Thomas Jefferson Deserves Respect From All Americans

by Bob Turner

Thomas Jefferson owned slaves and is widely believed by able and honorable people to have raped the enslaved child Sally Hemings and fathered all her children. Therefore, it’s understandable that some wish to see our third president “canceled,” to use the Woke vernacular.

Today would be Jefferson’s 280th birthday, so it seems fitting to pause briefly and reassess these horrendous allegations. I have studied Thomas Jefferson for more than half a century, and I am delighted to report that his critics are misinformed.

In reality, Thomas Jefferson may well have been America’s first abolitionist. Moreover, by far the most thorough investigation of the alleged Jefferson-Hemings sexual relationship—a year-long inquiry involving more than a dozen senior professors from all over the country—concluded (with but a single mild dissent) that the allegation is false.

Jefferson’s critics are not wrong about everything. He did own slaves, and (to use his language) slavery was certainly “an abomination.” But when he inherited slaves upon the deaths of his father and father-in-law, it was illegal in Virginia to free them. And it was Thomas Jefferson who, in 1769, drafted the law that permitted manumitting slaves and, later, the 1778 law prohibiting importing new slaves into Virginia.

The first of these laws led Marxist Professor Philip Foner—who edited a book of Jefferson’s writings, a two-volume collection of The Complete Writings of Thomas Paine, and a five-volume collection of the writings of abolitionist Frederick Douglass—to identify Jefferson (rather than Paine) as America’s “first abolitionist.”

In his original draft of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson denounced King George III for having “waged cruel war against human nature itself” on “a distant people who never offended him” by “carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere.” Most Americans today don’t know this, because the language was removed to keep Georgia and South Carolina from walking out of the convention.

Addressing slavery in his only book, Notes on the State of Virginia (1783), Jefferson reasoned

[C]an the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are of the gift of God? That they are not to be violated but with his wrath? Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever…. The Almighty has no attribute which can take side with us in such a contest.

Article 1, section 9, of the Constitution prohibited Congress from banning the slave trade for two decades. More than a year before that period elapsed, President Jefferson congratulated Congress on its approaching “opportunity to withdraw the citizens of the United States from all further participation in those violations of human rights which have been so long continued on the unoffending inhabitants of Africa, and which the morality, the reputation, and the best interests of our country, have long been eager to proscribe.” Congress concurred at the earliest opportunity.

As a member of the Second Continental Congress in 1784, Jefferson was called upon to draft rules to govern the Northwest Territories. Article Six read: “There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.” It failed by one vote, leading Jefferson to lament, “heaven was silent in that awful moment!” But seven decades later, near the end of the Civil War, the authors of the Thirteenth Amendment incorporated Jefferson’s language to honor his courageous struggle against slavery.

I have in the past described Jefferson as a “reluctant racist,” because he did express the “tentative” view that African slaves were not as intelligent as other races (while giving blacks the nod in such areas as physical courage and musical talent). But he was certainly not a “white supremacist,” having argued in 1785 that Native Americans were in body and mind “equal to the white man.” The following year, he wrote, “The want of attention to their rights is a principal source of dishonor to the American character.” Many were also offended by Jefferson’s defense of the rights of Jews and Muslims.

Days before concluding his second term as president, Jefferson wrote, in a February 25, 1809, letter to Henri Grégoire, that no person would be more pleased than himself to see refuted the doubts he had expressed about the intellectual abilities of black slaves—a distinction he repeatedly emphasized might be but a consequence of their enslaved circumstances. He added, “[W]hatever be their degree of talent, it is no measure of their rights. Because Sir Isaac Newton was superior to others in understanding, he was not therefore lord of the person or property of others.”

In American SphinxProfessor Joseph Ellis asserted Jefferson could have passed a polygraph test confirming his conviction that his own slaves “were more content and better off as members of his extended family than under any other imaginable circumstances.” This view was reinforced when Jefferson manumitted the highly talented James Hemings in 1796, after which James soon turned to alcohol and committed suicide. Jefferson died deeply in debt in 1826, and Section 54 of the Revised Virginia Code of 1819 made it illegal to free slaves (like livestock, legally considered chattel property) until all an estate’s creditors were satisfied.

