AC. The President of the United States impregnated his wife’s sister, a slave, six times.

In September 1802, a Richmond, Virginia newspaper published an article that shook the entire American nation. The President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, the man who had written the words All men are created equal, kept one of his slaves as a concubine . Her name was Sali, and he had had several children with her.

The scandal erupted in the middle of Jefferson’s presidency. His political enemies used history to destroy him. The newspapers published obscene cartoons. The sermons in the churches condemned him. But Jefferson never responded, never denied, never confirmed, he simply remained silent. And that silence lasted 200 years.

What the newspaper didn’t publish was even worse. Sally Hemings was not just his slave, she was the half-sister of his dead wife. The two women shared the same father. When Jefferson’s wife died, he inherited Sally. I was 9 years old. Eighteen years later, Sally had had six children. All from the same man, all children of the president, all born into slavery.

All with skin light enough to be mistaken for white, all with the face of Thomas Jefferson. As the author of the Declaration of Independence, he ended up having a secret family with his deceased wife’s sister. How a 16-year-old girl ended up pregnant by the most powerful man in America. Why did Sali agree to return from Paris when he could have been free? and how they lived for 38 years under the same roof without anyone doing anything to stop it.

The answer lies in what began in 1787 when Thomas Jefferson took Sally Hemings to Paris. When she arrived in Paris at 14 and he was 44, when she was still legally his property and when he made her a promise that would change both their destinies forever. This is the story that America tried to bury for two centuries.

The story that only DNA could confirm. The story of the president and the slave who was the sister of his dead wife. Virginia, United States, 1782. Thomas Jefferson was 39 years old. He was a lawyer, politician, architect, and philosopher. He had written the Declaration of Independence 6 years earlier. He was respected throughout the nation.

He owned a plantation called Montichelo, with hundreds of acres working for him. He was a man of principle. Or at least that’s what he said. In September of that year, his wife Marta died after giving birth to their sixth child. Jefferson was devastated. He spent three weeks locked in his room. When he finally got out, he made a promise. I would never get married again

I would never replace Marta.  He kept that promise, but he found another way to avoid being alone.  Martha Wales Jefferson had brought a considerable dowry to her marriage: land, money, and slaves. Among those slaves were the Hemings family, Elizabeth Hemings and her children. One of those children was Sally.  I was 9 years old when Marta died.

She was small, thin, fair-skinned, and had long, straight hair.  She didn’t look like an African slave because she wasn’t completely one. His father was John Wales, Martha’s father , Jefferson’s father-in-law.  Sally Hemings was the half-sister of Jefferson’s deceased wife and was now his property.

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Now, let ‘s go back to 1782, to Montichelo, to the plantation where Thomas Jefferson had just inherited his deceased wife’s 9-year-old sister and where 5 years later he would make a decision that would change both their lives forever.  When Martha Jefferson died, Thomas inherited everything she had brought to the marriage.

That included the Hemings family.  Elizabeth Hemings was the matriarch.  He was 57 years old.  She had been a slave of John Wales, Martha’s father .  She had had 12 children.  Six of them belonged to John Wales.  They were Marta’s brothers.  half, brothers, slaves with the blood of their own father.  One of those children was Sally.

He was 9 years old when he arrived in Monticelo.  Sali didn’t work in the fields; that was unusual.  Slave children began working in the fields from the age of six or eight.  But Sally was assigned to the main house.  She worked as a maid, helped in the kitchen, served at the table, cleaned the rooms, and was close to Jefferson’s white family all the time.  That was also unusual.

Jefferson had strict rules about which slaves could be in the house, but Sali and his brothers were different.  They were related to Marta, blood of the Wales family.  That gave them certain privileges that other slaves did not have.  The years passed.  Sali grew up.  Jefferson spent most of his time in politics.

He traveled constantly; he was governor of Virginia.  Later sent to France as minister.  In 1784, Jefferson left for Paris.  He took his eldest daughter, Patsi, who was 11 years old, with him.  She left her two youngest daughters in Virginia with relatives.  His plan was to stay in France for only 2 years.  He stayed five.

During those years, Jefferson lived in Paris as a diplomat.  He had an elegant house in the Elean fields.  She attended dinners with French nobles, met philosophers and artists, enjoyed European culture, but missed her daughters.  In 1787 he decided it was time to bring Poly, his 9-year-old daughter, to Paris.  He wrote to his brother-in-law in Virginia.

