Chapter 3: A. Books and monographs, 1982.
Reference: 65.
Name: Holden,
, Erik.
Publication: An American Christian Bible, Extracted by Thomas
Jefferson, Together with a
New
Declaration of Independence for Today's Americans .
City: Rochester,
WA:
Publisher: Sovereign Press,
Date:
1982.
Pages:
128.
Notes: Author claims to be the founder of the
"American Christian Church" and reprints the English portions of "The Life
and
Morals of Jesus." He approves of TJ because his bible removes the
implication that Jesus was a
supernatural being and, as his subsequent "New Declaration" reveals,
because TJ's text is
"non-Jewish." An attempt to use TJ for the purposes of anti-Semitic and
white supremacist
propaganda.
Distasteful, to say the least.
Reference: 66.
Name: Huddleston,
, Eugene L.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson: A Reference Guide .
City: Boston:
Publisher: G. K. Hall,
Date: 1982.
Pages: xxiii,
374.
Notes: Listed as # 13 in
TJCAB . Cites approximately 1400 items on Jefferson or the
Declaration of
Independence,
both scholarly and popular, with descriptive annotations.
Reference: 67.
Name: McAllister,
, Elaine.
Title: "The Marquis de Condorcet and Thomas Jefferson: Revolutionary
Proposals for Civic
Education in the Eighteenth Century."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Georgia State University, College
of Education,
Date: 1982.
Pages: 214.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 43.
Pages: 698-99A.
Notes: Concludes that TJ's and Condorcet's educational plans were the
most comprehensive and
democratic proposals written during the American and French Revolutions,
but other proposals
were
followed because these were too "radical" in implication and events worked
against
implementation.
Contents of the two plans were influenced by their common origins in
eighteenth-century
Atlantic
civilization and the democratic revolutions. TJ and Condorcet for the first
time envisioned
universal
civic education as a necessary and possible practical goal for the new
republics.
Reference: 68.
Name:
Publication: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson .
Volume 20,
, 1 April to 4 August 1791.
ed. Julian P. Boyd and Ruth W. Lester. Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1982. xxxii,
759.
Notes: Contains Boyd's last long Editorial Note, entitled
"Fixing the Seat of Government," which brings together papers concerning
the
planning for the new national capital. Boyd argues that "Jefferson's impress
upon the plan for the
capital is far greater than realized," and Pierre L'Enfant's has been
accordingly somewhat
exaggerated. Also includes a block of letters to Gouverneur Morris and
others on "Sources of
Foreign Intelligence."
B. Essays and book chapters.
Reference: 69.
Name: Allen,
, William B.
Title: "The Manners of Liberalism: A Question of Limits."
Publication: Improving College and University Teaching
Volume: 30
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 164-70.
Notes: Discusses Harriet Beecher Stowe's critique of TJ for diluting
liberalism by despairing of
the
possibility of giving a liberal education to all. Claims Stowe, unlike TJ,
concludes that "certain
artifices--manners-" are required in order to achieve the actual existence of
a particular
community
which can convey to men the idea of the end of their existence.
Reference: 70.
Name: Appleby,
, Joyce.
Title: "Commercial Farming and the `Agrarian Myth' in the Early
Republic."
Publication: Journal of American History
Volume: 68
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 833-49.
Notes: Contends that TJ's vision for America in the 1780's was both
agrarian and commercial.
He
envisioned a food-producing economy for an international market, thus
economic independence
and
a rising standard of living. Debate between Jeffersonians and Hamiltonians
was over how best to
realize America's economic potential, "a struggle between two different
elaborations of
capitalistic
development." TJ is not, as many historians have portrayed him, the loser
in a battle against
modernity but the winner in a contest over how the government should
serve its citizens.
Criticizes
the "retrospective bias" which identifies modernity with industrialism and
points out that the
agriculturalists were responding to the economic realities (and apparent
future) of their moment.
In
resisting Hamilton's policies the Republicans forwent the divisions
historians have focused on in
explaining party formation, -- rich vs. poor, merchants vs. farmers,
commercial interests vs.
proponents of self-sufficiency, -- because they believed that a freely
developing economy would
benefit all.
Reference: 71.
Name: Appleby,
, Joyce.
Title: "What Is Still American in the Political Philosophy of Thomas
Jefferson?"
Publication: William and Mary Quarterly
Volume: 39
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 287-309.
Notes: Contends that "more than another figure in his generation
Jefferson integrated a program
of
economic development and a policy for nation building into a radical moral
theory." This
integration is most demonstrable in the later period of his life when he
embraced the ideas of
Destutt
de Tracy, although a case is made for appearance of it in at least
elementary forms as early as the
time his appearance in the Continental Congress. Argues that TJ's
commitment to an expanding
commercial agriculture and later to commerce in general was linked to an
optimistic assessment
in
individual moral possibility that differentiated him from the reverence for
the past and the
anxiety
about the future characteristic of the tradition of civic humanism described
by J.G.A. Pocock,
John
Murrin, and others. If the author's claims at their most far-reaching do not
always seem to be
fully
supported by the evidence offered, they are nonetheless well enough
grounded to offer a serious
challenge to those historians who argue for the continuation as late as 1815
of a classical,
"Country-minded" politics. An important essay.
