The Kentucky resolutions of 1798, in which his abhorrence of those laws was
expressed, were originally drawn by him at the request of James Madison
and Colonel W. C. Nicholas. "These gentlemen," Jefferson once
wrote, "pressed me strongly to sketch resolutions against the
constitutionality of those laws." In consequence he drew and delivered
them to Colonel Nicholas, who introduced them into the legislature of Kentucky,
and kept the secret of their authorship. These resolutions, read in the light of
the events of 1798. will not now be disapproved by any person of republican
convictions; they remain, and will long remain, one of the most interesting and
valuable contributions to the science of free government. It is fortunate that
this commentary upon the alien and sedition laws was written by a man so firm
and so moderate, who possessed at once the erudition, the wisdom, and the
feeling that the subject demanded.
Happily the presidential election of 1800 freed the country from those laws
without a convulsion Through the unskillful politics of Hamilton
and the adroit management of the New York election by Aaron
Burr, Mr. Adams was defeated for
reelection, the electoral vote resulting thus: Jefferson, 73; Burr, 73; Adams,
65; Charles C. Pinckney, 64; Jay, 1. This strange result threw the election into
the house of representatives, where the Federalists endeavored to elect Burr to
the first office, an unworthy intrigue, which Hamilton
honorably opposed. After a period of excitement, which seemed at times fraught
with peril to the Union, the election was decided as the people meant it should
be: Thomas Jefferson became president of the United States and Aaron
Burr vice president.
The inauguration was celebrated throughout the country as a national holiday;
soldiers paraded, church-bells rang, orations were delivered, and in some of the
newspapers the Declaration
of Independence was printed at length. Jefferson's first thought on coming
to the presidency was to assuage the violence of party spirit, and he composed
his fine inaugural address with that view. He reminded his fellow-citizens that
a difference of opinion is not a difference of principle.
"We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists. If there be any
among us who would wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican
form. let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error
of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it."
He may have had Hamilton in
mind in writing this sentence, and, in truth, his inaugural was the briefest and
strongest summary he could pen of his argument against Hamilton
when both were in Washington's
cabinet. "Some honest men," said he,
"fear that a republican government cannot be strong -- that this
government is not strong enough. I believe this, on the contrary, the
strongest on earth. I believe it is the only one where every man, at the call
of the laws, would fly to the standard of the law, and would meet invasions of
the public order as his own personal concern."
Among the first acts of President Jefferson was his pardoning every man who
was in durance under the sedition law, which he said he considered to be "a
nullity as absolute and palpable as if congress had ordered us to fall down and
worship a golden image." To the chief victims of the alien law, such as
Kosciuszko and Volney, he addressed
friendly, consoling letters. Dr. Priestley, menaced with expulsion under the
alien law, he invited to the White House. He wrote a noble letter to the
venerable Samuel Adams, of Massachusetts, who had been avoided and insulted
during the recent contest. He gave Thomas Paine, outlawed in England and living
on sufferance in Paris, a passage home in a national ship. He appointed as his
cabinet James Madison, secretary of
state: Albert Gallatin, secretary of
the treasury; Henry Dearborn, secretary of war; Robert Smith, secretary of the
navy; Gideon Granger, postmaster-general; Levi Lincoln, attorney-general--all of
whom were men of liberal education. With his cabinet he lived during the whole
of his two terms in perfect harmony, and at the end he declared that if he had
to choose again he would select the same individuals. With regard to
appointments and removals the new president found himself in an embarrassing
position, as all our presidents have done. Most of the offices were held by
Federalists, and many of his own partisans expected removals enough to establish
an equality. Jefferson resisted the demand. He made a few removals for strong
and obvious reasons; but he acted uniformly on the principle that a difference
of politics was not a reason for the removal of a competent and faithful
subordinate.
