
  • W56 0000011 14,12,5,11,3,10,11,13,13,13,7 (1)16, (3)27, (4)21
  • W69 0000011 14,12,5,11,3,10,11,13,13,13,7 (1)16, (3)27, (4)21
  • W70 1110001 17,12,6,11,3,11,8,10,11,14,6 (0)1, (3a)3, (1a)11, (3a)30, (4a)14, (4)2
  • W61 0000011 14,12,5,11,3,10,11,13,13,13,7 (1)16, (3)28, (4)20

Allele assignments

DYS
393
DYS
390
DYS
19
DYS
391
DYS
388
DYS
389I
DYS
392
DYS
389II
DXYS
156Y
14 24 15 10 12 12 15 27 12

Results of re-testing the original Jefferson descendant samples for additional STR markers were published by King, et al. in 2007.[38] Together with DXYS 156Y (which was not included in the new panel), this gives the extended DNA signature:

DYS
393
DYS
390
DYS
19
DYS
391
DYS
388
DYS
439
DYS
389i
DYS
392
DYS
389ii
DYS
437
DYS
460
DYS
438
DYS
461
DYS
462
DYS
436
DYS
434
DYS
435
DXYS
156Y
13 24 15 10 12 12 12 15 27 14 10 9 11 13 12 11 11 12

(Note: the value of DXYS 156Y was reported as 7 in the original paper. This is believed to translate to 12 in the convention now used by DNA testing labs and online databases).

T (formerly K2) haplogroup

In addition to the Hemings controversy, the study team was interested in the Jefferson male line DNA because it was found to belong to K2, a haplogroup that is rare for Europeans. Because of this, they studied the K2 haplogroup and its origins in the UK.

The highest concentrations of the K2 haplogroup are found today among the people of the Middle East and Africa, but researchers believe the haplogroup originated in Asia. It is highest among the Fulbe peoples of West Africa. In lower concentrations, it appears in East Africa and in the Middle East.

Researchers wondered about the path of migration to produce small numbers of K2 individuals who came to reside in the UK and elsewhere in Europe. In 2007 King, et al. at the University of Leicester conducted DNA testing through a surname study of people named Jefferson.[38] Testing 85 randomly selected men from the UK with the surname Jefferson, the team found that they could be classified by a number of different haplogroups. This suggested that the surname originated independently multiple times from different unrelated founders. (This is likely as the surname means simply Jeff's or Jeffer's son.)

Two of the 85 men, with paternal grandfathers from Yorkshire and the West Midlands, respectively, and no known familial links to the USA, were found to belong to haplogroup K2. These two showed a perfect 17/17 match for STR values of the descendants of Field Jefferson. This shows that the rare haplotype existed among other men and families in England, so confirmed Jefferson's commonly accepted family origins there.

Researchers at Leicester state that the background level of the K2 haplogroup (now called Haplogroup T) in the UK is typical of the random dispersal of small numbers of uncommon haplogroups throughout the world. It could have had any ancient origin of arrival in the UK. Given known migration patterns, some researchers think it possible that Jefferson had a Sephardic Jewish ancestor from Spain or Portugal, or an even more ancient ancestor in Europe with origin in Phoenicia or the Levant.[39] Dr. Michael Hammer, a geneticist at the University of Arizona, found an exact match with this sample with a Moroccan Jew. Additionally, his database contained close matches with two other Middle Eastern Jews and an Egyptian.

"The haplogroup has probably been present for centuries in the 'indigenous' population of western Europe," says Professor Jobling (of the University of Leicester), "and is not exclusive to the Middle East and Africa." [40] According to limited data from commercial testing of people in the European nations, men in Italy may have the highest frequency of haplogroup T, with as many as 3.9% of Italian males belonging to this haplogroup.[41] Approximately 3% of Sephardi Jews and 2% of Ashkenazi Jews belong to haplogroup T.[39]

Conclusions

With this new evidence, formerly skeptical biographers such as Joseph Ellis and Andrew Burstein publicly said they had changed their opinions and acknowledged Jefferson's paternity of Hemings' children.[42][34] As Burstein said in 2005,