She needed the girl to be sent by boat and she needed her to travel with a companion, a responsible adult woman who could take care of her during the six-week voyage.  But when the ship arrived in London in June 1787, the person who disembarked with Poly was not an adult woman, it was Sally Hemings.  He was 14 years old.

The ship’s captain wrote a letter to Jefferson explaining the situation.  The woman who was supposed to accompany Poly had fallen ill at the last minute.  The family decided to send Sally instead.  The captain wrote that Sally was a very nice girl, that she had taken good care of Poly throughout the voyage, and that the child was healthy and happy.

Jefferson received the letter, expressed no anger at the change of plans, and simply made arrangements for both of them to travel from London to Paris.  Sally arrived in Paris in mid- July.  It was hot.  The city was full of life.  Sally had never left Virginia.  I had never seen such a big city, I had never seen so many people.

Jefferson welcomed them into his home, hugged Poly, then looked at Sally.  She had changed.  She was no longer the 9-year-old girl she remembered.  I was 14 years old now.  She was tall, thin, had long, straight hair, fair skin, and delicate features.  She looked like someone, like Marta, Jefferson’s dead wife .  That was no coincidence.

Sali and Marta were sisters.  They shared the same genes, the same traits.  Sali was like a ghost from the past, a living memory of the woman Jefferson had loved.  Jefferson decided that Sally would stay in Paris; he would not send her back to Virginia.  Poly needed a constant companion, someone to take care of her.

Sally would fulfill that role.  But Sally also needed training.  In France, servants were more refined than in Virginia. Jefferson paid for Sali to learn French, to learn to sew better, and to learn French manners.  Sali spent 2 years in Paris learning, growing, living in a city where slavery did not legally exist, where slaves could ask for their freedom before a court, where they could be free.

Sally lived in Jefferson’s house.  He slept in a small room upstairs. She helped dress Patsi and Poly.  I accompanied them to school, shopped at the markets, and learned the language.  The neighbors saw her as a maid, not as a slave, because technically she wasn’t one .  On French soil, Sali was free.  He could leave if he wanted.

He could stay in France, he could ask for asylum. She could start a new life.  But he was 14 years old.  She was alone, she didn’t know anyone, she had no money, she had no family except the Jeffersons.  Where would I go ?  Jefferson spent a lot of time at home during those years.  I didn’t travel as much as before.

He worked from his studio, received visitors, wrote letters and observed, he observed Sali moving around the house.  I watched as he learned French quickly.  She watched as Poly adored her.  I watched as she looked more and more like Marta every day.  Every gesture, every movement, every smile.  It was like having Marta back, but younger, more vulnerable, and completely dependent on him.

It is not clear exactly when it began.  The records don’t say so, the documents are vague, but sometime between 1787 and 1789, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings began a relationship.  He was 44 years old.  She was 16. He was the United States minister to France.  She was his slave.  He was free to do whatever he wanted.  She had no real options.  That is the nature of power.

That is the nature of slavery.   It does n’t matter that they were in France, it doesn’t matter that technically she was free.  The power between them was so unequal that the word consent had no real meaning.  In the fall of 1789, Jefferson received news from the United States.  George Washington had been elected president and Washington wanted Jefferson in his cabinet as secretary of state.

Jefferson would have to return to Virginia; he would have to leave Paris.  He began making preparations, packing his books, his furniture, his documents.  He bought tickets on a ship that would leave in October.  Two tickets for her daughters, one for James Hemings, Sally’s brother, who worked as her chef, and one for Sally.

But Sally didn’t want to leave.  For the first time in his life, he had something resembling freedom.  In Paris, nobody treated her like a slave.   She could walk the streets alone.  I could talk to whomever I wanted, I could dream of a different future.  If I went back to Virginia, all of that would end.  She would become property again, she would become a slave again, she would have no rights again, she would have no voice again, and there was something else.

Sali was pregnant.  He was 16 years old.  She was in a foreign country and carrying in her womb the child of the man who technically owned her.  According to the testimony of her son Madison Hemings, given many years later, Sally refused to return.  He told Jefferson that he would stay in France, that he could be free there, that his son would be born free.

Jefferson could not force her.  Not legally, not in France.  Then he did the only thing he could do.  He begged her, he made her promises, he promised her that if she returned to Virginia he would treat her well, that she would have privileges, that she would never work in the fields.  And most importantly, he promised her that all her children would be freed when they turned 21.

