Great Americans of History
THOMAS JEFFERSON - A CHARACTER SKETCH
THOMAS JEFFERSON A CHARACTER SKETCH By Edward S. Ellis
No golden eagle, warm from the stamping press of the mint, is more sharply
impressed with its image and superscription than was the formative period of our
government by the genius and personality of Thomas Jefferson.
Standing on the threshold of the nineteenth century, no one who attempted to
peer down the shadowy vista, saw more clearly than he the possibilities, the
perils, the pitfalls and the achievements that were within the grasp of the
Nation. None was inspired by purer patriotism. None was more sagacious, wise and
prudent, and none understood his countrymen better.
By birth an aristocrat, by nature he was a democrat. The most learned man
that ever sat in the president's chair, his tastes were the simple ones of a
farmer. Surrounded by the pomp and ceremony of Washington and Adams' courts, his
dress was homely. He despised titles, and preferred severe plainness of speech
and the sober garb of the Quakers.
"What is the date of your birth, Mr. President?" asked an admirer.
"Of what possible concern is that to you?" queried the President in turn.
"We wish to give it fitting celebration."
"For that reason, I decline to enlighten you; nothing could be more
distasteful to me than what you propose, and, when you address me, I shall be
obliged if you will omit the 'Mr.'"
If we can imagine Washington doing so undignified a thing as did President
Lincoln, when he first met our present Secretary of State, (John Sherman) and
compared their respective heights by standing back to back, a sheet of paper
resting on the crowns of Washington and Jefferson would have lain horizontal and
been six feet two inches from the earth, but the one was magnificent in
physique, of massive frame and prodigious strength,—the other was thin, wiry,
bony, active, but with muscles of steel, while both were as straight as the
proverbial Indian arrow.
Jefferson's hair was of sandy color, his cheeks ruddy, his eyes of a light
hazel, his features angular, but glowing with intelligence and neither could lay
any claim to the gift of oratory.
Washington lacked literary ability, while in the hand of Jefferson, the pen
was as masterful as the sword in the clutch of Saladin or Godfrey of Bouillon.
Washington had only a common school education, while Jefferson was a classical
scholar and could express his thoughts in excellent Italian, Spanish and French,
and both were masters of their temper.
Jefferson was an excellent violinist, a skilled mathematician and a profound
scholar. Add to all these his spotless integrity and honor, his statesmanship,
and his well curbed but aggressive patriotism, and he embodied within himself
all the attributes of an ideal president of the United States.
In the colonial times, Virginia was the South and Massachusetts the North.
The other colonies were only appendages. The New York Dutchman dozed over his
beer and pipe, and when the other New England settlements saw the Narragansetts
bearing down upon them with upraised tomahawks, they ran for cover and yelled to
Massachusetts to save them.
Clayborne fired popguns at Lord Baltimore, and the Catholic and Protestant
Marylanders enacted Toleration Acts, and then chased one another over the
border, with some of the fugitives running all the way to the Carolinas, where
the settlers were perspiring over their efforts in installing new governors and
thrusting them out again, in the hope that a half-fledged statesman would turn
up sometime or other in the shuffle.
What a roystering set those Cavaliers were! Fond of horse racing, cock
fighting, gambling and drinking, the soul of hospitality, quick to take offense,
and quicker to forgive,—duellists as brave as Spartans, chivalric, proud of
honor, their province, their blood and their families, they envied only one
being in the world and that was he who could establish his claim to the
possession of a strain from the veins of the dusky daughter of
Powhatan—Pocahontas.
Could such people succeed as pioneers of the wilderness?
Into the snowy wastes of New England plunged the Pilgrims to blaze a path for
civilization in the New World. They were perfect pioneers down to the minutest
detail. Sturdy, grimly resolute, painfully honest, industrious, patient, moral
and seeing God's hand in every affliction, they smothered their groans while
writhing in the pangs of starvation and gasped in husky whispers: "He doeth all
things well; praise to his name!" Such people could not fail in their work.
And yet of the first ten presidents, New England furnished only the two
Adamses, while Virginia gave to the nation, Washington, Jefferson, Madison,
Monroe and then tapered off with Tyler.
In the War for the Union, the ten most prominent leaders were Grant, Sherman,
Sheridan, Thomas, Farragut, Porter, Lee, Stonewall Jackson, J. E. Johnston and
Longstreet. Of these, four were the products of Virginia, while none came from
New England, nor did she produce a real, military leader throughout the civil
war, though she poured out treasure like water and sent as brave soldiers to the
field as ever kept step to the drum beat, while in oratory, statesmanship and
humanitarian achievement, her sons have been leaders from the foundation of the
Republic.
Thomas Jefferson was born in Shadwell, Albemarle County, Va., April 2,1743.
His father was the owner of thirty slaves and of a wheat and tobacco farm of
nearly two thousand acres. There were ten children, Thomas being the third. His
father was considered the strongest man physically in the county, and the son
grew to be like him in that respect, but the elder died while the younger was a
boy.