The few removals that he made were either for official misconduct or, to use
his own language, "active and bitter opposition to the order of things
which the public will has established."Arthur
St. Clair the Governor of the Northwest
Territory since 1788 was the most notable removal due to the later. He
abolished at once the weekly levee at the White House, as well as the system of
precedence that had been copied from the court etiquette of Europe. When
congress assembled he sent them a message, instead of delivering to them a
speech, which had the effect of preventing, as he remarked, "the bloody
conflict to which the making an answer would have committed them." he
abolished also all the usages that savored of royalty, such as the conveyance of
ministers in national vessels, the celebration of his own birthday by a public
ball, the appointment of fasts and thanksgiving days, the making of public tours
and official visits. He refused to receive, while traveling, any mark of
attention that would not have been paid to him as a private citizen, his object
being both to republicanize and secularize the government completely. He
declined also to use the pardoning power unless the judges who had tried the
criminal signed the petition. He refused also to notice in any way the abuse of
hostile newspapers, desiring, as he said, to give the world a proof that "an
administration which has nothing to conceal from the press has nothing to fear
from it."
A few of the acts of Mr. Jefferson's administration, which includes a great
part of the history of the United States for eight years, stand out boldly and
brilliantly. That navy which had been created by the previous administration
against France, Jefferson at once reduced by putting all but six of its vessels
out of commission. He dispatched four of the remaining six to the Mediterranean
to overawe the Barbary pirates, who had been preying upon American commerce for
twenty years; and Decatur and his
heroic comrades executed their task with a gallantry and success which the
American people have not forgotten. The purchase
of Louisiana was a happy result, of the president's tact and promptitude in
availing himself of a golden chance. Bonaparte,
in pursuit of his early policy of undoing the work of the seven-years' war, had
acquired the vast unknown territory west of the Mississippi, then vaguely called
Louisiana. This policy he had avowed, and he was preparing an expedition to hold
New Orleans and settle the adjacent country. At the same time, the people of
Kentucky, who, through the obstinate folly of the Spanish governor, were
practically denied access to the ocean, were inflamed with discontent. At this
juncture, in the spring of 1803, hostilities were renewed between France and
England, which compelled Bonaparte
to abandon the expedition which was ready to sail, and he determined to raise
money by selling Louisiana to
the United States. At the happiest possible moment for a successful negotiation,
Mr. Jefferson's special envoy, James Monroe,
arrived in Paris, charged with full powers, and alive to the new and pressing
importance of the transfer, and a few hours of friendly parleying sufficed to
secure to the United States this superb domain, one of the most valuable on the
face of the globe. Bonaparte
demanded fifty millions of francs. Marbois, his negotiator, asked a hundred
millions, but dropped to sixty, with the condition that the United States should
assume all just claims upon the territory. Thus, for the trivial sum of little
more than $15,000,000, the United States secured the most important acquisition
of territory that was ever made by purchase. Both parties were satisfied with
the bargain. "This accession," said the first consul, "strengthens
forever the power of the United States, and I have just given to England a
maritime rival that will sooner or later humble her pride."
The popularity of the administration soon became such that the opposition was
reduced to insignificance, and the president was re-elected by a greatly
increased majority. In the house of representatives the Federalists shrank at
length to a little band of twenty-seven, and in the senate to five. Jefferson
seriously feared that there would not be sufficient opposition to furnish the
close and ceaseless criticism that the public good required. His second term was
less peaceful and less fortunate. During the long contest between Bonaparte
and the allied powers the infractions of neutral rights were so frequent and so
exasperating that perhaps Jefferson alone, aided by his fine temper and
detestation of war, could have kept the infant republic out of the brawl. When
the English ship "Leopard," within hearing of Old Point
Comfort, poured broadsides into the American frigate "Chesapeake,"
all unprepared and unsuspecting, killing three men and wounding eighteen,
parties ceased to exist in the United States, and every voice that was audible
clamored for bloody reprisals. "I had only to open my hand,"
wrote Jefferson once, "and let havoc loose." There was a period
in 1807 when he expected war both with Spain and Great Britain, and his
confidential correspondence with Madison
shows that he meant to make the contest self-compensating, he meditated a scheme
for removing the Spanish flag to a more comfortable distance by the annexation
of Florida, Mexico, and Cuba, and thus obtaining late redress for twenty-five
years of intrigue and injury. A partial reparation by Great Britain postponed
the contest. Yet the offences were repeated; " no American ship was safe
from violation, and no American sailor from impressment. This state of things
induced Jefferson to recommend congress to suspend commercial intercourse with
the belligerents, his object being "to introduce between nations another
umpire than arms." The embargo of 1807, which continued to the end of
his second term, imposed upon the commercial states a test too severe for human
nature patiently to endure. It was frequently violate& and did not
accomplish the object proposed. To the end of his life, Jefferson was of opinion
that, if the whole people had risen to the height of his endeavor, if the
merchants had strictly observed the embargo, and the educated class given it a
cordial support, it would have saved the country the war
of 1812, and extorted, what that war did not give us, a formal and explicit
concession of neutral rights.
