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Reviews
of Books
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The Monticello MysteryCase
Continued
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Alexander O. Boulton
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The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty.
Edited by Eyler Robert Coates, Sr. (Charlottesville, Va.: Thomas Jefferson
Heritage Society, 2001. Pp. 207. $11.95 paper.)
A President in the Family: Thomas Jefferson, Sally
Hemings, and Thomas Woodson. By Byron W. Woodson, Sr. (Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 2001. Pp. xviii, 271. $24.95.)
Free Some Day: The African American Families of
Monticello, By Lucia Stanton. Monticello Monograph Series. (Charlottesville,
Va.: Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2000. Pp. 192. $13.95 paper.)
| In
October 1998 the announcement that DNA analysis identified Thomas
Jefferson as the most likely father of a child by his slave Sally
Hemings seemed to bring to a conclusion a historical debate that
had been waging for years. 1
Any remaining doubts about Jefferson's paternity
were apparently removed when the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the
organization that owns and operates Jefferson's historic Charlottesville,
Virginia, home Monticello, issued a report soon afterward declaring
that "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." 2
Several notable scholars of Jefferson quickly
reversed their previous denials of the affair.
3
A book on the subject issued by the University Press of Virginia
and a Forum in the William and Mary Quarterly, both
containing articles by leading historians, presented the new consensus
"that virtually all professional historians will accept that Jefferson
was the father of at least one of Sally Hemings's children."
4 |
1 |
| Now,
two new books have shattered the illusion that a kind of historical
finality had been achieved. |
2 |
| Very
shortly after the initial announcement of the DNA results a group
of individuals describing themselves as "concerned businessmen and
women, historians, genealogists, scientists, and patriots" formed
the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society (TJHS) to defend the reputation
of the Virginian. The new organization quickly published a statement
of its case by several members. The title forthrightly declares
their view: The Jefferson-Hemings Myth, an American Travesty.
The book was soon followed by its own "Scholars Report," issued
over the Internet, containing the opinions of thirteen academics
in the fields of law, government, medicine, economics, political
science, and history. 5
Historians on the committee of scholars included
Lance Banning, Robert H. Ferrell, Alf J. Mapp, Jr., David N. Mayer,
Forrest McDonald, and Paul Rahe. Except for Rahe, who differs with
the conclusions of the other historians, all the individuals are
in basic agreement with the views of Professor Robert F. Turner,
Associate Director, Center for National Security Law, at the University
of Virginia, whose lengthy position paper constitutes the bulk of
the "Scholars' Report." |
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