Read Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power Online

Authors: Jon Meacham

Tags: #Biography, #History, #Non-Fiction, #Politics, #Goodreads 2012 History

Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power (112 page)

I
N
A
L
ETTER
TO
J
AMES
P
ARTON
Gordon-Reed,
Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings,
254–57.

R
ANDOLPH

SAID
IN
ONE
CASE

Ibid., 254.


A
GENTLEMAN
DININ
G
WITH
M
R
. J
EFFERSON

Ibid.

A
THEORY
ULTIMATELY
D
ISPROVED
BY
DNA
RESEARCH
http://www.monticello
.org/site/plantation-and-slavery/report-research-committee-thomas-jefferson-and-sally-hemings (accessed 2012).

“I
ASKED
C
OL
. R[
ANDOLPH
]”
Gordon-Reed,
Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings,
255.

“T
HE
SECRETS
OF
A
N
OLD
V
IRGINIA
MANOR

Ibid., 256.

“I
AM
LITTLE
ABLE

PTJRS,
IV, 35.

“I
T
IS
WONDERFUL
TO
ME

Ibid., 87–88.

“H
OW
DO
YOU
DO
?”
Ibid., 100.

“S
UCH
AN
I
NTERCOURSE

Ibid., III, 278. See also Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
283–89.

“Y
OU
RE
MEMBER
THE
MACHINERY

Ibid., 305.

“M
ANY
ARE
THE
EVILS

Ibid., 356.

T
HE
SECOND
PRESIDE
NT
SPENT
TWO
DAYS
Ibid., IV, 314. The ensuing scene is drawn from this source.

“T
HIS
IS
ENOUGH
FOR
ME

Ibid., 313.

R
USH
SENT
WORD
OF
J
EFFERSON
'
S
SENTIMENT
S
Ibid., 389–91.

“A
LETTER
FROM
YOU

Ibid., 428–29.

W
HEN
A
DAMS
ANSWERED
Ibid., 483–85.

“O
N
THE
SUBJECT
OF
THE
HISTORY

Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
452.

“S
O
MANY
SUBJECTS
CROWD
UPON
ME

PTJRS,
VI, 277.

“Y
OU
AND
I
OUGHT
NOT
TO
DI
E
BEFORE

Ibid., 297.

“M
R
. A
DAMS
AN
D
MYSELF

Ibid., V, 670.

“M
Y
REPUTAT
ION
HAS
BEEN

Ibid., VI, 227.

“T
HE
SU
MMUM
BONUM
WITH
ME

Ibid., 231.

“M
EN
HAVE
DIFFERED

Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
335.

“A
ND
SHALL
YOU
AND
I”
Ibid., 337.

“I
BELIEVE
IN
THE
INTEGRITY

PTJRS,
V, 3.

“T
HE
NATUR
AL
ARISTOCRACY

Ibid., VI, 563.

“I
HAV
E
THUS

Ibid., 566–67.

EXCHANGED
A
TOTAL
OF
329
LETTERS
Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
xxix.

“W
E
HAVE
HAD
A
WRETCH
ED
WINTER

PTJRS,
III, 437.

“T
HE
RANC
OR
OF
PARTY

Ibid., 473.

“W
AR
HOW
EVER
MAY
BECOME

Ibid., I, 61. As ever, Jefferson worried about Congress. “I know no government which would be so embarrassing in war as ours,” he wrote Madison on March 17, 1809. “This would proceed very much from the lying and licentious character of our papers; but much also from the wonderful credulity of the members of Congress in the floating lies of the day. And in this no experience seems to correct them. I have never seen a Congress during the last 8 years a great majority of which I would not implicitly rely on in any question, could their minds have been purged of all errors of fact.” (Ibid.)

N
EW
S
OF
A
B
RITISH
FRIGAT
E
AND
SLOOP
OF
WAR
Ibid., IV, 133.

“O
UR
COUNTRY
HAS
TWICE

Ibid., 103.

J
EFFERSON
RETURNED
HO
ME
Ibid., V, 82.

“Y
OUR
DECLARATION
OF
WAR

Ibid.

