Chapter 8: A. Books and monographs, 1987.


Reference: 373.
Name: Adler, , David A.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson; Father of Our Democracy .
City: New York:
Publisher: Holiday House,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 48.
Notes: Juvenile for grades 2-4. Comprehensive within its few pages and discusses often elided topics such as TJ's ownership of slaves (but not the Sally Hemings controversy).


Reference: 374.
Name: Brown, , C. Allan.
Title: "Poplar Forest: Thomas Jefferson and the Ideal Villa."

Publication: M.A. thesis. Charlottesville: University of Virginia,
Date: 1987.
Notes: See the 1990 essay, cited below, based upon this important study.


Reference: 375.
Name: Burgess, , Granville.
Publication: Dusky Sally .
City: New York:
Publisher: Broadway Play Publishing,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 87.
Notes: Play about TJ and Sally Hemings based upon Fawn Brodie's 1974 biography. A judge in 1991 found that it also infringed upon the copyright of Barbara Chase Riboud's 1979 novel, Sally Hemings ; see New York Times , August 15, 1991, C13, 17.


Reference: 376.
Name: Bush, , Alfred L.
Publication: The Life Portraits of Thomas Jefferson .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 88.
Notes: Originally published in 1962; see TJCAB #2641. This edition adds bibliographic citations and makes some corrections, most importantly dropping a pencil drawing by Latrobe (portrait # 11 in the 1962 edition) that was not done from life.


Reference: 377.
Name: Crackel, , Theodore J.
Publication: Mr Jefferson's Army .
City: New York:
Publisher: New York University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xiii, 250.
Notes: Best account of TJ's handling of the Army during his presidency; explodes a number of myths about his ineptness and ignorance of military affairs and policy and about supposed republican principled rejection of standing armies. Shows how TJ tried to republicanize the Army and thought of it as a potential support for a republican government. The events of 1798-1800, however, convinced him that the existing army would be a threat to his government, and he sought to transform it into a body loyal to republican principles. His efforts at social and political reform of the army did lead to some poorly calculated actions, many of them having to do with the problematic General Wilkinson. By 1809, however, the Army under TJ's administration had become a respectable force that was beginning to modernize and that had taken on a more republican look.


Reference: 378.
Name: Cunningham, , Noble E.
Publication: In Pursuit of Reason: The Life of Thomas Jefferson .
City: Baton Rouge:
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xvi, 414.
Notes: An excellent one-volume biography informed by the most recent scholarship about TJ. Incorporates an account of TJ's political thought into the narrative of his public career, and, while not ignoring the dimensions of his private life, tends to concentrate more fully on his public life. Takes as its thematic core TJ's belief in "the sufficiency of reason for the care of human affairs," and justifies this choice. If readers might appreciate more attention to the emotional and non-rational TJ, the fact remains that TJ has always left his biographers at least a bit frustrated in this regard. A balanced, reliable account.


Reference: 379.
Name:
Publication: The Garden and Farm Books of Thomas Jefferson , ed. Robert C. Baron. Golden CO: Fulcrum Inc., 1987. 528.
Notes: A literal transcription of TJ's Farm and Garden Books with added materials, including a selection of his letters on gardening and farming, a note by Louis Leonard Tucker on how so many of TJ's papers (including the farm and garden notebooks) ended up at the Massachusetts Historical Society, Henry Steele Commager's essay "TJ and the Character of America" (slightly revised from its earlier 1973 version listed as # 2187 in TJCAB ), a brief account by Nancy St. Clair Talley on the work of the Garden Club of Virginia to restore the gardens at Monticello, a note on "TJ and Your Garden," and photographs by Robert Llewellyn. Attractive presentation does not displace the earlier volumes edited by Edwin M. Betts as the most suitable scholarly editions.


Reference: 380.
Name: Hochman, , Steven Harold.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: A Personal Financial Biography."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. University of Virginia,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 308.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 48
Date: (1988) ,
Pages: 2694-A.
Notes: Gives special attention to the relationship between TJ's private finances and his role in public life. On the eve of the Revolution he was wealthy, but the encumbrances of the Wayles estate and serious losses during the war put him in debt. He neglected his business affairs as he devoted time and attention to public service, and in his last years tottered on the edge of bankruptcy. Concludes that beyond the considerable truth in his claim that he had neglected his own interests, he often overreached himself in investments that did not make much profit and in money laid out for science, art, and literature that left a rich legacy for posterity but strained his own finances.


Reference: 381.
Name: Hogan, , Pendleton.
Publication: The Lawn: A Guide to Jefferson's University .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 149.
Notes: Photographs by Bill Sublette. A structure by structure guard, including the gardens, which offers information on TJ's intentions, designs, instructions to builders, etc. along with subsequent history.


Reference: 382.
Name: Kaplan, , Lawrence S.
Publication: Entangling Alliances with None; American Foreign Policy in the Age of Jefferson .
City: Kent, OH:
Publisher: Kent State University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 230.
Notes: Collects previously published essays and adds an introduction and a six-page note on recent trends in diplomatic history of the early republic. All essays on TJ have already been cited in TJCAB


Reference: 383.
Name: Langhorne, , Elizabeth.
Publication: Monticello: A Family Story .
City: Chapel Hill:
Publisher: Algonquin Books,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xi, 289.
Notes: Chatty, anecdotal account of TJ's life at Monticello and that of various members of his family. Particular attention paid to Martha Jefferson Randolph and her husband, Thomas Mann Randolph, their children Ellen Wayles Randolph and Cornelia Jefferson Randolph, and to the members of the Hemings family. Useful for the author's description of the role black servants played at Monticello and for her at least occasional recognition that they had their own priorities and cultural expectations. If life at Monticello was not quite so comfortable for the servants as portrayed here, neither was it merely a matter of exploitation and oppression. Although the author indulges in too much biographical imputation ("she surely must have felt" etc.), she presents some of the scandals surrounding Jefferson's family (granddaughter Anne's troubled marriage, incest and infanticide in the Randolph family, etc.) without speculating unduly on their effect on TJ. Occasionally needs more helpful documentation of sources but valuable for its use of collected papers of various family members.


