Hemings, Sally

From New World Encyclopedia
m (New page: {{Infobox Person |name = Sally Hemings |image = |image_size = |caption = |birth_name = |birth_date = circa 1773 |birth_place = [[Shadwell (Virginia)|S...)
 
 
(139 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{Images OK}}{{submitted}}{{epname|Hemings, Sally}}{{approved}}{{copyedited}}
 +
 
{{Infobox Person
 
{{Infobox Person
 
|name          = Sally Hemings
 
|name          = Sally Hemings
Line 5: Line 7:
 
|caption      =
 
|caption      =
 
|birth_name    =  
 
|birth_name    =  
|birth_date    = circa 1773  
+
|birth_date    = c. 1773  
 
|birth_place  = [[Shadwell (Virginia)|Shadwell]], [[Albemarle County, Virginia]]
 
|birth_place  = [[Shadwell (Virginia)|Shadwell]], [[Albemarle County, Virginia]]
 
|death_date    = 1835
 
|death_date    = 1835
Line 41: Line 43:
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Sally Hemings''' ([[Shadwell (Virginia)|Shadwell]], [[Albemarle County, Virginia]], circa 1773 &ndash; [[Charlottesville, Virginia]], 1835) was an American [[slavery|slave]] owned by [[Thomas Jefferson]]. She is said to have been the [[half-sister]] of Jefferson's deceased wife [[Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson]].<ref>[http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/John_Wayles ''John Wayles Paternity'']</ref> Jefferson was alleged during his administration to have fathered several children with slaves; more recently [[Jefferson DNA data|DNA test]]s indicate that a male in Jefferson's line, possibly Thomas Jefferson himself, was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings's children.
+
'''Sally Hemings''' (c. 1773 &ndash; 1835) was an American [[slavery|slave]] owned by [[Thomas Jefferson]], believed to be the mother of several children belonging to him. She was also reportedly the illegitimate [[half-sister]] of Jefferson's deceased wife, [[Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson]].
 
 
==Biography==
 
Hemings's mother, Betty Hemings, was the daughter of the English Captain Hemings and an enslaved African woman.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> Along with other members of her family, she was owned by Jefferson's [[father-in-law]], John Wayles, who died in 1773, leaving nearly all members of the Hemings family to his daughter [[Martha Jefferson]].<ref>[http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/John_Wayles ''John Wayles Paternity'']</ref> Several sources assert that Martha and Sally were half-sisters, both fathered by John Wayles, which is generally accepted, but not undisputed. Martha Jefferson died in 1782, leaving the Hemings family to Thomas. The Hemings family was at the top of the slave "hierarchy" at [[Monticello]].<ref name="reed160">Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.160. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
 
 
 
In 1784, Thomas Jefferson took up residence in [[Paris]] as the American envoy to [[France]]. 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. Polly and Hemings were met in [[London]] by [[John Adams|John]] and [[Abigail Adams]]. Abigail described Sally as a "Girl about 15 or 16" and as "quite a child, and Captain Ramsey is of opinion will be of so little Service that he had better carry her back with him." She added that Sally "seems fond of [Polly] and appears good-natured."<ref>[http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=mtj1&fileName=mtj1page007.db&recNum=536''Abigail Adams to Jeffferson June 26, 1787'']</ref> Ten days later she wrote that after five weeks at sea Polly had become "rough as a little sailor" but after two days had been restored to amiability; Sally, however, she said, "wants more care than the child, and is wholly incapable of looking properly after her, without some superior to direct her."<ref>[http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=mtj1&fileName=mtj1page007.db&recNum=610''Abigail Adams to jefferson July 6, 1787'']</ref>
 
 
 
Sally remained in France for twenty-six months. Also present was her brother, [[James Hemings|James]], who had accompanied Jefferson to France in 1784, and was learning to be a chef. Both Sally and James received wages while in France, and towards the end of their stay, James used them to pay a French tutor. There is no record of where Sally stayed. She could have stayed with Jefferson and her brother at the Hotel de Langoque or at the convent where Maria and Martha were schooled; in either case, Jefferson and his retinue spent weekends together at his villa.<ref> Thomas Jefferson: A Life, Willard S. Randall, Henry Holt & Co., 1993, p. 475</ref> The convent's bills do not seem to have included a boarding charge for Sally. The only clear documentation shows that Jefferson purchased clothing for her, probably because she needed to accompany Martha to formal events.<ref>{http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/interviews/reed.html ''Interview with Anette Gordon-Reed'']</ref>
 
 
 
Under French law, both Sally and James could have petitioned for their freedom. According to her son Madison, Sally was learning French, and was aware that she could be free in France. He claimed that she became pregnant by Jefferson and refused to return to the United States unless Jefferson agreed to free her children, and that Jefferson agreed.<ref name="madisonstatement" />
 
  
Hemings returned to the United States with Jefferson in 1789. While evidence is scarce, she seems to have 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 had six children:
+
After attending Jefferson and his daughters in [[Paris]], she returned with him to [[Monticello]] in 1789, where, from 1795 to 1808, she bore five children who lived into adulthood. Rumors and newspaper reports about her relationship with Jefferson became an issue in American politics in the early 1800s. Hemings' son, Madison, published a memoir (1873) in which he claimed the he and his siblings were all fathered by Jefferson. Jefferson's legitimate children and grandchildren denied the claim, affirming that the Hemings children were the offspring of a nephew of Jefferson.
  
* Harriet Hemings (I) (October 5, 1795 - December 7, 1797)<ref name="HemingsMont"/>
+
Reportedly, some of Sally Hemings' children, all of whom were light skinned and able to pass for being [[Caucasian]], were allowed to leave Monticello without being pursued as runaway [[slavery|slaves]]. The rest were later freed. Sally herself remained in slavery until after Jefferson's death in 1826. She then lived with her children in Charlottesville until she deceased in 1835. While some of her children disappeared from the historical record, a number of her living descendants are still known.
* Beverly Hemings ''(possibly born William Beverly Hemings)'' (April 1, 1798 - after 1873)<ref name="HemingsMont"/>
+
{{toc}}
* unnamed daughter ''(possibly named Thenia after Hemings's sister Thenia)'' (born in 1799 and died in infancy)<ref name=HemingsMont>[http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings-jefferson_contro.html ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account'']. Monticello.org.</ref>
+
Until the late twentieth century, historians tended to dismiss the allegation of Jefferson's relationship with Sally Hemings, but the controversy re-emerged in the late 1960s. [[DNA]] tests confirmed that a male in Jefferson's line, not one of the suggested nephews, was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings' children. Although circumstantial, evidence points to Jefferson.  
* Harriet Hemings (II) (May 22, 1801 - after 1863)<ref name="HemingsMont"/>
+
[[Image:Monticello reflected.JPG|thumb|280px|Sally Hemings lived at Monticello while Jefferson was alive]]
* [[Madison Hemings]] ''(possibly born James Madison Hemings)'' (January 19, 1805 - 1877)<ref name="HemingsMont"/>
+
==Early life==
* [[Eston Hemings]] ''(possibly born Thomas Eston Hemings)'' (May 21, 1808 - 1856)<ref name="HemingsMont"/>
+
[[Image:Jefferson-peale.jpg|thumb|200px|Thomas Jefferson, probable father of at least one of Sally Hemings' children]]
 +
Sally Hemings's mother, Betty Hemings, was the daughter of the English Captain Hemings and an enslaved African woman. Sally's family was owned by Jefferson's [[father-in-law]], John Wayles, who died in 1773, leaving nearly all members of the Hemings family to his daughter [[Martha Jefferson]]. Several sources assert that Wayles was Sally Heming's father, making her and Martha Jefferson half-sisters. Martha Jefferson died in 1782, leaving the Hemings family to her husband, Thomas. The Hemings family was at the top of the slave "hierarchy" at [[Monticello]] indicating a special relationship to their owner, possibly of kinship.
  
According to the 1873 recollections of her son Madison, she also bore a child in 1790, who died soon after.<ref name="madisonstatement" /> According to controversial newspaper accounts and the oral tradition of the descendants of former slave Thomas Woodson, a son named Thomas was born in 1790. Jefferson recorded slave births in his Farm Book. Some observers have noted inconsistencies in the records: there are erasures in the birth entry columns for 1790 and other years on page 31;<ref name = "page31">[http://www.thomasjeffersonpapers.org/cfm/doc.cfm?id=farm_31&mode=sm ''Page 31 of the Farm Book, with erasure'']</ref> usually Jefferson crossed out entries of those who died. Also, Jefferson did not take note of the father's name for Sally's children, although for some slaves' births he did note the father.<ref name="appleby">Appleby, Joyce Oldham and Arthur Schlesinger. ''Thomas Jefferson''. Macmillan, 2003. pp. 75-77.</ref>.
+
With his wife deceased, Thomas Jefferson took up residence in [[Paris]] as the American envoy to [[France]] in 1784. In 1787, Jefferson sent for his second daughter, nine-year-old Maria (Polly). He asked that the slave Isabel, an older woman, be sent as a companion for Polly, but because Isabel was pregnant, the teen-aged Sally Hemings accompanied her instead. Stopping in London, Polly and Sally were met by [[John Adams|John]] and [[Abigail Adams]]. Mrs. Adams expressed doubt concerning Sally's abilities, describing her as needing "more care than the child, and… wholly incapable of looking properly after her, without some superior to direct her."
  
Sally Hemings' duties 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=HemingsMont/> Hemings almost looked white in appearance and had "straight hair down her back."<ref name="reed160"/> Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, described her as "light colored and decidedly good looking." As an adult she may have lived in a room in Monticello's "South Dependencies," a wing of the mansion which was accessible to the main house through a covered passageway.<ref>[http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html ''Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children''] ''www.Monticello.org'' Retrieved May 21, 2008.</ref>
+
Sally remained in France for 26 months, where her brother [[James Hemings|James]], who had accompanied Jefferson to France in 1784, was learning to be a [[chef]]. Both Sally and James received wages while in France. There is no record of where Sally stayed. She may have stayed with Jefferson and her brother at the Hotel de Langoque or at the convent where Polly and her sister Martha were schooled. In either case, Jefferson and his retinue, including his daughters, spent weekends together at his villa.<ref>Randall (1993), 475.</ref> The convent's bills do not seem to have included a boarding charge for Sally. Documentation does show that Jefferson purchased clothing for her, probably because she needed to accompany Martha to formal events.
  
Sally never married. While she worked at Monticello, she was able to have her children nearby. According to her son Madison, they "were permitted to stay about the 'great house,' and only required to do such light work as going on errands." Madison said that Thomas Jefferson was a kind man, but was "not in the habit" of showing fatherly affection to him and his siblings. At age 14 they began their training, the brothers in carpentry and Harriet as a spinner and weaver. Beverly, Madison and Eston all learned to play the fiddle. In 1819 or 1820, a Jefferson granddaughter invited a friend to come to Monticello to "dance after Beverley's music" at the South Pavilion. Beverly "ran away" in 1822 and was not pursued. Harriet followed in the same year. According to the overseer Edmund Bacon, he gave her $50 and put her on a stagecoach, presumably to join her brother or another relative. <ref name="monticelloreport"/> 
+
Since [[slavery]] was illegal in France, under French law, both Sally and James could have petitioned to be released from Jefferson's ownership. According to her son Madison, Sally later indicated that she was aware that she could be free in France. He reported that she became pregnant by Jefferson and agreed to return to the United States as a slave only on the condition that Jefferson would agree to free her children, and that Jefferson agreed.
  
