Chapter 6: A. Books and monographs, 1985.
Reference: 234.
Name: Bedini,
, Silvio A.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson and American Vertebrate Paleontology
.
City: Virginia Division of
Mineral Resources Publication 61. Charlottesville:
Publisher:
Commonwealth of
Virginia,
Date:
1985.
Pages: [vi], 26.
Notes: If TJ was not the first American to collect and study vertebrate
paleontological remains,
he was more than any
other American responsible for popularizing the subject and for preserving
many fossil
specimens. His interest
developed as he began preparing the manuscript of
Notes on the State of Virginia , and over the next three
decades he
expended considerable
time, effort, and financial expense in pursuing new finds. An authoritative
account, describing
his interest in the finds
at Big Bone Lick and elsewhere, the megalonyx, and his support of the
American Philosophical
Society's collection.
Illustrated.
Reference: 235.
Name: Crackel,
, Theodore Joseph.
Title: "Mr. Jefferson's Army: Political Reform of the Military
Establishment,
1801-1809."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Rutgers University,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 306.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 47
Date: (1986) ,
Pages: 288-A.
Notes: Argues that TJ did not ignore the regular military establishment
but undertook a political
reform of it in order
to insure its loyalty to the new regime, for which he had ample reason for
concern. Recognizing
the necessity for regular
forces, he aimed to Republicanize the army by appointing Republican
officers at every
opportunity, by winning over
moderate Federalists, and ultimately by expanding the force and adding new
Republican officers.
The creation of a
military academy was a means to train poorly prepared but politically
correct young men, and the
1808 expansion of
the army allowed more Republicans to be appointed to senior positions.
Understanding TJ's
actions as an effort to
Republicanize the army resolves the paradoxes generated by earlier views
that focused on an
anti-army bias. Published
in 1987 and noted below.
Reference: 236.
Name: Martin,
, Judith.
Publication: Common Courtesy: In Which Miss Manners Solves the
Problem That Baffled Mr.
Jefferson .
City: New York:
Publisher:
Atheneum,
Date:
1985.
Pages:
x, 70.
Notes: TJ's
"Pell Mell Etiquette" instituted at the White House during his presidency
"succeeded chiefly in giving
everyone equal offense," although it was a pioneering attempt to devise a
code of manners for a
democratic, egalitarian
society. Despite the author's sometimes brittle wit, this is a thoughtful
attempt to work through
the principles of a
Jeffersonian, democratic etiquette defining a social realm in which "all
citizens are ... accorded
equal dignity."
Reference: 237.
Name: McLean,
, Dabney N.
Publication: Henry Soane, Progenitor of Thomas Jefferson
.
City: [Staunton,
VA?]:
Publisher:
D. N. McLean,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 36.
Notes: Genealogical study of one of TJ's great great grandfathers and
his descendants.
Reference: 238.
Name: Ong,
, Bruce Nelson.
Title: "Constitutionalism and Political Change: James Madison, Thomas
Jefferson, and
Progressive
Reinterpretations."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. University of Virginia,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 436.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 47
Date: (1986) ,
Pages: 645-A.
Notes: Contends that Madison and TJ wanted to check "Aristotlean
sedition," the conscious
attempt to change a
regime's principles or constitution, by providing a stronger basis for the
rule of law and restraints
on power. They
rejected the British variety of constitutionalism because they did not want
the politics of those in
office at any given
moment to overwhelm fundamental law. In the Progressive Era J. Allen
Smith, Herbert Croly,
Walter E. Weyl, and
Woodrow Wilson attempted to loosen these restrictions in order to attempt
major reforms in
American law and society.
Consequently an uneasy tension exists between that part of our tradition
which favors
constitutional restraints on power
and that which opposes them. A political science dissertation which seems
to overlook some
traditional historical
questions--whatever happened to the Federalists?
Reference: 239.
Name: Phelan,
, Joseph Richard.
Title: "Jefferson's Declaration of Independence and the Foundations of
American
Republicanism."
Publication: Ph.D.
dissertation. University of Toronto,
Date: 1985.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 47
Date: (1986),
Pages: 1044-A.
Notes: Notes the tendency of recent scholarship to deny the significance
of the Declaration as
either the expression of
the dominant political thought of the Revolution or of the principles upon
which American
democracy rests. Argues
against this that the Declaration embodies the republican spirit of the
Revolution which TJ and
the other founders held
to be essential to healthy political life and viable self-government. Explores
the extent to which
TJ's statesmanship was
concerned with preserving this spirit from decay or oblivion after the
Revolution.