That was the promise: freedom, not for her, but for her children, for the next generation.  Sali was 16 years old, pregnant, alone, and knew no one in France except the Jeffersons.  I had no money, I had nowhere to go.  Jefferson’s promises were all he had. Then he agreed.  In October 1789, Sally Hemings boarded a ship bound for Virginia.

She was three months pregnant.  She was traveling with her son’s father, the man who owned him, the man who had been her half-sister’s husband.  She returned to a life of slavery because it was the only option she had, or at least the only option she could see.  Sally Hemings arrived back in Montichelo in November 1789.

She was 5 months pregnant.  Nobody asked any questions.  The slaves knew it was better not to ask.  Jefferson’s white family didn’t ask either.  Or if they suspected something, they kept quiet. Sally was assigned back to the main house, not to the fields, not to the slave kitchens, to the house near Jefferson.

close to her daughters, as if nothing had changed.  But everything had changed.  In 1790, Sally gave birth to her first child.  There is no record of the name, no record of the exact date, only a brief note in Jefferson’s papers indicating that a baby had been born.  And then another note.  The baby died a few weeks after birth.

It is not known what of .  Childhood illnesses were common, and mortality was high, especially among slaves.  Sali was 17 years old.  She had lost her first child.  Jefferson wrote nothing about that in his private letters.  He didn’t mention the birth, he didn’t mention the death as if it hadn’t happened.  Jefferson was appointed Secretary of State under President George Washington.

That meant he would spend a lot of time in Philadelphia, where the capital was at the time, but he returned to Montichelo frequently, every few months, staying for weeks, sometimes months, and every time he returned, Sally was there waiting, working, living in a small room in the south building of the plantation, a room next to Jefferson’s.  That wasn’t normal.

Slaves did not live in rooms with their masters, but Sali was not a normal slave and everyone in Montichelo knew it. In 1795, Sali gave birth to a girl.  They named her Harriet.  She had fair skin, very fair, so much so that she could pass for white.  He had Jefferson’s features, the eyes, the shape of his face.

Anyone who saw them together could notice, but nobody said anything.  Harriet lived for 2 years, then she died.  Again, there is no record of the cause.  Again, Jefferson did not write about it.  Two dead children. Sally was 22 years old, had lost two babies, and was still a slave.  In 1798, Sally gave birth to a boy.

They called him Beverly.  This time the baby survived. She grew up strong, healthy, fair-skinned like her sister, with Jefferson’s features .  Beverly did not work in the fields.  He worked as a carpenter, as a musician.  He lived in the big house, not in the slave huts.  It was treated differently.

Better, because everyone knew who his father was.  Even though nobody said it out loud.  In 1799, Sali gave birth to a girl.  There is no record of the name.  The baby died in infancy.  Three children are now dead, one child is alive.  Sally was 26 years old. Jefferson was 56. He was now the Vice President of the United States, the second most powerful man in the nation.

And he kept returning to Monticielo, he kept returning to Sali.  In 180, Sali gave birth to another girl.  They also called her Harriet, like the first one who had died.  This Harriet survived. She was beautiful, with fair skin, straight hair, and blue eyes.  She didn’t look like a slave, she looked like a white girl from a good family.

And that was exactly what it was, at least half of it.  That same year, Thomas Jefferson was elected president of the United States.  He moved to Washington DC.  He lived in the White House, but kept returning to Montichelo every few months.  I would spend weeks there, sometimes months, during the summer when the heat in Washington was unbearable.

And every time he returned, Sally was there waiting for him.  During these years Jefferson was the most powerful man in America.  But in Monticelo, in that small room next to his, lived his secret.  The slaves of Montichelo knew, the neighbors suspected, the visitors noticed the light-skinned children who resembled the president, but no one spoke.

not publicly until someone did. In September 1802, a journalist named James Callender published an article in the Recorder newspaper.  Cender, an ally of Jefferson, had supported him politically, but the two had had a falling out.  Cender wanted revenge and had the perfect story to destroy Jefferson.  The article said that President Jefferson kept one of his slaves as a concubine, that her name was Sally, that he had had several children with her, that these children lived in Montichelo, that they resembled Jefferson,

that everyone in Virginia knew it, but no one dared to say it.  Calender wrote with specific details, names, ages, descriptions.   I was making it up, I was reporting what I had heard, what many knew, what no one had dared to publish.  The scandal exploded. Newspapers across the country picked up the story.