There is nothing in Jefferson's references to Hemings in his records that distinguishes her as receiving special treatment, but her extended family did. <ref name=HemingsMont/> Out of the hundreds of slaves he owned, Jefferson freed only two slaves in his lifetime, and five in his will - all from the Hemings family. Additionally, he allowed Harriet and Beverly to "escape" with his tacit consent.<ref>[http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/Slaves_Who_Gained_Freedom''Thomas Jefferson Wiki'']Slaves who gained freedom</ref> He also successfully petitioned the Virginia legislature to allow her sons Eston and Madison to remain in Virginia after they were free, as Virginia law held that freed slaves must leave within a year. Sally Hemings was never officially freed, an act - if Jefferson had ever considered it - which would have certainly drawn scrutiny.<ref name="appleby"/><ref>[http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html ''Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children'']. Monticello.org.</ref>  When appraisers arrived at Monticello after Jefferson's death to evaluate his estate, they described 56-year-old Hemings as "an old woman worth $50."<ref name="halliday">Halliday, E.M. ''Understanding Thomas Jefferson''. HarperCollins, 2001. ISBN 0060957611. p.120-122.</ref> Jefferson's daughter, Martha Randolph, then apparently gave Hemings her "time," a type of informal freedom which would allow her to continue to live in Virginia, and Hemings lived out the rest of her life in Charlottesville, with her sons.<ref name="monticelloreport"/> Researchers believe she was buried at a site in downtown Charlottesville, which now lies beneath a parking lot.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E07E4DC1131F931A3575BC0A96F958260 ''Fighting for Space at the Jefferson Family Table''] NY Times</ref><ref>[http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-AFRICAN/1999-05/0926888695 ''Rift runs through Jefferson family reunion'']</ref>
+
===Children===
 +
Hemings did return to the U.S. with Jefferson in 1789. She seems to have lived most of the rest of her life at Monticello, and later in nearby [[Charlottesville]], where she moved after Jefferson's death.  
  
==Controversy over Sally Hemings's children==
+
Some observers have noted inconsistencies in Jefferson's records regarding Hemings, including the fact that Jefferson did not note the father's name for Sally's children, although for some slaves' births he did note the father. According to Jefferson's records, she had six children:
===Press reports and rumors===
 
Prior to 1802, vague insinuations had been published in the ''Washington Federalist'' newspaper regarding Jefferson's alleged involvement with slaves.<ref name="monticelloreport" /> In 1802, [[James T. Callender]], a muckraking political journalist and former supporter of Thomas Jefferson, published a claim in the Richmond ''Recorder'' newspaper that Jefferson was the father of five children by Sally Hemings, including a son, Tom. By that time, according to various written sources, Hemings had borne as many as five children, but three had died, and there is no contemporary record of a son named "Tom" - Thomas Eston was born later - other than in Callender's articles or accounts derived from them.<ref name=HemingsMont/>  Callender called the alleged boy "President Tom," saying that he closely resembled the President and had been born upon Jefferson and Hemings' return from Paris. Jefferson's grandson Thomas Jefferson Randolph later admitted that Sally's children resembled Jefferson "so closely that it was plain that they had his blood in their veins," attributing the resemblance to paternity by a Jefferson relative<ref name="monticelloreport" />, but Callender had never visited Monticello and relied on second-hand information and speculation for his stories.<ref>''The Wolf by the Ears'', John Chester Miller, The Free Press, 1977 p.154</ref> Although he made an effort to correct factual errors in his account,<ref name="monticelloreport" /> and he was correct in reporting the existence of Sally, her presence in France, and the resemblance of her children to Jefferson, his basic assertion that "President Tom" existed has never been proven.
 
  
Today Callender is remembered as a mere "scandalmonger," but Jefferson, prior to meeting him, had concluded that Callender was "A man of genius" and "a man of science fled from persecution" - based on his knowledge of Callender's previous work criticizing politics in Great Britain, work which had necessitated his flight to the United States. Jefferson sought to make use of him against John Adams after Callender's success in scandalizing Alexander Hamilton, and subsequent to meeting him, paid him, over time, two hundred dollars. He also reviewed and provided feedback on early proofs of Callender's anti-Federalist pamphlet ''The Prospect Before Us''.<ref>''The Wolf by the Ears'', John Chester Miller, The Free Press, 1977 p.148 -151</ref><ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/adams/peopleevents/p_callender.html]''Callender's Relationship with Jefferson''</ref> In 1800, consequent to the publication of ''The Prospect Before Us'', Callender was incarcerated by President John Adams under the [[Alien and Sedition Act|Sedition Act]]. After Callender was released and Jefferson was elected president, Callender, who had been retroactively pardoned by Jefferson, asked Jefferson to appoint him [[Postmaster]] of [[Richmond, Virginia]], warning that if he did not there would be consequences. Callender believed erroneously that Jefferson was conspiring to deprive him of money owed to him by the government after the pardon. Jefferson refused to make the appointment. Subsequently, Callender published claims that Jefferson had funded his prior journalistic activities. After denials were issued, he also published Jefferson's letters to him to prove the relationship. Later, angered by the response of Jefferson supporters, which included the smear that Callender had abandoned his wife, leaving her to die of a venereal disease,<ref> Thomas Jefferson: A Life, Willard S. Randall, Henry Holt & Co., 1993, p.556</ref>  Callender wrote in a series of articles that Jefferson fathered children "by this wench Sally." <ref>''The Wolf by the Ears'', John Chester Miller, The Free Press, 1977 p.152 - 153</ref><ref name="reed160">Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p 59-61. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
+
* Harriet Hemings (I) (October 5, 1795-December 7, 1797)
 +
* Beverly Hemings ''(a male, possibly born William Beverly Hemings)'' (April 1, 1798-after 1873)
 +
* unnamed daughter ''(possibly named Thenia after Hemings's sister Thenia)'' (born in 1799 and died in infancy)
 +
* Harriet Hemings (II) (May 22, 1801-after 1863)
 +
* [[Madison Hemings]] ''(possibly born James Madison Hemings)'' (January 19, 1805-1877)
 +
* [[Eston Hemings]] ''(possibly born Thomas Eston Hemings)'' (May 21, 1808-1856)<ref>Monticello, [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings-jefferson_contro.html Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account.] Retrieved July 2, 2008.</ref>
  
The Hemings allegations resurfaced in the press in 1805, as a footnote to a different controversy (also initiated by Callender before his death in 1803) involving Jefferson's attempted affair with a married neighbor decades earlier. A private letter from a "Thomas Turner" was reprinted in a Boston newspaper, asserting the Hemings allegation was "unquestionably true." Unlike Callender, Turner correctly identified Hemings's eldest son as Beverly, and introduced to the public (but did not invent) the claim that Sally Hemings was the half-sister of Jefferson's deceased wife.<ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.73. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
+
[[Image:Monticello veggie garden.JPG|thumb|200px|View from the back of Monticello where many slaves worked]]
 +
According to the 1873 recollections of her son Madison, she also bore a child in 1790, conceived in France, who died soon after. According to controversial newspaper accounts and oral tradition this son was named Thomas.
  
While the rumors promoted by Callender were unable to defeat Jefferson politically, they were a lasting source of concern in posterity, and for his friends and family, some of whom believed the rumors and some not.<ref name="monticelloreport"/> His friend, Abigail Adams, in a letter of July 1, 1804, chastised Jefferson: "The serpent you cherished and warmed bit the hand that nourished him, and gave you sufficient specimens of his talents, his gratitude, his justice, and his truth."<ref>The Adams - Jefferson Letters, v. 1, University of North Carolina Press, 1959, p. 274</ref> In a later letter she characterized herself as a former friend and said Jefferson's explanation of his involvement with Callender was at variance with what she - and everyone she had ever discussed the matter with - believed.<ref>The Adams - Jefferson Letters, v. 1, University of North Carolina Press, 1959, p. 276</ref> John Adams, in a statement that some historians regard as supporting and some as rejecting Calender's claims, wrote "Callender and Sally will be remembered as long as Jefferson, as blots in his character. The story of the latter is a natural and almost unavoidable consequence of that foul Contagion in the human Character, Negro Slavery..."<ref name="monticelloreport"/>
+
Sally Hemings' duties 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 reportedly looked nearly white in appearance and had "straight hair down her back." Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, described her as "light colored and decidedly good looking." As an adult, she may have lived in a room in Monticello's "South Dependencies," a wing of the mansion which was accessible to the main house through a covered passageway.
  
===Madison Hemings's memoir===
+
Sally Hemings never married. While she worked at Monticello, she was able to have her children nearby. According to her son Madison, they "were permitted to stay about the 'great house,' and only required to do such light work as going on errands." Madison reported that Jefferson was a kind man, but was "not in the habit" of showing fatherly affection to him and his siblings.
[[Madison Hemings]], one of Sally's sons, claimed in an 1873 memoir<ref name="madisonstatement" /> edited by Samuel Wetmore, publisher  of the Ohio newspaper ''The Pike County Republican'', that Thomas Jefferson was his father and the father of all of Sally's children. He revealed that his brothers and sister had passed into white society, concealing their slave origins. Hemings account does not mention the "President Tom" of Callender's claims, but instead asserts that Sally Hemings's first child was conceived in France, and was born and died soon after her return to Virginia. <ref name="madisonstatement">{{cite web | title = Memoirs of Madison Hemings  | url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1873march.html }}</ref> 
 
  
Despite that discrepancy, some propose that the 1873 memoir was based on Callender's articles, with both including the same misspelling of the name of Martha Jefferson's father, John Wayles.<ref name="meyerresearch">{{cite web | title = The Thomas Jefferson - Sally Hemings Myth and the Politicization of American History  | author = Mayer, David |date= 2001-04-09| url = http://www.ashbrook.org/articles/mayer-hemings.html |  accessdate = 2007-08-02 }}</ref> However the phonetic mistranscription of "Wayles" to "Wales" may be an error that is easily reproduced independently.  
+
At age 14, the Hemings children began their training, the brothers in carpentry and Harriet as a spinner and weaver. Beverly, Madison, and Eston all learned to play the fiddle. In 1819 or 1820, a Jefferson granddaughter invited a friend to come to Monticello to "dance after Beverley's music" at the South Pavilion.
  
It is also alleged that there is no evidence of any oral tradition predating the 1873 memoir, by other descendants of Monticello slaves or within the Hemings family; however, oral traditions, by their very nature of being oral, tend not to leave evidence until they are written down. Since a large number of Hemings descendants were "passing for white," and Beverly and Harriet Hemings's legal status was as runaway slaves until 1865, there was a strong imperative to leave no record.<ref name = brodie />  <ref name='wm'>[http://oieahc.wm.edu/wmq/Oct01/CoatesWoodsonStantonOct01.pdf ''The Monticello Mystery-Case Continued ''] </ref>. In any case, it should be noted that a newspaper reminiscence published in 1902 by a non-relative claimed that it was widely accepted as true by their neighbors in Chillicothe, Ohio in the 1840s that Eston and Madison were Jefferson's sons.<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1902sprig.html ''A sprig of Jefferson'']</ref>
+
Beverly left the plantation in 1822, but was not pursued. Harriet followed in the same year. According to the plantation overseer Edmund Bacon, he gave her $50 and put her on a stagecoach, presumably to join her brother Beverly or another relative.
  