Reference: 384.
Name: Malone, , Dumas and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. , Norman Graebner, et. al.
Publication: Rhetoric and The Founders .
City: Lanham MD:
Publisher: University Press of America,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xiii, 87.
Notes: Panel discussions with Malone on "Rhetoric in the Time of the Founders" (1-19) and "Jefferson and Madison"(21-41).


Reference: 385.
Name: Mapp, , Alf J. , Jr.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson: A Strange Case of Mistaken Identity .
City: Lanham, MD:
Publisher: Madison Books,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xv, 487.
Notes: A biography of TJ through his inauguration in 1801. Despite the claim of the subtitle and a certain amount of flailing about at the work of unnamed "historians," no startling new interpretation is offered, although attention paid to TJ's private life and cultural interests fills out the more conventional biographical portrayal of the public and political man. Readable but seriously flawed by minor errors of fact, Virginia chauvinism ("The Virginia plantocracy of the eighteenth century was one of the most responsible oligarchies in the history of western civilization."), and authorial hobby horses.


Reference: 386.
Name: McEwan, , Barbara.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson's Poplar Forest .
City: Lynchburg, VA:
Publisher: Warwick House Publishing,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 116, [2].
Notes: Fullest available account of Poplar Forest, TJ's friends in the area, his building of the house, his gardening and farming there. Discusses later history of the house and estate up to its recent acquisition by the Corporation of Jefferson's Poplar Forest.


Reference: 387.
Name: Morris, , James McGrath and Persephone Weene, eds.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson's European Travel Diaries , Introduction by Dean M. Sagar. Ithaca: Isidore Stephanus, Sons, Publishing, 1987. 140.
Notes: The editors regularize the spelling and punctuation but, unfortunately, add no annotations to TJ's diary entries. The introduction summarizes his travels and finds the journals interesting as a demonstration of his facility for scientific observation and as an index of his interest in wine and viticulture. Illustrated.


Reference: 388.
Name: Patterson, , Charles.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson .
City: New York:
Publisher: Franklin Watts,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 95.
Notes: "A First Book," for approximately grades 4-7. Responsible use of facts, although some issues, such as slavery, are treated with less sophistication than they ought to be. Good of its type.


Reference: 389.
Name: Peterson, , Merrill D.
Publication: Jefferson and Madison & the Making of Constitutions .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 17.
Notes: Address given at a conference in honor of the late Adrienne Koch discussing the give and take between Madison and TJ. Describes TJ as the bolder thinker, more speculative, better generalizer and synthesizer, and more easily captivated by dreams of progress; Madison was more intellectually penetrating and probing and the more sagacious student of politics. Madison's concern for the rights of property and concern for some of the "infirmities of popular government" led him to disagree with a number of TJ's favorite ideas, including the periodic revision of constitutions. Claims the 49th Federalist paper reads TJ a lecture on this subject. Suggests that while both men opposed Hamilton's appeal to "implied powers" in order to justify incorporating a national bank, Madison was more receptive than TJ to construction of the Constitution as an adaptive principle, whereas TJ in later years protested the authority of the Supreme Court and desired a popular convention to amend the Constitution.


Reference: 390.
Name: Peterson, , Merrill D.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson: Religious Liberty and the American Tradition .
City: Fredericksburg, VA:
Publisher: Thomas Jefferson Institute for the Study of Religious Freedom,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 16, [4].
Notes: Speech commemorating the Statute for Religious Freedom. Claims that TJ had "a large and liberal vision of a new republican order, in which religious freedom formed an essential part." Madison's "Memorial and Remonstrance" is an exposition of the philosophy of the Statute, and TJ's Bill for the More General Diffusion of knowledge is an important complement to it.


Reference: 391.
Name: Shorto, , Russell.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson and the American Ideal .
City: Hauppauge NY:
Publisher: Barron's Educational Series,
Date: 1987.
Pages: xi, 162.
Notes: Juvenile, for grades 3-7 or so. Throws in a great deal of fictional, melodramatic conversation. Emphasizes western expansion, happy slaves, etc.

B. Essays and book chapters.


Reference: 392.
Name: Andrews, , Stuart.
Title: "Classicism and the American Revolution."

Publication: History Today .
Volume: 37
Date: (January, 1987) . 37-42.
Notes: Overview for a popular audience of responses to Greek and Roman culture in education, political thinking, architecture, and literature, with frequent reference to TJ.


Reference: 393.
Name: Austin, , Richard Cartwright.
Title: "Rights for Life: Rebuilding Human Relationships with Land"
in
Publication: Theology of the Land , ed. Bernard F. Evans and Gregory D. Cusack.
City: Collegeville, MN:
Publisher: Liturgical Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 103-26.
Notes: Uses TJ's belief in the universal human right of access to land to support an appeal for a "biblical ecology" of relationships among humans, the land, and God.


Reference: 394.
Name: Beebe, , Lynn A.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Poplar Forest."

Publication: Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine .
Volume: 121
Date: (no. 1, 1987) ,
Pages: 4-7.
Notes: Illustrated account of Poplar Forest and its recent purchase by the non-profit Corporation for Jefferson's Poplar Forest.


Reference: 395.
Name: Bellah, , Robert N.
Title: "The Quest for Common Commitments in a Pluralistic Society."

Publication: Philosophy and Theology
Volume: 2
Date: (Fall, 1987) ,
Pages: 20-34.
Notes: Arguing for a "deep pluralism" which balances the conflicting appeals of radical individualism and absolutist communalism, offers TJ as an exemplary figure and points to the continuity of his brand of pluralism in the thinking of Emerson and Royce.