Entering William and Mary College, Thomas was shy, but his ability quickly
drew attention to him. He was an irrestrainable student, sometimes studying
twelve and fourteen hours out of the twenty-four. He acquired the strength to
stand this terrific strain by his exercise of body. His father warned his wife
just before his death not to allow their son to neglect this necessity, but the
warning was superfluous. The youth was a keen hunter, a fine horseman and as
fond as Washington of out door sports.
He was seventeen years old when he entered college and was one of the
"gawkiest" students. He was tall, growing fast, raw-boned, with prominent chin
and cheek bones, big hands and feet, sandy-haired and freckled. His mind
broadened and expanded fast under the tutelage of Dr. William Small, a Scotchman
and the professor of mathematics, who made young Jefferson his companion in his
walks, and showed an interest in the talented youth, which the latter gratefully
remembered throughout life.
Jefferson was by choice a farmer and never lost interest in the management of
his estate. One day, while a student at law, he wandered into the legislature
and was thrilled by the glowing speech of Patrick Henry who replied to an
interruption:
"If this be treason, make the most of it."
He became a lawyer in his twenty-fourth year, and was successful from the
first, his practice soon growing to nearly five hundred cases annually, which
yielded an income that would be a godsend to the majority of lawyers in these
days.
Ere long, the mutterings of the coming Revolution drew Jefferson aside into
the service of his country.
At the age of twenty-six (May 11, 1769), he took his seat in the House of
Burgesses, of which Washington was a member. On the threshold of his public
career, he made the resolution which was not once violated during his life,
"never to engage, while in public office, in any kind of enterprise for the
improvement of my fortune, nor to wear any other character than that of a
farmer." Thus, during his career of nearly half a century, he was impartial in
his consideration of questions of public interest.
His first important speech was in favor of the repeal of the law that
compelled a master when he freed his slaves to send them out of the colony. The
measure was overwhelmingly defeated, and its mover denounced as an enemy of his
country.
It was about this time that Jefferson became interested in Mrs. Martha Wayles
Skelton, a childless widow, beautiful and accomplished and a daughter of John
Wayles, a prominent member of the Williamsburg bar. She was under twenty years
of age, when she lost her first husband, rather tall, with luxuriant auburn hair
and an exceedingly graceful manner.
She had many suitors, but showed no haste to lay aside her weeds. The
aspirants indeed were so numerous that she might well hesitate whom to choose,
and more than one was hopeful of winning the prize.
It so happened that one evening, two of the gentlemen called at the same time
at her father's house. They were friends, and were about to pass from the hall
into the drawing-room, when they paused at the sound of music. Some one was
playing a violin with exquisite skill, accompanied by the harpsicord, and a lady
and gentleman were singing.
There was no mistaking the violinist, for there was only one in the
neighborhood capable of so artistic work, while Mrs. Skelton had no superior as
a player upon the harpsicord, the fashionable instrument of those days. Besides,
it was easy to identify the rich, musical voice of Jefferson and the sweet tones
of the young widow.
The gentlemen looked significantly at each other. Their feelings were the
same.
"We are wasting our time," said one; "we may as well go home."
They quietly donned their hats and departed, leaving the ground to him who
had manifestly already pre-empted it.
On New Year's day, 1772, Jefferson and Mrs. Skelton were married and no union
was more happy. His affection was tender and romantic and they were devoted
lovers throughout her life. Her health and wishes were his first consideration,
and he resolved to accept no post or honor that would involve their separation,
while she proved one of the truest wives with which any man was ever blessed of
heaven. The death of his father-in-law doubled Jefferson's estate, a year after
his marriage. His life as a gentleman farmer was an ideal one, and it is said
that as a result of experimentation, Jefferson domesticated nearly every tree
and shrub, native and foreign, that was able to stand the Virginia winters.
Jefferson's commanding ability, however, speedily thrust him into the
stirring incidents that opened the Revolution. In September, 1774, his "Draught
of Instructions" for Virginia's delegation to the congress in Philadelphia was
presented. The convention refused to adopt his radical views, but they were
published in a pamphlet and copies were send to England, where Edmund Burke had
it republished with emendations of his own.
Great Britain viewed the paper as the extreme of insolence and punished the
author by adding his name to the list of proscriptions enrolled in a bill of
attainder.
Jefferson was present as a member of the convention, which met in the parish
church at Richmond, in March, 1775, to consider the course that Virginia should
take in the impending crisis. It was at that meeting that Patrick Henry
electrified his hearers with the thrilling words:
"Gentlemen may cry, 'Peace, peace!' but there is no peace! The war has
actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the North will bring to our ears
the clash of resounding arms! Our brethren are already in the field. Why stand
we here idle? What is it the gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so
dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take, but as for me,
GIVE ME LIBERTY, Or GIVE ME DEATH!"
Within the following month occurred the battle of Lexington.