Factual errors regarding the length of Sally Hemings's stay in France and the terms of Jefferson's will, and Madison's claim to have been named by Dolley Madison have also contributed to skepticism towards the account. Another source of incredulity is Madison's claim that Jefferson had little taste for agriculture and favored "mechanics"; this perhaps can be explained by noting that Madison came of age in a period of great construction at Monticello, late in Jefferson's life.<ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.22. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
+
===Later life===
 +
In Jefferson's references to Sally Hemings in his records, nothing distinguishes her as receiving special treatment. However, her extended family does appear to have been especially favored. Out of the hundreds of slaves he owned, Jefferson freed only two during his lifetime, Madison and Eston Hemings. He freed five additional slaves in his will, all from the Hemings family. He also seems to have allowed Harriet and Beverly to "escape" with his tacit consent. Jefferson also successfully petitioned the Virginia legislature to allow Hemings' sons Eston and Madison to remain in Virginia after they were free, an exception to a Virginia law requiring that freed slaves must leave within a year. Sally Hemings herself was never officially freed, although analysts point out that such an act would have certainly drawn scrutiny.  
  
A second Monticello slave account<ref name ="israel" /> in the same newspaper supported Madison Hemings's story, which prompted Jefferson's grandson Thomas Jefferson Randolph to respond at length in an unpublished letter regarding alleged chronological and factual errors in that story.<ref> [http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/Lafayette_at_Monticello#_ref-6]'' TJ Randolph reply to Pike''</ref>
+
When appraisers arrived at Monticello after Jefferson's death to evaluate his estate, they described 56-year-old Sally Hemings as "an old woman worth $50."<ref>E.M. Halliday (2001), 120-122.</ref> Jefferson's legitimate daughter, Martha Randolph, then apparently gave Hemings her "time," a type of informal freedom which would allow her to continue to live in Virginia, where she lived out the rest of her life in Charlottesville with her sons. Researchers believe she was buried at a site in downtown Charlottesville, which now lies beneath a parking lot.
  
Some skeptics have asserted that Madison's memoir exhibits a vocabulary unlikely to be used by a former slave, betraying the hand of the editor Samuel Wetmore - a Republican partisan and abolitionist. Wetmore's other accounts in the same series, however, do not exhibit the same degree of stylistic peculiarities. <ref name ="israel">[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1873israel.html ''Memoirs of Israel Jefferson'']</ref>It may be worth noting that Madison, as a member of the privileged Hemings family, did grow up in proximity to the polymath Jefferson and his children, and according to his own account, was tutored by Jefferson's grandchildren, subsequently pursuing literacy on his own, and that modern preconceptions of what an ex-slave "should" sound like have influenced the memoir's reception.<ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.19 - p.22. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
+
==Controversy over her children==
 +
Prior to 1802, vague insinuations had been published in the ''Washington Federalist'' newspaper regarding Jefferson's alleged involvement with slaves. [[James T. Callender]], a muckraking political journalist and former supporter of Jefferson, published a claim in the Richmond ''Recorder'' that Jefferson was the father of five children by Sally Hemings, including a son named Thomas. However, Callender had never visited Monticello and relied on second-hand information.
  
Finally, Madison's claim of paternity by Thomas Jefferson has been portrayed as wishful thinking. Shortly after its publication, a rival newspaper wrote "We have no doubt but there are at least fifty negroes in this county who lay claim to illustrious parentage. This is a well known peculiarity of the colored race."<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1873rebuttal.html ''Waverly Watchman rebuttal'']</ref> More recently, David Mayer, a participant in the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society's "Scholar's Commission" report issued in 2001, wrote that treating Madison's memoir as "history" instead of "myth" would be akin to "saying that a famous tribal leader among the Pacific Northwest First Peoples really was descended from a raven bird, because his family myth says so..."<ref name=meyerresearch />Annette Gordon-Reed, author of ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy'' notes that Hemings was vilified and ridiculed after the memoir was released, and after his memoir was forgotten and rediscovered, he was vilified and ridiculed again, "as if nothing had happened in America between 1873 and the 1990s." <ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.235. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
+
While the rumors promoted by Callender were unable to defeat Jefferson politically, they were a lasting source of concern in posterity, and for his friends and family, some of whom believed the rumors and some not. Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, later admitted that Sally's children resembled Jefferson "so closely that it was plain that they had his blood in their veins."<ref>Miller (1977), 154.</ref> John Adams wrote: "Callender and Sally will be remembered as long as Jefferson, as blots in his character. The story of the latter is a natural and almost unavoidable consequence of that foul Contagion in the human Character, Negro Slavery…"
  
===Eston Hemings family oral tradition===
+
Madison Hemings claimed in an 1873 memoir, edited by [[Samuel Wetmore]], publisher of the Ohio newspaper, ''The Pike County Republican,'' that Thomas Jefferson was his father, as well as the father of all of Sally's children. He also revealed that his brothers and sister had passed into white society, successfully concealing their slave origins. Critics propose that the 1873 memoir had numerous factual errors and based more on Callender's articles that facts known personally to Madison Hemings. Some skeptics have also asserted that Madison's memoir exhibits a vocabulary unlikely to be used by a former slave, betraying the hand of the editor Samuel Wetmore—a Republican partisan and abolitionist.
When author Fawn Brodie encountered descendants of [[Eston Hemings]] in the 1970s, she discovered that they had been unaware of their relation to Sally Hemings - Hemings had changed his surname to Jefferson after he moved to Wisconsin - and of their African ancestry, and had been told that they were distant relations of Jefferson's "uncle" (Jefferson's uncles died long before the Hemings children were born).<ref name = brodie /> Since then, skeptics have seized upon this to refute the Thomas Jefferson paternity claim, speculating that "uncle" actually referred to Jefferson's brother, Randolph. However, the family subsequently revealed that the "uncle" story had been fabricated by male family members in the 1940s out of concern over racial discrimination.<ref>{{cite news | title = A Founding Father and His Family | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/03/nyregion/03JEFF.html }}</ref> That this change in the oral tradition occurred is supported by a letter to the Chicago Tribune which followed Eston's son Beverly's 1908 obituary notice, which claimed Beverly was the grandson of Thomas Jefferson, and by the 1902 Scioto Gazette story about Eston.<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1902sprig.html ''A sprig of Jefferson'']</ref><ref name="monticelloreport" /> It's worth noting that it was the connection to the Hemings family and to Monticello that was obscured by the change, rather than to the Jefferson family. Other changes to the oral history included the omission of the 15 years the family had lived in the African American community in Chillicothe, Ohio; the changing of the spelling of "Eston" to "Estis"; and the changing of the family's origin from Albemarle County to Fairfax County.<ref>Lewis, Jan. ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture''. University of Virginia Press (1999). p.174. </ref>
 
  
===Woodson family oral tradition===
+
Descendants of Thomas Woodson, a "free colored" man, published claims that he was Sally Hemings's son by Thomas Jefferson, conceived in France and born at Monticello in 1790. He was thus supposedly the "President Tom" of Callender's articles. However, DNA testing of five descendants of Woodson showed no relation to Jefferson.
Descendants of Thomas Woodson, a "free colored" man first recorded as living in West Virginia, have  published claims that he was Sally Hemings's son by Thomas Jefferson, conceived in France and born at Monticello in 1790, the "President Tom" of Callender's articles. The first known documentary evidence regarding Woodson's life shows that he was a farmer in Greenbrier County, West Virginia, in 1807. DNA testing of five descendants of Woodson showed no relation to Jefferson. The report filed in the year 2000 by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the non-profit organization which maintains Monticello, found that Woodson's claims were improbable, despite being corroborated by Callender's original story and by the Woodson family oral tradition:  "If Thomas C. Woodson was Sally Hemings’s son born in 1790, he would have been a father at sixteen and a landowner at seventeen; his wife would have been eight years older
 
than he. While this is not necessarily impossible, it would have been highly unusual."<ref name="monticelloreport">{{cite web | title = Jefferson-Hemings Report | date = 2001-01 | url = http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/jefferson-hemings_report.pdf | format=PDF| publisher = ''Thomas Jefferson Foundation'' | accessdate = 2007-08-02 }}</ref> In 2001, the National Genealogical Quarterly placed his birth date circa 1784-85, based on census data.
 
  
 
===Jefferson's comments===
 
===Jefferson's comments===
Thomas Jefferson himself never commented publicly on the issue, though some of his remarks have been interpreted as indirect denials.
+
Thomas Jefferson himself never commented publicly on the issue, though some of his remarks have been interpreted as indirect denials or as a reason for his not liberating his own slaves. In his ''[[Notes on the State of Virginia]],'' Jefferson confessed to a physical aversion towards dark-skinned Africans; however, according to the pseudo-scientific calculus of race to which he subscribed, the children of Sally Hemings, who was three-quarters white, would be both legally and by "blood," white.
 
 
In a private letter he expressed his fear about the effect the social relations supporting slavery would have on those who would suddenly find themselves free: "For men probably of any color, but of this color we know, brought from their infancy without necessity for thought or forecast... Their amalgamation with the other color, produces a degradation to which no lover of his country, no lover of excellence in the human character, can innocently consent."<ref> [http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=307 ''Letter to Edward Coles''] August 25, 1814</ref> Some take this as expressing an unqualified opposition to racial mixing. In his [[Notes on the State of Virginia]] Jefferson confessed to a physical aversion towards dark-skinned Africans; however, according to the pseudo-scientific calculus of race to which he subscribed, the children of Sally Hemings, who was three-quarters white, would be both legally and by "blood," white.<ref>Lewis, Jan. ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture''. University of Virginia Press (1999). p.262 ''Letter to Francis Gray, March 4, 1815. </ref>
 
  
In a private letter, Jefferson bewailed his small number of progeny. On  June 25, 1804, Jefferson wrote to Governor John Page on the occasion of his daughter Mary Jefferson Eppes' death. <ref>Randall, Henry 1858. The Life of Thomas Jefferson, III, 103. Cited in Cappon (ed) 1959, 1987, The Adams-Jefferson Letters, p265.</ref> "Having lost even the half of all I had, my evening prospects now hang on the slender thread of a single life [his daughter Martha Randolph]. Perhaps I may be destined to see even this last chord of parental affection broken!"
+
In 1816, Jefferson wrote to George Logan that to deny something publicly increases the attention given to it. "I should have fancied myself half guilty, had I condescended to put pen to paper in refutation of their falsehoods, or drawn them respect by any notice from myself." Ten years later Jefferson wrote to Henry Lee saying, "There is not a truth existing which I fear or would wish unknown to the whole world."
 
