The Dark Side of Thomas Jefferson
A new portrait of the founding father challenges the long-held perception of Thomas Jefferson as a benevolent slaveholder
- By Henry Wiencek
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2012, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 8)
Bad enough that Cary had so viciously attacked someone, but his victim was a Hemings. Jefferson angrily wrote to Randolph that “it will be necessary for me to make an example of him in terrorem to others, in order to maintain the police so rigorously necessary among the nail boys.” He ordered that Cary be sold away “so distant as never more to be heard of among us.” And he alluded to the abyss beyond the gates of Monticello into which people could be flung: “There are generally negro purchasers from Georgia passing about the state.” Randolph’s report of the incident included Cary’s motive: The boy was “irritated at some little trick from Brown, who hid part of his nailrod to teaze him.” But under Lilly’s regime this trick was not so “little.” Colbert knew the rules, and he knew very well that if Cary couldn’t find his nailrod, he would fall behind, and under Lilly that meant a beating. Hence the furious attack.
Jefferson’s daughter Martha wrote to her father that one of the slaves, a disobedient and disruptive man named John, tried to poison Lilly, perhaps hoping to kill him. John was safe from any severe punishment because he was a hired slave: If Lilly injured him, Jefferson would have to compensate his owner, so Lilly had no means to retaliate. John, evidently grasping the extent of his immunity, took every opportunity to undermine and provoke him, even “cutting up [Lilly’s] garden [and] destroying his things.”
But Lilly had his own kind of immunity. He understood his importance to Jefferson when he renegotiated his contract, so that beginning in 1804 he would no longer receive a flat fee for managing the nailery but be paid 2 percent of the gross. Productivity immediately soared. In the spring of 1804, Jefferson wrote to his supplier: “The manager of my nailery had so increased its activity as to call for a larger supply of rod...than had heretofore been necessary.”
Maintaining a high level of activity required a commensurate level of discipline. Thus, in the fall of 1804, when Lilly was informed that one of the nail boys was sick, he would have none of it. Appalled by what happened next, one of Monticello’s white workmen, a carpenter named James Oldham, informed Jefferson of “the Barbarity that [Lilly] made use of with Little Jimmy.”
Oldham reported that James Hemings, the 17-year-old son of the house servant Critta Hemings, had been sick for three nights running, so sick that Oldham feared the boy might not live. He took Hemings into his own room to keep watch over him. When he told Lilly that Hemings was seriously ill, Lilly said he would whip Jimmy into working. Oldham “begged him not to punish him,” but “this had no effect.” The “Barbarity” ensued: Lilly “whipped him three times in one day, and the boy was really not able to raise his hand to his head.”
Flogging to this degree does not persuade someone to work; it disables him. But it also sends a message to the other slaves, especially those, like Jimmy, who belonged to the elite class of Hemings servants and might think they were above the authority of Gabriel Lilly. Once he recovered, Jimmy Hemings fled Monticello, joining the community of free blacks and runaways who made a living as boatmen on the James River, floating up and down between Richmond and obscure backwater villages. Contacting Hemings through Oldham, Jefferson tried to persuade him to come home, but did not set the slave catchers after him. There is no record that Jefferson made any remonstrance against Lilly, who was unrepentant about the beating and loss of a valuable slave; indeed, he demanded that his salary be doubled to £100. This put Jefferson in a quandary. He displayed no misgivings about the regime that Oldham characterized as “the most cruel,” but £100 was more than he wanted to pay. Jefferson wrote that Lilly as an overseer “is as good a one as can be”—“certainly I can never get a man who fulfills my purposes better than he does.”
On a recent afternoon at Monticello, Fraser Neiman, the head archaeologist, led the way down the mountain into a ravine, following the trace of a road laid out by Jefferson for his carriage rides. It passed the house of Edmund Bacon, the overseer Jefferson employed from 1806 to 1822, about a mile from the mansion. When Jefferson retired from the presidency in 1809, he moved the nailery from the summit—he no longer wanted even to see it, let alone manage it—to a site downhill 100 yards from Bacon’s house. The archaeologists discovered unmistakable evidence of the shop—nails, nail rod, charcoal, coal and slag. Neiman pointed out on his map locations of the shop and Bacon’s house. “The nailery was a socially fractious place,” he said. “One suspects that’s part of the reason for getting it off the mountaintop and putting it right here next to the overseer’s house.”