Reference: 240.
Name: Pole,
, J. R.
Publication: Equality, Status, and Power in Thomas Jefferson's
Virginia .
City: Williamsburg:
Publisher: Colonial Williamsburg Foundation,
Date:
1985.
Pages: 40.
Notes: Illuminates TJ's invocation of equality in the Declaration by
looking at the social and
historical context of this concept in Virginia. Shows a Virginia with
"a divided heritage;" if Virginians were caught up in slavery and deference
politics,
they also had "space
enough for free individuals to feel their own strength." Nothing new, but
well-grounded in up to
date scholarship and
intended for secondary and lower-level undergraduates.
Reference: 241.
Name: Santrey,
, Lawrence.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson .
City: Mahwah
NJ:
Publisher: Troll
Associates,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 30.
Notes: Juvenile. Illustrations by Allan Eitzer. A hero for primary grade
readers.
B. Essays and book chapters.
Reference: 242.
Name: Baum,
, Rosalie Murphy.
Title: "The Burden of Myth: The Role of the Farmer in American
Literature."
Publication: North Dakota Quarterly .
Volume: 53
Date: (Fall, 1985) .
Pages: 4-24.
Notes: Points to disparity between myths about idyllic farmers and the
actualities of farm life.
Discusses TJ as a
formulator of the rural ideal and exposes some inherent contradictions in his
most famous
statements about farmers (in
Notes and the 1785 letter to John Jay). They reflect a distrust
of human relationships and
yet commit farmers
to a world of trade and commerce in order to obtain manufactured goods;
his implicit praise for
small landowners is
belied by the size of his own establishment, and his work as an
experimental farmer confirms his
recognition of the need
for cooperation in agricultural societies. Also considers his changing views
on agriculture and
manufactures as well
as the considerable array of predecessors who contributed to the rural myth
of America.
Reference: 243.
Name: Breitwieser,
, Mitchell Robert.
Title: "Jefferson's Prospect."
Publication: Prospects
Volume: 10
Date: (1985) .
Pages: 315-52.
Notes: Argues against those who claim to discover a unity between
theory and experience in TJ
as well as against
interpreters who see simply contradiction; claims instead that TJ's writing,
particularly in
Notes , demonstrates an "antithetical unity" in which theory
and
experience "are bound
together in a dynamic, internally contradictory whole, in which the function
of experience is its
interruption and
resistance of thought's tendency toward complacent self-enclosure and
self-consistency." By
employing a "diverse
cognitive repertoire" of sometimes discrepant understandings, TJ is
simultaneously able to
discover sufficient categories
for the object of his attention even as he can suggest that the object retains
a mysteriousness, a
plurality of possibilities
beyond the limits of any single category. He also, as the treatment of
Native Americans and
blacks reveals, voices
historically particular attitudes even as he suspects his attitudes are
historically determined, and
parallel to this
movement of self-correction is his vision of a republic defined not by an
homogeneous vision of
society but by the free
argument of endlessly recurring differences. A rich and stimulating essay.
Reference: 244.
Name: Brown,
, Gwen O.
Title: "Transformation of Identity in Presidential Inauguration
Addresses."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. University of Maryland,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 174.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 47
Date: (1986) ,
Pages: 1114-A.
Notes: Uses Kenneth Burke's rhetorical theory to examine the first
inaugural speeches by
Washington, TJ, Lincoln,
Franklin Roosevelt, and Kennedy. Demonstrates the presence of image
patterns of time, space,
violence, and
transcendence. Concludes that the inaugural speeches communicate
transformation of identity
by defining the people,
defining the relationship between them and the President, and by defining
their joint purpose.
Hardly surprising.
Reference: 245.
Name: Carnahan,
, Frances.
Title: "Dining with Thomas Jefferson."
Publication: Early American Life .
Volume: 16
Date: (June, 1985) . 22-27.
Notes: TJ as host. The usual treatment.
Reference: 246.
Name: Creese,
, Walter L.
Title: "Jefferson's Charlottesville"
in
Publication: The Crowning of the American Landscape: Eight Great
Spaces and Their
Buildings .
City: Princeton:
Publisher: Princeton University Press,
Date:
1985.
Pages: 9-45.
