Read The Invention of Nature Online
Authors: Andrea Wulf
17 Jefferson touring Europe: Wulf 2011, pp.35–57, 70.
18 Lewis and Clark expedition: Jefferson’s Instructions to Lewis, 1803, Jackson 1978, vol.1, pp.61–6.
19 ‘this new world with’: Jefferson to AH, 28 May 1804, Terra 1959, p.788; see also Vincent Gray to James Madison, 8 May 1804, Madison Papers SS, vol.7, pp.191–2.
20 journey to Washington: Charles Willson Peale Diary, 29 May–21 June 1804, entry 29 May 1804, Peale 1983–2000, vol.2, pt.2, p.680ff.
21 US economy: North 1974, p.70ff.
22 nation of farmers versus merchants: Wulf 2011, p.83ff.
23 political meaning of design of Washington: Ibid., p.129ff.
24 size of Washington: Friis 1959, p.171.
25 carriages overturned: John Quincy Adams, in Young 1966, p.44.
26 White House: The White House was still called the President’s House. The first recorded use of the name ‘White House’ was only in 1811. Wulf 2011, p.125.
27 Jefferson’s laundry: William Muir Whitehill in 1803, Froncek 1977, p.85.
28 ‘state of uncleanly desolation’: Thomas Moore in 1804, Norton 1976, p.211.
29 demystifying office of President: Wulf 2011, p.145ff.
30 coat ‘thread bare’: William Plumer, 10 November 1804 and 29 July 1805, Plumer 1923, pp.193, 333.
31 ‘a large-boned farmer’: Sir Augustus John Foster in 1805–7, Foster 1954, p.10.
32 ‘No occupation is so’: Jefferson to Charles Willson Peale, 20 August 1811, TJ Papers RS, vol.4, p.93.
33 ‘never did a prisoner’: Jefferson to Pierre-Samuel Dupont de Nemours, 2 March 1809, Jefferson 1944, p. 394.
34 ‘the lowliest weed’: Margaret Bayard Smith about Jefferson, Hunt 1906, p.393.
35 seeds to White House: Wulf 2011, p.149.
36 Jefferson and mastodon: Thomson 2012, p.51ff.
37 Jefferson obsessed with many subjects: For details see Jefferson 1997 and Jefferson 1944; Jefferson to Ellen Wayles Randolph, 8 December 1807, Jefferson 1986, p.316; Edmund Bacon about Jefferson, Bear 1967, p.33.
38 president APS: Jefferson to American Philosophical Society, 28 January 1797, TJ Papers, vol. 29, p.279.
39 ‘the enlightened philosopher’: Alexander Wilson to William Bartram, 4 March 1805, Wilson 1983, p.232.
40 AH met Jefferson: Charles Willson Peale Diary, 29 May–21 June 1804, entry, 2 June 1804, Peale 1983–2000, vol.2, pt.2, p.690.
41 Jefferson’s private study: Margaret Bayard Smith about Jefferson, Hunt 1906, pp.385, 396; for inventions, see Isaac Jefferson about Jefferson, Bear 1967, p.18; Thomson 2012, p.166ff.
42 ‘you have found me playing’: Margaret Bayard Smith about Jefferson, Hunt 1906, p.396.
43 ‘living with the simplicity’: AH to Jefferson, 27 June 1804, Terra 1959, p.789.
44 AH in Washington: Charles Willson Peale Diary, 29 May–21 June 1804, Peale 1983–2000, vol.2, pt.2, pp.690–700.
45 ‘object of universal’: Caspar Wistar jr to James Madison, 29 May 1804, Madison Papers SS, vol.7, p.265.
46 ‘exquisite intellectual treat’: Albert Gallatin to Hannah Gallatin, 6 June 1804, Friis 1959, p.176.
47 ‘all the ladies say’: Dolley Madison to Anna Payne Cutts, 5 June 1804, ibid., p.175.
48 AH briefed politicians: Albert Gallatin to Hannah Gallatin, 6 June 1804, ibid., p.176.
49 AH’s maps: Charles Willson Peale, Diary, 29 May–21 June 1804, entry 30 May 1804, Peale 1983–2000, vol.2, pt.2, p.684; Louis Agassiz later said that AH’s measurements showed that previous maps had been so imperfect that Mexico’s position differed by about 300 miles, Agassiz 1869, pp.14–15.