Washington, Jefferson and Patrick Henry were members of the committee
appointed to arrange a plan for preparing Virginia to act her part in the
struggle. When Washington, June, 20, 1775, received his commission as
commander-in-chief of the American army, Jefferson succeeded to the vacancy thus
created, and the next day took his seat in congress.
A few hours later came the news of the battle of Bunker Hill.
Jefferson was an influential member of the body from the first. John Adams
said of him: "he was so prompt, frank, explicit and decisive upon committees
that he soon seized upon every heart." Virginia promptly re-elected him and the
part he took in draughting the Declaration of Independence is known to every
school boy.
His associates on the committee were Franklin, John Adams, Roger Sherman and
Robert R. Livingston. It was by their request that he prepared the document (see
fac-simile, page 49,) done on the second floor of a small building, on the
corner of Market and Seventh Streets. The house and the little desk, constructed
by Jefferson himself, are carefully preserved.
The paper was warmly debated and revised in congress on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th
of July, 1776. The weather was oppressively hot, and on the last day an
exasperating but providential invasion of the hall by a swarm of flies hurried
the signing of the document. Some days afterward, the committee of which
Jefferson was a member provided as a motto of the new seal, that perfect
legend,—E Pluribus Unum.
The facts connected with the adoption of the Declaration of Independence must
always be of profound interest. The public are inclined to think that our Magna
Charta was accepted and signed with unbounded enthusiasm and that scarcely any
opposition to it appeared, but the contrary was the fact.
While Jefferson was the author of the instrument, John Adams, more than any
one man or half a dozen men brought about its adoption. When the question was
afterward asked him, whether every member of congress cordially approved it, he
replied, "Majorities were constantly against it. For many days the majority
depended on Mr. Hewes of North Carolina. While a member one day was reading
documents to prove that public opinion was in favor of the measure, Mr. Hewes
suddenly started upright, and lifting up both hands to heaven, as if in a
trance, cried out:
'It is done, and I will abide by it.'
I would give more for a perfect painting of the terror and horror of the
faces of the old majority at that moment than for the best piece of Raphael."
Jefferson has given a synopsis of the arguments for and against the adoption
of the Declaration. It will be remembered that the hope of the colonies or new
States, even after the war had continued for a considerable time, was not so
much independence as to extort justice from Great Britain.
Had this been granted, the separation would have been deferred and when it
came, as come it must, probably would have been peaceable. At the same time,
there was a strenuous, aggressive minority who was insistent from the first for
a complete severance of the ties binding us to the mother country.
The debate in congress showed that New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Delaware, Maryland and South Carolina were not ready to take the irrevocable
step, but it was evident that they were fast approaching that mood, and the wise
leaders tarried in order to take them in their company.
In the vote of July 1, the Pennsylvania and South Carolina delegates still
opposed, while those from New York did the same, contrary to their own
convictions but in obedience to home instructions, which later were changed.
The signs of unanimity became unmistakable on the Second, and two days later,
as every one knows, the adoption of the Declaration took place, though it was
not until the Second of August that all the members, excepting John Dickinson
had signed.
Five years passed before the Articles of Confederation were formally adopted
by the states, by which time it had become clear that they must totally fail of
their purpose, for each state decided for itself whether to respond to the
demands of congress. The poison of nullification thus infused into the body
politic at its birth bore baleful fruit in the years that followed.
On six separate occasions, there were overt acts on the part of the States.
The first occurred in 1798, when Virginia and Kentucky passed nullification
resolutions.
The second was the attempt of New England in 1803 to form a northern
confederacy, comprising five New England States, and New York and New Jersey.
The third was Aaron Burr's wild scheme in the Southwest.
The fourth, the resolution of the New England States to withhold cooperation
in the War of 1812.
The fifth, the nullification acts of South Carolina in 1832.
The sixth and last, the effort of eleven states to form the Southern
Confederacy. This brought the burning issue to a head and settled the question
for the ages to come.
It seems incredible in these times that the country submitted for a month to
the intolerable Alien and Sedition acts. Should any congressman propose their
reenactment to-day, he would be looked upon as a crank and be laughed out of
court. They were enacted when Jefferson was Vice President and were the creation
of the brilliant Alexander Hamilton, whose belief was in a monarchy rather than
a republic.
The Sedition act made it a felony punishable with a fine of $5000 and five
years imprisonment for persons to combine in order to impede the operation of
any law of the United States, or to intimidate persons from taking Federal
office, or to commit or advise a riot or insurrection or unlawful assembly.
It declared further that the writing or publishing of any scandalous,
malicious or false statement against the president or either house of congress
should be punishable by a fine of $2000 and imprisonment for two years.
It will be noted that this law precluded all free discussion of an act of
congress, or the conduct of the president.
In other words, it was meant to be the death blow to freedom of speech.
But bad as it was, the Alien act, which congress passed at the same session,
1798, was ten fold worse.