Notes: Discusses the University of Virginia buildings and Monticello
as examples of TJ's desire
to create national
building models for the American landscape. A richly suggestive essay
which considers TJ's
ability to adapt European
traditions to a specific American environment and which argues that his
buildings take on a more
convincing unity when
viewed as parts of larger ensembles within an uncommitted landscape. Sees
the precedents for
the University as "a
brilliant body of French and English architecture," including chateaux,
hospitals, and prisons,
and not one building
alone. Discusses siting, proportion, and detailing of both achievements as
well as the historical
relationships between
earlier and later American approaches to inhabiting landscapes.
Reference: 247.
Name: Dorman,
, Robert L.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Letter to the Indians: Fate of a Frontier
Artifact."
Publication: Chronicles of Oklahoma
Volume: 63
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 341-59.
Notes: Conventional discussion of TJ's Indian policies and of the
checkered history of a letter of
April 11, 1806 given
to a delegation of Osages, Missouris, Kansas, Otoes, Pawnees, Iowas,
Sioux, Potawattomies,
Foxes, and Sacs.
Reference: 248.
Name: Ericson,
, Edward L.
Title: "Freethinker in the White House: Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: The Free Mind Through the Ages .
City: New
York:
Publisher:
Ungar,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 105-20.
Notes: Portrays TJ as a rationalist, a rejector of Christianity's claims
to supernatural origins, and
a philosophical
materialist.
Reference: 249.
Name: Fitzpatrick,
, James K.
Title: "Hamilton v. Jefferson"
in
Publication: God, Country, and the Supreme Court
.
City: Chicago:
Publisher:
Regnery,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 21-44.
Notes: Out of concern that America is becoming increasingly
"de-Christianized" by liberal,
secularist intellectuals, the
"ACLU mentality," etc. argues that the First Amendment was really
intended to promote
freedom
for religion. In this context, however, does not confront TJ's
ideas about religious
freedom and the wall of
separation, but instead tries to rescue him for the conservative position as
one determined to
safeguard society against
radical change. Unlike Hamilton, however, he was unwilling to admit the
necessity for moral
leadership and example
of an elite. Relies primarily on secondary sources.
Reference: 250.
Name: Foshee,
, Andrew.
W.
Title: "Jeffersonian Political Economy and the Classical Tradition:
Jefferson, Taylor, and the
Agrarian
Republic."
Publication: History of Political Economy
Volume: 17
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 523-50.
Notes: Argues that examination of TJ's and John Taylor's writings
reveal essentially the same
model of agrarian
political economy which is found in Greek and Roman literature. Claims
neither abandoned his
classical republican
heritage, but TJ ultimately saw what Taylor would not: Madison's version
of political economy
with more room for
domestic commerce and manufactures would be necessary to secure the
republic. Agrees with
Drew McCoy's analysis,
described as an attempt to reconcile the positions of Joyce Appleby and
J.G.A. Pocock. Claims
for the essentiality of
the classical model are not well considered and are supported rather more
by appeals to the
authority of other scholars
of a conservative bent than by thoughtful argument.
Reference: 251.
Name: French,
, Hannah D.
Title: "Notes on American Bookbindings: The March-Milligan
Connection, or, Second
Thoughts about John March
as a Binder for Thomas Jefferson."
Publication: Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society
Volume: 95
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 161-63.
Notes: Sowerby's identification of over 150 books bound for TJ by
John March between 1801
and 1807 is at least
partly erroneous. March died June 2, 1804, and John Milligan, who did a
great deal of binding
work for TJ, was the
administrator of his estate and seems likely to have used March's tools.
Reference: 252.
Name: Fretz,
, T.
A., R.T. Johnson, and R.E. Lyons.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: America's First Horticulturalist?"
Publication: HortScience
Volume: 20
Date: (June, 1985) ,
Pages: 344-46.
Notes: The answer is yes; surveys TJ's gardening and farm interests,
but adds nothing new.
Reference: 253.
Name: Goering,
, Wynn.
Title: "`Lovers of Peace and Order'."
Publication: Mennonite Life
Volume: 40
Date: (September, 1985) ,
Pages: 11-15.
Notes: Claims that in the years after 1783 "pacifism emerged as a
prime civic virtue," a
recognition that "the greatest
threat to liberty was neither tyranny nor anarchy, but war itself." Cites TJ,
Benjamin Rush, Joel
Barlow, and others.