50 knowledge was ‘astonishing’: Albert Gallatin to Hannah Gallatin, 6 June 1804, Friis 1959, p.176.
51 Jefferson collecting material on Mexico: Ibid., p.177; Jefferson’s table with information ‘Louisiana and Texas Description, 1804’, DLC; see also Terra 1959, p.786.
52 ‘twice as fast as’: Albert Gallatin to Hannah Gallatin, 6 June 1804, Friis 1959, p.176.
53 ‘mixing them together’: Charles Willson Peale Diary, 29 May–21 June 1804, entry 29 May 1804, Peale 1983–2000, vol.2, pt.2, p.683.
54 ‘fountain of knowledge’: Charles Willson Peale to John DePeyster, 27 June 1804, ibid., p.725.
55 ‘very extraordinary man’: Albert Gallatin to Hannah Gallatin, 6 June 1804, Friis 1959, p.176.
56 ‘most scientific man’: Jefferson to William Armistead Burwell, 1804, ibid., p.181.
57 disputed border: Jefferson to AH, 9 June 1804, Terra 1959, p.789; see also Rebok 2006, p.131; Rebok 2014, pp.48–50.
58 ‘between those lines’: Jefferson to AH, 9 June 1804, Terra 1959, p.789.
59 ‘their nations may be’: Jefferson to John Hollins, 19 February 1809, Rebok 2006, p.126.
60 information about disputed territory: AH to Jefferson, undated, AH Letters America 1993, p.307.
61 ‘treasures of information’: Jefferson to Caspar Wistar, 7 June 1804, DLC.
62 AH’s notes for Jefferson: Friis 1959, pp.178–9; AH’s report for Jefferson, and AH, Abstract of Humboldt’s and Bonpland’s Expedition, end of June 1804: AH Letters USA 2004, pp.484–94, 497–509.
63 Jefferson’s Cabinet meeting: Jefferson to James Madison 4 July 1804 and Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 3 July 1804, Madison Papers SS, vol.7, p.421.
64 ‘best air of all is’: AH to Albert Gallatin, 20 June 1804; see also AH to Jefferson, 27 June 1804, Terra 1959, pp.789, 801.
65 this ‘beautiful land’: AH to James Madison, 21 June 1804, ibid., p.796.
66 ‘either by violence’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.3, p.2.
67 ‘human machine’: AH, 7 August–10 September 1803, Guanajuato, Mexico, AH Diary 1982, p.211.
68 AH on repartimiento: AH, 9–12 September 1802, Hualgayoc, Peru, ibid., p.208.
69 ‘fell from the sky’: AH, February 1802, Quito, ibid., p.106.
70 ’based on ‘immorality’: AH, 23 October–24 December 1802, Lima, Peru, ibid., p.232.
71 ‘slightly raked to’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.3, p.79.
72 ‘impoverishes the soil’: Ibid., vol.4, p.120.
73 ‘like a mine’ and AH’s prediction: AH, 22 February 1800, AH Diary 2000, pp.208–9.
74 deforestation Cuba: AH Cuba 2011, p.115; AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.201.
75 ‘those vegetables which’: AH New Spain 1811, vol.3, p.105; see also AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.161; AH Cuba 2011, p.95.
76 ‘island would starve’: AH, 23 June–8 July 1801, AH Diary 2003, vol.1, p.87.
77 subsistence farming: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.161; AH Cuba 2011, p.95; AH New Spain 1811, vol.3, p.105.
78 ‘very tight wall’: AH, 30 March 1800, AH Diary 2000, p.238.
79 irrigations system Mexico City: AH, 1–2 August 1803, AH Diary 2003, vol.2, pp.253–7.
80 water engineers and follies: AH, 30 March 1800, AH Diary 2000, p.238.
81 ‘The only capital’: AH New Spain 1811, vol.3, p.454.
82 ‘imprudent activities’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.236.
83 ‘I think our governments’: Jefferson to James Madison, 20 December 1787, TJ Papers, vol.12, p.442.
84 ‘millions yet unborn’: Jefferson to Representatives of the Territory of Indiana, 28 December 1805, DLC.