In 2000-2001, I chaired the above-mentioned Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission, which included professors who had taught at Harvard, Yale, Oxford, Brown, UVA, and several other prestigious universities. After an intensive, year-long study, we concluded (with one mild dissent) that the charge that Thomas Jefferson fathered even one child by the enslaved Ms. Hemings is likely false.

The 1998 DNA study reported in the science journal Nature as having established Thomas Jefferson’s paternity of Sally Hemings’ youngest son Eston did not even have a sample of Thomas Jefferson’s DNA to test. Dr. Eugene Foster, who designed and oversaw the study, emphasized that the results pointed equally to any of the more than two-dozen adult Jefferson males known to have been in Virginia at the time. Based entirely upon the DNA evidence, the odds that Thomas Jefferson fathered Eston are under 5%.

For many generations, Eston’s descendants passed down the story that he was not President Jefferson’s child but the son of an “uncle.” President Jefferson’s much younger brother Randolph was known at Monticello as “Uncle Randolph” because of his relationship to the president’s daughter Martha, who ran the plantation when her father was in the White House.

Roughly 15 days before Eston’s most likely conception date, Randolph was invited to visit Monticello to see his beloved twin sister, who had returned from an extended absence. Randolph had five sons between the ages of 14 and 27 who would likely have accompanied him and would be more likely suspects than the 64-year-old President. The book Memoirs of a Monticello Slave notes that, when Randolph visited Monticello, he would “come out among black people, play his fiddle, and dance half the night.”

Our 400-page report is available on-line for anyone to read. Numerous efforts to arrange a debate have failed because no pro-paternity scholar has been willing to take part. The offer remains open.

Professor Bob Turner retired from the University of Virginia in 2020 and is writing a book on Jefferson and Slavery.  The Scholars Commission report can be found here. The column, published originally in The American Thinker, is republished here with permission.


Share this article



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)


Comments

26 responses to “Thomas Jefferson Deserves Respect From All Americans”

  1. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
    Virginia Gentleman

    You lost me in the first paragraph at “woke vernacular”. What does that mean? Is that the language of people who have self-awareness and open minds?

    1. James McCarthy Avatar
      James McCarthy

      Indeed, even unwoke, former faculty have fallen prey to “woke.” So much for objectivity in the context of grievance political views.

    2. Donald Smith Avatar
      Donald Smith

      Well, woke people are easily lost and confused, so I’m not surprised.

      1. James McCarthy Avatar
        James McCarthy

        Keep up to date!! Wokesters were once lost and now they are found and wait for the unwoke to see the light.

  2. Lefty665 Avatar

    DNA technology has changed materially since 1998. It would be interesting to see what examination using current standards shows.

    1. M. Purdy Avatar

      It’s the only way to settle this once and for all.

      1. Stephen Haner Avatar
        Stephen Haner

        Who cares? They are all gone. Undisputed is she was Martha’s half-sister, people remarked on the resemblance all the time, and Jefferson freed her children. He was not much of a manumitter, but he freed her children. Interesting. Attacked hard on that front, he still got to be president.

        I love to read history for the good stories, and that’s a humdinger. Reading Philbrick’s book on the Mayflower now, and apparently it ends with the Puritans selling their Indian neighbors into slavery. Learn something new every day….(Let’s cancel the Plymouth Colony!)

        1. M. Purdy Avatar

          Apparently Jeff Council cares and Bob Turner care. Let’s get to the truth.

    2. Charles D'Aulnais Avatar
      Charles D’Aulnais

      It’s not like we don’t know where to get some of his DNA.

      1. Useable DNA? Where?

        1. Lefty665 Avatar

          Sally’s progeny?

          1. Lefty665 Avatar

            Wow, thanks for posting that link. Reverse engineering DNA from the proteins in tooth enamel that turns out to be well preserved for millions of years. Who’d a guessed it? There’s more amazing stuff each day and a web to share it on.