 
In another private letter to [[Secretary of the Navy]] [[Robert Smith (cabinet)|Robert Smith]] dated July 1, 1805, Jefferson denied all "charges" made against him, except for one, that he had attempted to seduce his married neighbor, Betsey Walker, saying the accusation was "the only one founded in truth among all their allegations against me." There is disagreement on whether this is a denial of the several charges the Walkers made, or of all charges the Federalists made, including the Hemings allegations.<ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.141 -147. ISBN 0813916984.</ref><ref name="genealogy_edu" />
 
 
 
Later, in 1816, Jefferson wrote to [[George Logan]] that to deny something publicly increases the attention given to it. "I should have fancied myself half guilty, had I condescended to put pen to paper in refutation of their falsehoods, or drawn them respect by any notice from myself."<ref name="coatesrefutation">{{cite news | title = Research Report on the Jefferson-Hemings Controversy | author = Coates, Eyler Robert |  url = http://www.angelfire.com/va/TJTruth/rebuttal.html |  accessdate = 2007-08-02 }}</ref>
 
 
 
In 1826, Jefferson wrote to [[Henry Lee IV|Henry Lee]], "There is not a truth existing which I fear or would wish unknown to the whole world."<ref> The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Memorial Edition (Lipscomb and Bergh, editors), 20 Vols., Washington, D.C., 1903-04, Thomas Jefferson to Henry Lee, 1826. 16:179</ref><ref>[http://www.constitution.org/tj/jeff16.txt ''THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON Definitive Edition'']</ref>
 
 
 
According to biographer [[Henry S. Randall]], Jefferson's daughter Martha, roused to indignation by [[Ireland|Irish]] poet [[Thomas Moore]]'s couplet linking her father with a slave, thrust the offending poem in front of him one day at Monticello. Jefferson's only response was a 'hearty, clear laugh.'"<ref name="monticelloreport"/>
 
  
 
===Other claims===  
 
===Other claims===  
An overseer at Monticello, Edmund Bacon, whose recollections were transcribed by Rev. Hamilton Wilcox Pierson in 1862 in the book ''The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson'', said that Sally Hemings' daughter, presumably Harriet, was not Jefferson's; however, Pierson censored the name of the father: "He freed one girl some years before he died, and there was a great deal of talk about it. She was nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful. People said he freed her because she was his own daughter. She was not his daughter, she was——'s daughter. I know that. I have seen him come out of her mother's room many a morning when I went up to Monticello very early."<ref>Pierson, Rev. Hamilton Wilcox. "Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson." Manuscript of the recollections of Edmund Bacon, printed in James A. Bear, ed., ''Jefferson at Monticello''. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1967, p. 102.</ref> Skeptics of Bacon's testimony point out that Bacon's employment at Monticello commenced in 1806, five years after the birth of Harriet, and that he did not live at the "big house."<ref name="monticelloreport"/>
+
Monticello's overseer [[Edmund Bacon]], whose recollections were transcribed by Reverend [[Hamilton Wilcox Pierson]] in 1862, in the book, ''The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson,'' said that Sally Hemings' daughter, presumably Harriet, was not Jefferson's. However, Pierson censored the name of the supposed father: "He (Jefferson) freed one girl some years before he died, and there was a great deal of talk about it. She was nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful. People said he freed her because she was his own daughter. She was not his daughter, she was ______'s daughter. I know that. I have seen him come out of her mother's room many a morning when I went up to Monticello very early."<ref>Pierson (1967), 102.</ref> Skeptics of Bacon's testimony point out that Bacon's employment at Monticello commenced in 1806, five years after the birth of Harriet, and that he did not live at the "big house."
  
Two of Jefferson's grandchildren claimed the Hemings children had been fathered by either Samuel or Peter Carr, who had been raised at Monticello, and were the sons of Jefferson's sister Martha. One grandchild insisted all of the Hemings children were Samuel's; the other said they were Peter's. Grandson Jeff Randolph said that Sally Hemings's children were Peter's, and her sister Betsey Hemings's were Samuel's; according to biographer Henry S. Randall, he said the Carr brothers had confessed this to him. His sister Ellen Randolph Coolidge said that Hemings's children were Samuel's.<ref name="meyerresearch"/>
+
Two of Jefferson's grandchildren claimed the Hemings children had been fathered by one of Jefferson's nephews, either Samuel or Peter Carr, who had been raised at Monticello and were the sons of Jefferson's sister Martha.
  
Ellen Randolph Coolidge wrote in a letter now at the [[University of Virginia]] archives of her grandfather:  
+
Jefferson's granddaughter [[Ellen Randolph Coolidge]] wrote in a letter now at the [[University of Virginia]] archives of her grandfather:  
  
<blockquote>"His apartments had no private entrance not perfectly accessible and visible to all the household. No female domestic ever entered his chambers except at hours when he was known not to be there and none could have entered without being exposed to the public gaze."<ref>Ellen Randolph Coolidge's 1858 letter to Joseph Coolidge. ''Coolidge Letterbook''. University of Virginia Library.</ref></blockquote>
+
<blockquote>His apartments had no private entrance not perfectly accessible and visible to all the household. No female domestic ever entered his chambers except at hours when he was known not to be there and none could have entered without being exposed to the public gaze.</blockquote>
  
Coolidge's recollection is factually incorrect. In 1802-3, when Coolidge was six years old and living elsewhere, two hidden entrances to Jefferson's suite were built: an underground passageway used primarily by slaves, and two "porticles" which were built to screen from public view two exterior entrances to Jefferson's study. Anyone using these entrances could not be viewed from the parlor, the sitting room, dining room, and both first floor entrances.<ref>National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 206</ref>
+
Coolidge's recollection, however, is factually incorrect. In 1802-3, when Coolidge was six years old and living elsewhere, two hidden entrances to Jefferson's suite were built: An underground passageway used primarily by slaves, and two "porticles" which were built to screen two exterior entrances to Jefferson's study from public view. Anyone using these entrances would not be viewed from the parlor, the sitting room, dining room, and both first floor entrances.<ref>''National Genealogical Society Quarterly'' 89 (3) September 2001: 206.</ref>
  
Jefferson's daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph, according to one of her children's recollection, as told to biographer Henry Randall, had said that "Mr. Jefferson and Sally Hemings could not have met—were far distant from each other—for fifteen months prior to the birth" of the child who most resembled Jefferson. No documentary evidence supports the assertion that either Jefferson or Hemings were absent from Monticello in the relevant period.<ref name=HemingsMont/>
+
[[Image:Martha Jefferson Randolph.png|thumb|left|200px|Martha Jefferson Randolph]]
 +
Jefferson's daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph insisted that "Mr. Jefferson and Sally Hemings could not have met—were far distant from each other—for 15 months prior to the birth" of the child who most resembled Jefferson. However, no documentary evidence supports the assertion that either Jefferson or Hemings were absent for any length of time from Monticello in the relevant period.
  
Former slave [[Isaac Jefferson]] related in his memoirs that Jefferson's brother Randolph "was a mighty simple man: used to come out among black people, play the fiddle and dance half the night." This is often cited as evidence supporting paternity by Randolph. Isaac left Monticello in 1797, and his account most likely refers to events of the early 1780s when Randolph was a young man.
+
Former Monticello slave [[Isaac Jefferson]] related in his memoirs that Jefferson's brother Randolph "was a mighty simple man: Used to come out among black people, play the fiddle and dance half the night." This is often cited as evidence supporting paternity by Randolph. However, Isaac left Monticello in 1797, and his account most likely refers to events of the early 1780s when Randolph was a young man.
 
 
===Arguments for and against Thomas Jefferson paternity===
 
Arguments advanced in support of the paternity claims have included (1) Hemings's children were all conceived while Jefferson was present either in Paris or at Monticello, and none were conceived during his periods of absence; (2) statements made by Madison Hemings and by another former slave from Monticello who corroborated Madison's  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.
 
 
 
Counter-arguments to the above are (1) many times Jefferson was at Monticello and Hemings did not become pregnant, and when Jefferson was there, his male relatives were more likely to be there as well; (2) the strength of an oral tradition is not necessarily a gauge of its truth, and can be contradicted by other traditions and accounts; (3) the Hemings children could have been fathered by another member of Jefferson's family and thus would have resembled him without him actually being their father; and (4) a few other members of the Hemings family who were not Sally's children had been freed. In 1781, in ''[[Notes on the State of Virginia]]'', Jefferson had advocated freeing the children of slaves after they had learned a trade in order to sustain themselves as free persons. However, there is no record of him freeing anyone other than members of the Hemings family.<ref>[http://wiki.monticello.org/mediawiki/index.php/Slaves_Who_Gained_Freedom''Thomas Jefferson Wiki'']Slaves who gained freedom</ref>
 
  
 
==Academic debate==
 
==Academic debate==
Through most of the 19th and 20th 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 published memoir as an attempt to puff up his status by claiming a famous father.  
+
Through most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, biographers of Jefferson dismissed suggestions that he had fathered children by a slave, if they mentioned the issue at all. In 1968, however [[Winthrop Jordan]] treated the Hemings-Jefferson link as plausible in his book ''White Over Black,'' noting that Jefferson was at Monticello every time Sally Hemings became pregnant. [[Fawn M. Brodie]]'s 1974 biography of Jefferson assembled additional evidence about the Hemings family and the timing of Hemings' pregnancies, although some critics strongly objected to Brodie's [[psychoanalytic]] approach to Jefferson. [[Dumas Malone]], Douglass Adair, [[Virginius Dabney]], 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 the novels ''Sally Hemings'' by [[Barbara Chase-Riboud]] and ''Arc d'X'' by [[Steve Erickson]] and the [[Merchant-Ivory]] film ''Jefferson in Paris'' reached large audiences and persuaded many, most mainstream historians continued to assert that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Jefferson had a [[sexual relationship]] with any slave.  
  
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. [[Fawn M. Brodie]]'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.<ref name="meyerresearch"/> [[Dumas Malone]], Douglass Adair, [[Virginius Dabney]], 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 the novels ''Sally Hemings'' by [[Barbara Chase-Riboud]] and ''Arc d'X'' by [[Steve Erickson]] and the [[Merchant-Ivory]] 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.  
+
In 1997, law professor Annette Gordon-Reed published an examination of the arguments and available evidence, ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy.'' She pointed out that most historians had used double standards to evaluate the evidence for and against the statements of Madison Hemings. For example, Hemings' statement about his father was labeled unreliable "[[oral history]]" while the oral tales passed down by the Jefferson family were treated as trustworthy, even though they contradicted each other and the documentary record. Historians also accepted statements about Sally's father being John Wayles based on little concrete evidence, but insisted on much more proof about Sally's children by Jefferson.  
  
In 1997, however, law professor Annette Gordon-Reed published an 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 concrete evidence, but insisted on much more proof about Sally's children.  
+
Gordon-Reed did not argue that documentary records proved Madison Hemings' claim, only that authors had unfairly dismissed it. She suggested that a conclusive answer might lie in developing more evidence through DNA analysis.
  
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.
+
===DNA testing===
 +
Relevant results were published in the November 5, 1998 issue of the [[Great Britain|British]] scientific journal ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]''. The study compared the [[genetic genealogy|Y chromosomal haplotypes]] of four groups of men who were  descendants of 1) Thomas Jefferson's grandfather 2) Thomas Woodson 3) Madison Hemings's brother Eston, and 4) John Carr, the grandfather of the Carr brothers.
  
