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Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States of America - Thomas Jefferson DID NOT father any children by Sally Hemings

Started by Private User on Monday, April 28, 2025
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A groundbreaking book raises serious doubts about the allegation that Thomas Jefferson had a sexual relationship with the enslaved Sally Hemings that produced one or more children. Entitled “The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission,” it presents the conclusions of a yearlong inquiry by more than a dozen senior scholars from around the country.

Containing more than 400 pages and 1,400 footnotes, it is by far the most comprehensive analysis of the issue. With but a single mild dissent, the scholars concluded the story is probably false.

This conclusion will come as a surprise to many, who will recall the prestigious science journal “Nature” published a 1998 story entitled “Jefferson Fathered Slave’s Last Child,” suggesting the relationship had been confirmed by DNA tests. But as the study’s director, Dr. Eugene Foster, emphasized in letters to the editor of both “Nature” and the New York Times, the DNA tests merely linked Eston Hemings to one of more than two-dozen Jefferson males known to have been in Virginia at the time. Thomas Jefferson’s DNA was not involved.

The story originated in 1802 as part of a blackmail scheme by the most notorious scandalmonger of his era, James Thomson Callender, who once described George Washington as a “traitor” and a “thief.” During the 1800 presidential campaign Callender repeatedly libeled incumbent John Adams. After Jefferson won, Callender declared “by lying I made you President” and demanded as compensation appointment as Postmaster of Richmond — threatening that if Jefferson refused he would turn his pen on the president and exact “ten-thousand-fold vengeance.” Jefferson refused.

Callender first charged Jefferson was a French agent, and then that he was an atheist. Although Callender had never even been to Monticello, he learned there were biracial children there (the Hemings family was inherited by Jefferson upon the death his father-in-law in 1773), and Callender alleged Jefferson had begun a long-term affair with Sally, while serving as U.S. Minister to France, that had produced a son named “Tom” who resembled the president. There is no record of any such “Tom” in surviving Monticello records, and the subsequent claim of Thomas Woodson to have been that child was refuted by six DNA tests. Because they knew Jefferson and Callender, even Jefferson’s political enemies John Adams and Alexander Hamilton dismissed Callender’s charges as false.

There is no evidence that Sally or her children received “extraordinary privileges” as is widely alleged. She was never legally freed, and her children were not all given their freedom upon turning 21 as is often claimed. (Her eldest son, Beverly, left Monticello around the age of 24 without being legally freed.) It is true that Jefferson freed Sally’s sons Madison and Eston in his will, but he freed all but two of the sons and grandsons of Sally’s mother, Betty Hemings, who were still his “property” at that time — and Sally’s sons received by far the worst treatment in the will.

Only two surviving accounts of Sally’s abilities survive, and both are negative. Abigail Adams hosted Jefferson’s daughter Mary and Sally for three weeks in London in 1787 on their way to Paris and wrote the teenaged Sally needed “more care” than 8-year-old Mary and was “wholly incapable” of even babysitting.

We know very little of Sally’s life in Paris, but the surviving evidence suggests she didn’t even live near Jefferson. Her duties were to serve as ladies’ maid to daughters Martha and Mary, who lived across town in a Catholic convent school that had servants’ quarters. Years later, Martha received letters from Paris classmates asking to be remembered to Sally.

Sally is seldom mentioned in Jefferson’s records except on lists of his slaves, where she is treated exactly like her sisters. Jefferson wrote his overseer in 1790 that while he was in Washington his daughter Martha and her husband were to have “whatever the plantation will furnish,” including “the use of the house-servants, to wit Ursula, Critta, Sally, Bet, Wormley and Joe. So also of Betty Hemings should her services be necessary.” As usual, Sally was treated no different from other descendants of Betty Hemings. This was nearly a dozen years before the Callender allegation was first published, and one might have thought that had Sally been Jefferson’s “lover” she would have been among the dozen slaves he regularly took to Washington. She was not.

The most objective eyewitness observer on this issue may be overseer Edmund Bacon, who decades after Jefferson’s death denied allegations Jefferson fathered Sally’s children by noting he had often observed another man leaving Sally’s room while arriving for work early in the morning.

If Thomas Jefferson did not father Eston, who did? The best guess is his younger brother Randolph, who was documented in “Memoirs of a Monticello Slave” to have spent his nights at Monticello playing his fiddle and “dancing half the night” with his brother’s slaves and is alleged to have fathered children by other slaves.