Reference: 72.
Name: Baker,
, Denise W.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the West."
Publication: M.A. thesis. Western Kentucky University,
Date: 1982.
Notes: Not seen.
Reference: 73.
Name: Banes,
, Ruth A.
Title: "The Exemplary Self: Autobiography in Eighteenth-Century
America."
Publication: Biography
Volume: 5
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 226-39.
Notes: Claims that TJ, along with Franklin, John Woolman, and John
Adams in their
autobiographies downplayed their self-importance by offering a justification
for writing their
own
lives, by using parable forms, and by alluding to the power of Divine
Providence. These
conventions work to establish an autobiographical form and to present a
shared self-conception:
the
exemplary self. Where the eighteenth-century religious autobiographer
reaffirmed a universe of
verities, the secular autobiographers tended to clarify and expand important
aspects in American
history. In each case early American autobiographers emphasized universal
principles, while
diminishing individual importance, and thus, it is argued, the secular
writers emulated the
spiritual
writers. Does not do justice to the particular character of TJ's
autobiography (or Franklin's) by
flattening it against the model of spiritual autobiography, and ignores
rhetorically different
functions
of seemingly similar devices such as parable.
Reference: 74.
Name: Baumgarth,
, William F.
Title: "A Religious People: Political Philosophy, Civil Religion, and the
American
Polity."
Publication: Journal of Dharma
Volume: 7
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 26-45.
Notes: Focuses on the supposed tension in liberalism between regarding
religion as merely the
maintenance of opinion even as it requires that opinion for smooth operation
of the polity. Sees
TJ
as closest American theorist to Locke and describes him as a "republican
deist," but contends
that
the Declaration ultimately points not to the deists' "architect of the
universe" but to a personal
and
active God. Poorly edited and proofread attempt to reinscribe a more
conservative TJ and
Declaration.
Reference: 75.
Name: Bedini,
, Silvio A.
Title: "Jefferson: Man of Science."
Publication: Frontiers
(Annual of the American Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia)
Volume: 3
Date: (1982),
Pages: 10-23.
Notes: Excellent article-length treatment of TJ's interests in science.
Makes the distinction that
he
should more accurately be termed a "man of science" rather than a
"scientist." Traces
subsequent
history of his scientific collections; the fossils have ended up in the
Academy of Natural Sciences
of Philadelphia.
Reference: 76.
Name: Bell,
, Ian F.
A.
Title: "`Speaking in Figures': The Mechanical Thomas Jefferson of
Canto 31"
in
Publication: Ezra Pound: Tactics for Reading ,
ed. Ian F. Bell.
City: London:
Publisher: Vision
Press
/ Totowa, NJ: Barnes & Noble,
Date:
1982.
Pages: 148-86.
Notes: Pound was composing Canto 31 in 1933, the same year in which
he was writing
Jefferson and/or Mussolini . The image of TJ which
dominates this poem is the practical,
scientific man, the espouser of a materialistic philosophy
a la Cabanis and Flourens, and the friend to neology. Pound
wished to oppose the factory
system, the "masses," and a debased currency by reviving the liberating
potential of science and
constructive technology as embodied in heroes who got things done, while
apparently failing to
recognize this Enlightenment program as the source of the modern problem
in the first place.
With
the exception of six lines, all the language of this Canto comes from the
correspondence of TJ
(mostly) and Adams, emphasizing features of repeatability and
autoreflection, "a sense of itself
as
having been made." One of the best essays on Pound and TJ.
Reference: 77.
Name: Brown,
, Sharon A.
Title: "Creating the Dream: Jefferson National Expansion Memorial,
1933-1935."
Publication: Missouri Historical Review
Volume: 76
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 302-26.
Notes: On the origins of the project to memorialize "the vision of
Thomas Jefferson" which
emerged three decades later as the Gateway Arch.
Reference: 78.
Name: Carrithers,
, David W.
Title: "Montesquieu, Jefferson and the Fundamentals of
Eighteenth-Century Republican
Theory."
Publication: French-American Review
Volume: 6
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 160-88.
Notes: Analyzes TJ's reading and use of
L'Esprit des Lois . He devoted more space in his
commonplace book to Montesquieu than
to
any other political philosopher, but he seems to have read for practical use
to support his work on
formulating American governmental structures. He focused on discussions
about voting, popular
sovereignty, and confederate republicanism; his silence on Montesquieu's
discussion of virtue
and
education in Books III and IV may reveal some ideological differences, as
might also his
ignoring
Montesquieu's linking of republicanism and frugality in Book V.