Not much on TJ.
Reference: 254.
Name: Guzzetta,
, Charles.
Title: "Jefferson, Rumford, and the Problem of Poverty."
Publication: Midwest Quarterly ,
Volume: 26
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 343-56.
Notes: Draws a strong contrast between TJ and Benjamin Thompson,
Count Rumford, who
shared interests in science
but were seemingly opposed on everything else. They took opposite
approaches to the issue of
poverty: TJ sought to
eliminate by means of free land and free education in order to assure
independence and a
classless society, but Rumford
aimed to provide housing, food and work for the urban poor, relieving
poverty in order to
preserve an aristocratic
society. Ironically, TJ is the hero of the common man while Rumford is
remembered only as the
inventor of soup
kitchens, although the latter's ideas worked and TJ's didn't. Because this
essay does not consider
the different situations
posed by Munich and America in the 1790's, the comparison is of limited
value and its
conclusions seem a bit simplistic,
especially in its reliance upon cliches of Jefferson scholarship.
Reference: 255.
Name: Hatch,
, Peter.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Gardens."
Publication: Herb Society of America News .
Date: (Winter, 1985) .
Notes: Not seen. Presumably a reprinting of similarly titled article by
this author, first printed
in 1983 (# 143 above).
Reference: 256.
Name: Hellenbrand,
, Harold.
Title: "Roads to Happiness: Rhetorical and Philosophical Design in
Jefferson's
Publication: Notes on the State of Virginia ."
Publication: Early American Literature
Volume: 20
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 3-23.
Notes: Calls for awareness of how TJ reconciled inheritance of
rhetorical and philosophical
conventions with his own
beliefs and stylistic habits, particularly his conception of nature as stable
and quiescent beneath a
dynamic appearance.
His insistence that stable principles untainted by history were discernible
within history itself
motivated the rhetorical
designs of
Notes as well as his major political pronouncements, but at
the same time his thought
about nature and humane
nature was profoundly dualistic in its fears of turbulence and longing for
harmony. He feared
that moral, financial, and
even sexual economies would capitalize or devalue as one, and, claims the
author, a sexual
anxiety underlay his worries
about Americans' corruptions by an "unnatural" commercial process. He
tended to see blacks
and women as threats to
a pastoral and heterogenous world attuned to the underlying principles of
nature. Author
qualifies this anxious,
authoritarian TJ by pointing to the "mixed intentions" of
Notes .
Reference: 257.
Name: Hellenbrand,
, Harold.
Title: "Not `to Destroy But to Fulfill': Jefferson, Indians, and
Republican Dispensation."
Publication: Eighteenth-Century Studies
Volume: 18
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 523-49.
Notes: Contends that TJ mythologized Indian culture by appropriating
the scheme of old and
new dispensations from
its Christian prophetical and typological context and adapting it to both
connect and distinguish
tribal kinship groups
under natural law from societies under civil and republican rule. He saw the
Indians as natural
men who "were to be
yeomanized, republicanized, and gathered in the garden of the American
West in preparation for
the global concord that
was Jefferson's political and economic ideal." Sees TJ as projecting his own
anxieties about
white Virginia culture onto
the Indians and claims that his paternalistic and pedagogical rhetoric masks
a deep ambivalence
about the Indians,
particularly after the Louisiana Purchase. While these are not totally novel
opinions, this essay is
shrewd and insightful
in detail.
Reference: 258.
Name: Horrocks,
, Thomas.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Great Claw."
Publication: Virginia Cavalcade
Volume: 35
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 70-79.
Notes: Detailed account of TJ's receipt of fossil bones from the
supposed "megalonyx" and his
subsequent report to
the American Philosophical Society. He revised the report "only hours
before he presented it"
because he had read
Georges Cuvier's essay on the megatherium, recently unearthed in
Paraguay. His hasty
speculations about a great lion
collapsed when he read Jose Garriga's full account of the megatherium, a
sort of giant ground
sloth, but he hung on to
frontier folklore accounts about a giant cat of some kind.
Reference: 259.
Name: Karelis,
, Charles H.
Title: "A Note on Democracy and Liberal Education."
Publication: Liberal Education
Volume: 72
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 319-22.