On 4 March, 1809, after a nearly continuous public service of forty-four
years, Jefferson retired to private life, so seriously impoverished that he was
not sure of being allowed to leave Washington
without arrest by his creditors. The embargo, by preventing the exportation of
tobacco, had reduced his private income two thirds, and, in the peculiar
circumstances of Washington, his
official salary was insufficient. "Since I have become sensible of this
deficit," he wrote, " I have been under an agony of
mortification." A timely loan from Richmond bank relieved him
temporarily from his distress, but he remained to the end of his days more or
less embarrassed in his circumstances. Leaving the presidency in the hands of
James Madison, with whom he was in
the most complete sympathy and with whom he continued to be in active
correspondence, he was still a power in the nation. Madison
and Monroe were his neighbors and
friends, and both of them administered the government on principles that he
cordially approved. As has been frequently remarked, they were three men and one
system.
On retiring to Monticello in 1809, Jefferson was sixty-six years of age, and
had seventeen years to live. His daughter Martha and her husband resided with
him, they and their numerous brood of children, six daughters and five sons, to
whom was now added Francis Eppes, the son of his daughter Maria, who had died in
1804. Surrounded thus by children and grandchildren, he spent the leisure of his
declining years in endeavoring to establish in Virginia a system of education to
embrace all the children of his native state. In this he was most zealously and
ably assisted by his friend, Joseph C. Cabell, a member of the Virginia senate.
What he planned in the study, Cabell supported in the legislature; and then in
turn Jefferson would advocate Cabell's bill by one of his ingenious and
exhaustive letters, which would go the rounds of the Virginia press. The
correspondence of these two. patriots on the subject of education in Virginia
was afterward published in an octavo of 528 pages, a noble monument to the
character of both. Jefferson appealed to every motive, including self-interest,
urging his scheme upon the voter as a "provision for his family to the
remotest posterity." He did not live long enough to see his system of
common schools established in Virginia, but the university, which was to crown
that system, a darling dream of his heart for forty years, he beheld in
successful operation.
His friend Cabell, with infinite difficulty, induced the legislature to
expend $300,000 in the work of construction, and to appropriate $15,000 a year
toward the support of the institution. Jefferson personally superintended every
detail of the construction. He engaged workmen, bought bricks, and selected the
trees to be felled for timber. In March, 1825, the institution was opened with
forty students, a number which was increased to 177 at the beginning of the
second year. The institution has continued its beneficent work to the present
day, and still bears the imprint of Jefferson's mind. It has no president,
except that one of the professors is elected chairman of the faculty. The
university bestows no rewards and no honors, and attendance upon all religious
services is voluntary. His intention was to hold every student to his
responsibility as a man and a citizen, and to permit him to enjoy all the
liberty of other citizens in the same community. Toward the close of his life
Jefferson became distressingly embarrassed in his circumstances. In 1814 he sold
his library to congress for $23,000--about one fourth of its value. A few years
afterward he endorsed a twenty-thousand-dollar note for a friend and neighbor
whom he could not refuse, and who soon became bankrupt. This loss, which added
$1,200 a year to his expenses, completed his ruin, and he was in danger of being
compelled to surrender Monticello and seek shelter for his last days in another
abode.
Philip Hone, mayor of New York, raised for him, in 1826, $8,500, to which
Philadelphia added $5,000, and Baltimore $3,000. He was deeply touched by the
spontaneous generosity of his countrymen. "No cent of this," he
wrote, "is wrung from the tax-payer. It is the pure and unsolicited
offering of love." He retained his health nearly to his last days, and
had the happiness of living to the fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration
of Independence. He died at twenty minutes to one p. hr., 4 July, 1826. John
Adams died a few hours later on the same
day, saying, just before he breathed his last, "Thomas Jefferson still
lives." he was buried in his own graveyard at Monticello, beneath a
stone upon which was engraved an inscription prepared by his own hand;
"Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration
of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom,
and Father of the University of Virginia."