About 600 feet east of Bacon’s house stood the cabin of James Hubbard, a slave who lived by himself. The archaeologists dug more than 100 test pits at this site but came up with nothing; still, when they brought in metal detectors and turned up a few wrought nails, it was enough evidence to convince them that they had found the actual site of Hubbard’s house. Hubbard was 11 years old and living with his family at Poplar Forest, Jefferson’s second plantation, near Lynchburg, Virginia, in 1794, when Jefferson brought him to Monticello to work in the new nailery on the mountaintop. His assignment was a sign of Jefferson’s favor for the Hubbard family. James’ father, a skilled shoemaker, had risen to the post of foreman of labor at Poplar Forest; Jefferson saw similar potential in the son. At first James performed abysmally, wasting more material than any of the other nail boys. Perhaps he was just a slow learner; perhaps he hated it; but he made himself better and better at the miserable work, swinging his hammer thousands of times a day, until he excelled. When Jefferson measured the nailery’s output he found that Hubbard had reached the top—90 percent efficiency—in converting nail rod to finished nails.
A model slave, eager to improve himself, Hubbard grasped every opportunity the system offered. In his time off from the nailery, he took on additional tasks to earn cash. He sacrificed sleep to make money by burning charcoal, tending a kiln through the night. Jefferson also paid him for hauling—a position of trust because a man with a horse and permission to leave the plantation could easily escape. Through his industriousness Hubbard laid aside enough cash to purchase some fine clothes, including a hat, knee breeches and two overcoats.
Then one day in the summer of 1805, early in Jefferson’s second term as president, Hubbard vanished. For years he had patiently carried out an elaborate deception, pretending to be the loyal, hardworking slave. He had done that hard work not to soften a life in slavery but to escape it. The clothing was not for show; it was a disguise.
Hubbard had been gone for many weeks when the president received a letter from the sheriff of Fairfax County. He had in custody a man named Hubbard who had confessed to being an escaped slave. In his confession Hubbard revealed the details of his escape. He had made a deal with Wilson Lilly, son of the overseer Gabriel Lilly, paying him $5 and an overcoat in exchange for false emancipation documents and a travel pass to Washington. But illiteracy was Hubbard’s downfall: He did not realize that the documents Wilson Lilly had written were not very persuasive. When Hubbard reached Fairfax County, about 100 miles north of Monticello, the sheriff stopped him, demanding to see his papers. The sheriff, who knew forgeries when he saw them and arrested Hubbard, also asked Jefferson for a reward because he had run “a great Risk” arresting “as large a fellow as he is.”
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Comments (233)
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This article revails some more scary truths about Jefferson, but I don't think it is fair of us to be over judging him. Yes, Jefferson did write one of the greatest documents of all time and shaped this country and did many other great things, but he also did some horrible things, some of which were accepted in his time and some that was not. Jefferson had to be exposed to both the positives and negatives of slavery, yes he did have the oppertunity to free his slaves, but you also have to give him credit for not being a brutal slave holder that abused his slaves constantly. Slavery was a fact of our country that will never go away, just as our debt now is a fact of this country's history, we will never be able to erase it, just learn from it.
Posted by Melissa on May 13,2013 | 09:35 AM
I believe that this article was very incite full. It shows that everybody has flaws even those who we have high esteem for. I agree that what he did with the slaves was very hypocritical of him but we still must consider what Jefferson gave the world. He inspired liberty and freedom around the world, through his words he inspired hope for equality and freedom from tyrannical governments. That is what we must consider. But don't get me wrong, by the end of his life he was a greedy man who only worried about his wallet and sadly that profit was due to slavery.