There had been much unrest caused by the intermeddling of foreigners in the
States, and it was now decided that the president might drive out of the country
any alien he chose thus to banish, and to do it without assigning any reason
therefor. It was not necessary even to sue or to bring charges; if an alien
receiving such notice from the president refused to obey, he could be imprisoned
for three years.
President Adams afterward declared that he did not approve of this stern
measure which was the work of Hamilton, and boasted that it was not enforced by
him in a single instance.
Nevertheless, the Sedition act was enforced to a farcical degree.
When President Adams was passing through Newark, N. J., he was saluted by the
firing of cannon. One of the cannoneers, who was strongly opposed to him,
expressed the wish that he might be struck by some of the wadding. For this
remark, he was arrested and compelled to pay a fine of one hundred dollars.
Editor Frothingham printed his belief that Hamilton wished to buy the Aurora
for the purpose of suppressing it. For expressing that opinion he was fined and
imprisoned. Thomas Cooper made the remark that in 1797 President Adams was
"hardly in the infancy of political mistakes," and these mild words cost him
$400 and kept him in prison for six months.
It is hard to believe that the following proceedings took place within the
present hundred years in the United States of America, and yet they did.
In the case against Callender, Judge Chase denounced the accused to the
jurors and forbade the marshals to place any one not a Federalist on the jury.
The lawyers who defended Callender were threatened with corporal punishment.
In Otsego, N. Y., Judge Peck obtained signers to a petition for the repeal of
the obnoxious acts. For such action he was indicted and taken to New York city
for trial.
That was the sacred right of petition with a vengeance.
Matthew Lyon, while canvassing his district in Vermont for re-election to
congress, charged the president in one of his speeches with "unbounded thirst
for ridiculous pomp, foolish adulation and a selfish avarice," certainly mild
expressions compared with what are heard in these times, but because of their
utterance, Mr. Lyon spent four months in jail and paid a fine of $1000.
When he had served out his term and been re-elected, a strong effort was made
to prevent his taking his seat. It failed and in 1840, his fine was returned to
him with interest.
It can well be understood that the passage and enforcement of such iniquitous
measures caused alarm and indignation throughout the country.
Edward Livingston declared that they would "disgrace Gothic barbarism."
Jefferson's soul was stirred with the profoundest indignation. Under his
inspiration, the Virginia assembly adopted resolutions calling on the state to
nullify within its limits the enforcement of the Sedition act. The Alien and
Sedition laws were declared unconstitutional, and the sister States were invited
to unite in resisting them, "in order to maintain unimpaired the authorities,
rights and liberties reserved to the States respectively or to the people."
These views were not only those of Jefferson, but of Patrick Henry, George
Mason and nearly all leading Virginians.
Kentucky, the child of her loins, seconded the action of Virginia, urged
thereto by Jefferson who moulded her resolutions.
The revolt against the measures was so widespread that the Alien act was
repealed in 1800, and the Sedition act in the following year.
Having been essentially Federal measures, they were buried in the same grave
with the Federal party.
Having rendered these invaluable services, Jefferson resigned his seat in
congress, on account of the illness of his wife and the urgent need of his
presence at home. Moreover, he had been elected a member of the legislature of
his State and was anxious to purge its statute books of a number of
objectionable laws.
He had hardly entered upon the work, when he was notified of his appointment
as a joint commissioner with Franklin and Deane as representatives of the United
States in France. After reflection, he declined the appointment, believing his
duty at home was more important. That such was the fact was proven by his
success in securing the repeal of the system of entail, thus allowing all
property in the State to be held in fee simple, and by the abolishment of the
connection between church and state. The latter required years in order to
effect complete success, but it was reached at last.
How forceful were many of the expressions he employed during that contest,
such as: "Compulsion makes hypocrites, not converts;" "Truth stands by itself;
error alone needs the support of government."
Jefferson's committee abolished the frightful penalties of the ancient code;
he set on foot the movement for the improvement of public education; he drew the
bill for the establishment of courts of law in the State, and prescribing their
methods and powers; he destroyed the principle of primogeniture, and brought
about the removal of the capital from Williamsburg to Richmond.
Jefferson succeeded Patrick Henry as Governor of the State, at the opening of
the year 1779. The two years were marked by incessant trial and the severest
labor, for the war had reached Virginia soil and the State was desolated.
More than once the legislature was obliged to flee before the enemy; Gates
was crushed at Camden; Arnold the traitor scourged Richmond with his raiders;
Monticello itself was captured by cavalry, and Jefferson escaped only by a
hair's breadth. His estate was trampled over, his horses stolen, his barns
burned, his crops destroyed and many of his slaves run off.
He declined a third election, and in the autumn of 1782, to his inconsolable
sorrow, his wife died, leaving three daughters, the youngest a babe.
In the following November, he took his seat in congress at Annapolis, and
during that session he proposed and caused the adoption of our present system of
decimal currency.
In May, 1784, he was again elected plenipotentiary to France to assist
Franklin and Adams in negotiating commercial treaties with foreign nations. He
arrived in Paris in July, and in May, succeeding, became sole plenipotentiary to
the king of France for three years from March 10, 1785.