Jefferson’s political enemies , the Federalists, used the article to attack him.  They published obscene cartoons.  They wrote satirical poems, they called him a hypocrite.  They said that the man who had written that all men are created equal had slave children, that the president of the nation kept a slave mistress, that he was a liar, a fraud, a man without morals.

Jefferson did not respond, never denied the article, never confirmed anything, he simply remained silent.  His daughters defended their father, saying it was impossible, that he would never do such a thing, that the light-skinned children in Montichelo were the children of Jefferson’s nephews, not his, and that Calender was lying out of revenge.

But Jefferson himself never said anything, not a single public word about Sally Hemings, not a single denial, not a single confirmation. The scandal eventually died down. Jefferson was re-elected in 1804, served his second full term, and kept returning to Montelo, kept seeing Sali, kept having children with her because power protects.

And Jefferson had all the power.  I didn’t have any.  In 1805, Sally gave birth to a boy.  They called him Madison.  He was her fifth living child. Beverly was 7 years old.  Harriet had four.  Madison grew up knowing who her father was.  Years later, when he was an adult and free, he gave an interview to a newspaper.  He told the whole story.

He said that his father was Thomas Jefferson, that his mother was Sally Hemings, that he had grown up in Montichelo knowing this, that everyone knew it, that nobody talked about it, but that it was true.  In 1808, Sally gave birth to her last child. They called him Eston.  She had the fairest skin of them all.

He could easily pass for white.  Years later, when he was free, he changed his last name.  He called himself Eston Hemings Jefferson.  He took his father’s surname, the surname he was never legally entitled to use, but which was his by blood.  Sally Hemings, you had children with Thomas Jefferson.  Four survived to adulthood.

Beverly, Harriet, Madison and Eston.  All with light skin.  All with Jefferson’s features.  All slaves by birth.  Because the law stated that children followed the condition of their mother.  It didn’t matter who the father was.  If the mother was a slave, the children were slaves.  Even if the Father was the President of the United States, even if the Father had written that all men are created equal.

The law was clear and the law protected men like Jefferson, never women like Sally.  After the 180 scandal, Thomas Jefferson served two full terms as president, 8 years. During those years he traveled constantly between Washington DC and Monticelo.  He spent months in the capital.  Then he would return to Virginia, and every time he came back, Sally was there.  The scandal changed nothing.

Jefferson didn’t sell her, he didn’t send her away, he didn’t end the relationship, he simply carried on as if nothing had happened because he could, because nobody could force him to do anything different.  In 1809, Jefferson finished his presidency.  He was 66 years old.  He was tired of politics. He returned to Montichelo to stay, to live out his last years on his plantation with his white family and with Sali.

She was 36 years old, and had spent half her life with Jefferson.  She had had six children of her own.  He had lost two.  She had raised four and was still their slave.  Life in Monticelo had a strange routine.  Jefferson lived in the main house with his white daughters and grandchildren.  Sally lived in a small room in the south building, connected to the house by a corridor.

His children lived nearby.  Beverly worked as a carpenter.  Harriet helped around the house.  Madison and Eston were still children.  They all worked, but not like the other slaves, not in the fields under the sun, not being whipped by overseers; they worked in the house, learned trades, and had privileges that the other 300 slaves of Monticelo did not have.

Visitors noticed the light-skinned children, asked who the slaves were, and received evasive answers.  They are part of the Hemings family.  They are good workers.  They have white blood, but they never said whose.  Everyone knew it, but no one said it out loud.  It was the secret they all shared, the secret they protected.

Because Jefferson was power, Jefferson was respected, because speaking the truth out loud would mean destroying everything.  A slave named Isaac Jefferson, who worked at Montichelo for years, gave an interview many years later.  She talked about life on the plantation, and mentioned Sally Hemings. She said that she was the lady-in-waiting to Jefferson’s daughters, that she was much loved by the family, that she never worked in the fields, that she was always close to Mr. Jefferson.

But Isaac never said that Sali was Jefferson’s concubine.  She never said that her children were Jefferson’s, although she clearly knew because everyone knew.  Jefferson’s white daughters also knew, or at least suspected. They saw the Hemings children every day.  They saw how much they resembled their father. They saw the privileges they had.

They saw Sally living in a room next to Jefferson, but they never spoke about it.  Years later, after Jefferson had died, Jefferson’s granddaughters denied the whole story.  They said it was impossible, that their grandfather would never do something like that, that the Hemings children were the children of Jefferson’s nephews.

