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Giving Thomas Jefferson the Business: The Jefferson-Hemings Hoax
A Different Drummer/Middle American News ^ | December, 2003 | Nicholas Stix

Posted on 12/16/2003 11:18:44 AM PST by mrustow

In today’s America, a race hoax industry manned by black activists and their white benefactors in the media, politics, and academia produces one outrage after another, with the aim of denigrating white heroes, elevating often obscure blacks, making black racists rich and powerful, and waging race war.

So it is with the smear invented in 1802, and in recent years conscripted anew to sully the name of arguably the most brilliant of all of America's Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826). The Jefferson-Hemings Hoax claims, without any evidence, that the third president, renaissance man, and author of the Declaration of Independence fathered the children of slave Sally Hemings (1773-1835). Hoaxers seek to drag Jefferson through the mud, expropriate his legacy on behalf of Hemings' descendants, and supplant scholarship with Afrocentric propaganda. The perpetrators of the Jefferson-Hemings hoax seek, without firing a single shot, to rob the American people of their patrimony.

In July, the New York Times published articles by Jefferson descendant, Lucian Truscott IV, and Times staffers James Dao and Brent Staples, insisting that “most everyone knows” (Truscott) that Jefferson had fathered some or all of Hemings’ children. Dao alleged that “compelling” DNA evidence existed, while Staples spoke of a “new reality” that vindicated the claims made for generations by “the black oral tradition.”

Truscott, Dao, and Staples all left out of their tales, that there is no evidence that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings ever were lovers, that based on genetic evidence, any one of at least 25 men on Jefferson’s side of the family may have fathered one or more of Hemings’ children (Jefferson family historian Herbert Barger argues persuasively that Jefferson’s brother, Randolph, was Hemings’ lover.), and that the Jefferson paternity story was born as the fabrication of a disappointed office seeker (James Thomson Callender) with a history of libeling the Founding Fathers. Truscott and Staples resorted instead to insinuating that only a racist would deny the story.

The same race-baiting strategy prevails in academia, where scholar David N. Mayer observes, “…among many proponents of the Jefferson paternity claim there has emerged a truly disturbing McCarthyist-like inquisition that has cast its pall over Jefferson scholarship today. Questioning the validity of the claim has been equated with the denigration of African Americans and the denial of their rightful place in American history.”

Here’s what is known: Thomas Jefferson owned a slave named Sally Hemings. Hemings bore at least six children, but otherwise, little is known about her. During Hemings’ childbearing years, not even within the Jefferson clan, was she known as Thomas Jefferson’s lover.

In 1798, scandal-mongering newspaper editor James T. Callender, was imprisoned by President John Adams, under the Sedition Act. When Jefferson was elected president, and Callender freed, Callender demanded the job of postmaster of Richmond, Va. The demand was also a veiled threat. Although Jefferson had been Callender’s benefactor, he refused to meet the latter’s demand. Callender responded, in 1802, by loosing his libel on the world, claiming that Jefferson had a slave “concubine” named “Sally,” with whom he had fathered a child named “Tom.” (There is no evidence Hemings then had a son named Tom; her son, Thomas Eston, was not born until 1808.) Callender sought unsuccessfully to destroy Jefferson politically. In 1805, Jefferson privately denied the claim, and the myth died off.

After Jefferson’s death, propagandists periodically dug up the Callender hoax.

In 1954, racist Ebony magazine editor, Lerone Bennett Jr. (who later, in Before the Mayflower: A History of Black America, would claim that African seafarers had reached America before Europeans did), revived the hoax in an Ebony story.

In the 1970s, the myth was recycled by white “psychohistorian” Fawn Brodie, who simply projected her whimsical speculations onto the historical record.

The modern turning point in the hoax came with black law professor Annette Gordon-Reed’s 1997 book, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. Gordon-Reed uncritically accepted certain black oral traditions, heaped abuse on leading Jefferson biographers, and misrepresented the contents of an 1858 letter by Jefferson’s granddaughter, Ellen Randolph Coolidge, to her husband, in which Coolidge had denied the possibility of a Jefferson-Hemings liaison.

Bryan Craig, research librarian at the Jefferson Library, at Monticello, Jefferson’s estate, faxed this reporter a photocopy of the original Coolidge letter.

