13 April 1743 A.D. SHADWELL, ALBEMARLE, VA: Thomas Jefferson Born
13
April 1743 A.D. SHADWELL, ALBEMARLE, VA: Thomas Jefferson Born
Editors. “1743 – Thomas Jefferson was born at Shadwell in Albemarle county, Virginia.” This Day in U.S. Military
History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/04/13/april-13/. Accessed 10 Apr 2015.
1743 – Thomas Jefferson was
born at Shadwell in Albemarle county, Virginia. He was tutored by the
Reverend James Maury, a learned man, in the finest classical tradition. He
began the study of Latin, Greek, and French at the age of nine. He attended
William and Mary College in Williamsburg at sixteen years old, then continued
his education in the Law under George Wythe, the first professor of law in
America (who later would sign Jefferson’s Declaration in 1776). Thomas
Jefferson attended the House of Burgesses as a student in 1765 when he
witnessed Patrick Henry’s defiant stand against the Stamp Act. He gained the
Virginia bar and began practice in 1769, and was elected to the House of
Burgesses in 1769. It was there that his involvement in revolutionary politics
began. He was never a very vocal member, but his writing, his quiet work in
committee, and his ability to distill large volumes of information to essence,
made him an invaluable member in any deliberative body. In 1775 when a Virginia
convention selected delegates to the Continental Congress, Jefferson was
selected as an alternate. It was expected that Payton Randolph, (then Speaker
of the Virginia House and president of the Continental Congress too,) would be
recalled by the Royal Governor. This did happen and Jefferson went in his
place. Thomas Jefferson had a theory about self governance and the rights of
people who established habitat in new lands. Before attending the Congress in
Philadelphia he codified these thoughts in an article called A Summary View of
the Rights of British America. This paper he sent on ahead of him. He fell ill
on the road and was delayed for several days. By the time he arrived, his paper
had been published as a pamphlet and sent throughout the colonies & on to
England where Edmund Burke, sympathetic to the colonial condition, had it
reprinted and circulated widely. In 1776 Jefferson, then a member of the
committee to draft a declaration of independence was chosen by the committee to
write the draft. This he did, with some minor corrections from James Madison
and an embellishment from Franklin, the document was offered to the Congress on
the first day of July. The congress modified it somewhat, abbreviating certain
wording and removing points that were outside of general agreement. The
Declaration was adopted on the Fourth of July. Jefferson returned to his home
not long afterward. His wife and two of his children were very ill, he was tired
of being remote from his home, and he was anxious about the development of a
new government for his native state. In June of 1779 he succeeded Patrick Henry
as Governor of Virginia. The nation was still at war, and the southern colonies
were under heavy attack. Jefferson’s Governorship was clouded with hesitation.
He himself concluded that the state would be better served by a military man.
He declined re-election after his first term and was succeeded by General
Nelson of Yorktown. In 1781 he retired to Montecello, the estate he inherited,
to write, work on improved agriculture, and attend his wife. It was during this
time that he wrote Notes on the State of Virginia, a work that he never
completed. Martha Jefferson died in September of 1782. This event threw
Jefferson into a depression that, according to his eldest daughter he might
never have recovered from. Except that Washington called on him in November of
1782 to again serve his country as Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate peace
with Gr. Britain. He accepted the post, however it was aborted when the peace
was secured before he could sail from Philadelphia. In 1784 Jefferson went to
France as an associate Diplomat with Franklin and Adams. It was in that year
that wrote an article establishing the standard weights, measures, and currency
units for the Untied States. He succeeded Franklin as Minster to France the
following year. When he returned home in 1789, he joined the Continental
Congress for a while, and was then appointed Secretary of State under George
Washington. This placed him in a very difficult position. The character of the
executive was being established during the first few terms. Jefferson and many
others were critical of the form it was taking under the first Federalist
administration. Jefferson was sharply at odds with fellow cabinet members John
Adams and Alexander Hamilton, both of whom he found to be too authoritarian and
too quick to assume overwhelming power for the part of the executive. He
resigned from the cabinet in 1793 and formed the Democrat-republican party.
Heated competition continued. Jefferson ran for president in 1796, lost to John
Adams, and, most uncomfortably, this made him vice president under a man whom
he could no longer abide. After a single meeting, on the street, the two never
communicated directly during the whole administration. Jefferson again ran for
the presidency in 1801 & this time he won. He served for two terms & he
did ultimately play a deciding role in forming the character of the American
Presidency. The 12th amendment to the Constitution changed the manner in which
the vice president was selected, so as to prevent arch enemies from occupying
the first and second positions of the executive. Jefferson also found the State
of the Union address to be too magisterial when delivered in person. He
performed one and afterwards delivered them, as required by the constitution,
only in writing. He also undertook the Louisiana Purchase, extending the
boundaries of the country and establishing the doctrine of manifest destiny.
Thomas Jefferson retired from office in 1808. He continued the private portion
of his life’s work, and sometime later re-engaged his dearest & longest
friend James Madison, in the work of establishing the University of Virginia.
In 1815 one of his projects, a Library of Congress, finally bore fruit, when he
sold his own personal library to the congress as a basis for the collection.
Shortly before his death in 1826, Jefferson told Madison that he wished to be
remembered for two things only; as the Author of the Declaration of
Independence, and as the founder of the University of Virginia. Jefferson died
on the 4th of July, as the nation celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his
splendid Declaration.
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