[T]he white Jefferson descendants who established the family denial in the mid-nineteenth century cast responsibility for paternity on two Jefferson nephews (children of Jefferson’s sister) whose DNA was not a match. So, as far as can be reconstructed, there are no Jeffersons other than the president who had the degree of physical access to Sally Hemings that he did.[34]

In addition, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which operates Monticello, issued its own report in 2000 supporting Jefferson's paternity. Dr. Daniel P. Jordan, president of Monticello, committed at the time to incorporate "the conclusions of the report into Monticello's training, interpretation, and publications." The Foundation has published new articles and monographs on the Hemings descendants reflecting the new evidence, and installed exhibits at the facility showing Jefferson as father of the Sally Hemings children.[43][44] In February 2000, PBS Frontline produced a program about the issues. It noted in its overview of material published about Jefferson-Hemings:

"More than 20 years after CBS executives were pressured by Jefferson historians to drop plans for a mini-series on Jefferson and Hemings, the network airs, "Sally Hemings: An American Scandal." Though many quarreled with the portrayal of Hemings as unrealistically modern and heroic, no major historian challenged the series' premise that Hemings and Jefferson had a 38-year relationship that produced children."[45]

Minority view

There was intense interest in the study and its implications for American understanding of Jefferson and that period. A minority has continued to reject the conclusions of the consensus. In response to a PBS Frontline special on the DNA study, John H. Works, Jr., a Jefferson descendant and a past president of the Monticello Association, a lineage society, wrote that DNA tests indicated that any one of eight Jeffersons could have been the father of Eston. The eight possibilities identified by the DNA tests are Thomas, Randolph (Jefferson's brother); Randolph's five sons, who were in their teens or 20s when Sally Hemings was having children; and a cousin George. The memo noted that Dr. Foster said that the title of the article, as published by Nature: "Jefferson Fathered Slave’s Last Child," was misleading. The team had concluded that Jefferson's paternity was the simplest explanation and consistent with historic evidence, but the DNA study could not identify Thomas Jefferson exclusively of other Jefferson males.[46]

In 1999 the newly formed Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS) commissioned its own report. (Its founder and current Director Emeritus Herbert Barger, a family historian, had assisted Dr. Eugene Foster by finding descendants of the Jefferson male line, Woodsons and Carrs for testing for the DNA study.[47]) Its Scholars Commission, which included Lance Banning, Robert F. Turner and Paul Rahe, among others, concluded in 2001 there was insufficient evidence to determine that Jefferson was the father of Hemings's children. Their report suggested that his younger brother Randolph Jefferson was the father, and that Hemings may have had multiple partners. But, Paul Rahe published a minority view, saying he thought Jefferson's paternity of Eston Hemings was more likely than not.[48] In turn, the TJHS report was directly criticized as poor scholarship in the National Genealogical Society Quarterly, which reported that the historical, genealogical, and DNA evidence were sufficient to conclude that Thomas Jefferson was the father.[49]

The historian Alexander Boulton reviewed the TJHS report and The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty, published by the TJHS. In the William and Mary Quarterly, he noted that Randolph Jefferson had never been seriously proposed as a candidate by historians until after the DNA study of 1998 showed a genetic match between the Hemings descendant and the Jefferson line. He noted "previous testimony had agreed" that Hemings had only one father for her children, so criticized the idea that she had multiple partners for her children.[50] Jeanette Daniels, Marietta Glauser, Diana Harvey and Carol Hubbell Ouellette conducted separate research and in 2003 documented that Randolph Jefferson was seldom at Monticello.[51]

In 1999, after meeting his Hemings' cousins on a TV interview show, Lucian Truscott IV invited them to that year's annual meeting of the Monticello Association, the Jefferson lineage society.[52] The Association decided to commission its own report to determine whether it would admit Hemings' descendants to the lineage society. In contrast to the conclusions of the certified genealogists of the National Genealogical Society, the 2002 report concluded the evidence was insufficient to establish Jefferson's paternity. The majority of Association members voted against admitting the Hemings descendants. (Truscott IV noted in a 2001 article in American Heritage that the Association did not have such strict documentation standards before the DNA study and he could as easily have enrolled his cat as his daughter.)[52]

Search for Common Ground

In 2001, before the Monticello Association vote, Lucian Truscott IV had written:

"I pray that we will be fair to our cousins and to ourselves and to our history and to the memory not only of Thomas Jefferson but of Sally Hemings, and that we will do the right thing. Standing together, we are ancient evidence of the lie at the heart of racism, because in the words of Thomas Jefferson, we were created equal.