He died solvent, for the sale of his estate discharged his debts to the
uttermost farthing His daughter and her children lost their home and had no
means of support. Their circumstances becoming known, the legislature of South
Carolina and Virginia each voted her a gift of $10,000, which gave peace and
dignity to the remainder of her life. She died in 1836, aged sixty-three,
leaving numerous descendants.
The writings of Thomas Jefferson were published by order of congress in 1853,
under the editorial supervision of Henry A. Washington (9 vols., 8vo). This
publication, which leaves much to be desired by the student of American history,
includes his autobiography, treatises, essays, selections from his
correspondence, official reports, messages, and addresses. The most extensive
biography of Jefferson is that of Henry S. Randall (3 vols., New York, 1858).
See also the excellent work of Professor George Tucker, of the University of
Virginia. "The Life of Thomas Jefferson" (2 vols., Philadelphia and
London, 1837); "The Life of Thomas Jefferson," by James Parton
(Boston, 1874); and "Thomas Jefferson," by John T. Morse, Jr.,
"American Statesmen" series (Boston, 1883). A work of singular
interest is "The Domestic Life of Thomas Jefferson," by his
great-granddaughter, Sarah N. Randolph (New York, 1871). Jefferson's
"Manual of Parliamentary Practice" has been repeatedly republished;
the Washington edition of 1871 is among the most recent. Consult also the
"Memoirs, Correspondence, and Miscellanies of Thomas Jefferson," by
Thomas J. Randolph (4 vols., Boston. 1830). The lovers of detail must not
overlook "Jefferson at Monticello," compiled by Reverend Hamilton W.
Pierson, D. D., of Kentucky, from conversations with Edmund Bacon, who was for
twenty years Jefferson's steward and overseer. The correspondence between
Jefferson and Cabell upon education in Virginia is very rare. An impression of
Jefferson's seal, shown in the illustration on page 420, is now in the
possession of George Bancroft.
The portraits of Jefferson, which were as numerous in his own time as those
of a reigning monarch usually are, may well baffle the inquirer who would know
the express image of his face and person They differ greatly from one another,
as in truth he changed remarkably in appearance as he advanced in life, being in
youth raw-boned, freckled, and somewhat ungainly, in early manhood better
looking, and in later life becoming almost handsome--in friendly eyes. The
portrait by Rembrandt Peale, taken
in 1803, which now hangs in the library of the New York historical society, is
perhaps the most pleasing of the later pictures of him now accessible. The
portrait by Matthew Brown, painted for John Adams
in 1786, and engraved for this work, has the merit of presenting him in the
prime of his years. Daniel Webster's
minute description of his countenance and figure at fourscore was not accepted
by Mr. Jefferson's grandchildren as conveying the true impression of the man. "
Never in my life," wrote one of them, "did I see his
countenance distorted by a single bad passion or unworthy feeling. I have seen
the expression of suffering, bodily and mental, of grief, pain, sadness, just
indignation, disappointment, disagreeable surprise, and displeasure, but never
of anger, impatience, peevishness, discontent, to say nothing of worse or more
ignoble emotions. To the contrary, it was impossible to look on his face without
being struck with its benevolent, intelligent, cheerful, and placid expression.
It was at once intellectual, good, kind. and pleasant, whilst his tall, spare
figure spoke of health, activity, and that helpfulness, that power and will,
'never to trouble another for what he could do himself, 'which marked his
character."
--His wife, Martha Wayles Jefferson,
born in Charles City county, Virginia, 19 October, 1748; died at Monticello,
near Charlottesville, Virginia, 6 September, 1782, was the daughter of John
Wayles, a wealthy lawyer, from whom she inherited a large property. Her first
husband, Bathurst Skelton, died before she was twenty years of age, and Mr.
Jefferson was one of her many suitors. She is described as very beautiful, a
little above middle height, auburn-haired, and of a dignified carriage. She was
well educated for her (lay, and a constant reader. Previous to her second
marriage, while her mind seemed still undecided as to which of her many lovers
would be accepted, two of them met accidentally in the hall of her father's
house. They were about to enter the drawing-room when the sound of music caught
their ear. The voices of Jefferson and Mrs. Skelton, accompanied by her
harpsichord and his violin, were recognized, and the disconcerted lovers, after
exchanging a glance, took their hats and departed.