==DNA testing==
+
The study's major findings were that the Y chromosome of the Jefferson family did match that of Eston Hemings' family, but did not match those of the Woodson and Carr families. The implications for the paternity question were not conclusive about whether Thomas Jefferson was the father, but strongly tended to disprove the contention of the Jefferson grandchildren that Sally Hemings's children had been fathered by one of the Carr brothers. The Woodson family's claim to have been descended from Jefferson was also disproven. On the other hand, Eston Hemings was undoubtedly the son of "a" Jefferson.  
{{main|Jefferson DNA data}}
 
The November 5, 1998, issue of the [[Great Britain|British]] scientific journal ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]''<ref>{{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 fathered slave’s last child | journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]] | volume = 396 | issue = 6706 | pages = 27–28 | pmid = 9817200 | doi = 10.1038/23835 | url = http://www.familytreedna.com/pdf/Jeffersons.pdf}}</ref> contained a study on the available [[DNA]] evidence from a team led by Eugene A. Foster. The study compared the [[genetic genealogy|Y chromosomal haplotypes]] 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.
 
  
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.
+
===Other reports===
 
 
The study's major findings were that the Y chromosome of the Jefferson family matched that of Eston Hemings's family, while the Y chromosomes of the Woodson and Carr families were each different. The implications for the paternity question were not conclusive about whether Jefferson was the father, but were more clear in the cases of the other families tested. The Jefferson grandchildren's contention that Sally Hemings's children had been fathered by one or the other Carr brother was not tenable unless the children had multiple fathers and the Carrs fathered the other children besides Eston, or if the Carrs in some way did not possess the same Y chromosome as their grandfather (possibly through illegitimacy) and had been somehow fathered by a Jefferson. The Woodson family's claim to have been descended from Jefferson was also disproven—five Woodson descendants were tested to ensure accuracy. On the other hand, Eston Hemings was undoubtedly the son of "a" Jefferson.
 
 
 
Of all the accounts of the Hemings children published before 1998, Madison Hemings's was the most prominent to appear consistent with the DNA tests. ''Nature'' therefore headlined the study "Jefferson fathered slave’s last child." The title of the article was described as "incorrect" by its authors.
 
 
 
It has been pointed out that although the DNA tests effectively ruled out the Carr brothers from paternity of Eston, and any Jefferson from fathering Thomas Woodson, it did not conclusively prove that Jefferson or any other member of his family was the father of all the Hemings children. Jefferson had a brother, Randolph, who had five sons. One possibility put forward in ''Nature'' later was that one of Jefferson's paternal line relatives such as his father or grandfather had fathered a child or children with slaves and that slave, or a descendant of that slave, became the father of Hemings's children. Dr. Foster agreed that none of these possibilities could be genetically ruled out, but a preponderance of historical evidence currently cites Jefferson as the father.<ref>[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v397/n6714/full/397032c0.html''Foster's letter of reply in the journal Nature'']</ref>
 
 
 
===The Foundation and Commission reports===
 
 
Following the ''Nature'' article, the controversy continued to grow, and in 2000 and 2001 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.
 
Following the ''Nature'' article, the controversy continued to grow, and in 2000 and 2001 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.
  
====Thomas Jefferson Foundation report====
+
In January 2000, a group of specialists from the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which owns and operates [[Monticello]], published a study on the controversy initiated soon after the ''Nature'' paper. Their near-unanimous report 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>Monticello, [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings_report.html Monticello Foundation Report.] Retrieved September 29, 2008.</ref> This view is now given to visitors at Monticello by tour guides.
In January 2000, a group of specialists from the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which owns and operates Monticello, published a study on the controversy initiated soon after the ''Nature'' paper. Their near-unanimous report<ref>[http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings_report.html '' Monticello Foundation Report'']. Monticello.org.</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 ''Statement on the TJF Research Committee Report on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings'']. Monticello.org.</ref> 
 
 
 
The report also cited a probabilistic analysis published in the ''William & Mary Quarterly'' conducted by one of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation's committee members, Frasier Nieman, regarding 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 committee noted that "Randolph Jefferson and his sons are not known to have been at Monticello at the time of Eston Hemings’s conception," and although it is possible two of Randolph's sons could have visited during the conception time period of Harriet and Eston, "convincing evidence does not exist for the hypothesis that another male Jefferson was the father of Sally Hemings’s children."
 
 
 
The Monticello Foundation found no written evidence that the relationship began in Paris or of a deceased child born upon their return in 1790.
 
 
 
====Criticisms of the Foundation's report====
 
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."  He asserted that the Committee "had already reached their conclusions" before they began looking at the evidence and that the chair of the committee did not show Wallenborn's dissent to the other members.<ref name="meyerresearch"/>
 
 
 
The Foundation's report has been criticized for not including enough evidence that contradicts the Jefferson-Hemings theory, and for not mentioning within the main report that one of its members dissented from its conclusions.<ref name="coatesrefutation"/>  Concurrent work on an oral history project by committee members has been alleged as a conflict of interest, prejudicing the committee's valuation of oral history (although it did discount the Woodson family's oral history).<ref name="meyerresearch"/> 
 
 
 
It is alleged the committee did not weigh all oral history assertions fairly, specifically the competing claims of Israel Jefferson, the slave who corroborated Madison Hemings' account, versus Monticello slave overseer Edmund Bacon's assertions that Jefferson did not father Harriet and he knew who did.
 
 
 
Nieman's ''William & Mary Quarterly'' probabilistic analysis is questioned as assuming on scant evidence all of Hemings' children had the same father.<ref name="meyerresearch"/>
 
 
 
====Scholars Commission report====
 
Later in 2000, the newly-formed Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, whose stated purpose is to "further the honor and integrity of Thomas Jefferson," created a "Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission" composed of thirteen noted conservative scholars to examine the paternity question.<ref name="truth">Turner, Robert F. [http://www.tjheritage.org/scholars.html ''Scholars Commission'']. The Wall Street Journal Opinion Journal. 4 July 2001.</ref> On April 12, 2001, they issued a report which concluded that "the Jefferson-Hemings allegation is by no means proven;" members' individual conclusions ranged from "serious skepticism about the charge" to "a conviction that it is almost certainly false."<ref>[http://www.tjheritage.org/documents/AmericanHeritage_2.pdf ''Doubts About Jefferson and Hemings''].</ref> The majority suggested the most likely alternative is that [[Randolph Jefferson]], Thomas's younger brother, was the father of Eston. Twenty-five possible male Jeffersons lived in Virginia at the time, and eight of those lived close to or at Monticello.<ref name="meyerresearch"/>
 
 
 
Some participants in the Scholar's Commission framed their participation in terms of a [[culture war]], characterizing positive speculation about the Hemings matter as an "assault" on Jefferson, and those who credit the Hemings story as adherents of [[political correctness]], [[multiculturalism]] and [[postmodernism]].<ref name="meyerresearch" /> Historian [[Robert Turner (historian)|Robert Turner]], who chaired the commission and was the sole author of the bulk of the report<ref>National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 209</ref>, 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 ''The Truth About Jefferson'']</ref> Other participants have said they were motivated by a concern with Jefferson's reputation.<ref>[http://www.bowdoin.edu/news/archives/1bowdoincampus/001050.shtml ''Yarbrough Discusses Report'']</ref>
 
  
Dissenting from the majority opinion, 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."
+
Later in 2000, the newly-formed Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, whose stated purpose is to "further the honor and integrity of Thomas Jefferson," created a "Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission" composed of 13 noted conservative scholars to examine the paternity question. On April 12, 2001, the commission issued a report which concluded that "the Jefferson-Hemings allegation is by no means proven," noting that the likely alternative is that [[Randolph Jefferson]], Thomas's younger brother, was the father of Eston and that 25 possible male Jeffersons lived in Virginia at the time, and eight of those lived close to or at Monticello. Dissenting from the majority opinion, Paul Rahe wrote that he considered "it somewhat more likely than not that Thomas Jefferson was the father of Eston Hemings." He 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."<ref>Robert F. Turner, [http://www.tjheritage.org/scholars.html Scholars Commission,] ''The Wall Street Journal Opinion Journal.'' Retrieved August 30, 2008.</ref>
  
====Criticisms of the Scholars Commission report====
+
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. Today most historians agree that the story is more likely than not.
Alexander Boulton, a historian writing in the William and Mary Quarterly, asserts that the scholars, unable to undermine the evidence against Jefferson, resorted to a "Plan B" in which  "Past defenses of Jefferson having proven inadequate, the TJHS advocates have pieced together an alternative case that preserves the conclusions of earlier champions but introduces new "evidence" to support them. Randolph Jefferson, for example, had never seriously been considered as a possible partner of Sally Hemings until the DNA evidence indicated that a Jefferson was unquestionably the father of Eston." <ref name='wm'>[http://oieahc.wm.edu/wmq/Oct01/CoatesWoodsonStantonOct01.pdf ''The Monticello Mystery-Case Continued ''] </ref>
 
  
Skeptics have noted that the Randolph Jefferson paternity theory had not been raised by Jefferson's grandchildren or anyone else in the 19th century. The first person to publicly link Randolph Jefferson to Sally Hemings was playwright Karyn Traut in 1988; her husband, [[biology|biologist]] Thomas Traut, became a member of the Scholars Commission.  
+
==Legacy==
 +
Three of Hemings's children chose to [[Passing (racial identity)|pass]] as white. Two of them managed to effectively disappear from the historical record.
  
The ''[[National Genealogical Society]] Quarterly'' of September 2001 examined the controversy from the perspectives of several professionally accredited genealogists. Its articles were explicitly critical of the Scholars Commission report for failing to adhere to the standards of genealogical research, which the NGS authors characterized as more stringent than the legalistic paradigm adopted by the commission. Specifically, according to one article, the Scholars Commission's failings included: overreliance on derivative sources, biased assessment of data, distortion of evidence, deficient context, confounding the issue with irrelevant matters, and ignoring the weight of the body of evidence.<ref>National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 214 - 218</ref> Genealogist Helen Leary concluded that "the chain of evidence securely fastens Sally Hemings's children to their father, Thomas Jefferson."<ref>National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, p. 207</ref>
+
Eston Hemings moved to [[Ohio]] where, according to census records, he lived as a "mulatto," then moved to Wisconsin, changed his name to "Eston H. Jefferson" and lived as a white man. [[Madison Hemings]], who also moved to Ohio, was the only child who did not choose to live as a white person.<ref>Gordon-Reed, (1997), 148.</ref>
 +
[[Image:Andersonville birdseye ransom.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Andersonville prison]]
  
In 2003, a team of genealogical researchers, after examining primary source documents including census, tax, land, and marriage records, as well as the letters of Jefferson and his contemporaries, concluded that Randolph Jefferson's sons were most likely too young to have fathered Sally's children, and that there was no evidence they were raised or educated at Monticello prior to 1813. They also concluded that Randolph Jefferson was an infrequent and reluctant visitor to Monticello.<ref name = "genealogy_edu">[http://www.genealogy.edu/moodle/mod/resource/view.php?id=3543 ''genealogy.edu'']Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, A Look at Some Original Documents, Heritage Quest Magazine May/June 2003</ref>
+
A good deal is known about Madison's and Eston's families. Both achieved some success in life, were respected by their contemporaries, and had children who repeated their success. They worked as carpenters, and Madison had a small farm. Eston became a professional musician and bandleader, "a master of the violin, and an accomplished 'caller' of dances." A neighbor described him as "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>Monticello, [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children.] Retrieved October 20, 2008.</ref>
  
===Reactions===
+
Sons of both Madison and Eston served in the [[American Civil War]]. Madison's son, Thomas Eston Hemings, spent time at the [[Andersonville National Historic Site|Andersonville POW camp]], and later died in a camp in Meridian, Mississippi. According to a Hemings descendant, his brother, James, attempted to cross Union lines and enlist in the Confederate army to rescue him.<ref>Brady Research, [http://www.bradyresearch.com/Mary%20Elizabeth%20Hemings%20Butler%20Lee%20Brady.htm Mary Elizabeth Hemings Butler Lee Brady.] Retrieved August 30, 2008.</ref> Later, James was rumored to have moved to Colorado; like others in the family, he disappeared.
The Woodson family continues to press their case in the book ''A President in the Family.'' In this book, they argue that: (1) there was 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 indicates that gifts were given to a 'servant' named Thomas (Callender's "Tom" would have been 10 years old at the time of the gifts); (3) [[American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson|historian Joseph Ellis]]'s early entry into the reporting process was open to criticism because 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 lost control of the process.<ref>Woodson, Byron. ''A President in The Family''. Praeger, 2001. pp. 217,246, 222-229.</ref>
 
  
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.
+
[[Image:Omnibus - Project Gutenberg eText 16943.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Omnibus similar to those owned by Eston Hemings' son, Beverly Jefferson]] 
  
Among the public, the question of Thomas Jefferson's and Sally Hemings's relationship remains controversial. Members of the [[Monticello Association]], 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.
+
Eston's son [[John Wayles Jefferson]] wrote frequently for newspapers and published letters about his war experiences. He was proprietor of a hotel in Madison, Wisconsin. Ultimately he became a wealthy cotton broker in Tennessee.
  