Some claim the “oral history” of Sally’s descendants helps prove the alleged relationship. By far the strongest oral traditions along those lines were passed down by descendants of Thomas Woodson, whose claim was refuted by six DNA tests. There are no known descendants of Beverly or Harriet, leaving only Madison and Eston among Sally’s known children. Madison waited nearly 50 years after Jefferson’s death before reportedly claiming to be Thomas Jefferson’s son, but the new book identifies numerous errors in his account. The story passed down for generations by Eston’s descendants (until author Fawn Brodie persuaded them otherwise in the 1970s) was that Eston was not President Jefferson’s child, but the child of an “uncle.” Because of his relationship to daughter Martha, brother Randolph was widely known at Monticello as “Uncle Randolph.”

The weight of the evidence along with official pronouncements of the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society prove that Thomas Jefferson did not father any children by Sally Hemings. It is only groups like BLM, Antifa, the 1619 Project, and cultural Marxists, who want to keep the false narrative alive about Thomas Jefferson fathering slave children, simply to appease their ideological movements.

As such, all the children by Sally Hemings should be removed from this profile, as it is disingenuous and shoddy genealogy to keep them listed under Thomas Jefferson's profile here on Geni.

Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States of America is my second cousin 8 times removed.

Private User

We need links to the studies and articles you mention. Is your posting your original writing, or a quotation? If so, from what source? If it’s yours, let’s avoid the political mention at the bottom?

Do you know of an updated DNA report? How do they differentiate “Uncle Randolph” from President Jefferson? That would be pretty difficult, yes?

This is all from the commission’s report titled, “The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission,”

There isn’t a digitized copy anywhere, but available for purchase from different venues!

KM,

Your reasoning seems sound. Thank you for posting. Do you have references?

Gosh, I haven't heard anyone raise the Scholars Commission in an eternity. Their report came out in 2000, and their group had their own biases and problems.

Crucially, we stick to genealogy here, nothing else. And when the Scholars Commission published their report, the NGS wrote a response harshly critiquing their genealogical methods -- that's really important. Many of the Scholars Commission members were excellent lawyers, businesspeople, some historians, but they didn't follow genealogical principles in their research and writing. So we really can't use their report as a source here.

(National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 89, No. 3, September 2001, pp. 207, 214–18)

Sounds like Project 2025 white washing.

Sounds like Project 2025 white washing.

Why you hiding behind initials?

Jacklyn, I'd ask that we just let it go and move on. We try really hard to stick to genealogy on this site. The fact is, the report in question has been discredited as a genealogical source, so we aren't going to use it as one. Not much more to discuss or debate about it.

The lies about Thomas Jefferson are refuted by an objective analysis of all of the evidence.

This and the documented testimony of Edmund Bacon, the overseer, proves the allegations against Thomas Jefferson are completely false. All that is needed to falsify the claim.

"How do they differentiate “Uncle Randolph” from President Jefferson? That would be pretty difficult, yes?"

"The most objective eyewitness observer on this issue may be overseer Edmund Bacon, who decades after Jefferson’s death denied allegations Jefferson fathered Sally’s children by noting he had often observed another man leaving Sally’s room while arriving for work early in the morning."

I believe it was Jefferson's brother or uncle, maybe cousin (I don't recall that detail, offhand), who was observed consorting with Sally Hemming. The overseer didn't name him, of course, but it was proven by other records that he was present in the house at the time and that he was lonely because his wife was deceased.

Still the same yDNA, but wrong male.

re: Do you know of an updated DNA report? How do they differentiate “Uncle Randolph” from President Jefferson? That would be pretty difficult, yes?

re: Still the same yDNA, but wrong male.

With respect to Sally Hemming, it is possible she may have had relationships with more than one man, who could have shared the same haplogroup. Being present in the house and lonely, and excuse my bluntness but leaving Sally's room, or even being observed "in the act" does not mean someone was the father. It also does not rule them out, of course, but I don't want a comment that sounds like an episode of the Jerry Springer show, so use your imagination. ;-)

FWIW, I also think this smells of politics. Many things do, of course, but if two brothers are both suspects for paternity that is pretty sticky. It isn't like a modern day situation where it would typically be pretty obvious one was the uncle--unless the brothers in question were identical twins or something along those lines. Enough time has passed, I'm not sure autosomal DNA is going to be able to prove anything reliably?