Reference: 396.
Name: Bender, , Thomas.
Title: "New York as a Center of "
Difference": How America's Metropolis Counters American Myths."
Publication: Dissent .
Volume: 34
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 429-35.
Notes: Compares Puritan dream of a city upon a hill and TJ's agrarian ideals with New York's cosmopolitan experience. Claims that while "the New York experience and the outlook associated with that experience posit a political and cultural life based upon difference , the myth of rural and small town America excludes difference from politics and culture. Such exclusion impoverishes civic life, thinning and trivializing the notion of a public culture." TJ's trust in democracy was based upon his assumption of a societal consensus on values. In the agrarian, communal society he envisioned, Leviathan was not needed. His fear of heterogeneity associated with immigration touched on his inability to envision a republic made up of former masters and former slaves.


Reference: 397.
Name: Berns, , Walter.
Title: "The New Pursuit of Happiness."

Publication: Public Interest
Volume: 86
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 65-76.
Notes: Claims the basis of the move by TJ and the Framers of the Constitution to take religion out of politics was provided by the philosophers of natural right, beginning with Hobbes and Locke. In giving Congress power to promote science and the useful arts, the Framers joined America to science and industry; suggests that in this way TJ's "pursuit of happiness" came to be understood as, in Tocqueville's words, pursuing the "good things of life."


Reference: 398.
Name: Black, , Christine M. and Douglas J. Coburn.
Title: "In the Spirit of Jefferson: An Exercise on Our Living Constitution."

Publication: NASSP Bulletin
Volume: 71
Date: (September, 1987) ,
Pages: 76-79.
Notes: Recommends a Jefferson Meeting, a program inspired by TJ's 1816 letter recommending the periodic re-examination and amendment of the Constitution, as an innovative and memorable way to help students develop an understanding of the Constitution as a living document.


Reference: 399.
Name: Black , Christine M. and Douglas J. Coburn.
Title: "The Spirit of Jefferson."

Publication: The Quarterly: A Newsletter to Update Resources for Teaching Virginia Government
Volume: 2
Date: (January, 1987) .
Notes: Not seen, but presumably similar to the previous item.


Reference: 400.
Name: Briceland, , Alan V.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Epitaph: Symbol of a Lifelong Crusade Against Those Who Would `Usurp the Throne of God'."

Publication: Journal of Church and State
Volume: 29
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 285-303.
Notes: TJ's epitaph reminds Americans of their independence from all kings and politicians claiming a divine right, from all religious leaders, "priests," who claim special knowledge of God's intentions, and from public ignorance. Discusses in some detail TJ's anti-clericalism, his persistent criticism of religious authorities who exploit human ignorance and weakness.


Reference: 401.
Name: Bryan, , Susan.
Title: "Reauthorizing the Text: Jefferson's Scissor Edit of the Gospels."

Publication: Early American Literature
Volume: 22
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 19-42.
Notes: Stimulating discussion of "The Life and Morals of Jesus" as a Jeffersonian imaginative act, "a subtle sort of literary manifesto that inevitably calls for the reappraisal of all supposedly finished, printed texts" that has less in common with contemporaneous experiments of the young German romantics than with modern methods of literary scholarship. Argues that TJ approximates the hermeneutic strategy of testing pieces of the text against the whole, which is conceived as the posited horizon of meaning. A significant treatment of "The Life and Morals" as a literary text.


Reference: 402.
Name: Bubel, , Nancy.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson, Gardener."

Publication: Country Journal
Volume: 14
Date: (April 1987) ,
Pages: 11-13.
Notes: Sketch of TJ's gardening activities, claiming that "on the whole he would probably feel at home in your garden or mine."


Reference: 403.
Name: Caton, , Hiram.
Title: "The Second American Revolution."

Publication: The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation
Volume: 28
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 69-83.
Notes: Contentious response to Joyce Appleby's Capitalism and a New Social Order (1984), claiming that the idea of a revolution of 1800 is a bit of "national mythology" and merely "shifted the control of political office from one party to another." Describes "Jeffersonian electoral flapdoodle" as variously dependent upon stock images from the Old Whig tradition and "the oratory modish in Paris at that time." Claims the essential TJ is revealed in his endorsement of John Taylor of Caroline. A Tory's TJ, but suggestive discussion of the relevance of Adam Smith for TJ and the Jeffersonians.


Reference: 404.
Name: Dent, , Gail.
Title: "Three Prevailing Ideas and Their Impact on the Constitution."

Publication: Social Studies Review
Volume: 37
Date: (Fall, 1987) ,
Pages: 21-30.
Notes: Presents three lesson plans for an eleventh grade U. S. history course, including one on "Thomas Jefferson's Opinions of Negroes."


Reference: 405.
Name: Eidsmoe, , John.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: Christianity and the Constitution: The Faith of Our Founding Fathers .
City: Grand Rapids MI:
Publisher: Baker Book House,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 215-46.
Notes: Attempts to preserve TJ from the charge that he was not a Christian, but finds that he was certainly no orthodox Christian. Claims the wall of separation is misunderstood and offers the usual reasons of those who wish to set it aside. Claims TJ in the 1790's came to approve of Christianity as a moral basis for the nation, but misses the distinction between sociological fact and theological truth.


Reference: 406.
Name: Fleming, , Thomas.
Title: "A Voice From Paris."

Publication: Boys Life.
Volume: 77
Date: (August 1987) ,
Pages: 12.
Notes: TJ disagrees with Madison, but finally gains his object with the Bill of Rights.


Reference: 407.
Name: Fortune, , Brandon Brame.
Title: "Portraits of Virtue and Genius: Pantheons of Worthies and Public Portraiture in the Early American Republic, 1780-1820."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 565.