===Future testing===
+
Eston's son Beverly Jefferson was, according to his 1908 obituary, "a likable character at the Wisconsin capital, and a familiar of statesmen for half a century." He had operated a hotel with his brother, then built a successful horse-drawn "omnibus" business.<ref>Wisconsin History, [http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/ladr&CISOPTR=4&CISOSHOW=0 ''Beverly Jefferson Obituary.''] Retrieved August 30, 2008.</ref>  
Prospects have been raised of further DNA testing by possibly exhuming the body of William Hemings, Madison Hemings's son. Since only the paternal line of Eston was tested through DNA, further testing of William Hemings in comparison to the Jefferson and Carr DNA could reveal whether a Jefferson fathered more than one of Hemings's children or whether Jefferson's grandchildren were correct that the Carrs fathered some of the Hemings children. William Hemings is buried in [[Leavenworth National Cemetery]] in [[Leavenworth, Kansas]]. However, the childless William Hemings left no descendants authorized to permit his exhumation, and if it were possible, some family members are reluctant to permit the disturbance.<ref>[http://www.cjonline.com/stories/010400/new_ksgrave.shtml ''William Hennings'']Historian wants access to Kansas grave in probing link between Jefferson, slave</ref>
 
  
==Descendants==
+
Some of Madison Hemings' children and grandchildren who remained in Ohio suffered from the limited opportunities for blacks at that time, working as laborers, and servants or small farmers. William Hemings, Madison's last known male-line descendant, died in 1910, unmarried, in a veteran's hospital. [[Frederick Madison Roberts]] (1879-1952)—Sally Hemings' great-grandson and Madison's grandson—was the first person of known [[African American]] ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast. He served in the [[California State Assembly]] from 1919 to 1934.
Little is known of Sally Hemings's life; even less is known of her two children William Beverly and Harriet; however, a good deal more is known of the lives of her sons Madison and Eston, and of their descendants.
 
 
 
Three of Hemings's children chose to [[Passing (racial identity)|pass]] as white.<ref>Kilian, Michael. [http://www.jessejacksonjr.org/query/creadpr.cgi?id=%22005024%22 ''The Hidden Side of Monticello'']. 10 February 2002. on JesseJacksonJr.org.</ref> Two of them managed to effectively disappear from the historical record; one of these, Harriet, was said by a Monticello overseer to be "nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful" and married a white man after she left Monticello.<ref name="halliday" /> In 1961, Pearl M. Graham published research indicating she believed she had discovered and spoken with Harriet's descendants.<ref>[http://www.jstor.org/pss/2716715 ''Pearl Graham: Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings'']</ref> However, Fawn Brodie conjectured that these were actually the descendants of Sally's brother John Hemings.<ref>Brodie, Fawn. ''Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate Portrait''. W.W. Norton (1974). p.555</ref> Beverly also married a white woman of good circumstances, according to his brother Madison; Beverly's exit from history was as complete as Harriet's; the only post-slavery record of his activities is an enigmatic reference to him in former slave Isaac Jefferson's memoirs as launching a hot air balloon in [[Petersburg, Virginia]].
 
 
 
Eston moved to [[Ohio]] where, according to census records, he lived as a "mulatto," then moved to Wisconsin, changed his name to "Eston H. Jefferson" and lived as a white man. [[Madison Hemings]], who also moved to Ohio, was the only child who did not choose to live as a white person.<ref>Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy''. University of Virginia Press (April 1997). p.148. ISBN 0813916984.</ref>
 
 
 
Comparatively, a good deal is known about Madison's and Eston's families. Madison followed his brother Eston to Ohio. Both achieved some success in life, were respected by their contemporaries, and had children who repeated their success.<ref> [http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/odd/archives/001068.asp ''Hemings in Wisconsin'']</ref> They worked as carpenters, and Madison 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," and was in demand all across southern Ohio. A neighbor described him as "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>[http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html ''Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children'']. Monticello.org.</ref><ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1902sprig.html ''A sprig of Jefferson'']</ref>
 
 
 
Sons of both Madison and Eston served in the [[American Civil War]]. Madison's son Thomas Eston Hemings spent time at the [[Andersonville National Historic Site|Andersonville POW camp]], and later died in a camp in Meridian, Mississippi. According to a Hemings descendant, his brother James attempted to cross Union lines and enlist in the Confederate army to rescue him.<ref>[http://www.bradyresearch.com/Mary%20Elizabeth%20Hemings%20Butler%20Lee%20Brady.htm''Mary Elizabeth Hemings Butler Lee Brady'']</ref>  Later, James was rumored to have moved to Colorado; like others in the family, he disappeared. <ref name = brodie />
 
 
 
Eston's son [[John Wayles Jefferson]] wrote frequently for newspapers and published letters about his war experiences. He was proprietor of a hotel in Madison, Wisconsin. Ultimately he became a wealthy cotton broker in Tennessee.<ref name = memory>Lewis, Jan. ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture''. University of Virginia Press (1999). p.169. </ref><ref name = "jwjeff">[http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/wlhba/articleView.asp?pg=1&id=4558 ''Letter from J. W. Jefferson'']</ref><ref name = brodie> [http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1976/6/1976_6_28.shtml ''THOMAS JEFFERSON’S UNKNOWN GRANDCHILDREN'']Fawn Brodie, American Heritage Magazine, October 1976</ref>
 
 
 
Eston's son Beverly Jefferson was, according to his 1908 obituary, "a likeable character at the Wisconsin capital, and a familiar of statesmen for half a century." He had operated a hotel with his brother, then built a successful horse-drawn "omnibus" business.<ref>[http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/ladr&CISOPTR=4&CISOSHOW=0 ''Beverly Jefferson Obituary'']</ref>
 
 
 
Some of Madison Hemings's children and grandchildren who remained in Ohio suffered from the limited opportunities for blacks at that time, working as laborers, servants or small farmers.<ref name=memory />
 
William Hemings, Madison's last known male-line descendant, died in 1910, unmarried, in a veteran's hospital. [[Frederick Madison Roberts]] (1879-1952) - Sally Hemings's great-grandson/Madison's grandson/Ellen's son - was the first person of known [[African American]] ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast: he served in the [[California State Assembly]] from 1919 to 1934.
 
 
 
As of 2007 there are known male-line descendants of the youngest brother Eston Hemings and of Madison Hemings's three daughters, Sarah, Harriet, and Ellen.<ref name="monticelloreport"/>
 
 
 
Descendants of Thomas Woodson long claimed that he was the son of Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. The claim that Woodson was descended from Jefferson was conclusively disproved by DNA testing in 1998.
 
 
 
==Films==
 
*''Sally Hemings: An American Scandal'' [http://imdb.com/title/tt0206951/], a [[CBS]] television [[miniseries]] (Air dates: 2/13/00 and 2/16/00; Writer: [[Tina Andrews]] [http://imdb.com/name/nm0028877/]; Director: [[Charles Haid]]; With [[Carmen Ejogo]] as Hemings)
 
*{{cite episode
 
| title        = Jefferson's Blood
 
| url          = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/
 
| series      = PBS Frontline documentary
 
| serieslink  = PBS Frontline
 
| credits      = [[Shelby Steele|Steele, Shelby]] (writer, narrator)
 
| network      = [[PBS]]
 
| station      = [[WGBH-TV|WGBH]], Boston
 
| airdate      = 2000-05-03
 
}}
 
 
 
==Footnotes and citations==
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
*[[Madison Hemings]]
+
*[[Thomas Jefferson]]
*[[Eston Hemings]]
+
*[[Monticello ]]
*[[John Hemings]]
 
*[[Mary Hemings]]
 
*[[John Wayles Jefferson]]
 
*[[Jefferson DNA data]]
 
*[[Isaac Jefferson]]
 
*[[Lewis Woodson]]
 
 
 
==Further reading==
 
* Brodie, Fawn M. ''Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History'': ([[Fawn M. Brodie]]), W. W. Norton, 1974.
 
* Burton, Cynthia H. ''Jefferson Vindicated: Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions In the Hemings Genealogical Search'', self-published, 2005.
 
* Coates, Eyler Robert Sr. ''The Jefferson-Hemings Myth, An American Travesty'', Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001.
 
* Feldman, Jane and Shannon Lanier. ''Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family'', Random House, 2001.
 
* Gordon-Reed. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy'', University Press of Virginia, 1997.
 
* Lewis, Jan and Peter S. Onuf, editors. ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture'', University Press of Virginia, 1999.
 
* McMurry, James. F. Jr. ''Anatomy of a Scandal, Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Story'', Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2002). At [http://www.angelfire.com/va/TJTruth] and [http://www.tjheritage.org] ''www.tjheritage.org''
 
* Malone, Dumas. Six-volume biography of Thomas Jefferson: ([[Dumas Malone]]),  Little, Brown, 1948-1981.
 
* Sloan, Sam ''The Slave Children of Thomas Jefferson'': ([[Sam Sloan]]),  Kiseido, 1992. ISBN 1-881373-02-9* Woodson, Byron W. Sr. ''A President in the Family: Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and Thomas Woodson'', Praeger, 2001.
 