85 Jefferson experiments in agriculture: Wulf 2011, pp.113–20; see also for crop rotation: Jefferson to George Washington, 12 September 1795, TJ Papers, vol.28, pp.464–5; 19 June 1796, TJ Papers, vol.29, pp.128–9; for mould board plough: TJ to John Sinclair, 23 March 1798, TJ Papers, vol. 30, p.202; Thomson 2012, pp.171–2.
86 ‘I expect every day’: Jefferson to James Madison, 19 May, 9 June, 1 September 1793, TJ Papers, vol.26, pp.62, 241, vol.27, p.7.
87 ‘greatest service which’: Jefferson, Summary of Public Service, after 2 September 1800, ibid., vol. 32, p.124.
88 Jefferson and plants: For upland rice, see Wulf 2011, p.70; Jefferson to Edward Rutledge, 14 July 1787, TJ Papers, vol.11, p.587; for death penalty, see Jefferson to John Jay, 4 May 1787, TJ Papers, vol.11, p.339; for sugar maple orchards, see Wulf 2011, p.94ff.; for 330 varieties of vegetables, see Hatch 2012, p.4.
89 ‘the true representatives’: Jefferson to Arthur Campbell, 1 September 1797, TJ Papers, vol.29, p.522.
90 ‘have no country’: Jefferson to Horatio Gates Spafford, 17 March 1814, TJ RS Papers, vol.7, p.248; Jefferson on ownership of land and morals, see Jefferson 1982, p.165.
91 ‘The small landholders’: Jefferson to Madison, 28 October 1785, TJ Papers, vol.8, p.682.
92 50 acres for each free man: Jefferson’s draft for the Virginia constitution, before 13 June 1776 (all three drafts included this provision), TJ Papers, vol.1, p.337ff.
93 ‘the more free’: Madison, ‘Republican Distribution of Citizens’, National Gazette, 2 March 1792.
94 ‘sentiment of liberty’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.3, p.15.
95 AH and immorality of slavery: AH Geography 2009, p.134; AH Geography 1807, p.171; see also AH Cuba 2012, p.142ff.; AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.260ff.
96 ‘every drop of sugarcane’: AH, 23 June–8 July 1801, AH Diary 2003, vol.1, p.87.
97 ‘call their civilization’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.1, p.127.
98 ‘thirst for wealth’: Ibid., vol.3, p.3.
99 Jefferson carried on pillow: Wulf 2011, p.41.
100 ‘absolutely incorruptible’: Jefferson to Edward Bancroft, 26 January 1789, TJ Papers, vol.14, p.492.
101 ‘the greatest evil’: AH Cuba 2011, p.144; AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.7, p.263.
102 ‘disgrace’ and ‘according to the value’: AH to William Thornton, 20 June 1804, AH Letters America 1993, pp.199–200.
103 ‘if it was more pleasant’: AH, 4 Jan–17 February, ‘Colonies’, AH Diary 1982, p.66.
104 treatment of slaves: AH, 9–10 June 1800, ibid., p.255.
105 kitchen boy’s testicles: AH, Lima 23 October–24 December 1802, fragment titled ‘Missions’, ibid., p.145.
106 parcelling up land in small farms: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.4, pp.126–7; see for farms between Honda and Bogotá, AH, 23 June–8 July 1801, AH Diary 2003, vol.1, p.87.
107 ‘I love to dwell’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.4, p.128.
108 ‘what is against nature’: AH, 23 June–8 July 1801, AH Diary 2003, vol.1, p.87.
109 ‘inferior to the whites’: Jefferson 1982, p.143.
110 ‘a common type’: AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.4, p.474; for unity in human race, see also AH Cosmos 1845–52, vol.1, pp.351, 355; AH Kosmos 1845–50, vol.1, pp.381–5; AH Cordilleras 1814, vol.1, 1814, p.15.
111 ‘all are alike designed’: AH Cosmos 1845–52, vol.1, p.355; AH Kosmos 1845–50, vol.1, p.385.
112 ‘Nature is the domain’: AH Cosmos 1845–52, vol.1, p.3; AH Kosmos 1845–50, vol.1, p.4.
1 frigate Favorite: AH to James Madison, 21 June 1804, Terra 1959, p.796.
2 AH’s collections: AH Geography 2009, p.86; Wulf 2008, p.195; AH, Aus Meinem Leben (1769–1850), Biermann 1987, p.104.
3 ‘How I long to be’: AH to Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre, 25 November 1802, Bruhns 1873, vol.1, p.324.