Publication: DAI 48
Date: (1987),
Pages: 1564-A.
Notes: Considers collections of portraits as republican pantheons which at once bestowed honor on various worthies and held them up for emulation. American pantheons often aggrandized eminent sitters through severe, self-effacing formats even as they emphasized accuracy of countenance rather than "improved" portrayals. Pays special attention to five important collections of faces, TJ's assemblage of portraits, Trumbull's Declaration of Independence scene, Charles Willson Peale's gallery, Joseph Delaplaine's collection, and the New York City Hall pantheon. Chapter four takes up the question of supposed American degeneracy (the Buffon thesis).


Reference: 408.
Name: Furtwangler, , Albert.
Title: "Jefferson's Trinity"
in
Publication: American Silhouettes: Rhetorical Identities of the Founders .
City: Ithaca:
Publisher: Cornell University Press,
Pages: 115-37.
Notes: Uses the January 16, 1811 letter to Benjamin Rush in which TJ describes telling Hamilton that Bacon, Newton, and Locke were "my trinity of the three greatest men the world had ever produced" and Hamilton's supposed rejoinder that "the greatest man ... was Julius Caesar." Sensitive and critical attention to the rhetorical strategies of the letter supports a delineation of the role of Enlightenment progressivism in TJ's thought and practice. Contrasts TJ and William Blake's visions of revolutionary awakening, suggesting that the Declaration "can be understood as a shining public poem of a kind that Blake aspired to produce," but concluding that TJ lived in a world where such visions could be given a social reality. Blake's recurrent scenes of humanity casting off the nightmares of space and time, science, and history contrast with TJ's Monticello, luminously fixed in space and time.


Reference: 409.
Name: Gaustad, , Edwin S.
Title: "The Libertarians: Jefferson and Madison" and "The Philosophes : Adams and Jefferson"
in
Publication: Faith of Our Fathers: Religion and the New Nation .
City: San Francisco:
Publisher: Harper and Row,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 36-58; 85-109.
Notes: The first of these chapters portrays TJ's and Madison's work for religious liberty, emphasizing their understanding of first amendment rights as insisting upon an essential distinction between civil and religious functions in society. Claims TJ may have felt even more strongly about religious liberty than about political liberty, and that during his presidency and after, TJ "retreated in no way from his single-minded dedication to religious liberty." The second chapter treats TJ and Adams as enlightened thinkers about religion. Influenced by Richard Price and Joseph Priestley, TJ set out to reveal a "natural, reasonable Christianity," and like Adams, he saw the test of religion in its link to morality. States that "both Adams and Jefferson had within them the essence of the religious spirit." Well-informed, brings together TJ's comments about religious liberty that prove to be a stumbling block for those who wish to diminish his authority for a rigorous interpretation of first amendment rights, but by separating into different chapters discussions of religious liberty and of rational morality grounded in religion evades the ground upon which their readings stand.


Reference: 410.
Name: Gaustad, , Edwin S.
Title: "Liberty of Religion: For Virginia and Far Beyond."

Publication: Valley Forge Journal .
Volume: 3
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 253-71.
Notes: TJ's and Madison's struggles for religious liberty from the Virginia Statute and the First Amendment through their presidential careers and after. Notes TJ's anti-clericalism and his commitment to the basic freedom of the mind as a God-given right. The usual story, well told.


Reference: 411.
Name: Gaustad, , Edwin S.
Title: "On Jeffersonian Liberty"
in
Publication: The Lively Experiment Continued , ed. Jerald C. Brauer.
City: Athens GA:
Publisher: Mercer University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 85-104.
Notes: Discusses four facets of TJ's libertarian career: political liberty, religious liberty, liberty vs. equality, and academic liberty. Sees TJ as leaning toward liberty in the fundamental antagonism (as Tocqueville saw it) between liberty and equality. On the question of equality for Indians, blacks, and women, "theory pulled in one direction, experience (or political reality) in another." Somewhat uncritical, except for discussion about the problems of equality.


Reference: 412.
Name: Gibbs, , Lee W.
Title: "We, the Theologians."

Publication: Christianity Today
Volume: 31
Date: (December 11, 1987) ,
Pages: 29-31.
Notes: Compares TJ's and Madison's theological beliefs and calls for a "clearer understanding and a renewed appreciation of the religious and philosophical principles that were so essential" in their work.


Reference: 413.
Name: Greider, , Linda.
Title: "In Quest of the Breast of Venus."

Publication: Harrowsmith
Volume: 2
Date: (November/December, 1987) ,
Pages: 58-67.
Notes: Supposedly on TJ's gardening and landscaping at Monticello. Not seen.


Reference: 414.
Name: Harrison, , Joseph H., Jr.
Title: " Sic et non : Thomas Jefferson and Internal Improvement."

Publication: Journal of the Early Republic
Volume: 7
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 335-49.
Notes: A good account of TJ's changing attitudes toward government support of internal improvements charted against his eventual turn to a states rights position, more or less, in his final years. Although he was initially enthusiastic about improvements as a form of progress, negative considerations kept breaking in where the federal government was concerned. In his 6th Annual Message he proposed using federal money for internal improvements, but in the years after 1816 he moved toward the states rights position shared by many of his Virginia acquaintances and opposed the plans of John Quincy Adams. Claims it was not capitalism he opposed but "consolidation."


Reference: 415.
Name: Hedges, , William L.
Title: "Telling Off the King: Jefferson's Summary View as American Fantasy."

Publication: Early American Literature
Volume: 22
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 166-74.
Notes: Based upon an attentive study of the language of the Summary View , argues that it "keeps transforming itself from a resolution of `instruction' into a letter to the King" in which TJ turns history into what he calls an "American story." This becomes a narrative about American freedom and a discovery of mythical ancestors for an American "free people." An excellent consideration of this text as a literary performance.


Reference: 416.
Name: Hill, , Kent R.
Title: "Religion and the Common Good: In Defense of Pluralism."

Publication: This World
Volume: 17
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 77-87.
Notes: Describes TJ's Statute for Religious Freedom as the basis for an understanding of American pluralism and examines the threats to it posed by the religious right, the religious left, and the secularists. One consequence of these threats may be the loss of the public schools as a common ground for society.