* ''Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission Report'',  Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, 2001. [http://www.angelfire.com/va/TJTruth] ''www.angelfire.com''
 
* [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings-jefferson_contro.html Monticello account of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings] ''www.monticello.org''
 
** [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings_report.html Report of the Research Committee on Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings]
 
  
* ''Thomas Jefferson's Farm Book: Thomas Jefferson'', Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2002. ISBN 1-882886-10-0
+
==Notes==
* ''The Farm Book by Thomas Jefferson'' ISBN 0-923891-80-3
+
<references/>
  
* [http://www.thomasjeffersonpapers.org/cfm/doc.cfm?id=farm_c2 Farm Book, 1774-1824, by Thomas Jefferson (electronic edition). Thomas Jefferson Papers: An Electronic Archive. Boston, Mass.: Massachusetts Historical Society, 2003.] ''www.thomasjeffersonpapers.org''
+
==References==
 +
* Brodie, Fawn M. ''Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History.'' W. W. Norton & Company, 1998. ISBN 978-0393317527.  
 +
* Burton, Cynthia H. ''Jefferson Vindicated: Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions In the Hemings Genealogical Search.'' Self-published, 2005. ISBN 978-0976777502.
 +
* Feldman, Jane, and Shannon Lanier. ''Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family.'' Random House, 2001. ISBN 978-0375821684.
 +
* Gordon-Reed, Annette. ''Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy.'' University of Virginia Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0813918334.
 +
* Lewis, Jan, and Peter S. Onuf (eds.). ''Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture.'' University of Virginia Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0813919195.
 +
* McMurry, Rebecca, and James. F. Jr. ''Anatomy of a Scandal, Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Story.'' White Mane Publishing Company, 2002. ISBN 978-1572493032.
 +
* Malone, Dumas. ''Six-volume Biography of Thomas Jefferson''. Little, Brown, 1948-1981. ISBN 978-1882886005.
 +
* Pierson, Rev. Hamilton Wilcox. "Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson." In James A. Bear (ed.), ''Jefferson at Monticello''. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1967. ISBN 978-0813900223.
 +
* Sloan, Sam. ''The Slave Children of Thomas Jefferson.'' Kiseido, 1998. ISBN 978-4906574001.
 +
* Woodson, Byron W., Sr. ''A President in the Family: Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and Thomas Woodson.'' Praeger, 2001. ISBN 978-0275971748.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/appendixh.html Sally Hemings and her children]
+
All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
* [http://monticello.org/gettingword/index.html Getting Word Oral History Project]
 
* [http://monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings_report.html Monticello Foundation Report]
 
* [http://woodson.org/default.shtml Woodson Family web site]
 
* [http://www.tjheritage.org/scholars.html Scholars Commission Report]
 
* [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moa;cc=moa;q1=jefferson%20thomas;rgn=main;idno=abp5340.0001.001;didno=abp5340.0001.001;view=image;seq=00000001 The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson]
 
* [http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/gutenberg/etext00/clotl10a.txt Project Gutenberg Etext of Clotel; or, The President's Daughter]
 
* [http://www.rumormillnews.com/jefferson.htm Assault on a Founding Father]
 
* [http://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/collections/tj/hemingsbib2.html Bibliography of Hemings - Jefferson Sources]
 
* [http://www.booknotes.org/Program/?ProgramID=1503 Annette Gordon-Reed, on Booknotes]
 
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRmWBrnPtto Annette Gordon-Reed, on Charlie Rose]
 
* [http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/odd/archives/001068.asp Hemings - Wisconsin links]
 
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHzHurZjuh8 A&E biography Clip]
 
* [http://reason.tv/video/show/306.html Alan Pell Crawford, Twilight at Monticello video]
 
  
{{Persondata}}
+
* [http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemingscontro/hemings-jefferson_contro.html Monticello account of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings] ''monticello.org''
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hemings, Sally}}
+
*[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/cron/1873march.html Memoirs of Madison Hemings] ''www.pbs.org'' 
  
 
[[Category:history and biography]]
 
[[Category:history and biography]]
{{Credit|212712168}}
+
[[Category:biography]]
 +
[[category:History of the Americas]]
 +
{{Credit|Sally_Hemings|212712168}}

Latest revision as of 01:50, 23 December 2022

Sally Hemings
Bornc. 1773
Shadwell, Albemarle County, Virginia
Died1835
Charlottesville, Virginia
NationalityAmerican Flag of United States
OccupationSlave
ChildrenHarriet Hemings, Beverly Hemings, Eston Hemings, Madison Hemings
RelativesJames Hemings

Sally Hemings (c. 1773 – 1835) was an American slave owned by Thomas Jefferson, believed to be the mother of several children belonging to him. She was also reportedly the illegitimate half-sister of Jefferson's deceased wife, Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson.

After attending Jefferson and his daughters in Paris, she returned with him to Monticello in 1789, where, from 1795 to 1808, she bore five children who lived into adulthood. Rumors and newspaper reports about her relationship with Jefferson became an issue in American politics in the early 1800s. Hemings' son, Madison, published a memoir (1873) in which he claimed the he and his siblings were all fathered by Jefferson. Jefferson's legitimate children and grandchildren denied the claim, affirming that the Hemings children were the offspring of a nephew of Jefferson.

Reportedly, some of Sally Hemings' children, all of whom were light skinned and able to pass for being Caucasian, were allowed to leave Monticello without being pursued as runaway slaves. The rest were later freed. Sally herself remained in slavery until after Jefferson's death in 1826. She then lived with her children in Charlottesville until she deceased in 1835. While some of her children disappeared from the historical record, a number of her living descendants are still known.

Until the late twentieth century, historians tended to dismiss the allegation of Jefferson's relationship with Sally Hemings, but the controversy re-emerged in the late 1960s. DNA tests confirmed that a male in Jefferson's line, not one of the suggested nephews, was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings' children. Although circumstantial, evidence points to Jefferson.

Sally Hemings lived at Monticello while Jefferson was alive

Early life

Thomas Jefferson, probable father of at least one of Sally Hemings' children

Sally Hemings's mother, Betty Hemings, was the daughter of the English Captain Hemings and an enslaved African woman. Sally's family was owned by Jefferson's father-in-law, John Wayles, who died in 1773, leaving nearly all members of the Hemings family to his daughter Martha Jefferson. Several sources assert that Wayles was Sally Heming's father, making her and Martha Jefferson half-sisters. Martha Jefferson died in 1782, leaving the Hemings family to her husband, Thomas. The Hemings family was at the top of the slave "hierarchy" at Monticello indicating a special relationship to their owner, possibly of kinship.

With his wife deceased, Thomas Jefferson took up residence in Paris as the American envoy to France in 1784. In 1787, Jefferson sent for his second daughter, nine-year-old Maria (Polly). He asked that the slave Isabel, an older woman, be sent as a companion for Polly, but because Isabel was pregnant, the teen-aged Sally Hemings accompanied her instead. Stopping in London, Polly and Sally were met by John and Abigail Adams. Mrs. Adams expressed doubt concerning Sally's abilities, describing her as needing "more care than the child, and… wholly incapable of looking properly after her, without some superior to direct her."

Sally remained in France for 26 months, where her brother James, who had accompanied Jefferson to France in 1784, was learning to be a chef. Both Sally and James received wages while in France. There is no record of where Sally stayed. She may have stayed with Jefferson and her brother at the Hotel de Langoque or at the convent where Polly and her sister Martha were schooled. In either case, Jefferson and his retinue, including his daughters, spent weekends together at his villa.[1] The convent's bills do not seem to have included a boarding charge for Sally. Documentation does show that Jefferson purchased clothing for her, probably because she needed to accompany Martha to formal events.

Since slavery was illegal in France, under French law, both Sally and James could have petitioned to be released from Jefferson's ownership. According to her son Madison, Sally later indicated that she was aware that she could be free in France. He reported that she became pregnant by Jefferson and agreed to return to the United States as a slave only on the condition that Jefferson would agree to free her children, and that Jefferson agreed.

Children

Hemings did return to the U.S. with Jefferson in 1789. She seems to have lived most of the rest of her life at Monticello, and later in nearby Charlottesville, where she moved after Jefferson's death.

Some observers have noted inconsistencies in Jefferson's records regarding Hemings, including the fact that Jefferson did not note the father's name for Sally's children, although for some slaves' births he did note the father. According to Jefferson's records, she had six children:

  • Harriet Hemings (I) (October 5, 1795-December 7, 1797)
  • Beverly Hemings (a male, possibly born William Beverly Hemings) (April 1, 1798-after 1873)
  • unnamed daughter (possibly named Thenia after Hemings's sister Thenia) (born in 1799 and died in infancy)
  • Harriet Hemings (II) (May 22, 1801-after 1863)
  • Madison Hemings (possibly born James Madison Hemings) (January 19, 1805-1877)
  • Eston Hemings (possibly born Thomas Eston Hemings) (May 21, 1808-1856)[2]
View from the back of Monticello where many slaves worked

According to the 1873 recollections of her son Madison, she also bore a child in 1790, conceived in France, who died soon after. According to controversial newspaper accounts and oral tradition this son was named Thomas.

Sally Hemings' duties 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 reportedly looked nearly white in appearance and had "straight hair down her back." Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, described her as "light colored and decidedly good looking." As an adult, she may have lived in a room in Monticello's "South Dependencies," a wing of the mansion which was accessible to the main house through a covered passageway.

Sally Hemings never married. While she worked at Monticello, she was able to have her children nearby. According to her son Madison, they "were permitted to stay about the 'great house,' and only required to do such light work as going on errands." Madison reported that Jefferson was a kind man, but was "not in the habit" of showing fatherly affection to him and his siblings.

At age 14, the Hemings children began their training, the brothers in carpentry and Harriet as a spinner and weaver. Beverly, Madison, and Eston all learned to play the fiddle. In 1819 or 1820, a Jefferson granddaughter invited a friend to come to Monticello to "dance after Beverley's music" at the South Pavilion.

Beverly left the plantation in 1822, but was not pursued. Harriet followed in the same year. According to the plantation overseer Edmund Bacon, he gave her $50 and put her on a stagecoach, presumably to join her brother Beverly or another relative.

Later life

In Jefferson's references to Sally Hemings in his records, nothing distinguishes her as receiving special treatment. However, her extended family does appear to have been especially favored. Out of the hundreds of slaves he owned, Jefferson freed only two during his lifetime, Madison and Eston Hemings. He freed five additional slaves in his will, all from the Hemings family. He also seems to have allowed Harriet and Beverly to "escape" with his tacit consent. Jefferson also successfully petitioned the Virginia legislature to allow Hemings' sons Eston and Madison to remain in Virginia after they were free, an exception to a Virginia law requiring that freed slaves must leave within a year. Sally Hemings herself was never officially freed, although analysts point out that such an act would have certainly drawn scrutiny.

When appraisers arrived at Monticello after Jefferson's death to evaluate his estate, they described 56-year-old Sally Hemings as "an old woman worth $50."[3] Jefferson's legitimate daughter, Martha Randolph, then apparently gave Hemings her "time," a type of informal freedom which would allow her to continue to live in Virginia, where she lived out the rest of her life in Charlottesville with her sons. Researchers believe she was buried at a site in downtown Charlottesville, which now lies beneath a parking lot.

Controversy over her children

Prior to 1802, vague insinuations had been published in the Washington Federalist newspaper regarding Jefferson's alleged involvement with slaves. James T. Callender, a muckraking political journalist and former supporter of Jefferson, published a claim in the Richmond Recorder that Jefferson was the father of five children by Sally Hemings, including a son named Thomas. However, Callender had never visited Monticello and relied on second-hand information.

While the rumors promoted by Callender were unable to defeat Jefferson politically, they were a lasting source of concern in posterity, and for his friends and family, some of whom believed the rumors and some not. Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, later admitted that Sally's children resembled Jefferson "so closely that it was plain that they had his blood in their veins."[4] John Adams wrote: "Callender and Sally will be remembered as long as Jefferson, as blots in his character. The story of the latter is a natural and almost unavoidable consequence of that foul Contagion in the human Character, Negro Slavery…"

Madison Hemings claimed in an 1873 memoir, edited by Samuel Wetmore, publisher of the Ohio newspaper, The Pike County Republican, that Thomas Jefferson was his father, as well as the father of all of Sally's children. He also revealed that his brothers and sister had passed into white society, successfully concealing their slave origins. Critics propose that the 1873 memoir had numerous factual errors and based more on Callender's articles that facts known personally to Madison Hemings. Some skeptics have also asserted that Madison's memoir exhibits a vocabulary unlikely to be used by a former slave, betraying the hand of the editor Samuel Wetmore—a Republican partisan and abolitionist.