Jefferson's residence in France produced a profound impression upon him and
had much to do in crystallizing his ideas of the true form of government.
That country was groveling under the heel of one of the most hideous systems
that the baseness of man ever conceived. Who has not read of the nobleman who,
when his coachman ran over a child and crushed out its life, was only concerned
lest its blood should soil his carriage, or of the poor peasants who were
compelled to beat the bogs all night long, to prevent the frogs from croaking
and thereby disturbing the slumber of their lordly masters? The condition of no
people could be more horrible, than that of the lower classes in France previous
to the uprising, with its excesses that horrified the world.
Jefferson enjoyed the music, the art and the culture of the gay capital, but
could never shake off the oppression caused by the misery of the people.
"They are ground to powder," he said, "by the vices of the form of government
which is one of wolves over sheep, or kites over pigeons."
He took many journeys through the country and made it a practice to enter the
houses of the peasants and talk with them upon their affairs and manner of
living. He often did this, using his eyes at the same time with the utmost
assiduity. All that he learned deepened the sad impression he had formed, and he
saw with unerring prevision the appalling retribution that was at hand.
But Jefferson was not the officer to forget or neglect his duties to his own
government, during the five years spent in France.
Algiers, one of the pestilent Barbary States, held a number of American
captives which she refused to release except upon the payment of a large ransom.
It had been the custom for years for the powerful Christian nations to pay those
savages to let their ships alone, because it was cheaper to do so than to
maintain a fleet to fight them. Jefferson strove to bring about a union of
several nations with his own, for the purpose of pounding some sense into the
heads of the barbarians and compelling them to behave themselves.
One reason why he did not succeed was because our own country had no navy
with which to perform her part in the compact.
France, with that idiotic blindness which ruled her in those fearful days,
maintained a protective system which prevented America from sending cheap food
to starving people, nor was Jefferson able to effect more than a slight change
in the pernicious law. One thing done by him made him popular with the masses.
His "Notes on Virginia" was published both in French and English. Like
everything that emanated from his master hand, it was well conceived and full of
information. In addition, it glowed with republican sentiment and delighted the
people. He was in Paris when his State legislature enacted the act for which he
had so strenuously worked, establishing the freedom of religion. He had numerous
copies of it printed in French and distributed. It struck another popular chord
and received the ardent praise of the advanced Liberals.
Jefferson was too deeply interested in educational work to forget it among
any surroundings. All new discoveries, inventions and scientific books were
brought to the knowledge of the colleges in the United States, and he collected
a vast quantity of seeds, roots and nuts for transplanting in American soil.
It need hardly be said that his loved Monticello was not forgotten, and, as
stated elsewhere, he grew about everything of that nature that would stand the
rigor of the Virginia winters. No office or honor could take away Jefferson's
pride as a cultivator of the soil.
Returning to Virginia on leave of absence, in the autumn of 1789, he was
welcomed with official honors and the cordial respect of his fellow citizens. On
the same day he learned of his appointment by Washington as his Secretary of
State.
He would have preferred to return to his former post, but yielded to the
wishes of the first president, and, arriving in New York in March, 1790, entered
at once upon the duties of his office.
In the cabinet Jefferson immediately collided with the brilliant Alexander
Hamilton, Secretary of the Treasury.
The two could no more agree than oil and water.
Jefferson was an intense republican-democrat, and was shocked and disgusted
to find himself in an atmosphere of distrust of a republican system of
government, with an unmistakable leaning toward monarchical methods. This
feeling prevailed not only in society, but showed itself among the political
leaders.
Jefferson's political creed may be summed up in his own words:
"The will of the majority is the natural law of every society and the only
sure guardian of the rights of man; though this may err, yet its errors are
honest, solitary and short-lived. We are safe with that, even in its deviations,
for it soon returns again to the right way."
Hamilton believed in a strong, centralized government, and on nearly every
measure that came before the cabinet, these intellectual giants wrangled. Their
quarrels were so sharp that Washington was often distressed. He respected both
too deeply to be willing to lose either, but it required all his tact and
mastering influence to hold them in check. Each found the other so intolerable,
that he wished to resign that he might be freed from meeting him.
Hamilton abhorred the French revolution, with its terrifying excesses, and
Jefferson declared that no horror equalled that of France's old system of
government.
Finally Jefferson could stand it no longer and withdrew from the cabinet
January 1, 1794.
An equally potent cause for his resignation was the meagreness of his salary
of $3500. It was wholly insufficient and his estate was going to ruin. He
yearned to return to his beloved pursuit, that of a farmer.
The request by Washington to act as special envoy to Spain did not tempt him,
but he allowed his name to be put forward as a candidate for the presidency in
1796. John Adams received 71 votes and Jefferson 68, which in accordance with
the law at that time made him vice-president.