Montesquieu placed more
stress
on authority and obedience than TJ did, and he showed more respect for
classical authors.
Claims
TJ was more conscious of breaking from the past and that by looking at the
record of his reading,
we can see that Montesquieu was an influence that helped him focus and
clarify his emerging
thoughts on republicanism.
Reference: 79.
Name: Cassara,
, Ernest.
Title: "The Development of America's Sense of Mission"
in
Publication: The Apocalyptic Vision in America ,
ed. Lois Parkinson Zamora.
City:
Bowling Green:
Publisher: Bowling Green University Popular Press,
Date: 1982.
Pages: 64-96.
Notes: Conventional discussion of TJ on 78-84. Nothing new.
Reference: 80.
Name: Cord,
, Robert L.
Title: "Resurrecting Madison and Jefferson"
in
Publication: Separation of Church and State: Historical Fact and
Current Fiction .
City: New York:
Publisher: Lambeth Press,
Date: 1982.
Pages:
16-47.
Notes: As part of a larger thesis that the Supreme Court's recent
decisions involving the
separation
of church and state are not in accord with American historical fact, argues
that the traditional
interpretation of the positions of Madison and Jefferson is historically
faulty. Points to
Madison's
willingness to issue thanksgiving day proclamations, which he understood
as "merely
recommendatory," and his willingness to accept a chaplain to Congress as
well as to TJ's
acceptance
of missionary activities as stipulations in treaties with Indians as evidence
that they did not
understand the First Amendment as forbidding aid to religion "on a
non-discriminatory basis."
This
is one of the better argued and historically supported expressions of the
conservative critique of
the
so-called "broad" interpretation of the First Amendment's meaning for
church-state relations, but
it
seems insufficiently compelling because of a selective use of historical fact.
No mention is made
of TJ's "wall of separation" statement, Madison's comment on the danger
of establishing "a
precedent for giving to religious societies as such a legal agency in carrying
into effect a public
and
civil duty" in the veto message of February 21, 1811, although quoted, is
ignored, and the
complex
historical and moral circumstances surrounding the Moravian's
Gnadenhutten project are not
recognized. Nevertheless, challenging to simplistic defenses of the "broad"
interpretation,
although
the portrayal of that position here is rather a straw man.
Reference: 81.
Name: Crackel,
, Theodore J.
Title: "Jefferson, Politics, and the Army: An Examination of the
Military Peace Establishment
Act
of 1802."
Publication: Journal of the Early Republic
Volume: 2
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 21-38.
Notes: Argues that the design of the Act was to purge the officer corps
of its most vocal
Federalists
in order to replace them with men of Republican sympathies, and it was
not, as sometimes
claimed,
an example of Republican abhorrence of standing armies or of Jeffersonian
economy. The Army
had been shrinking since early 1800; the Act of 1802 required only another
300 dismissals, but
these
came from the "bloated" ranks of the commissioned officer corps. Claims
that the Act was TJ's
foundation for a reform of the Army. Well informed and balanced essay.
Reference: 82.
Name: Cullen,
, Charles T.
Title: "The Jefferson Papers and the New Technology"
in
Publication: Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Meeting of the Society
for Scholarly Publishing:
The Challenge of Change: Critical Choices for Scholarly Publishing
,
ed. Edward
T.
Cremmins.
City: Washington:
Publisher: Society for Scholarly Publishing,
Date:
1982.
Pages: 20-21.
Notes: Describes how after publishing 20 volumes of the
Jefferson Papers in the traditional manner, the editorial
project has become computerized.
Files are created using Waterloo SCRIPT codes so as to speed up
production time and increase
accuracy by eliminating the need to retype edited text as part of type
setting.
Reference: 83.
Name: Cunliffe,
, Marcus.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Dangers of the Past."
Publication: Wilson Quarterly
Volume: 6
Date: (Winter, 1982) ,
Pages: 96-107.
Notes: "Adapted" with little change from the author's 1981 essay
described above.
Reference: 84.
Name: Dewey,
, Frank L.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Notes on Divorce."
Publication: William and Mary Quarterly
Volume: 39
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 212-23.
Notes: Discusses TJ's notes drawn up for Dr. James Blair of
Williamsburg and the status of
divorce
law in the eighteenth century. See the author's related essay published in
1981.
Reference: 85.
Name: Dewey,
, Frank L.
Title: "The Waterston-Madison Episode: An Incident in Thomas
Jefferson's Law
Practice."
Publication: VMHB
Volume: 90
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 165-76.
Notes: On caveats and petitions over land titles and a "get rich quick"
scheme (of somewhat
dubious ethics although not technically illegal) devised by some of TJ's
clients in Augusta
County.