          2. Lefty665 Avatar

            Wow, thanks for posting that link. Reverse engineering DNA from the proteins in tooth enamel that turns out to be well preserved for millions of years. Who’d a guessed it? There’s more amazing stuff each day and a web to share it on.

          3. Charles D'Aulnais Avatar
            Charles D’Aulnais

            Which brings us to why we are here. We should be less sure of our positions and thoughts, and more in wonder of what we can discover and learn.

          4. Lefty665 Avatar

            I try to know what I know, standing up for it and learning more. That requires understanding that there is much more I don’t know. That number gets bigger much faster and every day. It is a wonderful world.

  3. William O'Keefe Avatar
    William O’Keefe

    It is unfortunate that so many of today’s citizens make themselves feel more worthy by tearing down Jefferson and the other founding fathers. The fact that he MAY have fathered one of Sally Hemings children does not and should not diminish all that he gave to our nation.
    Claiming that he raped Hemings is malicious to an extreme. There is no evidence and the evidence that he fathered an offspring is weak at best.
    We should stop judging past historical figures by today’s ephemeral standards and instead should spend more time judging ourselves and today’s culture.

  4. Ronnie Chappell Avatar
    Ronnie Chappell

    The author of this piece seems desperate to persuade us that Jefferson did not father children by Sally Hemmings. I think the case was strong and very compelling that he did, even before DNA evidence became available. The “randy” newphew or uncle claim reeks of grasping at straws. Hemmings was pregnant with their first child when she returned with Jefferson from France. Annette Gordon-Reed has done a wonderful job of writing about the Hemmings family and demonstrating how the birth of subsequent children coincided with his presence at Monticello.

    While Jefferson honored his promise to free their children, the rest of his slaves were sold on his death because he died more than $100,000 in debt. He lived lavishly on borrowed money and his slaves paid the price.

    He was a man so vile, Martha Washington made it clear he was not welcome at George’s funeral.

    1. M. Purdy Avatar

      “He was a man so vile, Martha Washington made it clear he was not welcome at George’s funeral.” Politics.

  5. Charles D'Aulnais Avatar
    Charles D’Aulnais

    He does indeed deserve respect. So too does the truth. Like every last one of us, even TJ was a mixed bag.

  6. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
    James Wyatt Whitehead

    The debate here illustrates that no matter what, Jefferson lives. Happy birthday! I present my weak lineage to Mr. Jefferson:
    Thomas Jefferson 1743-1826
    brother-in-law of 1st cousin 4x removed of wife of 2nd great-grandfather

    I wonder if this is good enough for discount at Monticello?

    1. Lefty665 Avatar

      Dunno, but it should be enough to get you a spot in the museum beside Geo Washington’s hatchet that’s had the head replaced twice and the handle 4 times:)

    2. I don’t know about a discount, but it’s certainly enough to get a statue of you removed from your grave.

  7. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Jefferson the first abolitionist? That is sillier than the claims about climate change and home runs. No, in that generation give the title to Franklin if anybody, but slavery was challenged by some before either were born.

    During the peak of the cancellation frenzy I think concerns about Washington and Jefferson references and statues being erased were legit, but it didn’t happen. Perhaps passions cooled, perhaps even the most ardent realize that most Americans continue to regard both as vital and important Founding Fathers deserving of study and respect. Who is stirring this up now? This begins to be more about people today seeking to feel better about themselves than any effort at defending Jefferson. He got rich off slaves. They did backbreaking labor so he didn’t have to. Whether he participated in such a vile practice, plenty of slave holders raped the women (despite it being both illegal and considered disgusting even then) and got richer off the progeny. Power corrupts.

    1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
      Eric the half a troll

      It seems like a balanced presentations of Jefferson’s and the rest of the FF’s achievements and faults is pretty much the norm these days. Certainly what I experienced at Montpelier and suspect the same is true at Monticello.

      Hope TJ is having a fine birthday!!

Leave a Reply