She married Mr. Jefferson in 1772. He retained a romantic devotion for her
throughout his life, and because of her failing health refused foreign
appointments in 1776, and again in 1781, having promised that he would accept no
public office that would involve their separation. For four months previous to
her death he was never out of calling, and he was insensible for several hours
after that event. Two of their children died in infancy, Martha, Mary, and Lucy
Elizabeth surviving, the latter dying in early girlhood.
MARTHA Jefferson, daughter
born at Monticello in September, 1772; died in Albemarle county, Virginia, 27
September, 1836, after the death of her mother accompanied her father to Europe
in 1784 and remained several years in a convent, until her desire to adopt a
religious life induced her father to remove her from the school. In the autumn
of the same year (1789) she married her cousin, Thomas Mann Randolph, afterward
governor of Virginia, and, being engrossed with the cares of her large family,
passed only a portion of her time in the White House, which she visited with her
husband and children in 1802, with her sister in 1803, and during, the winter of
1805-'6. After the retirement of Mr. Jefferson she devoted much of her life to
his declining years. He describes her as the "cherished companion of his
youth and the nurse of his old age," and shortly before his death
remarked that the "last pang of life was parting with her."
After the business reverses and the death of her father and husband, she
contemplated establishing a school, but was relieved from the necessity by a
donation of 810,000 each from South Carolina and Virginia. She left a large
family of sons and daughters, whom she carefully educated. The portrait on this
page represents Mrs. Randolph. There is no known portrait of Mrs. Jefferson.
Her sister, MARY Jefferson , born at Monticello, 1 August, 1778; died in
Albemarle county, Virginia, 17 April, 1804, was also educated in the convent at
Panthemont, France, and is described, in a letter of Mrs. John
Quincy Adams, "as one of the most beautiful and remarkable children
she had ever known." She married her cousin, John Wayles Epps, early in
life, but was prevented by delicate health from the enjoyment of social life.
She spent the second winter of Mr. Jefferson's first term with her sister as
mistress of the White House. She left two children, one of whom, Francis,
survived. --Jefferson's last surviving granddaughter, Mrs. Septima Randolph
Meikleham, died in Washington, D.C., on 16 September, 1887. See "Domestic
Life of Thomas Jefferson," by his great-granddaughter, Sarah N. Randolph
(New York, 1871).
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We invite you to read a transcription
of the complete text of the Declaration as presented by the National Archives.
JEFFERSON, Thomas, (father-in-law
of Thomas Mann Randolph and John Wayles Eppes), a Delegate from Virginia and a
Vice President and 3d President of the United States; born at ‘Shadwell,’
Va., in present-day Albemarle County, Va., on April 13 (Gregorian calendar),
1743; attended a preparatory school; graduated from William and Mary College,
Williamsburg, Va., in 1762; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced
practice in 1767; member, colonial House of Burgesses 1769-1775; prominent in
pre-Revolutionary movements; Member of the Continental Congress in 1775 and
1776; chairman of the committee that drew up the Declaration of Independence in
the summer of 1776 and made the first draft; signer of the Declaration of
Independence; resigned soon after and returned to his estate, ’Monticello’;
Governor of Virginia 1779-1781; member, State house of delegates 1782; again a
Member of the Continental Congress 1783-1784; appointed a Minister
Plenipotentiary to France in 1784, and then sole Minister to the King of France
in 1785, for three years; Secretary of State of the United States in the Cabinet
of President George Washington 1789-1793; elected Vice President of the United
States and served under President John Adams 1797-1801; elected President of the
United States in 1801 by the House of Representatives on the thirty-sixth
ballot; reelected in 1805 and served from March 4, 1801, to March 3, 1809;
retired to his estate, ’Monticello,’ in Virginia; active in founding the
University of Virginia at Charlottesville; died at ’Monticello,’ Albemarle
County, Va., July 4, 1826; interment in the grounds of ‘Monticello.’-
-Biographical
Data courtesy of the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
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