Reference: 417.
Name: Hudson, , Patricia L.
Title: "In Mr. Jefferson's Garden."

Publication: Americana .
Volume: 14
Date: (February 1987) . 50-55.
Notes: On the efforts of Peter Hatch to restore appropriate plantings at Monticello. As Monticello's resident horticulturist he is concerned both with restoring the gardens as they might have been in TJ's time and with educating visitors about historic plants and gardens.


Reference: 418.
Name: Hughes, , Robert.
Title: "A Plain, Exalted Vision."

Publication: Time
Volume: 130
Date: (July 6, 1987) ,
Pages: 74-77.
Notes: Discusses the aesthetic sensibility of 1787. Calls TJ "the father of American architectural thought (as distinct from mere building." Both his ideas about building and the ideas of the American Constitution grew from the secular humanism that was their common moral root.


Reference: 419.
Name: Hulse, , James W.
Title: "Jefferson's Ghost, Land Policy, and Nevada's Sagebrush Rebellion."

Publication: Halcyon
Volume: 9
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 83-97.
Notes: The late 1970's effort of Nevada to lay claim to unappropriated federal land within its borders "was as though the ghost of Thomas Jefferson had walked and spoken again, this time in the Great Basin, without much consideration for what had happened to the Republic in the century and a half since his death." Cites TJ as one of the first to try to formulate a land policy, but over the next 190 years the Jeffersonian dream of a society in which allodial land policy would prevail gave way slowly to non-allodial policy in which the federal government "increasingly assumed the role of `lord paramount'."


Reference: 420.
Name: Iovine, , Julie V.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson at Home."

Publication: Connoisseur
Volume: 217
Date: (June, 1987) ,
Pages: 26.
Notes: Describes a newly installed permanent exhibit at Monticello dedicated to TJ's domestic life and interests.


Reference: 421.
Name: Johnson, , Eldon L.
Title: "The `Other Jeffersons' and the State University Idea."

Publication: Journal of Higher Education .
Volume: 58
Date: (March/April, 1987) ,
Pages: 127-150.
Notes: States that it is somewhat simplistic to focus on TJ and the University of Virginia as the archetypal model of the state university. Discusses William R. Davie of North Carolina and Abraham Baldwin of Georgia and compares them in passing to TJ.


Reference: 422.
Name: Kaplan, , Lawrence S.
Title: "Jefferson and the Constitution: The View from Paris, 1786-89."

Publication: Diplomatic History .
Volume: 11
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 321-35.
Notes: TJ's comments about the Constitution to both European and American correspondents reflected his sense of the importance of Europe and European opinion concerning the U. S. He needed to reassure European friends about incidents such as Shay's Rebellion even as he needed to temper some of their exaggerated optimism. His view of European monarchy and despotism influenced his writings to American correspondents about the dangers of unchecked authority. The Constitution was a counter to European pessimism and a cause of concern to his American friends. The Bill of Rights was important on both sides of the Atlantic, and in Europe was the source of immediate foreign policy advantages.


Reference: 423.
Name: Konvitz, , Milton R.
Title: "Religious Liberty: The Congruence of Thomas Jefferson and Moses Mendelssohn."

Publication: Jewish Social Studies
Volume: 49
Date: (no. 2, 1987) ,
Pages: 115-24.
Notes: Praise for the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom as marking TJ as one who left his country better for his having lived. His wall of separation between Church and State finds separate expression in Mendelssohn's Jerusalem (1783). TJ and Mendelssohn believed that true religious beliefs were not dependent on special supernatural revelation or any religion's scriptures. Both affirmed that essential liberty is not a mere civil liberty but absolute, an essential part of the definition of man.


Reference: 424.
Name: Kreig, , Andrew.
Title: "The First Pentagon Papers."

Publication: Yankee
Volume: 51
Date: (November 1987) ,
Pages: 216.
Notes: Note on the Jefferson administration's 1806 prosecution of the editors of The Connecticut Courant for seditious libel.


Reference: 425.
Name: Lane, , Mills.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: Architecture in the Old South: Virginia .
City: Savannah:
Publisher: Beehive Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 90-125.
Notes: Discusses TJ's life-long interest in architecture; notes his commitment to classical values and their Palladian reinterpretation, his inspiration by French architecture, and his activities as an architect in Virginia. Survey, most useful for its coverage of TJ's influence on domestic architecture such as Bremo, Barboursville, and Oak Hill to which he variously contributed suggestions or drawings. Illustrated with photographs and drawings.


Reference: 426.
Name: Lerner, , Ralph.
Title: "Jefferson's Pulse of Republican Reformation"
in
Publication: The Thinking Revolutionary: Principle and Practice in the New Republic .
City: Ithaca:
Publisher: Cornell University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 60-90.
Notes: As part of a larger argumentative strategy intended to oppose the deterministic aspects of the work of historians of republican/country ideology, the author explores TJ's intellectual "grand design" for a regime of self-governing people. Claims the Declaration of Independence provides the context for the significance of TJ's other achievements and focuses particularly on his proposed revisal of the laws of Virginia. States that "the revisal's rough journey through the Virginia General Assembly testifies to the political and psychic barriers separating Jefferson from those fellow planters in whose midst he lived and on whose votes his measures depended." Recognizes but perhaps somewhat underestimates the problematic textual status of the laws and the possible role of others, on or off the Committee of Revisors, and by treating the revisions as if they were a fully adequate index to Jefferson's thought, tends to deny some of their historic specificity. A stimulating discussion, but readers should also consult Julian Boyd's editorial note in Papers , vol 2, 305-24.


Reference: 427.
Name: Looby, , Christopher.
Title: "The Constitution of Nature: Taxonomy as Politics in Jefferson, Peale, and Bartram."