The letter actually said, "His [Jefferson’s] apartments had no private entrance not perfectly accessible and visible to all the household. No female domestic ever entered his chambers except at hours when he was known not to be there and none could have entered without being exposed to the public gaze."

In Prof. Gordon-Reed’s hands, the second sentence changed, as if by magic, to "No female domestic ever entered his chambers except at hours when he was known not to be in the public gaze."

Gordon-Reed’s changes turned the letter’s meaning on its head, supporting claims that Jefferson could have had secret trysts with Hemings. Either Gordon-Reed committed one of the most dramatic copying errors in the annals of academia, or one of the most egregious acts of academic fraud of the past generation.

Ironically, it was Prof. Gordon-Reed, who politely, promptly, directed me to the Jefferson Library, where I obtained a copy of the original Coolidge letter. After I e-mailed her three times about the discrepancy, Prof. Gordon-Reed finally responded, “As to the discrepancy, there was an error in transcription in my book. It was corrected for future printings.”

In January, 2000, a panel of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation (TJMF, since renamed the Thomas Jefferson Foundation), which owns Jefferson’s Monticello home, released its Monticello report claiming there was a “strong likelihood” that Jefferson had fathered ALL of Hemings’ children.

The “scholars” who prepared the tendentious, 2000 Monticello report, led by Prof. Gordon-Reed’s reported friends, Dianne Swann-Wright and Lucia Stanton, could not be bothered to study the original Coolidge letter, and instead cited the false version published in Gordon-Reed’s book. Likewise, in 2000, Boston PBS station, WGBH, presented a “documentary,” Jefferson’s Blood, which perpetuated the hoax. The Monticello Report still cites the altered Coolidge letter (on p. 6, under "Primary Sources", and the PBS/WGBH web site for Jefferson’s Blood still has the phony version posted, in its entirety,, three years after it was proven to be false, a practice typical of the Jefferson-Hemings hoax industry as a whole.

While in her book, Prof. Gordon-Reed purports not to take a position on whether Jefferson and Hemings were lovers, she takes the lawyer’s tack of “Plan B” made famous by the TV show, The Practice. She attacks all of the most celebrated white biographers of Jefferson, such as Dumas Malone, while accepting at face value dubious black oral traditions. Thus does Prof. Gordon-Reed set up the reader to fall for the hoax, with the false Coolidge letter providing the knockout punch. Supportive reviewers insisted that Gordon-Reed had proved the “possibility” of such an affair, ignoring the fact that unlike fiction, history is about what DID transpire, not what COULD HAVE transpired.

The party of tenured academic hoaxers now insists that the burden of proof rests on those who deny the existence of a Jefferson-Hemings liaison, to prove a negative! And so does the politics of racism enjoy yet another triumph over the truth.

In November, 1998, Nature magazine published an article based on the research of a team of scientists led by Dr. Eugene Foster, with the dishonest title, “Jefferson Fathered Slave’s Last Child.”

Although Foster & Co. could not possibly have confirmed (as opposed to disconfirming) Jefferson’s paternity, they leaped over the evidence to Foster’s desired conclusion: “The simplest and most probable explanations for our molecular findings "are that Thomas Jefferson … was the father of Eston Hemings Jefferson [sic] …”

Foster & Co. studied DNA from male-line descendants of Thomas Jefferson’s paternal uncle, Field Jefferson (who would have the same male Y chromosome as Thomas Jefferson), and from male-line descendants of Hemings’ last son, Eston, determining that one Jefferson male was Eston’s father. But that left at least 25 Jefferson men as candidates!

(An accompanying article in Nature by liberal historians Joseph Ellis and Eric Lander, sought to exploit the hoax, to rescue the authors’ sexually compromised hero, Bill Clinton.)

Descendants of Sally Hemings' son, Madison, refused to permit Madison's son, William, to be exhumed. Such cooperation would have resulted either in Madison's being shown to be the offspring of some male-line Jefferson, or of his being genetically excluded from the Jefferson line.

