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- The character of Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Jefferson: The Man, The Myth, and The Morality
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- Thomas Jefferson was a man of the greatest moral character who has been
- excoriated routinely over the last 30 years by historical revisionists
- and presentists. His commitment to America and his vast contributions to
- the framing of society as it is today are overlooked in favor of base
- analysis of his character that, while not flawless, is that of a morally
- upright person who has deeply held convictions and lives by them.
- Jefferson was born to a prominent family of Virginia tobacco growers.
- Plantation life is based largely around the work of slaves, so Jefferson
- was surrounded by them from the time of his birth in 1743 until the day
- he died. One of the harshest criticisms of Jefferson comes from the fact
- that, while he vehemently opposed slavery, was indeed a slave owner
- himself. As historian Douglas L. Wilson points out in his Atlantic
- Monthly article ôThomas Jefferson and the Character Issueö, the question
- should be reversed:
- ô...[T]his was of asking the question... is essentially backward, and
- reflects the pervasive presentism of our time. Consider, for example,
- how different the question appears when inverted and framed in more
- historical terms: How did a man who was born into a slave holding
- society, whose family and admired friends owned slaves, who inherited a
- fortune that was dependent on slaves and slave labor, decide at an early
- age that slavery was morally wrong and forcefully declare that it ought
- to be abolished?ö (Wilson 66).
- Wilson also argues that Jefferson knew that his slaves would be better
- off working for him than freed in a world where they would be treated
- with contempt and not given any real freedoms.
- Another way that Thomas Jefferson shows his moral character is in his
- most famous achievement, the drafting of the Declaration of
- Independence. This document is probably the most important document in
- the history of the United States, and one of the most important in the
- history of the world. Jefferson writes that ôall men are created equalö
- and argues that every man has the right to ôlife, liberty, and the
- pursuit of happiness.ö JeffersonÆs document shows not only his strongly
- held beliefs in freedom, but his acceptance of and belief in the views
- of the Age of Reason. He believed himself to be a person who was doing
- what was morally right, not for the fame that would eventually accompany
- it. In fact, he didnÆt want to write the Declaration to begin with. In
- 1776, the song ôNot Me, Johnö shows how Jefferson was pushed into doing
- it, despite the fact that he would have actually rather gone home to see
- his wife. When nobody else would do it, he acquiesced and agreed to
- write it. His quote, ôWhat will posterity think we were -- demigods?
- WeÆre men -- no more, no lessö (1776), shows how as a contemporary of
- such philosophical greats as Voltaire and Mill, he did what he did
- because it was what needed to happen -- not in any way, shape, or form
- because he wanted to be remembered as a demigod, a status he actually
- had anyway, according to Wilson, until the 1960Æs.
- Another thing that JeffersonÆs character is criticized for and blown
- out of proportion is his liaison with a slave, Sally Hemings. Historian
- Fawn Brodie argues that it was ônot scandalous debauchery with an
- innocent slave victim, but rather a serious passion that brought
- Jefferson and the slave woman much happiness over a period lasting
- thirty-eight years.ö True, their affair started when she was only 14
- years old, but to criticize this is terribly presentistic. In colonial
- times, especially in the middle and southern colonies, girls were
- married off between the ages of 13 and 16; it was not considered
- defilement and abuse like it is today. In fact, his relationship with
- Hemings could actually be considered to be a positive thing for him on
- two fronts: Since she was 52 when he died, Jefferson obviously did not
- lust after her solely on a physical basis; also, he promised his wife
- when she died that he would not remarry. He fulfilled his promise only
- because he found a woman to love whom he was not expected, indeed not
- allowed, to marry. This is a weak front on which to criticize Jefferson.
- Given JeffersonÆs contributions to American society, it is almost
- impossible to find him to be morally weak and coarse. Those who do are
- presentists, cynics, and nay-sayers who are simply looking for a way to
- criticize one of the greatest Americans who has ever lived.
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