President Adams ignored him in all political matters, and Jefferson found the
chair of presiding officer of the senate congenial. He presided with dignity and
great acceptability, and his "Manual of Parliamentary Practice" is still the
accepted authority in nearly all of our deliberative bodies.
The presidential election of 1800 will always retain its place among the most
memorable in our history.
The Federalists had controlled the national government for twelve years, or
ever since its organization, and they were determined to prevent the elevation
of Jefferson, the founder of the new Republican party. The Federal nominees were
John Adams for president and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney for vice-president,
while the Republican vote was divided between Jefferson and Aaron Burr.
A favorite warning on the part of those who see their ideas threatened with
overthrow is that our country is "trembling on the verge of revolution." How
many times in the past twenty-five, ten and five years have ranting men and
women proclaimed from the housetops that we were "on the verge of revolution?"
According to these wild pessimists the revolution is always at hand, but somehow
or other it fails to arrive. The probabilities are that it has been permanently
side-tracked.
During the campaign of 1800, Hamilton sounded the trumpet of alarm, when he
declared in response to a toast:
"If Mr. Pinckney is not elected, a revolution will be the consequence, and
within four years I will lose my head or be the leader of a triumphant army."
The Federalist clergy joined in denouncing Jefferson on the ground that he
was an atheist. The Federalists said what they chose, but when the Republicans
grew too careless they were fined and imprisoned under the Sedition law.
The exciting canvas established one fact: there was no man in the United
States so devotedly loved and so fiercely hated as Thomas Jefferson. New York
had twelve electoral votes, and because of the Alien and Sedition laws she
withheld them from Adams and cast them upon the Republican side.
It may not be generally known that it was because of this fact that New York
gained its name of the "Empire State."
The presidential vote was: Jefferson, 73; Burr, 73; John Adams, 65; C. C.
Pinckney, 64; Jay, 1. There being a tie between the leading candidates, the
election was thrown into the House of Representatives, which assembled on the
11th of February, 1801, to make choice between Burr and Jefferson.
It is to the credit of Hamilton that, knowing the debased character of Burr,
he used his utmost influence against him.
A great snow storm descended upon the little town of Washington and the
excitement became intense. On the first ballot, eight States voted for Jefferson
and six for Burr, while Maryland and Vermont were equally divided. All the
Federalists voted for Burr with the single exception of Huger of South Carolina,
not because of any love for Burr, but because he did not hate him as much as he
did Jefferson.
Mr. Nicholson of Maryland was too ill to leave his bed. Without his vote, his
State would have been given to Burr, but with it, the result in Maryland would
be a tie.
It was a time when illness had to give way to the stern necessity of the
case, and the invalid was wrapped up and brought on his bed through the driving
snow storm and placed in one of the committee rooms of the house, with his wife
at his side, administering medicines and stimulants night and day. On each vote
the ballot box was brought to the bed side and his feeble hand deposited the
powerful bit of paper.
Day after day, the balloting went on until thirty-five ballots had been cast.
By that time, it was clear that no break could be made in the Jefferson
columns and it was impossible to elect Burr. When the thirty-sixth ballot was
cast, the Federalists of Maryland, Delaware and South Carolina threw blanks and
the Federalists of Vermont stayed away, leaving their Republican brothers to
vote those States for Jefferson. By this slender chance did the republic escape
a calamity, and secure the election of Jefferson for president with Burr for
vice-president.
The inauguration of the third president was made a national holiday
throughout the country. The church bells were rung, the military paraded, joyous
orations were delivered, and many of the newspapers printed in full the
Declaration of Independence.
The closeness of the election resulted in a change in the electoral law by
which the president and vice-president must of necessity belong to the same
political party.
Jefferson had every reason to feel proud of his triumph, but one of the
finest traits of his character was his magnanimity.
The irascible Adams made an exhibition of himself on the 4th of March, when
in a fit of rage, he rose before day-light and set out in his coach for
Massachusetts, refusing to wait and take part in the inauguration of his
successor. With the mellowness of growing years, he realized the silliness of
the act, and he and Jefferson became fully reconciled and kept up an
affectionate correspondence to the end of their lives.
Jefferson did all he could to soothe the violent party feeling that had been
roused during the election. This spirit ran like a golden thread through his
first excellently conceived inaugural. He reminded his fellow citizens that
while they differed in opinion, there was no difference in principle, and put
forth the following happy thought:
"We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists. If there be any among us,
who would wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican form, let them
stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be
tolerated where reason is left free to combat it."
There can be little doubt that he had Hamilton in mind when he answered, as
follows, in his own forceful way the radical views of that gifted statesman.
"Some honest men fear that a republican government cannot be strong, that
this government is not strong enough. I believe this, on the contrary, is the
strongest government on earth. I believe it is the only one where every man, at
the call of the laws, would fly to the standard of the law, and would meet
invasions of the public order as his own personal concern."
It was characteristic of Jefferson's nobility that one of his first efforts
was to undo, so far as he could, the mischief effected by the detested Sedition
law. Every man who was in durance because of its operation was pardoned, and he
looked upon the law as "a nullity as obsolete and palpable, as if congress had
ordered us to fall down and worship a golden image."