It is ironic that 'genealogists' and 'scholars' seem so inclined to arbitrarily attribute ydna to the most historically or politically notable male member of a famous family.

And willing to go way out on a limb in attempts to justify their opinions while persuading the general public that speculation is actual fact.

For me, it seems possible, perhaps even likely, she could have had "relationships"--consensual or otherwise with both men. She was a slave.

You could argue motivation in several directions. Someone could certainly have motivation to want notable ancestry, and others could have motivation to want to erase such a claim. That is what I'm suggesting in my post. A DNA test of Sally, any possible father and offspring at the time would have been able to reliably show who the parents were, but in hindsight DNA is only part of the picture.

One book, from already discredited sources seems on shaky ground unless they have something really new to offer? Which it seems they do not?

The Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society maintains that their research has uncovered critical pieces of evidence that make Jefferson’s paternity of Hemings’ children nearly impossible. One piece of this evidence is the DNA test, performed in 1998, which allegedly proved Jefferson was the father of Hemings’ son Eston. Authors to a study done in 2011 say that because the DNA sample was taken from an uncle of Jefferson and not the former president himself, Eston’s father could have been any one of two dozen Jefferson men living in Virginia at the time.

Please read A Civil Action: Sally Hemings v. Thomas Jefferson

Allegations that Thomas Jefferson had an affair and fathered at least one child with slave Sally Hemings have been discussed for two centuries. In this Article, the authors summarize a “mock” trial defense of Jefferson, concluding that the allegations are unproved by the greater weight of the evidence.

https://www.tjheritage.org/a-civil-action-sally-hemings-v-thomas-je...

No genealogical society accepts any of the descendants of Sally Hemings for membership using Thomas Jefferson as an ancestor!!! That’s a stone cold fact. This includes any of the royal, noble, or patriotic genealogical societies in America today.

For Geni, none of Sally Hemings' children should be placed as children of Thomas Jefferson, regardless of the historical revisionism and propaganda perpetrated by the Thomas Jefferson (Memorial) Foundation for the last 25 years!

The American Journal of Trial Advocacy is not a genealogical journal.

The National Genealogical Society Journal has published an entire issue (Vol. 89, No. 3) dedicated to the idea that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had children. They support it.

The TJHS argues many things, but we will continue to stick to genealogical evidence.

This research highlights DEI's removal of African-American History, with a specific focus on Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. The 1619 book, a product of Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times Magazine, edited by Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman, and Jake Silverstein, is a fundamental aspect of Black History. As an African-American, I have a familial connection to this history, as my great-uncle and other relatives are descendants of Sally Hemings. I am concerned that DEI's actions will result in the erasure of Black History and the disqualification of DNA.

Re:I am concerned that DEI's actions will result in the erasure of Black History and the disqualification of DNA.

We live in really strange times right now, so I can understand why you feel this way. I am only posting about DNA, and I can see how this could go either way IF we look only to the DNA. To put things another way, it sounds like this book is trying to base their claim by using the same logic they claim is flawed when applied to support Thomas Jefferson as the father.

Personally, I think it seems a bit of a reach to have Jefferson's brother conveniently stopping by and impregnating Sally when Thomas was living there and available. Again, I'm not trying to be crass, but even IF Sally did sleep with his brother, what are the odds of getting pregnant and having children from the encounters? Didn't he also have a life? He wasn't living there too, right? If it was one child, OK, perhaps, and again maybe he or another Jefferson make could be the father of one of the children, but all of them? It seems more likely the father was the man living there.

I copied this from the discussion.

Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society prove that Thomas Jefferson did not father any children by Sally Hemings. It is only groups like BLM, Antifa, the 1619 Project, and cultural Marxists, who want to keep the false narrative alive about Thomas Jefferson fathering slave children, simply to appease their ideological movements. As such, all the children by Sally Hemings should be removed from this profile, as it is disingenuous and shoddy genealogy to keep them listed under Thomas Jefferson's profile here on Geni.

He is my 10th cousin

It was stated,

"The American Journal of Trial Advocacy is not a genealogical journal.

The National Genealogical Society Journal has published an entire issue (Vol. 89, No. 3) dedicated to the idea that Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings had children. They support it.

The TJHS argues many things, but we will continue to stick to genealogical evidence."