4 ‘I’m so new that’: AH to Carl Freiesleben, 1 August 1804, AH Letters America 1993, p.310.
5 AH chose Paris: AH, Aus Meinem Leben (1769–1850), in Biermann 1987, p.104.
6 two elephants: Stott 2012, p.189.
7 Paris under Napoleon: Horne 2004, p.162ff.; Marrinan 2009, p.298; John Scott, 1814, Scott 1816; Thomas Dibdin, 16 June 1818, Dibdin 1821, vol.2, pp.76–9.
8 ‘as if their houses’: Robert Southey to Edith Southey, 17 May 1817, Southey 1965, vol.2, p.162.
9 ‘philosophers’ and ‘grimaciers’: John Scott, 1814, Scott 1816, pp.98–9.
10 ‘devoted solely to enjoyment’: Ibid., p.116.
11 ‘eternal agitation’: Thomas Dibdin, 16 June 1818, Dibdin 1821, vol.2, p.76.
12 classes and reading: John Scott, 1814, Scott 1816, pp.68, 125.
13 ‘a discourse on some’: Ibid., p.84.
14 Gay-Lussac reached 23,000 feet: AH Geography 2009, p.136; AH Geography 1807, p.176.
15 AH shared room with Gay-Lussac: Casper Voght, 16 March 1808, Voght 1959–65, vol.3, p.116; see also Bruhns 1873, vol.2, p.6.
16 ‘risen from the dead’: Goethe to WH, 30 July 1804, Goethe’s Day 1982–96, vol.4, p.511; AH as president of the Berlin Academy, Christian Gottfried Körner to Friedrich Schiller, 11 September 1804, Schiller Letters 1943–2003, vol.40, p.246.
17 CH in Paris: Geier 2010, p.237; Gersdorff 2013, p.108ff.
18 a ‘fantastical creature’: WH to CH, 29 August 1804, WH CH Letters 1910–16, vol.2, p.232.
19 ‘as if he had only left’: CH to WH, 28 August 1804, ibid., p.231.
20 his ‘Deutschheit’: CH to WH, 22 August 1804, ibid., p.226.
21 ‘one has to honour’: WH to CH, 29 August 1804, ibid., p.232.
22 never see Berlin again: AH to WH, 28 March 1804, quoted in WH to CH, 6 June 1804, ibid., p.182.
23 only ‘pulled faces’: CH to WH, 12 September 1804, ibid., p.249.
24 ‘The fame is greater’: AH to WH, 14 October 1804, Biermann 1987, p.178.
25 Bonpland to La Rochelle: Beck 1959–61, vol.2, p.1.
26 AH at Académie: 19, 24 September and 15, 29 October 1804, AH Letters America 1993, p.15.
27 ‘unites a whole Académie’: Claude Louis Berthollet about AH, in AH to WH, 14 October 1804, Biermann 1987, p.179.
28 critics now enthusiastic: AH to WH, 14 October 1804, ibid., p.178.
29 ‘night and day form’: George Ticknor, April 1817, AH Letters USA 2004, p.516.
30 AH’s results used by others: AH to WH, 14 October 1804, Biermann 1987, p.179.
31 AH shared specimens: AH to Dietrich Ludwig Gustav Karsten, 10 March 1805, Bruhns 1873, vol.1, p.350.
32 pension for Bonpland: AH to WH, 14 October 1804, Biermann 1987, p.179; Bruhns 1873, vol.1, p.398; AH to Jardin des Plantes, 1804, Schneppen 2002, p.10.
33 AH missed South America: AH to Carl Freiesleben, 1 August 1804, AH Letters America 1993, p.310.
34 Bolívar and AH met: Arana 2013, p.57; Heiman 1959, pp.221–4.
35 AH introduced by Montúfar (footnote): Arana, 2013, p.57; AH, January 1800, AH Diary 2000, p.177.
36 Bolívar in Paris: Lynch 2006, p.22ff.; Arana 2013, p.53ff.
37 Bolívar’s teeth: O’Leary 1969, p.30.
38 Bolívar visited AH: Arana 2013, p.58; Heiman 1959, p.224.
39 AH painted with vivid colours: Bolívar to AH, 10 November 1821, Minguet 1986, p.743.
40 AH, Bolívar and revolutions: AH to Bolívar, 29 July 1822, ibid., pp.749–50.