He addressed friendly and affectionate letters to Kosciusko and others, and
invited them to be his guests at the White House. Samuel Adams of Massachusetts
had been shamefully abused during the canvas, but he felt fully compensated by
the touching letter from the president. Thomas Paine was suffering almost the
pangs of starvation in Paris, and Jefferson paid his passage home. Everywhere
that it was possible for Jefferson to extend the helping hand he did so with a
delicacy and a tact, that won him multitudes of friends and stamped him as one
of nature's noblemen.
The new president selected an able cabinet, consisting of James Madison,
Secretary of State; Albert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury; Henry Dearborn,
Secretary of War; Robert Smith, Secretary of the Navy; Gideon Granger,
Postmaster-general; Levi Lincoln, Attorney General. This household proved a
veritable "happy family," all working together in harmony throughout the two
terms, and Jefferson declared that if he had his work to do over again, he would
select the same advisers without exception.
Although the policy, "to the victors belong the spoils," had not been
formulated at that time, its spirit quickened the body politic. Jefferson's
supporters expected him to turn out a part at least of the Federalists, who held
nearly all the offices, but he refused, on the principle that a competent and
honest office holder should not be removed because of his political opinions.
When he, therefore, made a removal, it was as a rule, for other and sufficient
reasons.
But he did not hesitate to show his dislike of the ceremony that prevailed
around him. He stopped the weekly levee at the White House, and the system of
precedence in force at the present time; also the appointment of fast and
thanksgiving days. He dressed with severe simplicity and would not permit any
attention to be paid him as president which would be refused him as a private
citizen. In some respects, it must be conceded that this remarkable man carried
his views to an extreme point.
The story, however, that he rode his horse alone to the capitol, and, tying
him to the fence, entered the building, unattended, lacks confirmation.
Jefferson was re-elected in 1804, by a vote of 162 to 14 for Pinckney, who
carried only two States out of the seventeen.
The administrations of Jefferson were marked not only by many important
national events, but were accompanied by great changes in the people themselves.
Before and for some years after the Revolution, the majority were content to
leave the task of thinking, speaking and acting to the representatives, first of
the crown and then to their influential neighbors. The property qualification
abridged the right to vote, but the active, hustling nature of the Americans now
began to assert itself. The universal custom of wearing wigs and queues was
given up and men cut their own hair short and insisted that every free man
should have the right to vote.
Jefferson was the founder and head of the new order of things, and of the
republican party, soon to take the name of democratic, which controlled all the
country with the exception of New England.
Our commerce increased enormously, for the leading nations of Europe were
warring with one another; money came in fast and most of the national debt was
paid.
Louisiana with an area exceeding all the rest of the United States, was
bought from France in 1803, for $15,000,000, and from the territory were
afterward carved the states of Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas,
Nebraska, the Dakotas, Montana, Oklahoma, the Indian Territory and most of the
states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Colorado and Wyoming.
The upper Missouri River and the Columbia River country to the Pacific Ocean
were explored in 1804-6, by Lewis and Clarke, the first party of white men to
cross the continent north of Mexico. Ohio was admitted to the Union in 1802.
Fulton's steamboat, the Clermont made her maiden trip from New York to Albany in
1807. The first boatload of anthracite coal was shipped to Philadelphia, and it
was a long time before the people knew what to do with it.
The Tripolitan Pirates were snuffed out (1801-1805). The blight of the
Embargo Act settled upon our commerce in 1807, in which year the opening gun of
the War of 1812 was fired when the Leopard outraged the Chesapeake.
The Embargo Act was a grievous mistake of Jefferson, though its purpose was
commendable. Under the plea of securing our ships against capture, its real
object was to deprive England and France of the commodities which could be
secured only in the United States. This measure might have been endurable for an
agricultural people, but it could not be borne by a commercial and manufacturing
one, like New England, whose goods must find their market abroad. Under the
Embargo Act, the New England ships were rotting and crumbling to pieces at her
wharves. It was not long before she became restless. The measure was first
endorsed by the Massachusetts legislature, but the next session denounced it.
Early in 1809, congress passed an act allowing the use of the army and navy
to enforce the embargo and make seizures.
The Boston papers printed the act in mourning and, meetings were called to
memorialize the legislature. That body took strong ground, justifying the course
of Great Britain, demanding of congress that it should repeal the embargo and
declare war against France. Moreover, the enforcement act was declared "not
legally binding," and resistance to it was urged.
This was as clear a case of nullification as that of South Carolina in 1832.
Connecticut was as hot-headed as Massachusetts.
John Quincy Adams has stated that at that time the "Essex Junto" agreed upon
a New England convention to consider the expediency of secession. Adams
denounced the plotters so violently that the Massachusetts legislature censured
him by vote, upon which he resigned his seat in the United States senate.