Descendants of Thomas Woodson, a "free colored" man, published claims that he was Sally Hemings's son by Thomas Jefferson, conceived in France and born at Monticello in 1790. He was thus supposedly the "President Tom" of Callender's articles. However, DNA testing of five descendants of Woodson showed no relation to Jefferson.

Jefferson's comments

Thomas Jefferson himself never commented publicly on the issue, though some of his remarks have been interpreted as indirect denials or as a reason for his not liberating his own slaves. In his Notes on the State of Virginia, Jefferson confessed to a physical aversion towards dark-skinned Africans; however, according to the pseudo-scientific calculus of race to which he subscribed, the children of Sally Hemings, who was three-quarters white, would be both legally and by "blood," white.

In 1816, Jefferson wrote to George Logan that to deny something publicly increases the attention given to it. "I should have fancied myself half guilty, had I condescended to put pen to paper in refutation of their falsehoods, or drawn them respect by any notice from myself." Ten years later Jefferson wrote to Henry Lee saying, "There is not a truth existing which I fear or would wish unknown to the whole world."

Other claims

Monticello's overseer Edmund Bacon, whose recollections were transcribed by Reverend Hamilton Wilcox Pierson in 1862, in the book, The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson, said that Sally Hemings' daughter, presumably Harriet, was not Jefferson's. However, Pierson censored the name of the supposed father: "He (Jefferson) freed one girl some years before he died, and there was a great deal of talk about it. She was nearly as white as anybody, and very beautiful. People said he freed her because she was his own daughter. She was not his daughter, she was ______'s daughter. I know that. I have seen him come out of her mother's room many a morning when I went up to Monticello very early."[5] Skeptics of Bacon's testimony point out that Bacon's employment at Monticello commenced in 1806, five years after the birth of Harriet, and that he did not live at the "big house."

Two of Jefferson's grandchildren claimed the Hemings children had been fathered by one of Jefferson's nephews, either Samuel or Peter Carr, who had been raised at Monticello and were the sons of Jefferson's sister Martha.

Jefferson's granddaughter Ellen Randolph Coolidge wrote in a letter now at the University of Virginia archives of her grandfather:

His apartments had no private entrance not perfectly accessible and visible to all the household. No female domestic ever entered his chambers except at hours when he was known not to be there and none could have entered without being exposed to the public gaze.

Coolidge's recollection, however, is factually incorrect. In 1802-3, when Coolidge was six years old and living elsewhere, two hidden entrances to Jefferson's suite were built: An underground passageway used primarily by slaves, and two "porticles" which were built to screen two exterior entrances to Jefferson's study from public view. Anyone using these entrances would not be viewed from the parlor, the sitting room, dining room, and both first floor entrances.[6]

Martha Jefferson Randolph

Jefferson's daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph insisted that "Mr. Jefferson and Sally Hemings could not have met—were far distant from each other—for 15 months prior to the birth" of the child who most resembled Jefferson. However, no documentary evidence supports the assertion that either Jefferson or Hemings were absent for any length of time from Monticello in the relevant period.

Former Monticello slave Isaac Jefferson related in his memoirs that Jefferson's brother Randolph "was a mighty simple man: Used to come out among black people, play the fiddle and dance half the night." This is often cited as evidence supporting paternity by Randolph. However, Isaac left Monticello in 1797, and his account most likely refers to events of the early 1780s when Randolph was a young man.

Academic debate

Through most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, biographers of Jefferson dismissed suggestions that he had fathered children by a slave, if they mentioned the issue at all. In 1968, however Winthrop Jordan treated the Hemings-Jefferson link as plausible in his book White Over Black, noting that Jefferson was at Monticello every time Sally Hemings became pregnant. Fawn M. Brodie's 1974 biography of Jefferson assembled additional evidence about the Hemings family and the timing of Hemings' pregnancies, although some critics strongly objected to Brodie's psychoanalytic approach to Jefferson. Dumas Malone, Douglass Adair, Virginius Dabney, 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 the novels Sally Hemings by Barbara Chase-Riboud and Arc d'X by Steve Erickson and the Merchant-Ivory film Jefferson in Paris reached large audiences and persuaded many, most mainstream historians continued to assert that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Jefferson had a sexual relationship with any slave.

In 1997, law professor Annette Gordon-Reed published an examination of the arguments and available evidence, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. She pointed out that most historians had used double standards to evaluate the evidence for and against the statements of Madison Hemings. For example, Hemings' statement about his father was labeled unreliable "oral history" while the oral tales passed down by the Jefferson family were treated as trustworthy, even though they contradicted each other and the documentary record. Historians also accepted statements about Sally's father being John Wayles based on little concrete evidence, but insisted on much more proof about Sally's children by Jefferson.

Gordon-Reed did not argue that documentary records proved Madison Hemings' claim, only that authors had unfairly dismissed it. She suggested that a conclusive answer might lie in developing more evidence through DNA analysis.

DNA testing

Relevant results were published in the November 5, 1998 issue of the British scientific journal Nature. The study compared the Y chromosomal haplotypes of four groups of men who were descendants of 1) Thomas Jefferson's grandfather 2) Thomas Woodson 3) Madison Hemings's brother Eston, and 4) John Carr, the grandfather of the Carr brothers.

The study's major findings were that the Y chromosome of the Jefferson family did match that of Eston Hemings' family, but did not match those of the Woodson and Carr families. The implications for the paternity question were not conclusive about whether Thomas Jefferson was the father, but strongly tended to disprove the contention of the Jefferson grandchildren that Sally Hemings's children had been fathered by one of the Carr brothers. The Woodson family's claim to have been descended from Jefferson was also disproven. On the other hand, Eston Hemings was undoubtedly the son of "a" Jefferson.

Other reports

Following the Nature article, the controversy continued to grow, and in 2000 and 2001 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.

In January 2000, a group of specialists from the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which owns and operates Monticello, published a study on the controversy initiated soon after the Nature paper. Their near-unanimous report 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."[7] This view is now given to visitors at Monticello by tour guides.

Later in 2000, the newly-formed Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society, whose stated purpose is to "further the honor and integrity of Thomas Jefferson," created a "Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission" composed of 13 noted conservative scholars to examine the paternity question. On April 12, 2001, the commission issued a report which concluded that "the Jefferson-Hemings allegation is by no means proven," noting that the likely alternative is that Randolph Jefferson, Thomas's younger brother, was the father of Eston and that 25 possible male Jeffersons lived in Virginia at the time, and eight of those lived close to or at Monticello. Dissenting from the majority opinion, Paul Rahe wrote that he considered "it somewhat more likely than not that Thomas Jefferson was the father of Eston Hemings." He 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."[8]

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. Today most historians agree that the story is more likely than not.

Legacy

Three of Hemings's children chose to pass as white. Two of them managed to effectively disappear from the historical record.

Eston Hemings moved to Ohio where, according to census records, he lived as a "mulatto," then moved to Wisconsin, changed his name to "Eston H. Jefferson" and lived as a white man. Madison Hemings, who also moved to Ohio, was the only child who did not choose to live as a white person.[9]

Andersonville prison

A good deal is known about Madison's and Eston's families. Both achieved some success in life, were respected by their contemporaries, and had children who repeated their success. They worked as carpenters, and Madison had a small farm. Eston became a professional musician and bandleader, "a master of the violin, and an accomplished 'caller' of dances." A neighbor described him as "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."[10]

Sons of both Madison and Eston served in the American Civil War. Madison's son, Thomas Eston Hemings, spent time at the Andersonville POW camp, and later died in a camp in Meridian, Mississippi. According to a Hemings descendant, his brother, James, attempted to cross Union lines and enlist in the Confederate army to rescue him.[11] Later, James was rumored to have moved to Colorado; like others in the family, he disappeared.

Omnibus similar to those owned by Eston Hemings' son, Beverly Jefferson

Eston's son John Wayles Jefferson wrote frequently for newspapers and published letters about his war experiences. He was proprietor of a hotel in Madison, Wisconsin. Ultimately he became a wealthy cotton broker in Tennessee.

Eston's son Beverly Jefferson was, according to his 1908 obituary, "a likable character at the Wisconsin capital, and a familiar of statesmen for half a century." He had operated a hotel with his brother, then built a successful horse-drawn "omnibus" business.[12]

Some of Madison Hemings' children and grandchildren who remained in Ohio suffered from the limited opportunities for blacks at that time, working as laborers, and servants or small farmers. William Hemings, Madison's last known male-line descendant, died in 1910, unmarried, in a veteran's hospital. Frederick Madison Roberts (1879-1952)—Sally Hemings' great-grandson and Madison's grandson—was the first person of known African American ancestry elected to public office on the West Coast. He served in the California State Assembly from 1919 to 1934.

See also

Notes

  1. Randall (1993), 475.
  2. Monticello, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
  3. E.M. Halliday (2001), 120-122.
  4. Miller (1977), 154.
  5. Pierson (1967), 102.
  6. National Genealogical Society Quarterly 89 (3) September 2001: 206.
  7. Monticello, Monticello Foundation Report. Retrieved September 29, 2008.
  8. Robert F. Turner, Scholars Commission, The Wall Street Journal Opinion Journal. Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  9. Gordon-Reed, (1997), 148.
  10. Monticello, Appendix H: Sally Hemings and Her Children. Retrieved October 20, 2008.
  11. Brady Research, Mary Elizabeth Hemings Butler Lee Brady. Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  12. Wisconsin History, Beverly Jefferson Obituary. Retrieved August 30, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Brodie, Fawn M. Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History. W. W. Norton & Company, 1998. ISBN 978-0393317527.
  • Burton, Cynthia H. Jefferson Vindicated: Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions In the Hemings Genealogical Search. Self-published, 2005. ISBN 978-0976777502.
  • Feldman, Jane, and Shannon Lanier. Jefferson's Children: The Story of One American Family. Random House, 2001. ISBN 978-0375821684.
  • Gordon-Reed, Annette. Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. University of Virginia Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0813918334.
  • Lewis, Jan, and Peter S. Onuf (eds.). Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture. University of Virginia Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0813919195.
  • McMurry, Rebecca, and James. F. Jr. Anatomy of a Scandal, Thomas Jefferson and the Sally Story. White Mane Publishing Company, 2002. ISBN 978-1572493032.
  • Malone, Dumas. Six-volume Biography of Thomas Jefferson. Little, Brown, 1948-1981. ISBN 978-1882886005.
  • Pierson, Rev. Hamilton Wilcox. "Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson." In James A. Bear (ed.), Jefferson at Monticello. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1967. ISBN 978-0813900223.
  • Sloan, Sam. The Slave Children of Thomas Jefferson. Kiseido, 1998. ISBN 978-4906574001.
  • Woodson, Byron W., Sr. A President in the Family: Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and Thomas Woodson. Praeger, 2001. ISBN 978-0275971748.

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.