Thomas Jefferson, born
on 13 April 1743, in Shadwell, Virginia [U.S.], was a draftsman of the Declaration
of Independence of the United States and the
nation’s first secretary of state (1789–94) and second vice
president (1797–1801) and, as the third president (1801–09),
the statesman responsible for the Louisiana Purchase. An early
advocate of total separation of church and state, he also was the founder and
architect of the University of Virginia and most eloquent American
proponent of individual freedom as the core meaning of the American
Revolution.
Long
regarded as America’s most distinguished “apostle of liberty,” Jefferson has
come under increasingly critical scrutiny within the scholarly world. At the
popular level, both in the United States and abroad, he remains an incandescent
icon, an inspirational symbol for both major U.S. political parties, as well as
for dissenters in communist China, liberal reformers in central and eastern
Europe, and aspiring democrats in Africa and Latin
America. His image has suffered,
however, as the focus on racial equality has prompted a more negative
reappraisal of his dependence upon slavery and his conviction that American
society remain a white man’s domain. Especially disturbing to many were the DNA
results of the 1998 study revealing that Jefferson had almost certainly
fathered a child with his slave Sally Hemings, thirty years his junior. The
huge gap between his lyrical expression of liberal ideals and the more attenuated
reality of his own life has transformed Jefferson into America’s most
problematic and paradoxical hero. The Jefferson Memorial in
Washington, D.C., was dedicated to him on 13 April 1943, the 200th anniversary
of his birth.
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