Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power (113 page)

Read Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power Online

Authors: Jon Meacham

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

TO
TREAT
HIS
OW
N
SON
Ibid., 126–27. “Nothing less than his good, and the hope of restoring happiness to his family and friends and to yourself particularly could have induced me to the pain of this communication,” Jefferson wrote the senior Bankhead. Ibid., 127.


IN
A
STATE
A
PPROACHING
INSANITY

Ibid., 127.

COULD
BE
VICIOUS
Crawford,
Twilight at Monticello,
127.

FOR
REFUSING
TO
HAN
D
OVER
THE
KEYS
Bear,
Jefferson at Monticello,
94.

P
ATSY
TRIED
TO
CALM
Ibid.

B
ANKHEAD
GOT
INTO
A
FI
GHT
Crawford,
Twilight at Monticello,
166–67.

“W
ITH
RESPECT
TO
B
ANKHEAD

Ibid., 171.

“I
THINK
,
W
ITH
YOU

Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
467.

“I
STEER
MY
BARK

Ibid.

“I
ENJOY
GOOD
H
EALTH

Ibid., 484.

“I
DARE
NOT
LOO
K
BEYOND

PTJRS,
VII, 217–18.

“S
OME
MEN
LOOK

TJ to H. Tompkinson (Samuel Kercheval), July 12, 1816. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, http://retirementseries.dataformat.com (accessed 2011).

“T
HE
FACT
IS

TJ to Benjamin Waterhouse, March 3, 1818. Extract published
at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

BURNING
OF
THE
ROUGHLY
3,000
BOOKS
JHT,
VI, 172.

6,487
VOLUME
S
Ibid., 176.


FOR
ITS
SELECTIO
N

Ibid., 177.

I
T
WAS
A
UNIVERSI
TY
Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 462–63, details the organizational foundations.

TO

FORM
THE
ST
ATESMEN

Thomas Jefferson and the University of Virginia
Commissioners: The Rockfish Gap Report, August 4, 1818. Extract published
at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

“I
KNOW
NO

TJ to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820. Extract published at
Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

“I
THINK
BY
FAR

PTJ,
X, 244–45. In 1814, he told Thomas Cooper: “I have long had under contemplation, and been collecting materials for the plan of a university in Virginia which should comprehend all the sciences useful to us, and none others.” (
PTJRS,
VII, 127.)

“T
HIS
INSTITUTION
WILL
BE

TJ to William Roscoe, December 27, 1820. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

“F
OR
HERE
WE
ARE
NOT

Ibid.

“I
F
OUR
LEGISLATURE

TJ to Joseph C. Cabell, January 22, 1820. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011). Jefferson initially hoped the university was the capstone of a broader system of public education, a cause to which he had been devoted for decades. “Were it necessary to give up either the Primaries or the University, I would rather abandon the last,” he said in January 1823. “Because it is safer to have a whole people respectably enlightened, than a few in a high state of science and the many in ignorance. This last is the most dangerous state in which a nation can be. The nations and governments of Europe are so many proofs of it.” Ibid., January 13, 1823.

RODE
TH
ROUGH

A
PERFECT
HURR
ICANE

Elizabeth Trist to Nicholas P. Trist, March 9, 1819. Published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

SAID
TO
HAVE
INSTALLED
A
TELESCOP
E
Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 473.

T
HE
STATE
'
S
REL
IGIOUS
WORLD
REACTED
Ibid., 465.

HE
OFFERED
A
BRILL
IANT
PLAN
Ibid., 468–69.

“I
REJOICE
THAT

TJ to Benjamin Waterhouse, June 26, 1822. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).


IS
BECOME
THE
FAVORITE
BEVERAGE

TJ to Edmund Rogers, February 14, 1824. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

“W
ERE
I
TO
BE
THE
FOUNDER

TJ to Thomas B. Parker, May 15, 1819. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).


IS
KNOWN
TO

Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 440.

