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Happy Birthday Thomas Jefferson

On this date in 1743, Thomas Jefferson, who became the third U.S. president, was born in Virginia. As a young attorney and member of the Continental Congress, Jefferson drafted the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson became Governor of Virginia in 1779, when the Anglican Church was disestablished as the state religion.

He wrote the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom, whose preamble indicted state religion, noting that "false religions over the greatest part of the world and through all time" have been maintained through the church-state. The heart of the statute guarantees that no citizen "shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever." It was adopted in 1786 and is replicated in most other state constitutions.

Jefferson spent five years in France as an ambassador, and therefore was out of the country at the time of adoption of the U.S. Constitution. He strenuously urged the addition of a Bill of Rights. He became the first secretary of state in 1789, vice president in 1796, president in 1800 and reelected in 1804.

In his Notes on Virginia (1781), Jefferson, a Deist, wrote: "Millions of innocent men, women and children since the introduction of Christianity have been burnt, tortured, fined, imprisoned. Yet have we not advanced one inch towards uniformity. What has been the effect of coercion? To make one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites. To support roguery and error all over the earth." He contemptuously rejected the trinity concept, regarded Jesus as a human teacher only and in 1804 composed a 46-page New Testament extraction titled The Philosophy of Jesus of Nazareth. No known copies exist.

In an October 1813 letter to a friend, Jefferson explained that he had arranged "the matter which is evidently, his, and which is as easily distinguishable as diamonds from a dunghill." He produced what became known as the Jefferson Bible, 84 pages, in 1820. It was titled The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.

As president he issued his famous letter to the Baptists of Danbury, Connecticut, on Jan. 1, 1802, explaining that the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment builds "a wall of separation between church and state." He refused to issue any days of prayer or thanksgiving, believing civil powers alone were conferred on public officials.

Jefferson instructed that the epitaph on his tombstone read: "'Author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom & Father of the University of Virginia,' because by these, as testimonials that I have lived I wish most to be remembered." He and John Adams died on the same significant anniversary of July 4, 1826.

Source: https://ffrf.us/2Dymo0t
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
Yes. impregnated a young servant/ slave Sally Hemmings.

She was the half-sister of his wife.

Her 6 children were Thomas Jefferson's and she negotiated the freedom of her 6 children upon returning to the United States where she would resume slave status for the freedom of her children....because when she was in France with Jefferson, slavery was outlawed.
@JaggedLittlePill She was 14 when she started giving birth to his children. And she was [b]legally[/b] a slave. Jefferson’s white descendants denied the story for decades—until dna testing proved beyond any doubt, that Sally Hemings’ descendants shared their ancestry.
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
@bijouxbroussard Yes, I thought she was 14 but I was not positive that I was correct on that. I need to create a source sheet of the resources I have used in my courses that have taught me so much.

Though I did know that the white descendants tried to deny it and that DNA helped to do so.

 
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