Publication: Early American Literature
Volume: 22
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 252-73.
Notes: Contends that in early republican America taxonomic construction of the natural order was "a rehearsal, so to speak, of social and political construction." TJ's "overwhelmingly static, synchronic presentation of knowledge in the Notes on Virginia was intended to foster" a social and political homogeneity demanded by his "reactionary anxiety." A strong point, but ignores TJ's welcoming of generations' independence from each other, the possibility of recurrent revolutionary violence, and other recognitions of the inevitability of change.


Reference: 428.
Name: McAllister, , Elaine.
Title: "Condorcet and Jefferson on Education."

Publication: Condorcet Studies II , ed. David Williams.
City: New York:
Publisher: Peter Lang,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 87-117.
Notes: Compares and contrasts ideas on education as embodied in Condorcet's Memoires of 1791 and the Rapport of 1792 and TJ's 1779 Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge and the School Bill of 1817 . Discusses their shared concerns for liberty and equality, their belief that education should be a liberating force, and that it should be free of political control. Their plans differed in so far as they reflected the different cultural, social, political, and economic differences of their societies. TJ's plans for a decentralized, local Virginia did not have to contend with the counter-revolutionary, anti-egalitarian threat Condorcet faced, but in both France and Virginia conservative forces resisted the radical purpose of their plans and perverted them into instruments of elite (and later middle-class) control over the lower classes.


Reference: 429.
Name: McGinty, , Brian.
Title: "Isaac Jefferson: The Slave Who Remembered."

Publication: American History Illustrated .
Volume: 21
Date: (February, 1987) .
Pages: 32-33.
Notes: A popular account drawn from Charles Campbell's transcription of Isaac's oral reminiscences.


Reference: 430.
Name: Moss, , Sidney P. and Carolyn Moss.
Title: "The Jefferson Miscegenation Legend in British Travel Books."

Publication: Journal of the Early Republic
Volume: 7
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 253-74.
Notes: Aims to show how the miscegenation legend accreted in British travel books about America and how British authors for the most part attempted to outdo their predecessors in scandal. Beginning with Callender's scurrilous charges, writers like Mrs. Smollet, Thomas Hamilton, and Hugo Playfair let their imaginations expand upon precious few facts (and those mostly irrelevant to the accusations) in order to develop the full-blown fantasies of TJ's white daughter being sold upon the block in New Orleans. Not all travellers took up the issue, and only relatively few pursued it at length. Some Tory writers used it as a device to expose republican principles as vicious in practice. Well-researched and informative.


Reference: 431.
Name: Nevins, , Jane.
Title: "The Men in the Empty Chairs"
in
Publication: Turning 200: The Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution .
City: n.p.:
Publisher: Richardson & Steirman,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 10-29.
Notes: Popular account; discusses TJ and John Adams as the two important leaders absent from the 1787 convention. They each feared for the American experiment, but in differing ways which arose from principles that had contending adherents in the convention. Conventional sketch, emphasizing his preference for merely amending the Articles of Confederation and his complacency toward Shays's rebels.


Reference: 432.
Name: Nichols, , David K.
Title: "The Promise of Progressivism: Herbert Croly and the Progressive Rejection of Individual Rights."

Publication: Publius
Volume: 17
Date: (Spring, 1987) ,
Pages: 27-39.
Notes: Discusses Croly's attempt to synthesize Hamiltonianism and Jeffersonianism; describes as distorting his identification of the tradition of TJ as that Primarily of a defense of individual rights against state power and suggests that it in effect fosters a confusion of TJ and the Antifederalists.


Reference: 433.
Name: Onuf, , Peter S.
Title: "The Ordinance of 1784"
in
Publication: Statehood and Nation: A History of the Northwest Ordinance .
City: Bloomington:
Publisher: Indiana Univ. Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 46-56.
Notes: Reprints and discusses the provisions of the Ordinance of 1784, drafted by a committee headed by TJ, and examines his thinking on the procedure of Western settlement. The 1784 Ordinance along with the 1785 land ordinance provided the basic framework for early American territorial policy. TJ expected the newly opened regions to be settled rapidly, but he failed to anticipate obstacles which Congress faced in organizing new settlements. Contends that he may have overestimated the ability of frontier settlers to govern themselves--he assumed that new settlements would be "states" from their beginning--and also expected too much from the new land system.


Reference: 434.
Name: Peden, , William.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)"
in
Publication: Fifty Southern Writers Before 1900 , ed. Robert Bain and Joseph M. Flora.
City: Westport CT:
Publisher: Greenwood,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 268-76.
Notes: Biographical sketch emphasizing TJ's diversity.


Reference: 435.
Name: Peterson, , Merrill D.
Title: "Jefferson, The West and the Enlightenment Vision."

Publication: Wisconsin Magazine of History
Volume: 70
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 270-80.
Notes: Based on author's Wisconsin Jefferson Lecture of June 24, 1986. For a general audience, covers the involvement with the West of the "premier exponent of the American Enlightenment," beginning with the provisions concerning western lands in his draft constitution for Virginia (the only articles that did find their way into Virginia's frame of government). Also discusses his role in the Ordinance of 1784, his impact on the land ordinance of 1785, and the Lewis and Clark expedition. Well-informed, thorough, but nothing new.


Reference: 436.
Name: Peterson, , Merrill D.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Constitution."

Publication: Community, Technical, and Junior College Journal
Volume: 59
Date: (August/ September, 1987) ,
Pages: 12-16.
Notes: See article of the same title published in 1986 in This Constitution and listed above.


Reference: 437.
Name: Pierard, , Richard V.
Title: "Separation of Church and State: Figment of an Infidel's Imagination?"
in
Publication: Faith and Freedom: A Tribute to Franklin H. Littell , ed. Richard Libowitz.
City: New York:
Publisher: Pergamon Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 143-50.
Notes: Responds to W. A. Criswell's denunciation of TJ's belief in separation of church and state by showing that Criswell thus repudiates his own Baptist heritage. (Criswell is a fundamentalist Baptist minister in Dallas who in 1960 had questioned John F. Kennedy's suitability as a Catholic to be president.) Points out further that such a position also ignores the idea's deep roots in the nation's history and its encouragement of religious devotion and diversity.