They invented this story, defended it for decades because admitting the truth meant admitting that their grandfather had a slave family, that he had kept his dead wife’s sister as a concubine.  That was too embarrassing, too painful.  So they lied and hoped that no one could prove otherwise.  The years passed.

Jefferson grew old.  He had enormous debts.  The plantation did not generate enough money.  He had lived beyond his means for decades, buying books, building buildings, importing wines, collecting art, all with borrowed money.  By 1826 he owed the equivalent of more than 2 million dollars today.

She knew that when Montichelo died, it would have to be sold.  The slaves would have to be sold.  Everything would be lost.  His white family would be left with nothing.  But there was one thing Jefferson could control.   He could decide which slaves to free in his will.  Virginia law allowed masters to free their slaves upon death.

Jefferson had freed very few slaves during his lifetime, but now, knowing that he would soon die, he had to make decisions.  He decided to free five slaves, just five of the more than 100 he owned at that time.  Two of them were Sally’s brothers, the other three were Sally’s children .  Beverly, Madison, and Eston would free them.

He fulfilled the promise he had made to Sali 37 years earlier in Paris, but he did not free Sali.  His name does not appear in the will.  There is no letter of freedom for her. Nothing.  After 37 years, after six children, after a lifetime of being his concubine, Jefferson did not release her.  Perhaps he thought it wasn’t necessary.

Perhaps she thought her daughters would informally free her.  Maybe he just did n’t care enough.   We do n’t know.  What we do know is that when Thomas Jefferson died on July 4, 1826, Sally Hemings was still legally his slave.  Jefferson died in his bed at Monticelo.  He was 83 years old.  She had lived an extraordinary life. He had written the declaration of independence.

He had been governor, minister, vice president, president.  He had founded the University of Virginia.  He was considered one of America’s great men, one of the founding fathers, a genius, a visionary, a hero.  He died on the same day as John Adams, the second president. It was seen as a sign of destiny.  Two great men dying on the same day.

The 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence made headlines across the country.  The newspapers published praise, speaking of his greatness, his legacy, and his importance to the nation.  Nobody mentioned Sally Hemings.  Nobody spoke about the six children he had with her.

Nobody mentioned that he had spent 37 years in a relationship with his slave, that this slave was the sister of his dead wife, that he had promised to free his children, that he had not freed the mother.  All of that was ignored, buried, forgotten, because that was not the story America wanted to tell about Thomas Jefferson.

That wasn’t the story that made him a hero.  Then, that story disappeared.  It became a rumor, gossip, something that respectable people didn’t mention, and it remained that way for almost 200 years.  Sally Hemings was not officially released, but Jefferson’s daughter, Marta, allowed her to leave Montichelo shortly after her father’s death.

Sally moved to Charlottesville, the nearest city .  She lived with her children Madison and Eston.  He was 53 years old.  For the first time in her life she did not live in Montichelo, she did not serve the Jefferson family, she was not anyone’s property, she was de facto free, although legally she remained a slave until her death.

Sally Hemings lived 9 more years, she died in 1835, she was 62 years old.  In the 1830 census, 5 years before her death, she was registered as a white woman, not as a mulatto, not as a black woman, but as white.  Their children were registered as white; they had crossed the color line; they had become what their skin allowed them to be.

They had escaped slavery, not only legally, but also socially.  They had turned white and with that they had erased their connection with Sally, with Jefferson, with the whole story, because that was the only way to survive, that was the only way to be truly free. Sally Hemings’ four children, who survived to adulthood, took different paths after gaining their freedom.

They all had skin light enough to pass as white, and they all used that advantage to escape slavery in ways that others could not.  Beverly Hemings disappeared in 1822. She was 24 years old.  He simply left Montichelo one day and never returned. Jefferson recorded in his books that Beverly had run away, but he didn’t send anyone to look for him.  He let it go.

He kept his promise in a strange way.  Beverlye went north.  He married a white woman.  He lived like a white man.  She had children.  Their descendants never knew they had African blood. They never knew that their great-grandfather had been Thomas Jefferson.  Beverly deliberately erased that story.  It was the only way to be truly free.

Harriet Hemings also left in 1822. She was 21 years old.  Jefferson gave him money for the trip.  50 is enough to go far.  Harriet went to Washington DC.  She married a white man.  She lived as a white woman.  She had children.  His family never knew the truth.  Harriet kept the secret until her death because revealing the truth meant losing everything, it meant being rejected by her husband, it meant her children would be considered black.

