"I never
had done a single act or been concerned in any transaction which I feared to
have fully laid open, or which could do me any hurt if truly stated."--Thomas
Jefferson, April 15, 1806.
Lance Banning stated the case well: "We are
asked to believe this U.S. minister to France, a man with ready access to some
of the most beautiful and accomplished women in Europe, initiated an affair
with a 15 or 16-year-old slave girl, whom Abigail Adams had recently described
as more in need of care than the 8-year-old she had attended. This girl was the
personal servant (and likely something of a confidant) of Jefferson's two
daughters—an individual, that is, whose discretion the accomplished politician
and diplomat could not possibly have trusted. Although it may well be that
Sally lived, during much of her time in Paris, in the cross-town convent where
Patsy and Polly were being schooled, we are to assume that Thomas and Sally
carried on their affair in the crowded two-bedroom townhouse where Jefferson
lived—and did so without arousing suspicion of David Humphreys, who slept in
one of the bedrooms, or of anyone else who was there. She became pregnant with
Jefferson's child, the story continues, entered into an agreement with him, and
(with Jefferson taking care that she would have a berth convenient to his
daughters) sailed back to the U.S. in this condition with him, his two girls, and
her brother James. The baby, if it existed, either died soon after birth,
leaving no trace other than Madison Hemings's statement, or became the elusive,
unrecorded 12-year-old slave named "Tom," mentioned in James
Callender's infamous 1802 newspaper accusation, who, if he later took the name
Tom Woodson, was not Thomas Jefferson's child.
"According to this story, Jefferson would continue in a monogamous and fertile
relationship with Sally for nearly 20 years, ultimately fathering five or six
more children (the first of whom, however, was not born until 1795). During
these twenty years, he was content, as was she, to confine the relationship to
the times when he was at Monticello, although he took other slaves with him
wherever he went and as many as a dozen to the White House. On these terms, he
continued in the relationship until at least age 64, when Eston Hemings was
conceived, five years after he had been publicly accused of a relationship with
Sally and while he was contemplating his second presidential term. He carried
it on, all this while, while constantly surrounded by visitors and by a large
white family, none of whom—and least of all the daughters who would have known
Sally best—ever had the least suspicion that he was involved with any of his slaves
or ever saw the slightest indication that he was closer to Sally than to any
other servant. [Note: As established by Elizabeth Langhorne in her family biography of Jefferson, "Monticello: A Family Story" (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 1987), after the death of his wife, Thomas Jefferson's "intimate companion" at Monticello was his daughter Martha, who accompanied him on his every stay and return to Monticello, in addition to the frequent presence of his eleven grandchildren.]
"Indeed, the grandchildren who grew up at Monticello and managed it during
Jefferson's last years did not merely say that any such relationship was wholly
unsuspected—never a touch or a word or a glance—they said it was simply
impossible in this particular house. "His apartment," his
granddaughter told her husband, "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." In fact, apart
from Madison Hemings, no one who ever lived at Monticello and none of the
uncounted visitors who stayed there overnight ever said that he was involved
with Sally—not even Sally herself, though she lived in practical freedom in
Charlottesville for ten years after his death.
"It is possible, of course, that everyone except Madison Hemings was lying or
covering up or engaged in psychological "denial." Jefferson's family
had an interest in protecting his reputation, much as Madison Hemings had an
interest in claiming descent from a famous man. I see no reason to think that
any of these people were deliberately making things up. What of eye-witnesses
who had no obvious interest in the matter either way? Former household slave
Isaac Jefferson mentioned Sally Hemings in later years; but did not so much as
hint that there was any special relationship between her and Jefferson. And in
another interview, Edmund Bacon, who was overseer at Monticello when Eston was
conceived and may have worked there for years before, raised the subject of the
accusations against his employer.
"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 mourning, when I went up to Monticello very early.
"The girl was certainly Harriet Hemings, Sally's daughter. The father was named
by Bacon but protected by the reporter, a preacher in Kentucky.
"All of Sally Hemings's children who lived to adulthood did achieve their
freedom, either de facto or de jure, and it is often said that they were the
only nuclear family of Monticello who did. However, contrary to the terms of
the "treaty" as Madison Hemings described it, Sally Hemings did not
receive extraordinary privileges at Monticello. Jefferson fed, clothed, and
treated Sally Hemings pretty much indistinguishably from his other household
servants, recorded her life and childbirths in much the same way, and left her
as part of the estate. By Madison Hemings's own account, moreover, Jefferson
showed no particular affection for her children and reared them much as he did
other household slaves." (Lance Banning, "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: Case Closed?," The Claremont
Institute, August 30, 2001).
Like other
men, Jefferson was sensitive to these false accusations. . . Publicly, however,
he made no response to these unsrcupulous attacks. 'I should have fancied
myself half guilty,' he said, 'had I condescended to put pen to paper in
refutation of their falsehoods, or drawn them respect by any notice from
myself.' [Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Dr. George Logan, June 20, 1816]. Nor
did he use the channels of civil authority to silence his accusers. True to the
declarations he had made in his inaugural address and elsewhere, he defended
his countrymen's right to a free press. . . [Regarding this issue], one of the recently discovered documents .
. . [is] a letter written by nineteenth century biographer Henry Randall (who
published a three volume biography,Life of Jefferson (1858)), recounting a
conversation at Monticello between himself and Jefferson's oldest grandson,
Thomas Jefferson Randolph. In this conversation Randolph confirmed . . . that
'there was not the shadow of suspicion that Mr. Jefferson in this or any other
instance had commerce with female slaves.' [See also, "The Jefferson
Scandals" (1960), Fame and the Founding Fathers: Essays by Douglass Adair, ed.
Trevor Colbourn (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1974), pp 169.]"
Additionally, "Colonel Randolph said that he had spent a good share of his life closely about Mr. Jefferson, at home [Jefferson never locked his bedroom door by day and left it open at night, Colonel Randolph sleeping within the sound of his breathing at night] and on journeys, in all sorts of circumstances, and he fully believed him chaste and pure -- as "immaculate a man as God ever created." [Henry S. Randall to James Parton (June 1, 1868).]"
This is only a brief account, and readers are encouraged to read and examine all of the evidence For example, “. . . Robert
Turner's 'The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission'
(Carolina Academic Press, 2011) . . . presents a substantial argument for the
position that Hemings's paternity is still unknown.” — Alan Pell
Crawford, Wall Street Journal, Sat., April 14, 2012, p. C8. However, while for some doubts may persist, an honest review of the arguments leaves one to wonder why the
claims are so often accepted as truth.
By: J. David Gowdy, President & Founder, The Washington, Jefferson & Madison Institute