Reference: 438.
Name: Pierard, , Richard V.
Title: "Separation of Church and State in the United States and German Constitutions."

Publication: Fides et Historia
Volume: 19
Date: (June-July, 1987) ,
Pages: 47-62.
Notes: Comparing U.S. church-state policy as defined by TJ's separationist model (although that is currently under some attack) with the German accommodationist policy suggests that state assistance is actually harmful to the spiritual life of the church, as Madison asserted.


Reference: 439.
Name: Plotnik, , Art.
Title: "Jefferson-gate!"

Publication: American Libraries
Volume: 18
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 980.
Notes: Discusses Charles Goodrum's mystery, The Best Cellar , which hypothesizes that the original Library of Congress collection was not totally destroyed by the British in 1814 but that its survival was hushed up by friends of TJ who wanted to "slip one great chunk of money" to him. There appears to be some evidence for the rescue of some of the books in the original collection, although they have now disappeared.


Reference: 440.
Name: Popkin, , Richard H.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Letter to Mordecai Noah."

Publication: American Book Collector
Volume: 8
Date: (June, 1987) ,
Pages: 9-11.
Notes: Noah sent his speech at the founding of synagogue Kahal Kedereth Shearith Israel in New York to John Adams, TJ, and Madison and later published their replies in 1819. TJ wrote in his otherwise unpublished letter, "Your sect by its sufferings has furnished a remarkable proof of the universal spirit of intolerance inherent in every sect."


Reference: 441.
Name: Roland, , Daniel Dean.
Title: "The Influence of Francis Fauquier, William Small, and George Wythe on Thomas Jefferson."

Publication: Southern Historian
Volume: 8
Date: (Spring 1987) ,
Pages: 5-13.
Notes: Claims Fauquier gave TJ "a sense of gentility," Small introduced him to "nature's order and Enlightenment thinking," and Wythe, whose influence was most important of the three, both instructed him in the law and "helped him gain a sense of character." Possibly so, but doesn't add anything to what is already known about the relationships between TJ and his professed mentors in Williamsburg.


Reference: 442.
Name: Salviati, , Yvette.
Title: "La `Barque secrete' d'un demi-dieu: Thomas Jefferson dans La Virginienne ."

Publication: Mythes, Croyances et Religions dans le Monde Anglo-Saxon
Volume: 5
Date: (1987) . 165-85.
Notes: On the portrayal of TJ in Barbara Chase-Riboud's novel, originally published as Sally Hemings in 1979, translated into French as La Virginienne . This journal published by Section d'anglais, Faculté des lettres et des sciènces humaines, Université de Avìgnon.


Reference: 443.
Name: Sanderson, , Jane.
Title: "Jefferson's Descendent Becomes a Living Memorial."

Publication: People Weekly .
Volume: 27
Date: (January 26, 1987) . 80-81.
Notes: Roberts Coles III, a descendant of TJ, bears a strong physical resemblance and has developed a one-man show entitled "Meet Thomas Jefferson" in which he impersonates his ancestor.


Reference: 444.
Name: Schmitt, , Gary J.
Title: "Jefferson and Executive Power: Revisionism and the `Revolution of 1800.'"

Publication: Publius
Volume: 17
Date: (Spring, 1987) ,
Pages: 7-25.
Notes: Discusses the seeming contradiction between TJ's determined opposition to Hamilton's conception of a strong chief executive and his own exercise of presidential power. Argues that TJ understood the need for executive power, particularly after his experience as governor of Virginia, but that he undertook to limit the presidency's formal powers, e.g. by means of his style of "republican simplicity," accepting the two-term limit, etc. TJ understood as well as Hamilton the need for potentially expansive executive authority to meet unforseen contingencies, but he presumably hoped to keep the presidency from becoming a "form of government, the principal branches of which may be beyond the [people's] control."


Reference: 445.
Name: Seelye, , John.
Title: "Beyond the Shining Mountains: The Lewis and Clark Expedition as an Enlightenment Epic."

Publication: Virginia Quarterly Review
Volume: 63
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 36-53.
Notes: Argues that TJ's Notes sketch out "an imperial plan for the United States, couched as a typical expression of Enlightenment inquiry." The demonstration of that spirit appears in the documents and records of the Lewis and Clark expedition. The expedition was mounted to verify TJ's beautiful visionary map of North America; its success realizes an epic dimension but its darker implications also dim "the lustre of the Enlightenment spirit with which it was conceived." Interesting essay, but a bit diffuse.


Reference: 446.
Name: Sides, , W. Hampton.
Title: "In Pursuit of Happiness."

Publication: Washingtonian
Volume: 22
Date: (March, 1987) ,
Pages: 168-77.
Notes: Account of University of Virginia as a party school which has wandered from TJ's original vision, although it has also acquired considerable academic strengths.


Reference: 447.
Name: Sindt, , Dee.
Title: "Tribute to Thomas Jefferson at Clos de Vougeot."

Publication: Wine World
Volume: 61
Date: (Spring, 1987) ,
Pages: 14-20.
Notes: Describes dinner given by La Confrèrie des Chevaliers du Tastevin to commemorate TJ's 1787 tour through Burgundy. A social note, in effect, with little on TJ and wine.


Reference: 448.
Name: Singer, , Alan.
Title: "Why Did the Founding Fathers Write the Constitution of the United States?"

Publication: OAH Magazine of History
Volume: 2
Date: (Fall, 1987) ,
Pages: 25-32.
Notes: Fictional discussion among TJ, John Adams, Madison, Hamilton, and Abigail Adams that questions whether the Constitution was a defense of liberty or a self-serving document to preserve the economic and political position of aristocrats.


