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To: Bodleian_Girl

“father of her white children.”

Aren’t they all considered black? More than the old 1/32nd of african ancestory or whatever it was.


128 posted on 07/03/2017 8:22:27 PM PDT by dynachrome (When an empire dies, you are left with vast monuments in front of which peasants squat to defecate)
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To: dynachrome

Ol’ Virginny is a lovely state and the Valley speaks to me, feels like home though I’ve never lived there, but it also could be a very authoritarian place. “Mulattoes” could not own property and the definition of that term was very broad to the point of being vague, including indians and even anyone darker than they thought a white person should be regardless of any known heritage. A lot of such people ended up fleeing to comparatively wild and ungoverned NC to get away from that. Part of the reason I doubt this Thomas Jefferson paternity is due to knowing how Virginia was toward such people for a fair amount of it’s history, certainly through to the Civil War era.


132 posted on 07/03/2017 8:27:53 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: dynachrome

I think according to the law in Virginia at that time, they were considered slaves, no matter their color.

“Ellen Wayles Randolph Coolidge, Jefferson’s white granddaughter, who had moved with her mother, Martha Randolph, and her father and brothers and sisters to Monticello in 1809, knew the Hemings children well. All of Sally’s children were “fair,” she wrote privately to her husband in 1858, and “all set free at my grandfather’s death, or had been suffered to absent themselves permanently before he died.”

She wrote further in this revealing letter:
It was his principle (I know that of my own knowledge) to allow such of his slaves as were sufficiently white to pass for white men, to withdraw quietly from the plantation; it was called running away, but they were never reclaimed. I remember four instances of this, three young men and one girl, who walked away and staid away. Their whereabouts was perfectly known but they were left to themselves—for they were white enough to pass for white.

Ellen’s brother, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, in a confidential interview with an early Jefferson biographer, admitted that Sally Hemings “had children which resembled Mr. Jefferson so closely that it was plain that they had his blood in their veins.” In one case, he said, “the resemblance was so close, that at some distance in the dusk the slave, dressed in the same way, might have been mistaken for Mr. Jefferson.”

http://www.americanheritage.com/content/thomas-jefferson%E2%80%99s-unknown-grandchildren


133 posted on 07/03/2017 8:28:19 PM PDT by Bodleian_Girl (Don't check the news, check Cernovich on Twitter)
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