Notes: Notes that TJ's support for universal education went along with
an elitist scheme that
repeatedly and drastically
narrowed the flow of students moving up. Attempts to deal with this
paradox lead to at least
three views of our present
day reality: all students should be treated equally; the slowest learners
should get extra resources;
the quickest learners
should receive a larger shore of the resources. There are contrasting
advantages, particularly
between the last two views,
and we tend to favor inverse proportionality when supporting the kind of
education that holds
society together and direct
proportionality when we allocate technical training. This is an argument
implicit, perhaps, in
TJ's pyramidical scheme.
Reference: 260.
Name: Kelso,
, William M.
Title: "Digging on Jefferson's Mountain."
Publication: World Book Encyclopedia 1985 Yearbook
.
City: Chicago:
Publisher: World
Book,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 100-17.
Notes: Account of archaeological work at Monticello under the author's
direction. Of several
similar articles by this
author, this is notable for its useful illustrations, particularly helpful in
making the locations of
archaeological finds clear
to those who might never have visited Monticello or not visited it recently.
Reference: 261.
Name: Knight,
, Carleton, III.
Title: "Mr. Jefferson and His Successors."
Publication: Architecture
Volume: 74
Date: (December, 1985) ,
Pages: 62-71.
Notes: Account of the expansion of the University of Virginia campus
discusses the
architectural implications of TJ's
original design and some of the subsequent failures to consistently follow
up on his inspiration.
Notes a renewed
attention to the Jeffersonian tradition in recent years, however.
Reference: 262.
Name: Langhorne,
, Elizabeth.
Title: "A Black Family at Monticello."
Publication: Magazine of Albemarle County History
Volume: 43
Date: (1985) .
Pages: 1-16.
Notes: Account of the Hemings family, particularly after TJ's death.
Adapted in part from a
chapter of the author's
forthcoming book (published in 1987, see below).
Reference: 263.
Name: MacIsaacs,
, Heather Smith.
Title: "Living in Mr. Jefferson's Village."
Publication: House and Garden
Volume: 157
Date: (May, 1985) ,
Pages: 142-49, 246-48.
Notes: Description of the University of Virginia campus and the
restoration of Hotel D on the
East Range as a residence
for Dean Jacquelin Taylor Robertson of the School of Architecture.
Photographic illustrations.
Reference: 264.
Name: Malone,
, Dumas.
Title: "The Madison-Jefferson Friendship"
in
Publication: James Madison on Religious Liberty ,
ed. Robert S. Alley.
City: Buffalo:
Publisher:
Prometheus Books,
Date:
1985.
Pages: 303-05.
Notes: Claims that TJ and Madison "always saw eye to eye," although
he goes on to admit that
they had some
differences of opinion. Says Madison was the better constitutionalist and
more judicious, but TJ
had a more daring
mind. Minor note.
Reference: 265.
Name: Maverick,
, Maury, Jr.
Title: "A Conversation with Jefferson."
Publication: Texas Observer
Volume: 77
Date: (January 11, 1985) ,
Pages: 10-11.
Notes: TJ here approves of the Nicaraguan revolution of the
Sandinistas. Their revolution is not
so disruptive as the
American one was, and they share our religion and European heritage.
Reference: 266.
Name: McInerney,
, Peter.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: American Reformers ,
ed. Alden Vaughan.
City: New York:
Publisher: H. W.
Wilson,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 474-79.
Notes: Sketch focusing, appropriately enough, on TJ as reformer.
Reference: 267.
Name: Miller,
, William Lee.
Title: "The Bicentennial of the Virginia Statute."
Publication: Christian Century
Volume: 102
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 1171-75.
Notes: Thoughtful discussion of the Statute, arguing that TJ's position
was clearly in favor of an
absolute separation
of church and state. Describes the form of the Statute as "rather like an
introduction to a waltz"
with its long,
passionate, and intellectually weighty preamble, its brief statement of
enactment, and its
concluding paragraph that
"might be said to be rather amusingly un-Jeffersonian." Actually, in the last
paragraph TJ tries to
get around his own
belief that one generation cannot bind another with an assertion that the
rights behind the statute
are "the natural rights
of mankind." Thus, any later attempts to repeal it would infringe those
rights.
Reference: 268.
Name: Nichols,
, Gene R.
Title: "Children of Distant Fathers: Sketching an Ethos of
Constitutional Liberty."
Publication: Wisconsin Law Review .
Date: 1985.
Pages: 1305-57.
Notes: Argues for a location in the ninth amendment of a constitutional
right to self-governance.
