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Study Casts Further Doubt on Jefferson-Hemings Affair. Will Press Notice?

By Matthew Philbin | September 01, 2011 | 10:55

A  A

Fact: The man who wrote so eloquently about basic human liberty in the Declaration of Independence was himself a slave owner. Unproven theory: That man had a sexual relationship with one of those slaves and fathered at least one of her children.

If you’re a liberal journalist, the fact makes you inclined to believe the theory, and ideology and political necessity take you the rest of the way. At least, that has been the case in reporting on the Jefferson-Hemings historical controversy over the last decade and more.

It will be interesting to see if a new book that goes a long way toward exonerating Thomas Jefferson receives the same kind of breathless coverage as evidence the media cited to condemn him. Or if CBS produces a miniseries to correct the one it made exploiting that evidence.

Back in 1998, DNA testing finally produced something conclusive about the centuries-old question of whether Thomas Jefferson had a sexual relationship with his slave, Sally Hemings. Liberal journalists, then desperate for ways to defend President Bill Clinton during his own sordid sex scandal, pounced on the news that a descendent of Hemings shared some of our third president’s DNA.

But that’s all it said about the rumors and legends that had circulated for nearly two centuries. The report stated only that a Jefferson fathered a child with Hemings. And in fact there was a more likely culprit – Thomas’s younger brother Randolf, who did father children by his own slaves and was much closer to Hemings’ age.

But the press had its story. In Nov. 1998, the Media Research Center quoted CNN anchor Marina Kolbe saying “new genetic work, coupled with old circumstantial evidence, proves Jefferson fathered at least one child by his slave, Sally Hemings. One of the study’s authors says it suggests, according to history, presidential indiscretions are long-standing." NBC reporter Bob Faw was even more direct:“After all, if Bill Clinton’s favorite President could end up on Mount Rushmore and the two-dollar bill, despite being sexually active with a subordinate, it might put Mr. Clinton’s conduct with a certain intern in a different light.”

But nobody took the story and ran with it like the Washington Post. A Post story maintained that Jefferson “almost certainly fathered a child with one of his slaves.” Columnist Bill Raspberry wrote, “After nearly two centuries, Thomas Jefferson’s secret is out.”

Story after story took Thomas’ paternity as fact, some even speculating that Jefferson “maybe the father of the other four children as well.” Post coverage was so bad that in July, 1999, new ombudsman E.R. Shipp called the paper to account, writing, “In reporting on the Jefferson-Hemings story these six months, the Post often has failed to make clear what is fact…what is speculation and what is convenient.”

Predictably, The New York Times wasn’t any better. A story by Neil A. Lewis was titled “Study Finds Strong Evidence Jefferson Fathered Slave Son.” Don Terry repeated the erroneous conclusion, writing that, “the recent release of DNA evidence indicating that Jefferson had probably fathered at least one child with Hemings,” and used it pick at the scab of black grievance.

According to Terry, blacks – even black school kids –possess either a preternatural historical insight or clairvoyance, because they knew about Jefferson all along. “Why, he asked, did '’white society'’ need DNA evidence to accept what ‘ordinary people with common sense like me’ had recognized as fact long ago?”

Terry ascribed the reluctance of scholars and white Jefferson defendants to accept the Jefferson-Hemings legend as “trying to hide” something. In an editorial, Brent Staples castigated white Jefferson family members who were reluctant to accept inconclusive evidence as conclusive. “If white Jeffersons cannot reach out to the black people whose ancestors built Monticello -- and especially to those who share the founder's blood -- then the prospects for harmony in this Jeffersonian Republic seem dimmer for all of us.” The truth and the great man’s reputation be damned.

Thanks in no small part to the Times and the Post, assumptions of Jefferson’s guilt aren’t just for black high school students any more – they’ve become conventional wisdom.  With the release of “The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission?” on Sept. 1, will The Times be as interested in toppling that conventional wisdom as it was in overturning scholarly tradition? The work of a panel of scholars, the book starts with the actual DNA results and rebuts point-by-point the case for Jefferson’s paternity.

We’ll wait for the New York Times to admonish Hemings’ descendents to drop their ancestry claims for the sake of racial harmony …

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Comments

Crickets

Submitted by Utherpend on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:04am.