Posted by Christopher H on May 12,2013 | 02:13 PM
I found this article very interesting, it was very captivating, drawing me in word by word. I think that Thomas Jefferson did contradict himself, however I believe that he did it with good reason. I think it is easy to look at Jefferson and label him a hypocrite, but people often miss something important when they judge him. People rarely take into consideration the conflict that Jefferson himself had to face. Deep down, I believe that Jefferson knew that slavery was immoral and I think he the whole idea made him a little bit uncomfortable. However, Jefferson saw it as his own obligation to continue on with this idea of slavery. He was forced to look at what he found best for the nation while contradicting his own morals.
Posted by Lauren G on May 11,2013 | 03:49 PM
Since none of us were physically at Monticello to know its true day to day goings on, this story is merely speculation.
Posted by Jan on April 14,2013 | 08:41 PM
not sure why you focus on a cult of personality. without the Founding Fathers and American Revolution slavery might still be part of our daily life.
Posted by Tom on February 25,2013 | 08:08 PM
Great article, really enlightening and interesting. Thank you Mr. Wiencek. As for a lot of the comments dissing Thomas Jefferson, I think there's not enough thoughtful insight being applied. Taking into context the time he lived in, and filtering the often subjective bias we all were exposed to in grade school and beyond, this article is just a revealing piece about a complex, complicated, and very bright man, who also happens to be an active participant in shaping what America was and is today. He was far from perfect but still exceptional in many ways. Applying our current cultural values to how he lived his life is misleading and a distortion of history.
Posted by Ed VIm on February 24,2013 | 08:45 PM
If everything in this article about Thomas Jefferson is true, my opinion of the man has indeed changed. Unfortunately what human nature is capable of knows no bounds, and that is what is most disturbing. When fear and the love of money and power take over, no one is safe. We see it in our country today. Nothing has changed.
Posted by Jean Rhoads on February 21,2013 | 05:36 PM
In response to Matt Clark -- it is often said that it was illegal for Jefferson to free slaves, but that is not correct. In 1782 the Virginia legislature passed a law allowing slave owners to manumit slaves without any restrictions. An 1806 law required that freed slaves leave Virginia unless the legislature granted an exemption. In his will Jefferson freed five men and requested exemptions for them. So no law prevented Jefferson from freeing slaves with Kościuszko's bequest. Jefferson knew that there were several claimants to Kościuszko's estate, but Jefferson believed that the will was valid and that Kościuszko's wish to free slaves could be carried out. In 1821 Jefferson wrote to the administrator, Benjamin Lear, "should the foreign claims be rejected, as I think they must be, there will be no difficulty of carrying the trust into execution in this state." The money was there for the taking, but it was not a large enough sum to persuade Jefferson to part with his very valuable slaves.
Posted by Henry Wiencek on February 19,2013 | 12:45 AM
I am a retired university professor. I strongly recommend that copies of this article on Jefferson be taught in grade schools and high schools throughout the U.S. and in other countries. Further, I believe it should be included on the required reading lists of university courses in American History. I had previously known that Jefferson has fathered children by Sally Hemmings, one of his slaves. This article was a further unpleasant revelation to me about Jefferson's real character. I found it deeply disturbing in many ways, but it has been my experience that the truth about American history often is deeply disturbing. I believe that future students should be made aware of the truth about our nation, not its scrubbed and perfumed stories.
Posted by David Eastwood on February 15,2013 | 12:54 PM
Slaves "lived in 10'x 20'log cabins with a fire place and sleeping loft, that they were allowed to have poultry yards and their own fruit and vegetable gardens, were given Sundays, Christmas and Easter off and during the winter months most of them had plenty of free time. Wake up America. This is the side of slavery that has been swept under the rug by the NAACP, Sharpton and the people who fund them." My God...there are people here actually DEFENDING slavery! Not just Jefferon's involvement, mind you, but slavery itself! Madness. This article reinforces my opinion of both Jefferson and the Jefferson cult. For all his intellectual might, far and away the most overrated of the founders.