TJ's Declaration and
other writings give the clearest statement of the American commitment to
self-governance,
which in turn supports the
Supreme Court's decisions that give constitutional protection to personal
privacy. Because the
Court has failed to locate
unambiguously the textual sources of such rights, it is necessary to
introduce into constitutional
discourse the American
dedication to self-governance figured by TJ and Abraham Lincoln.
Reference: 269.
Name: Ratzlaff,
, Robert K.
Title: "The Evolution of a Gentleman-Politician: John Rutledge, Jr., of
South Carolina."
Publication: Midwest Quarterly
Volume: 27
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 77-95.
Notes: TJ, while Minister to France, served Rutledge, then making his
Grand Tour, as adviser,
sponsor, and banker.
Rutledge returned to South Carolina with a strong personal attachment to
TJ, but this disappeared
in the contentious
atmosphere of the late 1790's as Rutledge turned Federalist.
Reference: 270.
Name: Saito,
, Makoto.
Title: "`Dokoritsu Sengen' ni okeru bunri to togo: T. Jefuason ni yoru
`Dokoritsu' no
rukai."
["Separation and
Integration in the Declaration of Independence: The Meaning of the
Declaration According to T.
Jefferson].
Publication: Kokkagakai Zasshi [Japan].
Volume: 98 no. 9-10,
Date: (1985) .
Pages: 1-37.
Notes: A longer, more fully argued version of the following entry, but
in Japanese.
Reference: 271.
Name: Saito,
, Makoto.
Title: "What Was Meant by `Independence' in the Declaration of
Independence?"
Publication: Japanese Journal of American Studies
Volume: 2
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 49-57.
Notes: Discusses the Summary View as background for
the Declaration and argues that
TJ saw the colonies
as forced to dissolve a union which they had voluntarily formed with Great
Britain. The
Declaration announced not so
much the independence of subordinates but the separation of a group of
states from another state
which they had
formerly affiliated with on equal terms. The Declaration is thus important
as a document
strengthening American unity
and as one announcing separation.
Reference: 272.
Name: Schulz,
, Constance B.
Title: "Essay Review: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson."
Publication: Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
Volume: 109
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 69-80.
Notes: Discusses Volume 20 of the
Papers and Jefferson's Extracts from the Gospels
, the first volume in the new
"Second Series" of the
Papers . Gives an excellent brief account of Boyd's
conception and handling of the Papers
project, including the
evolution of its editorial practices. Notes the disadvantages of Boyd's
"growing and ardent
identification with Jefferson's
political cause" which led to longer notes, attacks on the historical
contributions of others such as
Hamilton, and
sometimes to an undercutting of the persuasiveness of the documents
themselves. If Volume 20
is "vintage Boyd," the
Extracts volume shows signs of a new direction which
upholds Boyd's tradition of
scholarly rigor and excellence
even as it meets demands for more rapid publication and accessibility.
Reference: 273.
Name: Sheridan,
, Eugene R.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: The Encyclopedia of Unbelief ,
ed. Gordon Stein.
City: Buffalo:
Publisher:
Prometheus Books,
Date: 1985.
Volume: Vol.1,
Pages:
360-63.
Notes: Claims that TJ is notable in American religious history as the
primary author of the
Virginia Statute for
Religious Freedom, as a pioneer in applying rationalist criticism to the
Bible, and as a champion
of free thought in all
areas, including religion. Describes his movement through youthful natural
religion to a
demythologized Christianity
of a moralistic bent.
Reference: 274.
Name: Shi,
, David E.
Title: "Republicanism Transformed"
in
Publication: The Simple Life: Plain Living and High Thinking in
American
Culture .
City: New
York:
Publisher: Oxford University Press,
Date: 1985.
Pages:
74-100.
Notes: In the years after the revolution a seeming epidemic of
materialism and luxury upset the
sensibilities of classical
republican thinkers, but TJ was hopeful that republican virtue could be
nurtured in American
future generations. Like
Benjamin Rush, he first put his hope in public education as the "keystone
of our arch of
government," and while he
adjusted his later outlook to the changing national conditions, he gave up
neither his belief in the
necessity of Epicurean
enlightened self-restraint nor in the value of education as an instrument of
moral and scientific
progress. He had an
abiding faith in technology's ability to improve the lives of citizens and he
supported an
"equilibrium" among agriculture,
manufacture
(although only of "coarse articles" and necessities),
and trade.