We are Jefferson’s children. We are a family."

[52]

In 2010, Shay Banks-Young and Julia Jefferson Westerinen (descended from Sally Hemings' sons Madison and Eston, respectively, they identify as African American and white), and David Works (brother of John H. Works, Jr., and descended from Martha Wayles), were honored with the international "Search for Common Ground" award for "their work to bridge the divide within their family and heal the legacy of slavery."[53] The three have spoken about race and their extended family in numerous appearances across the country.[53] After organizing a reunion at Monticello in 2003 of both sides of the Jefferson family, they organized "The Monticello Community", for descendants of all who lived and worked there during Jefferson's lifetime.[54] In July 2007, the 3-day Monticello Community Gathering brought together descendants of many people who had worked at the plantation, with educational sessions, tours of Monticello and Charlottesville, and other activities. It was organized by descendants of both sides of Jefferson's family, as well as of others who had worked there.[55]

Shay Banks-Young, a descendant of Madison Hemings, had grown up with a family tradition of descent from Jefferson. David Works had originally resisted the new DNA evidence, but after he read the commissioned reports, he became convinced of Jefferson's paternity and voted in favor of admitting the Hemings' descendants to the Monticello Association.[53]

Julia Jefferson Westerinen is descended from Eston Hemings Jefferson. After he moved his family to Madison, Wisconsin in 1852, they all took the surname Jefferson and entered the white community. His descendants married and identified as white from then on. In the 1940s, Julia's father and his brothers changed the family oral tradition and told their children they were descended from an uncle of Jefferson, as they were trying to protect them from racial discrimination. In the 1970s, a cousin, Jean Jefferson, read Fawn Brodie's biography of Jefferson and recognized Eston Hemings' name from family stories. She contacted Brodie and learned the truth about their descent. This enabled tracking down the family to gain a descendant for DNA testing. Julia's brother, John weeks Jefferson, was the Eston Hemings' descendant tested; his DNA matched that of the Jefferson male line.[56]