Posted by David Lawrence on February 14,2013 | 05:32 AM
THOMA IS THE GREATEST AMERICAN PRESIDENT
Posted by RONNESIA ROBINSON on February 12,2013 | 12:03 PM
[3 of 4] Thus, the claim that the abolitionist movement was simply invented out of whole cloth by some folks in America circa 1800 withers and dies under historical scrutiny. This chronology, I submit, also mitigates against absolving Jefferson by appealing to the argument that he was “a man of his time.” Jefferson was too much a man of letters, and too much a man of the world, to have been unaware of at least some of this history, and most certainly would have had some awareness of some of the actions abolishing slavery that occurred in other countries (particularly those in Europe) that were contemporaneous to his own life. And the fact remains that, even in Jefferson’s own time, the question of the morality of slavery was something humanity had been wrestling with for a very long time. [cont'd]
Posted by Mark P. Kessinger on February 8,2013 | 02:17 AM
[cont'd 2 of 4] • 1335, slavery made illegal in Sweden (which then included modern day Norway) • 1416, slavery abolished in the Republic of Ragusa (modern day Dubrovnik, Croatia) • 1435, Pope Eugene IV writes his encyclical, “Sicut Dudum,” which banned enslavement on pain of excommunication; • 1537, Pope Paul III forbids the slavery of indigenous peoples of the Americas, and in any future populations that might later be discovered • 1588, slavery abolished in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth • 1590, slavery banned in Japan by Emperor Toyotomi Hideyhoshi • 1652, slavery banned in the Providence Plantations (in what would later become Rhode Island) • 1701, the British Lord Chief Justice rules that a slave became free upon arrival in England • 1723, Russia abolishes slavery (although it retains serfdom) • 1761, a decree by the Marquis of Pombal abolishes slavery in mainland Portugal, and in Portuguese territories in India • 1775, America’s first abolitionist society, the Pennsylvania Abolition Society, was formed in Philadelphia • 1777, Slavery abolished in Madeira • 1780, Pennsylvania passes “An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery” • 1783, slavery ruled illegal in Massachusetts based on the state’s constitution • 1787, the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 was passed by The United States of America in Congress, outlawing any new slavery in the Northwest Territoties (this, along with the various actions occurring in various other states, clearly establishes that the morality of the institution of slavery was very much in the public consciousness at the time the Constitution was drafted) • 1793, Upper Canada (Ontario) abolishes the importation of slaves • 1794, France abolishes slavery in all of its possessions (sadly, it was restored in 1802 by Napoleon) • 1799, the slavery of Scottish coal miners, established in 1606, was ended [cont'd]
Posted by Mark P. Kessinger on February 8,2013 | 02:16 AM
[1 of 2] Adam Griffin writes: "This article has an agenda, history does not." Oh would that it were so! But as Winston Churchill pointed out, "History is written by the victors." The matter was even more succinctly addressed by Napoleon: "What is history but a fable agreed upon?" Even if historians believe themselves to be objective recorders of events and those events' meanings and significance, they are nevertheless influenced by personal and cultural biases, many of which they are often unaware of. Thus, there is always value in interrogating the historical record, particularly in the case of someone such as Jefferson, for whom lionization to the point of near deification has taken place over the years. Another commenter, CTLovesNathanHale, writes: “Chattel slavery was legal throughout human history in every little corner of the planet UNTIL it was outlawed in some states in America after around 1800.” Now, this is simply a misstatement of fact – a misstatement one can only hope is attributable to a lack of awareness of the historical record. The fact of the matter is that in the 6th Century, B.C., over 2,300 years prior to 1800 CE, Cyrus the Great abolished slavery in Persia, and over time, an awareness of chattel slavery’s moral repugnance grew in various parts of the world. By 1800, a number of European countries had already abolished slavery and/or slave trading. Here are a few more historical highlights: • 1117 CE, slavery abolished in Iceland; • 1256, slavery and serfdom abolished, and all serfs released, in the Comune di Bologna: • 1315, Louis X of France decreed that “France” signifies freedom, and that any slave setting foot in France should be freed; • 1335, slavery made illegal in Sweden (which then included modern day Norway) [cont'd]
Posted by Mark P. Kessinger on February 8,2013 | 02:13 AM
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