Reference: 275.
Name: Simpson,
, Lewis P.
Title: "The Ideology of Revolution"
in
Publication: The History of Southern Literature ,
eds. Louis D. Rubin, Lewis P.
Simpson, and Thomas
D. Young.
City: Baton Rouge:
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press,
Date: 1985.
Pages: 57-67.
Notes: Treats TJ as a "poet-prophet" who unmasked the ironies of a
slave-owning society and
was a fundamentally
modernist thinker whose writing marked the climactic "movement of man
and nature into mind."
Claims his pastoral
fiction of the yeoman farmer as ideological embodiment of freedom was
"more relevant to the
literary imagination in
the nonslaveholding parts of the new nation than it was to the man of letters
in the South." A
considerably more
suggestive and stimulating discussion than offered by most literary
dictionaries or encyclopedias.
Reference: 276.
Name: Smylie,
, James H.
Title: "Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom: The Hanover
Presbytery Memorials,
1776-1786."
Publication: American Presbyterians
(formerly
Publication: Journal of Presbyterian History
).
Volume: 63
Date: (1985),
Pages:
355-73.
Notes: Reprints the five Memorials with historical introduction
explaining their part in the
debates in Virginia over TJ's
proposed Statute.
Reference: 277.
Name:
Title: "UVA Begins Restoration of Jeffersonian Buildings."
Publication: Architecture
Volume: 74
Date: (January, 1985) ,
Pages: 37-38.
Notes: A decade after restoring the Rotunda, the University begins
restoration work on the other
buildings of the
original lawn as designed by TJ. Note.
Reference: 278.
Name: Wilson,
, Douglas L.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Early Notebooks."
Publication: William and Mary Quarterly
Volume: 42
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 433-51.
Notes: Attempts to view the notebooks as a group of related documents
and to date the entries in
them as accurately
as possible. Examines the complications surrounding the dated entries in the
Case and Fee
books, the Garden Book,
the Farm Book, and the Memorandum Books. A careful and detailed
consideration of the entries
in the three
commonplace books follows; includes some discussion of the unpublished
equity law
commonplace book. One
conclusion author arrives at is that TJ was reading Montesquieu's
Esprit and Beccaria perhaps as late as when he came to revise
the laws of Virginia. This
is an important piece
of scholarship which cannot be easily summarized, however, and ought to
be consulted by
anyone interested in TJ's
reading or his intellectual development in general.
Reference: 279.
Name: Woods,
, Mary N.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the University of Virginia: Planning the
Academic
Village."
Publication: Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
Volume: 44
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 266-83.
Notes: Relates the plan of the University of Virginia as an institutional
building type to hospital
and school designs
available to TJ through his library or professional contacts. Notes the
comparative novelty of his
plans, but suggests
that he may have been influenced in the idea of an academical village by
Quatremere de Quincy's
first volume on
architecture in the Encyclopedie Methodique . Suggests that
questions of sanitation and
ventilation may have
drawn his attention to hospital designs such as Wren's Chelsea Hospital, the
Royal Hospital at
Plymouth, or the
proposals of Jean-Baptiste le Roy. TJ may also have been influenced by
Benjamin Latrobe,
particularly because of his
sensitivity to the relationship between design and student discipline.
Reference: 280.
Name: Woodson,
, Minnie Shumate.
Title: "Researching to Document the Oral History of the Thomas
Woodson Family: Dismantling
the Sable
Curtain."
Publication: Journal of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical
Society
Volume: 6
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 3-12.
Notes: Oral tradition, kept in the family until after the publication of
Fawn Brodie's work
maintains that Thomas
Woodson was another son of TJ and Sally Hemings, possibly the Tom who
supposedly died in
infancy. Long on family
tradition, short on important evidence, but, nevertheless, Woodson and his
family are an
interesting group in their own
right.
Reference: 281.
Name: Zagarri,
, Rosemarie.
Title: "Founding Intentions: Jefferson & Madison on School
Prayer."
Publication: New Republic .
Volume: 193
Date: (September 9, 1985) ,
Pages: 10-11.
Notes: Examination of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom
seems clearly to support
complete separation of
church and state; the government can not "prefer one religion over another,
or even prefer
religion over irreligion."
States that Justice Rehnquist and others wish to resurrect a principle TJ and
Madison wanted to
repudiate once and for
all.