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Thomas Jefferson

Essay by   •  February 3, 2011  •  Essay  •  632 Words (3 Pages)  •  1,087 Views

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Although Thomas Jefferson publicly and privately expressed his disagreement with the practice of slavery, how he really felt is open to debate. Theoretically, Thomas Jefferson was open to the abolishment of slavery, yet through his actions he communicated the exact opposite. Dumas Malone and William Cohen express this discrepancy extensively.

Dumas Malone emphasizes the contradiction that Jefferson observed in human nature and in his native society. Thomas Jefferson was one of the first people to propose a plan on emancipation. He devised this plan while revising the Virginia laws during the American Revolution. His plan called for the freeing of all slaves born after a specific date. Thomas Jefferson did not believe that blacks and whites would be able to coexist because of deeply-rooted racist beliefs. Because of this belief Jefferson followed a policy of non-involvement in both local and state affairs during his term as president. Jefferson knew that his intervention might do more harm than good and knew that there was no hope for peaceful emancipation in any southern state during his lifetime. Since society used slavery as a crux, Jefferson knew that public support for any plan, no matter how rational or feasible would be hard to gain.

Despite all of Jefferson's private letters that Malone details, William Cohen paints a different portrait of Jefferson through his actions. As Cohen reports, Thomas Jefferson had no real desire to rid the nation of slavery, after all it was the very infrastructure of society both for the South and for Thomas Jefferson himself. This is especially apparent in the fact that Jefferson was unwilling to manumit his slaves and only emancipated two during his lifetime and another seven in his will. Of the seven, most were directly ascended from his father-in-law. It is apparent that Jefferson's unwillingness to liberate his slaves stemmed from his reluctance to alter his standard of living. In comparison to his slaveholding counterparts, Jefferson did indeed treat his slaves favorably. He tried to unite families often buying or selling a spouse so that a family could be rekindled. However, Jefferson only did such a practice when it seemed profitable to him. One such example was in 1792 when he offered to sell a slave and her children to his brother who owned her husband. It is said that the slave woman had been asking to be reunited with her husband for sometime, but she had to await

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