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Jefferson lineage colors family relations. (Commentary).


'THIS is a story about family," Michelle Cooley said. "It's a story about coming together as a people and a country."

Nat Abeles sees it differently.

"This story," he told me, "is about how a single piece of yellow journalism yellow journalism: see newspaper.
yellow journalism

In newspaper publishing, the use of lurid features and sensationalized news in newspaper publishing to attract readers and increase circulation.
 can survive for 200 years if it serves some people's interest."

Whoever says Americans don't care about U.S. history should come to Charlottesville in early May when the Monticello Association -- of which Abeles is president -- holds its annual meeting.

The association limits membership to lineal descendants of Thomas Jefferson and by deed controls the family graveyard at Monticello, the mountaintop moun·tain·top  
n.
The summit of a mountain.
 home the third U.S. president built a few miles outside of town.

Cooley, for her part, is a descendent of Thomas Woodson, who, she says, was the son of Jefferson and his slave Sally Hemings.

When Cooley's father died in 1998, she asked to bury him in the Monticello graveyard, where all Jefferson's lineal That which comes in a line, particularly a direct line, as from parent to child or grandparent to grandchild.


LINEAL. That which comes in a line. Lineal consanguinity is that which subsists between persons, one of whom is descended in a direct line from the other.
 descendents are entitled to lie.

The association, dismissing talk of a Hemings-Jefferson liaison as an ancient canard ca·nard  
n.
1. An unfounded or false, deliberately misleading story.

2.
a. A short winglike control surface projecting from the fuselage of an aircraft, such as a space shuttle, mounted forward of the main wing and
, declined her request. This brought to a boil a controversy that had simmered for two centuries and continues today, in a roiling stew of racial grievance and sexual innuendo innuendo n. from Latin innuere, "to nod toward." In law it means "an indirect hint." "Innuendo" is used in lawsuits for defamation (libel or slander), usually to show that the party suing was the person about whom the nasty statements were made or why the comments . History at its very best, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
.

Taste far slander

And it did indeed begin in yellow journalism, as Abeles says.

In 1802, James Callender, a pamphleteer pam·phlet·eer  
n.
A writer of pamphlets or other short works taking a partisan stand on an issue.

intr.v. pam·phlet·eered, pam·phlet·eer·ing, pam·phlet·eers
To write and publish pamphlets.
 with a taste for slander, published the rumor that President Jefferson kept a slave as concubine CONCUBINE. A woman who cohabits with a man as his wife, without being married.  -- "dusky Sally," in Callender's frankly racist account -- and fathered several children with her.

Jefferson never denied the account outright, and the story was kept alive by abolitionists, radical Republicans and others with an interest in bringing his memory low. After the Civil War, a Republican newspaper printed a memoir by Sally's son Madison, who said Jefferson was his father and recollected in great detail his own childhood at Monticello.

Biographers mostly ignored Madison's account, deeming Jefferson too honorable a character to conduct such a skulking liaison. In 1973, historian Fawn Brodie revived the story in her Jefferson "psychobiography psy·cho·bi·og·ra·phy  
n. pl. psy·cho·bi·og·ra·phies
1. A biography that analyzes the psychological makeup, character, or motivations of its subject:
," and though her book became an international bestseller, it made her a pariah in her profession.

In historical circles, old-fashioned Jefferson defenders have been replaced by a more culturally diverse, though more politically uniform, set of historians who feel less obliged to defend traditional American icons.

Susan Stein, Monticello's curator, estimates that "more than 90 percent of professional historians who've looked at this are persuaded Jefferson and Hemings had a sustained relationship."

Science provided the key evidence. Not long after Michelle Cooley made her request, Nature magazine published DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 findings that proved Sally's son Eston, born in 1808, was fathered by a Jefferson: Thomas, or Thomas' brother or one of his nephews.

That was enough for the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which maintains Monticello, to quickly issue a report concurring with the Nature article. More important, it was enough for Oprah. The daytime chatmeister invited several Hemings descendents to appear on her syndicated television show with a Jefferson descendent sympathetic to their claim. He invited them all to the 1999 meeting of the Monticello Association. And they've been attending ever since.

Since 1999, association members have greeted them with ever diminishing amounts of Southern hospitality. Last year the association voted conclusively that Hemings descendents were ineligible for membership, absent more precise evidence of Jefferson's paternity The state or condition of a father; the relationship of a father.

English and U.S. Common Law have recognized the importance of establishing the paternity of children.
. This year other steps, such as barring outsiders from some of the weekend events, were taken to actively discourage Hemings descendents from attending.

More than 20 Hemings cousins traveled to Charlottesville for the meeting anyway. "I come because it's my family and I should be here," said Shay shay  
n. Informal
A chaise.



[Back-formation from chaise (taken as pl. )]

Noun 1.
 Banks-Young, a Hemings descendent from Columbus, Ohio.

As it turned out, the association didn't enforce its threats to exclude the Hemings descendents from events, and those who came eager for fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics.
fireworks

Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to
 left disappointed. Yet the culture clash survives, in ways both great and small.

The two families also are divided on what the controversy means. If the Hemings story is true, what does it say about Jefferson?

"It means that he was capable of sustaining a loving relationship for many years with a woman of color," Cooley told me. "It makes him warm and human."

This is not, to put it mildly, how the Monticello Association answers the question.

Sal Pace, a Jefferson descendent from Colorado, joined the association in the late 1990s, just before the Hemings controversy boiled over. Now, he sees the association as the last defender of Jefferson's honor.

"Think of what this means," he said, as the meeting wound down Sunday afternoon. "We're being asked to say that one of the greatest Americans in history, the man who wrote the Declaration of Independence, was essentially a rapist. Maybe that doesn't bother other people, but I'm sorry, I'm not prepared to say that."

Andrew Ferguson is a columnist with Bloomberg News.
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Title Annotation:Thomas Jefferson
Author:Ferguson, Andrew
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 12, 2003
Words:810
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