The Embargo Act was passed by congress, December 22, 1807, at the instance of
Jefferson, and repealed February 28, 1809, being succeeded by the
Non-Intercourse Act, which forbade French and British vessels to enter American
ports. It was mainly due to Jefferson's consummate tact that war with Great
Britain was averted after the Leopard and Chesapeake affair, and he always
maintained that had his views been honestly carried out by the entire nation, we
should have obtained all we afterward fought for, without the firing of a
hostile gun.
When on March 4, 1809, Jefferson withdrew forever from public life, he was in
danger of being arrested in Washington for debt. He was in great distress, but a
Richmond bank helped him for a time with a loan. He returned to Monticello,
where he lived with his only surviving daughter Martha, her husband and numerous
children, and with the children of his daughter Maria, who had died in 1804.
He devoted hard labor and many years to the perfection of the common school
system in Virginia, and was so pleased with his establishment of the college at
Charlottesville, out of which grew the University of Virginia, that he had
engraved on his tombstone, "Father of the University of Virginia," and was
prouder of the fact than of being the author of the Declaration of Independence.
Meanwhile, his lavish hospitality carried him lower and lower into poverty.
There was a continual procession of curious visitors to Monticello, and old
women poked their umbrellas through the window panes to get a better view of the
grand old man. Congress in 1814, paid him $23,000 for his library which was not
half its value. Some time afterward a neighbor obtained his name as security on
a note for $20,000 and left him to pay it all.
In the last year of his life, when almost on the verge of want, $16,500 was
sent to him as a present from friends in New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore,
more than one-half being raised by Mayor Hone of New York. Jefferson was moved
to tears, and in expressing his gratitude said, he was thankful that not a penny
had been wrung from taxpayers.
In the serene sunset of life, the "Sage of Monticello" peacefully passed away
on the afternoon of July 4, 1826, and a few hours later, John Adams, at his home
in Quincy, Mass., breathed his last. A reverent hush fell upon the country, at
the thought of these two great men, one the author of the Declaration of
Independence and the other the man who brought about its adoption, dying on the
fiftieth anniversary of its signing, and many saw a sacred significance in the
fact.
Horace Greeley in referring to the co-incidence, said there was as much
probability of a bushel of type flung into the street arranging themselves so as
to print the Declaration of Independence, as there was of Jefferson and Adams
expiring on the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of that instrument; and yet
one alternative of the contingency happened and the other never can happen.
Jefferson's liberal views have caused him to be charged with infidelity.
He profoundly respected the moral character of Christ, but did not believe in
divine redemption through Christ's work. His dearest aim was to bring down the
aristocracy and elevate the masses.
He regarded slavery as a great moral and political evil, and in referring to
it said: "I tremble for my country when I remember that God is just."
No more humane slave owner ever lived, and his servants regarded him with
almost idolatrous affection, while his love of justice, his hospitality, his
fairness to all and his winning personality disarmed enmity and gave him many of
his truest and warmest friends from among his political opponents.
A peculiar fact connected with Jefferson is the difference among his
portraits. This is due to the varying periods at which they were made. As we
have stated, he was raw-boned, freckled and ungainly in his youth, but showed a
marked improvement in middle life. When he became old, many esteemed him good
looking, though it can hardly be claimed that he was handsome.
When Jefferson was eighty years old, Daniel Webster wrote the following
description of the venerable "Sage of Monticello:"
"Never in my life did I see his countenance distorted by a single bad passion
or unworthy feeling. I have seen the expression of suffering, bodily and mental,
of grief, pain, sadness, disagreeable surprise and displeasure, but never of
anger, impatience, peevishness, discontent, to say nothing of worse or more
ignoble emotions. To the contrary, it was impossible to look on his face without
being struck with the benevolent, intelligent, cheerful and placid expression.
It was at once intellectual, good, kind and pleasant, whilst his tall, spare
figure spoke of health, activity and that helpfulness, that power and will,
'never to trouble another for what he could do himself,' which marked his
character."
This sketch may well be closed with Jefferson's own words regarding life and
happiness.
"Perfect happiness, I believe, was never intended by the Deity to be the lot
of one of his creatures in this world; but that He has very much put it in our
power the nearness of our approach to it, is what I have steadfastly believed.
"The most fortunate of us, in our journey through life, frequently meet with
calamities and misfortunes, which may greatly afflict us; and to fortify our
minds against the attacks of these calamities and misfortunes should be one of
the principal studies and endeavors of our lives.
"The only method of doing this is to assume a perfect resignation to the
Divine will, to consider that whatever does happen must happen, and that by our
uneasiness we cannot prevent the blow before it does fall, but we may add to its
force after it has fallen.
"These considerations, and others such as these, may enable us in some
measure to surmount the difficulties thrown in our way, to bear up with a
tolerable degree of patience under this burden of life, and to proceed with a
pious and unshaken resignation till we arrive at our journey's end, when we may
deliver up our trust into the hands of Him who gave it, and receive such reward
as to Him shall seem proportionate to our merits."
|