But male-line descendants of slave Thomas Woodson, whose family oral tradition insists he was born to Jefferson and Hemings, were genetically excluded from the Jefferson line. (The Thomas C. Woodson Family Association has ignored the finding.) Woodson has been assumed by the hoaxers to be the slave whom James T. Callender claimed was Hemings' first child (“Tom”). Either Woodson was not Hemings' son, or Hemings was not monogamous. If the former case is true, James T. Callender was a complete and utter liar. If the latter case is true, black oral traditions and contemporary pseudo-scholarship that have claimed that Hemings carried on an almost 40-year, monogamous love affair with Thomas Jefferson are refuted, and Hemings was not involved with ANY Jefferson male in late 1780s Paris, the time and place the legend insists the affair began.

Unscrupulous journalists and professors immediately insisted that the Foster study had “proven” that Jefferson was the father of Hemings’ children. The spirit of James T. Callender was alive and well.

The other source of claims of Jefferson’s paternity is the “black oral tradition.” However, the hoaxers have ignored Hemings descendants’ mutually contradictory oral traditions, the DNA evidence, the fact that Eston Hemings never claimed to be Jefferson’s child, and scholars’ persuasive argument that the “black oral tradition” that insists on Jefferson’s paternity, is itself the bastard offspring of the Callender hoax.

Racist black professors and journalists, and their elite white allies, now insist that black oral history be given pride of place over documentary evidence. But oral history has always been the stuff of myth, and in the case of the black tradition, often racist myth. Relying on “oral history” would open the door to instant historical rewrites through contemporary black race hoaxes.

Scandalized by the TJMF’s conduct, a group of scholars formed a blue-ribbon Scholars Commission. Excepting one dissent, its members found no evidence to support the Hemings story. Dissenter Paul A. Rahe, determined that although it was for him somewhat likelier than not that Thomas Jefferson fathered Eston Hemings (1808-?), ultimately the case was inconclusive. The Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society was also formed, and in 2001 published the invaluable book, The Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty, that is highly critical of the Foster and TJMF reports, and accompanying media and academic circus.

The Jefferson-Hemings story is a case study in the use of scholarly and journalistic fraud and racial intimidation by people for whom the written word functions solely as a weapon in a race war. The Jefferson-Hemings hoaxers seek to steal America’s history, and replace it with a counterfeit version, in order to oppress America’s white majority.

Originally published in the December, 2000, Middle American News.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: New York; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: academia; annettegordonreed; brentstaples; bryancraig; ccrm; counterhistory; davidnmayer; dianneswannwright; diversity; dumasmalone; ellencoolidge; ericlander; estonhemings; eugenefoster; fawnbrodie; fieldjefferson; herbertbarger; hoax; jamesdao; jamestcallender; jeffersonlibrary; jeffersonsblood; josephellis; leronebennettjr; luciantruscottiv; luciastanton; madisonhemings; monticelloreport; naturemagazine; newyorktimes; paularahe; race; racehoaxes; sallyhemings; slavery; thomasjefferson; thomaswoodson; tjmf; williamhemings
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To: cyborg
Have not seen it.
81 posted on 12/16/2003 1:07:06 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: mrustow; 4ConservativeJustices; stainlessbanner; GOPcapitalist
Jefferson bump
82 posted on 12/16/2003 1:09:11 PM PST by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: CatoRenasci
You aren't missing much. The only thing they got right were the main actors. Nick Nolte is older and Thandi Newton is half African and half English. I think they alluded to the french lady thing too, but you know what the movie really was about.
83 posted on 12/16/2003 1:10:36 PM PST by cyborg
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To: Sabertooth
Ping! I believe you had a few links on this junk.
84 posted on 12/16/2003 1:12:50 PM PST by TomServo ("This can't be Wisconsin! There aren't any signs for Tommy Bartlett's water show.")
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To: CatoRenasci
While some may find Jefferson's sexual business offensive, I don't. He was single, and a widower still has need for a woman. UNLIKE, Bill Clinton who was married, had a child already and catting around with anything and everything in a skirt.

So call me a moral relativist, but if I hear Klintoon or Jackson compare themselves to Jefferson one more time, I'm going to vomit.
85 posted on 12/16/2003 1:13:02 PM PST by cyborg
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To: Servant of the 9; cyborg
Does it really matter?

Yes. It DOES matter. The Left is systematically trying to tear down all of our founding fathers, to further their ultimate conclusion: That all of American heritage and law is based in racism and hypocrisy, and is therefore illegitimate. All hail the [Communist] revolution!