Reference: 449.
Name: Skillen, , James W.
Title: "Changing Assumptions in the Public Governance of Education: What Has Been Changed and What Ought to Change"
in
Publication: Democracy and the Renewal of Public Education , ed. Richard John Neuhaus.
City: Grand Rapids:
Publisher: Eerdmans,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 86-115.
Notes: Finds fundamentally incompatible the assumption drawn from the Greco-Roman tradition that government holds primary responsibility for educating citizens with that rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition which placed primary authority for educating children in the hands of parents. TJ and many of his contemporaries embraced the former assumption, but their philosophic understanding of human nature as sovereign individual persons defined by a universal law of nature entailed no detailed social or political philosophy. Claims TJ's natural rights beliefs lacked "a sufficiently positive content for its idea of political community" and "said even less about the distinct nature and purpose of the family, the school, the church, the economic enterprise, and so forth." Charges TJ with a republican dogmatism that was in effect a "biased sectarian ... philosophy" of rationalistic empiricism and enlightened moralism.


Reference: 450.
Name: Skillen, , James W.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Religious Character of Education."

Publication: Religion and Public Education
Volume: 14
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 381-85.
Notes: Contends that TJ's belief in a moral sense common to all human beings was "dogmatic," in effect putting him in the same category as those he criticized. Repeats the argument made elsewhere (see previous item) for the need to find a "new framework of public pluralism for schools" that is not based on a Jeffersonian faith in reason but upon religious views that emphasize human relationship to the Creator.


Reference: 451.
Name: Stowe, , Steven M.
Title: "Private Emotions and a Public Man in Early Nineteenth-Century Virginia."

Publication: History of Education Quarterly
Volume: 27
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 75-81.
Notes: Essay review of the final volume of Malone's biography and of Jan Lewis's 1983 The Pursuit of Happiness (see above). Suggests that the example of TJ may be an occasion to see questions of family in Virginia and the early 19th-century South complete within a specific biographical context. Puts these volumes in the context of other scholarship about the Southern family in this period.


Reference: 452.
Name: Sylvers, , Malcolm.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Constitution."

Publication: Storia Nordamericana
Volume: 4 nos. 1-2,
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 121-36.
Notes: Argues that TJ's residence in Europe in the 1780's allowed the maturing of his opinions about the Constitution and enhanced his ability to become a national leader. Overcoming his initial objections, he recognized that the Constitution was superior in fairness and protection of civil rights to any European institution. He also went beyond the parochialism of thinking of himself as a Virginian and gained a sense of himself as an American.


Reference: 453.
Name: Tattersall, , James J.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Douwes' Method of Determining Latitude."

Publication: Historia Mathematica
Volume: 14
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 275-81.
Notes: Discusses an unpublished manuscript of trigonometry problems which relate to TJ's computations of the latitude at Poplar Forest done in the winter of 1811. TJ used the method of Cornelius Douwes as simplified by the tables of Nevil Maskelyne. Reproduces the manuscript and explains the computations.


Reference: 454.
Name: "Thomas Jefferson at Monticello."
Publication: Museum News
Volume: 65
Date: (February, 1987) ,
Pages: 81-82.
Notes: Paragraph noting new exhibit.


Reference: 455.
Name: Tickener, , J. Ann.
Title: "Between Theory and Practice: The Transformation of Self-Reliance Themes in Thomas Jefferson's Thought"
in
Publication: Self-Reliance versus Power Politics: The American and Indian Experiences in Building Nation States .
City: New York:
Publisher: Columbia University Press,
Date: 1987.
Pages: 73-94.
Notes: Argues that where TJ's early political thought showed a strong concern for individual self-reliance, after 1800 the precarious international position of the U.S. compelled him to support policies designed to promote national integration and self-reliance, sometimes in contradiction to his earlier notions. Sees a tendency toward mercantilist strategies, partly because of his commitment to America's potential for power and prosperity, partly because of a perceived need to reverse dependency relationships with other nations. The concept of self-reliance is sometimes a bit one-dimensional here, but an interesting argument.


Reference: 456.
Name: Waddell, , Gene.
Title: "The First Monticello."

Publication: Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
Volume: 46
Date: (1987) ,
Pages: 5-29.
Notes: Well documented and illustrated essay claiming that TJ became an architect in the course of designing the first Monticello. This is one of the best-documented pre-Revolutionary buildings in the U. S., and TJ's records reveal that considerations of climate as well as aesthetics governed his selection of a site. They also show how far he relied on other sources for design, why he changed his plans during construction, how far he executed his designs, and why he largely destroyed the house. Argues that he later redesigned the house for aesthetic, rather than political, reasons.


Reference: 457.
Name: Anonymous
Title: "What Jefferson Said about Such Ploys."

Publication: Oklahoma Observer
Volume: 19
Date: (March 10, 1987) ,
Pages: 17.
Notes: Prints the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom without comment, but implicitly as a comment on Oklahoma politics.


Reference: 458.
Name: Zuckert, , Michael P.
Title: "Self-Evident Truth and the Declaration of Independence."

Publication: Review of Politics
Volume: 49
Date: (1987) .
Pages: 319-39.
Notes: Contends that a careful reading of the Declaration shows that TJ does not in fact insist that the opening truths are self-evident, but he calls for them to be treated as if they were self-evident. The text points not to their cognitive status but to their political or practical status ("we hold ..."). Appreciating the status of the so-called self-evident truths above all brings into focus the problem of politics as civic education in the American republic. It also focuses attention on the logical structure of the Declaration and illuminates recent scholarly debates over the meaning and sources of the Declaration. Offers a cogent critique of Morton White's and Garry Wills's analyses of the sources and significance of TJ's understanding of "self-evident" propositions, showing that if it is difficult to square the text's use of "self-evident truths" with a specific Lockean origin, there is, nevertheless, no barrier to reaffirming the traditional view of the role of Locke. Worthwhile essay.