See also

  • List of genetic results derived from historical figures

References

  1. ^ "The Legacies of Monticello", Getting Word, Monticello, accessed March 19, 2011
  2. ^ "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account". Monticello. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. http://www.monticello.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings-brief-account. Retrieved 4 November 2011. 
  3. ^ Philip D. Morgan (1999). "Interracial Sex In the Chesapeake and the British Atlantic World c. 1700-1820". In Jan Lewis, Peter S. Onuf. Sally Hemings & Thomas Jefferson: history, memory, and civic culture. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 9780813919195. http://books.google.com/books?id=jaoC2BtS4OIC&pg=PA52&lpg=PA52&dq=Philip+D.+Morgan&source=bl&ots=3IBM322VaS&sig=ukr6SZY7w6_z1qC0WRJBwvU15Fs&hl=en&ei=6E42S8WdHYa7lAfVm82XBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CB0Q6AEwBzge#v=onepage&q=Philip%20D.%20Morgan&f=false. 
  4. ^ Joshua D. Rothman, Notorious in the Neighborhood: Sex and Interracial Relationships Across the Color Line in Virginia, 1787-1861, University of North Carolina Press, 2003
  5. ^ Annette Gordon-Reed, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy, University of Virginia Press, 1998 (reprint, with new foreword, first published 1997)
  6. ^ "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account", Monticello Website, accessed 22 June 2011, Quote: "Ten years later [referring to its 2000 report], TJF [Thomas Jefferson Foundation] 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."
  7. ^ Helen F. M. Leary, National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, pp. 207, 214 - 218 Quote: Leary concluded that "the chain of evidence securely fastens Sally Hemings's children to their father, Thomas Jefferson."
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  9. ^ Ed. Thos. Jefferson Loony, et. al. (2006). "Elijah Flecther's Account of a Visit to Monticello" May 8, 1811. Thos. Jefferson Papers, Retirement Series, Vol. 3: Princeton. p. 610. 
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  14. ^ The Memoirs of Madison Hemings, Thomas Jefferson: Frontline, PBS-WGBH
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  20. ^ Winthrop Jordan, White over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968
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  24. ^ Lucia C. Stanton, "Elizabeth Hemings and Her Family", Free Some Day: The African American Families of Monticello], University of North Carolina Press, 2000, p. 117, accessed 13 August 2011
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  26. ^ http://www.tjscience.org/
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  33. ^ ''DNA typing: biology, technology, and genetics of STR markers''. John Marshall Butler, Elsevier Academic Press, 2005. pg 224-9. Books.google.com. 2001-09-11. http://books.google.com/books?id=gwDyBq2xLjIC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Forensic+DNA+typing:+biology,+technology,+and+genetics+of+STR+markers++By+John+Marshall+Butler&hl=en&ei=X44uTaTmGY3ZcYuZgZkI&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCsQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=falseForensic. Retrieved 2011-06-19. 
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  • Jefferson, Thomas — born April 13, 1743, Shadwell, Va. died July 4, 1826, Monticello, Va., U.S. Third president of the U.S. (1801–09). He was a planter and became a lawyer in 1767; he was also a slaveholder, though he opposed slavery. While a member of the House of… …   Universalium

  • Jefferson DNA data — was taken from living male claimed descendants of Jefferson and Hemings. [cite journal|last = Foster | first = EA |coauthors = Jobling MA, Taylor PG, Donnelly P, de Knijff P,Mieremet R, Zerjal T, Tyler Smith C | year = 1998 | title = Jefferson… …   Wikipedia

  • Sally Hemings — Infobox Person name = Sally Hemings image size = caption = birth name = birth date = circa 1773 birth place = Shadwell, Albemarle County, Virginia death date = 1835 death place = Charlottesville, Virginia death cause = resting place = resting… …   Wikipedia

  • Madison Hemings — Infobox Person name = Madison Hemings image size = caption = birth name = birth date = birth date|1805|01|18 birth place = death date = death date and age|1877|11|28|1805|01|18 death place = death cause = resting place = resting place coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Thomas Jefferson — Infobox President name=Thomas Jefferson order=3rd President of the United States term start=March 4, 1801 term end=March 4, 1809 predecessor=John Adams successor=James Madison birth date=OldStyleDate|April 13|1743|April 2 birth place=Shadwell,… …   Wikipedia

  • Sally Hemings — (vers 1773 – 1835) était une esclave qui vivait en Virginie en Amérique du Nord, fille de Betty Hemings. Sa mère travailla pour John Wayles, qui mourut en 1773, le père de Martha Wayles. Avec le remariage de celle ci avec Thomas Jefferson, Sally… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Eston Hemings — Infobox Person name = Eston Hemings Jefferson image size = caption = birth name = birth date = 1808 birth place = Monticello, Virginia death date = 1856 death place = Madison, Wisconsin death cause = resting place = resting place coordinates =… …   Wikipedia

  • Mary Hemings — Born 1753 Charles City County, Virginia Died after 1834 Charlottesville, Virginia Resting place unknown Nationality American Occupation …   Wikipedia

  • Betty Hemings — Infobox Person name = Elizabeth Betty Hemings image size = caption = birth name = birth date = circa 1735 birth place = possibly Bermuda Hundred, Henrico County, Virginia death date = 1807 death place = Monticello death cause = resting place =… …   Wikipedia

  • Martha Jefferson — This article is about the wife of Thomas Jefferson. For the daughter of Thomas Jefferson, see Martha Jefferson Randolph. Martha Jefferson First Lady of Virginia In office June 1, 1779 – June 3, 1781 Preceded by Dorothea Henry Succeeded …   Wikipedia

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