The sound of them ignoring this book will be like the vaccum of space.

"For a people who are free, and who mean to remain so, a well-organized and armed militia is their best security."
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If only they had Jerry Springer or Maury Povich

Submitted by Lipton on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:10am.

during those days.

I'd like to thank Hollywood for renewing my interest in reading.
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That Thomas Jefferson theory....

Submitted by TempusFugit on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:37am.

...has been accepted media wisdom since long before 1998. I remember an episode of the 1970s sitcom the Jeffersons that focused on scheming laundromat owner George Jefferson doing a television commercial claiming he was a descendant of Thomas Jefferson. 1980s sitcom Head of the Class also mentioned the theory. I'm now waiting for Hollywood to correct its error (twiddling thumbs)

In Switzerland, they had brotherly love and five hundred years of democracy and peace, and what did they produce? The cuckoo clock! - Orson Welles
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Historic Malpractice

Submitted by FaulknerFan on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:42am.

Thomas Jefferson fathering children with Sally Hemmings is probably the biggest historical fraud in the last half century. A 2009 book by William Hyland, "In Defense of Thomas Jefferson" exposes a lot of the under the table shenanigans that went on to propagate this myth by the left in academia and book authors as well as laying out the case against the theory.

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well, this whole thing

Submitted by misterbee241 on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:56am.

was put up to defend their boy Bill by asking the question, how can you hold bill accountable when one of the founding fathers was guilty of the same thing? there is NO smear or lie to which liberals will not sink.

If you're not getting flak, you're not over the target.
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Thomas Jefferson did not have sex with that woman. (Wag finger)

Submitted by WoodyM on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 11:56am.

The liberal press won't mention this study, because, at the time the claim was hyped, they wanted to defend Bill Clinton's antics in the Oval Office by saying essentially that everybody does it, and that took smearing Thomas Jefferson. Now, this group may have to prove that Thomas Jefferson didn't use cigars, too.

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Convenience

Submitted by Galvanic on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 12:12pm.

". . . in July, 1999, new (Washington Post) ombudsman E.R. Shipp called the paper to account, writing, “n reporting on the Jefferson-Hemings story these six months, the Post often has failed to make clear what is fact…what is speculation and what is convenient.'”

The great operative word is convenient.   Convenience fills knowledge gaps to the string facts together into the narrative favored by the author.

 

 

 

 

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Jefferson's descendents....

Submitted by adamsmith on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 2:13pm.

Isn't there a yearly gathering of his descendents both black and white, with the black ones having his DNA supposedly? I'd love to see this be proved to be Progressive propaganda, but people with certain DNA throws a wrench into this. It'll be interesting to see if this is truly historical fantasy. Liberals love to cover up the fact that Lincoln fully intended on repatriating black slaves to Africa(Monrovia-see their flag) and to the Guianas in South America. Lincoln stated the two races would never be able to live together in peace. With Farrakhan,Sharpton,J. Jackson,and all the other race hustlers, it looks like Lincoln may have had a point.

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If there was actual proof

Submitted by Newsbusterbrown on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 2:19pm.

If there was actual proof that Jefferson fathered children with Sally Hemings, then so be it. The truth is the truth and if it hurts one of our Founding Fathers, then that's how the cookie crumbles.

However, there never has been proof of Thomas Jefferson fathering her children, only that a Jefferson did. Therefore, anybody who says TJ did the deed(s) is a buffoon (at the very least, a lousy historian).

“There are no easy answers, but there are simple answers. We must have the courage to do what we know is morally right.” - Ronald Reagan (1964 Republican Convention)

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The words DNA and "probably" don't belong in the same sentence.

Submitted by UpNorth on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 2:28pm.

Nor do "almost certainly" or "may be the father of four".  With DNA, it either is, or it isn't, a fact. 

But, the left has never let that stand in the way of a point they wish to push. 

To re-elect Obama would be like the Titanic backing up and hitting the iceberg again.
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Truth or fiction, Jefferson

Submitted by LAM SON 719 on Fri, 09/02/2011 - 12:41am.

Truth or fiction, Jefferson was a man ans saw himself as a man unlike obama who belives himself to be a god.

Non, je ne regrette rien. "You aren't angry because I might be a racist, you're angry because you know I'm right".
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