enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thomas Jefferson and slavery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson_and_slavery

    Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, owned more than 600 slaves during his adult life. Jefferson freed two slaves while he lived, and five others were freed after his death, including two of his children from his relationship with his slave (and sister-in-law) Sally Hemings. His other two children with Hemings were ...

  3. Thomas Jefferson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson

    Jefferson freed his runaway slave Harriet Hemings in 1822. Upon his death in 1826, Jefferson freed five male Hemings slaves in his will. [367] During his presidency, Jefferson allowed the diffusion of slavery into the Louisiana Territory hoping to prevent slave uprisings in Virginia and to prevent South Carolina secession. [368] In 1804, in a ...

  4. Notes on the State of Virginia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notes_on_the_State_of_Virginia

    Notes was the only full-length book published by Thomas Jefferson in his lifetime. Notes on the State of Virginia (1785) is a book written by the American statesman, philosopher, and planter Thomas Jefferson. He completed the first version in 1781 and updated and enlarged the book in 1782 and 1783. It originated in Jefferson's responses to ...

  5. Historical reputation of Thomas Jefferson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_reputation_of...

    In the 1930s, Jefferson was held in higher esteem; President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933–1945) and New Deal Democrats celebrated his struggles for "the common man" and reclaimed him as their party's founder. Jefferson became a symbol of American democracy in the incipient Cold War, and the 1940s and 1950s saw the zenith of his popular reputation.

  6. Sally Hemings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Hemings

    Madison Hemings, Madison Hemings recollections, Pike County Republican, 13 Mar. 1873 In 1784, Thomas Jefferson was appointed the American envoy to France; he took his eldest daughter Martha (Patsy) with him to Paris, as well as several of his slaves. Among them was Sally's elder brother James Hemings, who became a chef trained in French cuisine. Jefferson left his two younger daughters in the ...

  7. Harriet Hemings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_Hemings

    Harriet Hemings (May 1801 – after 1822) was born into slavery at Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson, third President of the United States, in the first year of his presidency. Most historians believe her father was Jefferson, who is now believed to have fathered, with his slave Sally Hemings, four children who survived to adulthood.

  8. Madison Hemings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madison_Hemings

    Madison Hemings (January 19, 1805 – November 28, 1877) was the son of Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. He was the third of Sally Hemings’ four children to survive to adulthood. [1] Born into slavery, according to partus sequitur ventrem, Hemings grew up on Jefferson's Monticello plantation, where his mother was also enslaved.

  9. Glossary of American slavery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_American_slavery

    Glossary of American slavery. Broadside advertising bucks, wenches and a "picaninny" in Kentucky, 1855. Broadside advertising "acclimated" slaves separately from other people for sale, in New Orleans in 1858. This is a glossary of American slavery, terminology specific to the cultural, economic, and political history of slavery in the United ...