SENT
A
WAR
-
PREPARATION
MESSAGE
TO
C
ONGRESS
EOL,
659–700.

“W
E
ARE
TO
HAVE
WAR
THEN
?”
PTJRS,
IV, 472.

“Y
OUR
MESSAGE
HAD
ALL

Ibid., 376–77.

FORTY
-
ONE
·
TO FORM STATESMEN, LEGISLATORS AND JUDGES

“I
N
A
REPUBLICA
N
NATION

TJ to David Harding, April 20, 1824. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

A
S
LATE
AS
1810
EOL,
667.

“T
HE
PEOPLE
WILL
NOT

Ibid.

THE
W
AR
OF
1812
W
AS
DISASTROUS
Ibid., 659–700. See also
JHT,
VI, 107–36; Anthony S. Pitch,
The Burning of Washington: The British Invasion of 1814
(Annapolis, Md., 1998), is a vivid account of the attack on the American capital.

“N
O
GOVERNMENT
CAN
BE
MAINTAINED

PTJRS,
VII, 648.

VICTORI
ES
AT
B
ALTIMORE
AND
A
T
P
LATTSBURGH
EOL,
690–91.

THE
H
A
RTFORD
C
ONVENTION
Ibid., 692–95. See also
JHT,
VI, 126–27. Richard Buel, Jr.,
America on the Brink: How the Political Struggle Over the War of 1812 Almost Destroyed the Young Republic
(New York, 2005), chronicles the depth of the Federalist opposition to the Republican project in the first decade and a half of the nineteenth century.

“T
HE
CEMENT
OF
THE
U
NION

JHT,
VI, 126.

I
N
1814
T
HE
E
PISCOPAL
BISHOP
O
F
S
OUTH
C
AROLINA
PTJRS,
VII, 368.

P
AT
SY
GUESSED
Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 332.

T
HE
SM
ASHING
OF
GLASS
ALER
TED
Ibid., 331.

S
TRANGERS
HOPIN
G
FOR
A
GLIMPSE
Ibid.


AP
PROACH
WITHIN
A
DOZE
N
YARDS

Ibid.

H
ENRY
R
ANDAL
L
ONCE
WALKED
OVER
Ibid., 332.

A V
IRGINIA
GENTLEMAN
WHO
HAD
FALLE
N
OUT
Ibid., 333.

H
IS
HEARING
W
AS
FAILING
A
BIT
Ibid., 426.

I
L
L
IN
EARLY
1818
Ibid., 445.

H
E
WROTE
WARMLY
TO
J
OHN
A
DAMS
Ibid., 446.

CHRONIC
FINANCIAL
T
ROUBLE
See, for instance,
JHT,
VI, 453–56.

APPEARS
TO
HAVE
DRUNK
TOO
MUCH
Alan Pell Crawford,
Twilight at Monticello: The Final Years of Thomas Jefferson
(New York, 2008), 138.

IS
SAID
TO
HAVE
GROWN
JEALOUS
Ibid., 137–38.

THREE
TERMS
AS
GOVERNOR
JHT,
VI, 341. See also http://www.monticello.org/site/jefferson/thomas-mann-randolph (accessed 2012).

FELL
OUT
OVER
THE
FATE
OF
E
DGEHILL
Gordon-Reed,
Hemingses of Monticello,
418.

THE
FATHER
GREW
ERRATIC
Ibid.
,
416–18.

SAID
HE
W
AS

MORE
FEROCIOUS

Ibid., 417.

C
HARLES
L. B
ANKHEAD
PTJRS,
III, 633–34. See also Anne Z. Cockerham, Arlene W. Keeling, and Barbara Parker, “Seeking Refuge at Monticello: Domestic Violence in Thomas Jefferson's Family.”
Magazine of Albemarle County History
64 (2006): 29–52.

“H
E
WAS
A
FINE
-
LOOKING

Bear,
Jefferson at Monticello,
94.

“I
HAVE
SEEN
HIM

Ibid.

J
EFFERSON
TOOK
B
ANKHEAD
TO
P
OPLAR
F
OREST
Crawford,
Twilight at Monticello,
70–72. See also Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 264.

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