I tend to believe he did father children for Sally from what I have read in the past.

Only one of Sally Hemings's children, Eston, showed evidence of having a father with Jefferson genes.

Eston's father could have been one of many Jefferson relatives living in Virginia at the time. Suspicion has settled on two of Thomas Jefferson's nephews, both surnamed Carr, who frequented Mount Vernon and who are buried there in the Jefferson family graveyard.

It is far more likely that one of the Carr brothers fathered Eston than Thomas Jefferson, who was quite elderly and who suffered from debilitating migraine headaches at the time of Eston's conception.

86 posted on 12/16/2003 1:14:30 PM PST by shhrubbery!
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To: CatoRenasci
Malone said that he thought that the father of Sally's children was Peter and Samuel Carr. They were the sons of one of Jefferson's sisters, and they were named by both Jefferson's grandson and his overseer. They must have been telling the truth, right? The grandson even swore he got a confession from either Peter or Samuel himself.

Too bad the DNA excluded both Peter and Samuel Carr! Randolph Jefferson was barely mentioned prior to the DNA test as a possible father. In order to determine the father, you must look to see what Jefferson Y-chromosone holder was there at the time of each Hemings child conception- so far there is only one who was there each time- Thomas Jefferson. That, along with exclusion of the Carr brothers who were the most likely suspects prior to the DNA test, leads me to believe that Jefferson was the father of Sally's children. Of course, no one can ever know the truth.

87 posted on 12/16/2003 1:17:05 PM PST by LWalk18
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To: Servant of the 9
"Yes, but we will never know what the TRUTH of this matter is."

That's CLASSIC moral relativism. Did you train at DU? Will we ever know the truth? Maybe not. But the dissemblers want the issue framed as, This is what we say the situation must be...now you disprove it--prove a negative.

"The 'facts' in the article above are no more definitive than the claims of the other side."

Actually, you're right on this...until you apply logic, reason and common sense. They're not "facts," they're facts. And the other side has made many an unfounded claim. A careful reading can lead one to a reasonable inference: while there is no definitive proof that Jefferson had children with Hemmings, it is still possible. Unproven, but possible.

"Neither side has anything but allegations and vague statistics."

Okay, I get it now. You're just here to piss people off. You don't really have anything intelligent to offer.

"Does either position make Thomas Jefferson less of a great man, indeed a Renaissance Man, and patriot?"

Yes, the side of the race dissemblers and hustlers does make him less of a great man--because attached to the "fact" of his fathering the kids with Hemmings is a whole train car of baggage: he was a hypocrite, a racist, a liar, and that therefore makes him, and his part in founding the country, less legitimate--less great.

Here's what's what: According to the best historical and DNA research, one of a minimum of 25 men in the Thomas Jefferson family fathered at least one child that we know of by Sally Hemmings.

If you read that as, Founding Father Thomas Jefferson made babies with one of his slaves...well, you don't know how to read.
88 posted on 12/16/2003 1:17:25 PM PST by John Robertson
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To: Flux Capacitor
Racist black professors and journalists, and their elite white allies, now insist that black oral history be given pride of place over documentary evidence.

I am trying to figure out the angle on the Jefferson-Hemings story, but this "black oral history" is highly suspect. Did you know that the whole theory of academic study of "Cleopatra was black" just because some illiterate grandmother told her professor grandaughter that she heard it when she was young. Not a shred of evidence supports this, yet now it is taken seriously by some lefty academics.

89 posted on 12/16/2003 1:17:27 PM PST by KC_Conspirator (This space for rent)
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To: mrustow
Good article, but this is a cheap shot: "ignoring the fact that unlike fiction, history is about what DID transpire, not what COULD HAVE transpired." We don't know "what DID transpire," and Stix is as much in the business of looking at "What COULD HAVE transpired" as anyone he criticizes. Probably the verdict is "not proven," and historians have made too much of the rumors. But Stix is not less inclined to use hearsay and rumor when it suits him, and one can't stop historians from looking into such stories. The "Jefferson wouldn't do that" response naturally provokes many historians to demonstrate that he could or did.

While Stix is on the whole on more solid ground than those he criticizes, one can't help pointing out that if Callender was a liar or scandalmonger, he had worked for Jefferson before turning against him. It's only fair that Jeffersonians have to face up to the sort of allegations that their leader encouraged against his own enemies.