A
FORTY
-
SIX
-
PAGE
WORK
The Jefferson Bible
, 27. This Smithsonian edition is an elegant and engaging volume.

T
HE
P
HILOSOPHY
OF
J
ESUS
Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 654.

A
MORE
AMBITIOUS
WORK
The Jefferson Bible
, 26–31.

“T
HE
RELIGION
O
F
J
ESUS

TJ to Jared Sparks, November 4, 1820, Thomas Jefferson Papers, LOC.

A
CHURCHGOER
WHO
CARRIED
Meacham,
American Gospel,
278.


OF
A
SECT
BY
MYSELF

Ibid., 4.

J
EF
FERSON
HOPED
THAT
Johann N. Neem, “A Republican Reformation: Thomas Jefferson's Civil Religion and the Separation of Church from State” in Cogliano, ed.
A Companion to Thomas Jefferson
, 91–109, is a excellent essay on the complexities of Jefferson's thinking on these matters.

“T
HE
TRUTH
IS
THAT

Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
594.

“M
AY
WE
MEET
TH
ERE
AGAIN

Neem, “A Republican Reformation: Thomas Jefferson's Civil Religion and the Separation of Church from State” in Cogliano, ed.
Companion to Thomas Jefferson
, 97.


THE
DO
CTRINES
OF
J
ESUS
ARE
SIMPLE

Ibid., 103.


BOLD
IN
THE
PURSUIT

PTJRS,
VII, 191.

“I
T
IS
TOO
LATE
IN
THE
DAY

Ford,
Writings,
IX, 412–14.

DONATED
MONEY
TO
THE
A
MERICAN
B
IBLE
S
OCIETY
PTJRS,
VII, 178.

HE
WAS
FELLED
Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 453.


THE
BOISTEROUS
SEA
OF
LIBERTY

TJ to Richard Rush, October 20, 1820. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

FORTY
-
TWO
·
THE KNELL OF THE UNION

“F
ROM
THE
B
ATTLE
OF
B
UNKER
'
S
H
ILL

Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 454. .

“I
HAVE
MUCH
CONFIDENCE

TJ to François Barbé de Marbois, June 14, 1817. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).


L
IKE
A
FIRE
BELL
IN
T
HE
NIGHT

TJ to John Holmes, April 22, 1820. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, www.monticello.org/familyletters (accessed 2011).

“T
HE
CESSIO
N
OF
THAT
KIND

Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 456.

“T
H
E
BANKS
,
BANKRUPT
LAW

Cappon,
Adams-Jefferson Letters,
548–49.

T
HE
RESOLUTION
WAS
A
COMPROMISE
Howe,
Wrought,
147–60. See also Wilentz,
Rise of American Democracy,
231–40, and Robert Pierce Forbes,
The Missouri Compromise and Its Aftermath: Slavery and the Meaning of America
(Chapel Hill, N.C., 2007).

“I
T
IS
NOT
A
MORAL
QUESTION

TJ to the Marquis de Lafayette, December 26, 1820. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, http://retirementseries.dataformat.com (accessed 2011).

“T
HE
LEADERS
OF
F
EDERALIS
M

Randall,
Jefferson,
III, 457. “They are taking advantage of the virtuous feelings of the people to effect a division of parties by a geographical line; they expect that this will insure them, on local principles, the majority they could never obtain on principles of Federalism,” said Jefferson. Ibid.


A
HIDEOUS
BLOT

TJ to William Short, September 8, 1823. Extract published at Papers of Thomas Jefferson Retirement Series Digital Archive, http://retirementseries.dataformat.com (accessed 2011).

“T
HIS
,
MY
DEAR
SIR

PTJRS,
VII, 604. The plan had been proposed by Edward Coles.

Other books

The Year I Met You by Cecelia Ahern
New World, New Love by Rosalind Laker
Forever Young The Beginning by Gerald Simpkins
The Way I Found Her by Rose Tremain
The Killer's Tears by Anne-Laure Bondoux
Altar of Eden by James Rollins