It meant a return to social slavery.  So Harriet chose silence, just as her mother had chosen silence throughout her life.  Madison Hemings was different.  He was officially freed in Jefferson’s will in 1826. He was 21 years old.  He stayed in Virginia.  He married a free black woman.  She had children.  He lived as a black man.

And in 1873, when he was 68 years old, he gave an interview to a newspaper.  He told the whole story. He said that his father was Thomas Jefferson, that his mother was Sally Hemings, that Sally had been Jefferson’s concubine for 37 years, that all his siblings were Jefferson’s children, that he had grown up in Monticelo knowing this, that it was no secret to anyone who lived there.

Madison was the only one who spoke the truth publicly, the only one who wasn’t afraid, the only one who didn’t hide.  Eston Hemings was also released in 1826. He was 18 years old.  She stayed in Virginia for a while, and got married.  She had children.  But in 1852 he decided to move to Ohio and when he moved he changed his last name.

He called himself Eston Hemings Jefferson.  He took his father’s surname, the surname he was never legally entitled to use, but which was his by blood.  In Ohio, Eston and his family lived as white people.  Her children married white people.  Their descendants never knew they had African blood, but they always knew they were descended from Thomas Jefferson.

They kept that part of the story to themselves. Sally’s story was erased. After Jefferson’s death, his white family denied the entire story for more than 150 years.  They said it was impossible, that Jefferson would never have had a relationship with a slave, that the Hemings children were the children of Jefferson’s nephews, not his own.

They invented complicated stories to explain why the children looked so much like Jefferson.  They said that families look alike, that cousins ​​look alike , that it was just a coincidence. They attacked Madison Hemings’ credibility.  They said he was lying, that he was seeking attention, that he wanted to associate himself with a famous name.

Jefferson’s white family protected his reputation for decades, and America believed them because no one wanted to believe that a Founding Father had a slave family.  Historians also denied history for a long time.  They said there was not enough evidence, that Madison Hemings’ testimony was unreliable, that the slaves were lying, that Jefferson was a man of principle, that he would never do such a thing .

Some historians admitted it was possible, but most denied it.  especially the historians who admired Jefferson, who had dedicated their lives to studying his legacy. Admitting the truth about Sally Hemings meant admitting that Jefferson was a hypocrite, that the man who wrote about equality kept his own children in slavery.  That was too awkward.

So, the story was ignored, minimized, denied.  But in 1998 everything changed.  A group of scientists conducted DNA tests on the descendants of Aston Hemings and on the descendants of the Jefferson family. The results were clear. Eston’s descendants had the DNA of the Jefferson line.  It couldn’t be a coincidence.

It couldn’t be a nephew; it had to be Thomas Jefferson or someone very close to him in the direct line.  And since Jefferson was the only Jefferson man living in Montichelo when Eston was conceived, the conclusion was obvious.  Thomas Jefferson was the father of Eston Hemings.  And if he was Eston’s father, he was probably the father of all of Sally’s children.

172 years after Jefferson’s death, science confirmed what Madison Hemings had said in 1873, what the slaves of Monticelo had always known, what Sally Hemings had lived for 37 years.  Thomas Jefferson had fathered six children with his slave.  The slave who was the half- sister of his dead wife.  the slave who had begun a relationship with him when she was 16 years old.

The slave who was never free, the slave who was erased from official history for almost two centuries.  In 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which manages Monticelo as a museum, published an official report.  They acknowledged the relationship, they acknowledged the children, they acknowledged that the story they had denied for so long was true.

The exhibits in Montichelo have changed .  They added information about Sally Hemings, about her children, about the room where she lived, about the promise Jefferson made to her in Paris, about the 37 years they spent together, about the fact that he never released her.  Thomas Jefferson died as one of America’s great men.

Sally Hemins died as a forgotten ex-slave.  Their children were free, but they had to hide or deny who they were to live in peace.  Some chose to be white, others chose to be black, but all carried the weight of a secret that America did not want to know. The secret is that the man who wrote that all men are created equal had six children with his slave and never publicly acknowledged them, never freed them until they turned 21, and never freed their mother.

This is the story that America buried for 200 years.  The story that only science could confirm.  The story of the president and the slave, of power and impotence, of hypocrisy and survival, of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings and of the six children who were born in the shadow of the most powerful man in America.  M.

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