90 posted on 12/16/2003 1:19:18 PM PST by x
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To: shhrubbery!
The Carr were excluded by the DNA test- if those test proved anything, they proved that neither Carr fathered Eston Hemings. That is why everyone is pushed Randolph- notice that neither side mentions them after 1998.
91 posted on 12/16/2003 1:20:17 PM PST by LWalk18
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To: billbears
Based on DNA evidence, one of 25 possible Jeffersons with the same Y chromsome was the father. We couldn't even get a jury to convict OJ with more evidence than that.
92 posted on 12/16/2003 1:21:40 PM PST by 4CJ (Come along chihuahua, I want to hear you say yo quiero taco bell. - Nolu Chan, 28 Jul 2003)
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To: shhrubbery!
The possibility of Thomas Jefferson's fornication does not bother me. It doesn't change how I regard him as president. It does not invalidate his role in building this country. The left can believe what it wants to, but I know what I believe about this country. It is a good country, and history isn't riddled with dead,white males who were evil wicked people. Besides the left, the arbitors of the sexual revolution, have sown more oats than one dead president.
93 posted on 12/16/2003 1:22:02 PM PST by cyborg
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To: KC_Conspirator
People will believe what they want to believe. Somehow Cleopatra being black is supposed to infuse all poor blacks here with self esteem. This is as ridiculous as saying I'm smart because my family came from Europe.
94 posted on 12/16/2003 1:24:25 PM PST by cyborg
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To: cyborg
Didn't Jesse Jackass father an illigitimate child? He doesn't get dragged through the mud. Of course, no one really cares...
95 posted on 12/16/2003 1:28:52 PM PST by MichiganCheese (What would Scooby Do?)
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To: centurion316
I tend to disagree with your notion of "Historical activism" The question of Hemming's paternity is one that has existed for nearly 200 years. It is only within the last decade or so that technology has advanced to the point that some reasonably conclusive evidence could he had. The Commission was one that seemed emminently fair to me and followed good historical investigative process. The evidence was weighed in toto and conclusions were drawn on the basis of preponderance of historical and current evidence. There was a full throated minority report and the commission's findings were subject to rigorous peer review

I have no axe to grind in the Jefferson paternity issue and could careless about some obscure political spin placed on the results of their inquiries. That wasn't their charge.

For me the evidence while not absolutely definitive in the sense of the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard used in a criminal trial it overwhelmingly met the preponderance of evidence standard used by historians. The evidence of supporting the conclusion tha Jefferson fathered one or more of Hemmings children dwarfs the evidence that he didn't father Hemming's child.

Those who oppose the conclusion posit what I consider to be strained and tortured explanations that are unsupported by evidence. In the end they are reduced to the position of entertaining speculations of how Jefferson might not be the father of Hemming's child. They remain speculations devoid of evidence.
96 posted on 12/16/2003 1:29:43 PM PST by tcuoohjohn (Follow The Money)
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To: petitfour
There is a film at Monticello (the welcome center or museum or whatever it is) that mentions Jefferson having an affair with some married British female while he was a diplomat in Paris.

That was Maria Cosway. She and her husband were both portrait painters.

Ben Franklin had preceded Jefferson in Paris and was said to have had very many affairs. I don't know about Jefferson, but Franklin's undoubted amorousness puts 18th century life in a different light than most of us got from history textbooks.

97 posted on 12/16/2003 1:30:36 PM PST by x
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To: MichiganCheese
Of course not. Rainbow PUSH hush money is great thing to have.
98 posted on 12/16/2003 1:30:53 PM PST by cyborg
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To: LWalk18
You're right that Malone focused on Carr (the "nephew" I referred to in my first post). I don't have the Malone handy, but I seem to recall Randoph being mentioned as a possibility. If I remember the 2000 report, it is not the case that TJ was the only Jefferson male who was present when the Hemmings children were conceived. I'll look it up when I get a chance.
99 posted on 12/16/2003 1:33:10 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: CatoRenasci
Here's a bio on Sally Hemings from the Jefferson Foundation:

http://www.monticello.org/plantation/lives/sallyhemings.html
100 posted on 12/16/2003 1:43:32 PM PST by petitfour
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