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 (215)
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The author's piece of propaganda is so transparantly fraudulent that I'm surprised so many people read it and have positive comments. Jefferson is a giant of human liberty and hardly a hypocrite as the fedgov funded Smithsonian would have you believe. These fedgov and bankster-funded propagandists seek to divide the American people along lines like race, religion, gender -- anything they can seize on to keep us apart on THEIR dreamed for slave plantation. Slavery is alive and well in America, except it isn't chattel slavery. ps Jefferson wrote that the surest guarantee of liberty was to educate all of the people. Jefferson was a lawyer, and the word people specifically encompasses every single human being, including children, slaves, indians, etc. Hmmm, VERY racist of him! pps 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 -- how VERY evil those white men must have been that they were the first to outlaw slavery! How very evil Jefferson was that he almost managed to outlaw chattel slavery in Virginia around the same time! Folks, learn something and stop reading trash like the Smithsonian pumps out...
Posted by CTLovesNathanHale on February 7,2013 | 02:59 PM
Excellent article, but I am surprised there is no mention of Annette Gordon-Reed's great book "The Hemingses of Moniticello, an American family".
Posted by Ieneke van Houten on February 3,2013 | 03:43 PM
This article about Thomas Jefferson was riveting and shocking. It seems that enough time has passed and sensibilities have changed enough that we can have a more honest presentation of historical information. Our "heroes" were afterall people just like us, melanges of good and not-so-admirable qualities. It is so sad to see that Jefferson's earlier humanist idealism was supplanted by selfishness. But is that so different from the idealism of people of my generation of idealistic hippies who have become corporate raiders, Wall Street thiefs, enslavers of cheap third world laborers? It is a great disservice to present historical figures as saints: it misguides people who accept or attempt to build on historical fabrications, and makes for very boring fare as well.
Posted by Sylvia C. Beeman on January 14,2013 | 06:23 PM
I have read a lot of American history and I have always considered Thomas Jefferson to be a hypocrite and a snake. Your article on his treatment of slaves proves him to be a hypocrite. His underhanded actions during the Washington and Adams administrations, and the manner in which he conducted his political campaigns proves him to have been a snake. He may even have come close to treason in his attempts to undermine Washington's foreign policy in respect to the country's relations with France. Thomas Jefferson was certainly a genius, an innovator and a great thinker, but his personal life casts a dark shadow on his legacy. It is difficult to admire such a man, even though many historians have strived to enhance his stature.
Posted by Bill Heard on January 4,2013 | 08:13 PM
Hello All, Thank you so much Henry Wiencek for the excellent article about TJ. It didn't change my opinion about Jefferson as I'm 1/16th Seneca and Oneida, and his policies were very detrimental to Native Americans. There is a saying some American Indians have for people such as Jefferson. It's "two hearts." I think it's self-explanatory. I hope to see another article about TJ which addresses his affect on Native Americans. Walk In Balance, Theresa
Posted by Theresa Ong on December 26,2012 | 04:10 AM
I can only hope Jefferson put up a struggle while quelling his better Spirit, the one who wrote such revolutionary phrases. Who knows what bitter fruits resulted from the first decades of dissension as idealism faced untrod reality. Or, perhaps, like many of us, we was just following the trends of history, loving justice superficially in his greatness, without making it a part of his struggle for material survival. Perhaps it was not a struggle at all. Great people are often only the conduit for the message. We must not mistake them for the message, especially when they fail it! Is is the message, not the man, that is the foundation of OUR better selves. If Jefferson was so irredeemably embedded in the cruelties of his era that it so defeated his better spirit, we must remember this weakness did not afflict all of his contemporaries. WE DARE NOT give up on Jefferson's words merely because Jefferson failed to live them - and WE must not stop efforts to bring them to reality - because racism is still with us and still virulent. WE must do what Jefferson would not - WE must face the evils of our past AND our present. We must do this because the Message is our truest self, and if we lost faith & hope in the Message that all "are created equal" and "endowed" with "inalienable rights", we will surely inflict more mindless evil upon the future.
Posted by Karyn58 on December 22,2012 | 02:44 PM
This just shows us that the idea of a free human race is a lie. It is an idea, and ideas are used to confuse and thus control, which is what TJ and all the founding fathers did. Humans are not free and they never will be. The nature of mankind is servitude and exploitation on all levels. With our current system, it is merely progressing into a much more efficient method of doing that. The only thing humans can do is make their stay in this experience as painless as possible.
Posted by Anthony P Palillo on December 19,2012 | 11:41 AM
To Dan Mc - I don't think Hamilton was too much better on this issue... he married into a slaveholding family and helped his in-laws sell slaves, after all.
Posted by Eve on December 16,2012 | 07:29 PM
The King, what are you talking about?
Posted by Adam Griffin on December 9,2012 | 06:28 PM
As a European I totally agree and salute you for your words, Phil. "True national pride comes in confronting and accepting the sins of the past and moving on to live as better and united people, reconciled to each others' pasts, and understanding of the trauma in nations that still have an even longer journey to travel towards real freedom and democracy".
Posted by Avelina on December 7,2012 | 02:56 PM
The much expanded Black Legend about Spain in America can after all be contrasted with this type of accounts now surfacing. I am very glad I didn't visit the 'holy' Monticello while I was a Fulbright student in the States 20 years ago and was presented with propaganda of the excellencies in the American Way of Life. That these tales are now told about shows health and maturity in the American society. Sent from Madrid.
Posted by Dr. Avelina M. Martínez on December 7,2012 | 02:49 PM
Jefferson was guilty of treason and insurrection which is a greater crime than owning slaves. How come no one ever writes an article about that part of Jefferson's darkness?
Posted by The King on December 7,2012 | 09:14 AM
This article has an agenda, history does not. We try to apply these larger than human ideals to human beings—albeit great men of their time and ours. Jefferson fell into a trap so many of us do, debt. Just look at our nation. He had dug a hole to big by the time he fully realized it, he came to understand debt makes you a slave—he was a slave to slavery reciprocally with his slaves. Obviously I am not trying to make the "plight" of the slaveholder anywhere near literally being in bondage but we forget the reality of his life, he had to continue slavery on his plantation or his livelihood is gone, his family starves and he fails his most basic job as a patriarch. He knew slaves were human beings, he knew what he was doing with the Declaration of Independence, and he didn't put it on his tombstone for merely reputation—he had a legacy of defending liberty that he felt could transcend his own slavery. And it did. As the Great Emancipator himself wrote, "All honor to Jefferson—to the man who, in the concrete pressure of a struggle for national independence by a single people, had the coolness, forecast, and capacity to introduce into a merely revolutionary document, an abstract truth, applicable to all men and all times, and so to embalm it there, that to-day, and in all coming days, it shall be a rebuke and a stumbling-block to the very harbingers of re-appearing tyranny and oppression. Your obedient Servant A. Lincoln—"
Posted by Adam Griffin on December 5,2012 | 02:49 PM
What people fail to realize is that: over man's approximately two million years on this planet, slavery was the norm, not the exception. All the rhetoric about slavery two hundred years after the fact---in the U.S. is ridiculous. Africans were sold for the most part to traders by their own people. And if anyone thinks slavery is totally eradicated today is smokin' dope. It exists in all parts of the world, whether in Africa in some forms or sweat shoppes around the world. Why don't we hear about these forms of slavery from the black leaders like Jessee Jackson or Al Sharpton? Because there's no government money to be had if they do.
Posted by Frances Annette Hixenbaugh on December 5,2012 | 10:14 AM
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