There is no DNA evidence confirming that Thomas Jefferson fathered any children with Sally Hemings or any other slave at his plantation. It was late 1998 with the release of DNA evidence that Nature magazine wrongly alleged proved Thomas Jefferson fathered at least one of Sally Hemings's children. The DNA sample was not taken from Thomas Jefferson himself but from his uncle, which only suggested that two dozen or so men with that particular Y-DNA signature could have fathered JUST ONE of Sally's children, that being Eston! The DNA study totally dismissed the possibility of any of the other children of Heming be fathered by any Jefferson with that Y-DNA signature. Moreover, there were other surnamed men in Virginia at that time who had a similar Y-DNA signature as the Jefferson
family.

In fact, the DNA evidence merely showed that Sally Hemings' youngest son, Eston, was likely fathered by one of more than two dozen Jefferson males in Virginia at the time. Eugene Foster, who organized the DNA tests, acknowledged that the results did not point to the then 64-year-old Thomas Jefferson any more than to his much younger brother, Randolph, or for that matter any of Randolph's five sons.

Indeed, the less cerebral Randolph would seem to be a far more likely candidate for Eston's paternity than the aging president. Randolph is documented by a 19th-century slave account to have spent his evenings at Monticello playing his fiddle among the slaves and "dancing half the night," and there is evidence he fathered children by his own slaves. We know that Randolph, who lived only 20 miles away, was invited to Monticello only days before Sally Hemings likely conceived Eston.

Furthermore, the oral history passed down for generations by Eston's descendants claimed he wasn't Thomas Jefferson's child but the son of "an uncle." Thomas Jefferson's paternal uncles died decades before Eston was conceived, but the president's brother was widely known at Monticello as "Uncle Randolph" because of his relationship to the president's daughters.

Finally, all of Sally Hemings's known children seem to have been born between the death of Randolph's first wife and his remarriage at about the time Eston was born. About the same time as this remarriage, Thomas Jefferson completed his second term and returned to live full time at Monticello; the 34-year-old Sally conceived no more known children.

So, it is absurd and a genealogical fiction to say that the "genealogical evidence" supports Thomas Jefferson being the father of Sally Hemings' youngest child, Eston, and extremely absurd to say he fathered all of them!

Those are the DNA facts and they are undisputed.

For those interested in learning about this long-standing controversy, Wikipedia has a long, detailed entry summarizing the available evidence and the points made by different commentators: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jefferson%E2%80%93Hemings_controversy

I would recommend reading the NGSQ issue, which actually doesn't center on questions of DNA, and only looks at that as one small piece of the puzzle.

We have some parties here deeply invested in not showing these relationships in the tree. I can respect those views; it's certainly an interesting topic. But we're not going to change this profile away from what even the Thomas Jefferson Foundation itself has come around to saying is a settled argument. And we're definitely not going to do it based on a document from 2000 that has been widely decried by genealogists. The TJHS report is a non-starter, though you're welcome to present journal articles from major genealogical journals in this century that agree with their claims.

Not much left for me to say after that.

The interpretation by Fawn Brodie was nothing more than that: an interpretation. Randall had absolutely zero proof, and the DNA shows nothing more than zero proof. Why is this still an issue? Fawn Brodie wrote her assertation based on what she had only "heard"... Annette Gordon-Reed... her analysis was based on no substantial research, but again on detailing oversights and presenting bias.

The Y-DNA test presented as proof that there was a connection between the Jefferson and Eston Hemings line... truly does not mean that Jefferson fathered these children... and anyone within their due diligence to Genealogy should recognze this as such.

"A changed consensus emerged after a Y chromosome DNA analysis was done in 1998, which showed a match between a descendant of the Jefferson family male line, a descendant of Field Jefferson, and a descendant of Eston Hemings, Sally's youngest son. It showed no match between the Carr line and the Hemings descendant." This presents a few issues: IF this is known as fact; which I myself have not done the research; this still presents no actual FACT that JEFFERSON himself was the father.
Without further ACTUAL DNA testing, this will forever be an argument for everyone who cares about it.

Still... no need to be rude to anyone. THAT needs to stop. We are not adolescents.... so let us not act as such. Agree to disagree... until DNA proves otherwise.

As has been said all along from a strictly GENEALOGICAL and DNA standpoint!

Based on all of the GENEALOGICAL and DNA evidence, it is absurd and a genealogical fiction to unequivocally state that the "genealogical evidence" supports Thomas Jefferson being the father of Sally Hemings' youngest child, Eston, and extremely absurd to say he fathered all of them!

Those are the current (May 2025) DNA facts and they are undisputed.

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