This essay and the one listed immediately above are important studies of
TJ's law practice; they
are
included in the author's book-length study of 1986, listed below.
Reference: 86.
Name: Edwards,
, Rem B.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: Life, Religious Views"
and
"Thomas Jefferson: The
Philosophy
Behind the Declaration of Independence" in
Publication: A Return to Moral and Religious Philosophy in Early
America .
City: Washington, D.C.:
Publisher: University Press of
America,
Date:
1982.
Pages: 105-170.
Notes: Intended to make available "the best of early American
philosophizing to college
students"
and general readers. The chapter on TJ's religious views is weakened by
oversimplification and
by
a somewhat ahistorical treatment; the chapter on the philosophical
background to the Declaration
weighs the influence of "the rationalistic school" and "the moral sensists,"
devoting a bit more
space
to the latter. Takes up the questions of what Jefferson meant by equality,
the notion of
inalienable
rights
(derived from Hutcheson), the pursuit of happiness, and the right to
revolution. Does
not
displace the earlier works by Garry Wills and Morton White on the
philosophical
context of the
Declaration, even for college students and general readers.
Reference: 87.
Name: Frankel,
, Jeffrey A.
Title: "The 1807-1809 Embargo against Great Britain."
Publication: Journal of Economic History
Volume: 42
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 291-308.
Notes: Opposes conventional views that the Embargo was an economic
failure and demonstrates
that the Embargo's effect was to lower the real value of consumption in
Britain more than in the
U.S.
Britain was less able to supply agricultural products previously imported
from the U.S. than the
U.S.
was to make up the loss in manufactured goods coming the other way. The
Embargo failed, the
author contends, not for economic reasons but political ones. Britain was
united in opposition to
Napoleon, whereas Federalist opposition to TJ and his Embargo grew. An
economic analysis,
not
on TJ directly, but of interest to anyone seeking to understand, and perhaps
to justify, his notions
about the use of embargoes.
Reference: 88.
Name: Garrett,
, Romeo B.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Negro"
in
Publication: The Presidents and the Negro .
City:
Peoria IL:
Publisher:
The
author,
Date: 1982.
Pages: 23-31.
Notes: Sanitized sketch of TJ as "a victim of the slavery system."
Reference: 89.
Name: Gianniny,
, Omer Allan, Jr.
Title: "Introduction"
to Samuel Latham Mitchill's
Publication: A Discourse on the Character and Services of Thomas
Jefferson .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: Division of Humanities
School of Engineering and
Applied Science,
Date: University of Virginia, 1982.
Pages:
i-xii.
Notes: Photographic reprint of Mitchill's 1826 eulogy. The introduction
gives a brief account of
Mitchill, summarizes his discussion of TJ's services to science and notes
some aspects he
overlooked. Aimed at undergraduates in a course on TJ's Interest in Science
and Technology.
Reference: 90.
Name: Hanson,
, Michael.
Title: "Jefferson Houses in Virginia."
Publication: Country Life (Great Britain).
Volume: 171
Date: (1982),
Pages:
816.
Notes: Biographical sketch, notes that Edgemont, the house TJ designed
for James Powell
Cocke,
has recently been sold. Minor.
Reference: 91.
Name: Hoffmann,
, John.
Title: "Queries Regarding the Western Rivers: An Unpublished Letter
from Thomas Jefferson to
the Geographer of the United States."
Publication: Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society
Volume: 75
Date: (1982) .
Pages: 15-28.
Notes: In letter dated January 24, 1784, TJ asked Thomas Hutchins for
information on the
flooding
of Western rivers. His query suggests that Hutchins' reply was less desired
for the revision of the
Notes than for TJ's interest in the size of the national domain
and his commitment to the
creation of new states in the West. Thus this bit of correspondence has
more to do with his work
as
a member of Congress and his work on the Ordinance of 1784.
Reference: 92.
Name: Jacobs,
, Victor.
Title: "Was Thomas Jefferson Really Very Bright?"
Publication: Manuscripts
Volume: 34
Date: (1982) .
Pages: 21-24.
Notes: Explains a 1781 bill of exchange countersigned by George
Rogers Clark (twice) and by
TJ
as governor of Virginia. Yes, TJ really was very bright.
Reference: 93.
Name: Johansen,
, Bruce E.
Title: "Self-Evident Truths"
in
Publication: Forgotten Founders: Benjamin Franklin, the Iroquois, and
the Rationale for the
American Revolution .
City: Ipswich, MA:
Publisher:
Gambit,
Date: 1982.
Pages: 98-118.
Notes: Discusses the shaping influence of Iroquoian political and social
ideas upon the emerging
American culture, particularly through Benjamin Franklin. This chapter
considers the impact of
Iroquoian ideas upon TJ and the Declaration of Independence. Interesting,
but the arguments are
stronger for the influence on Franklin than for those regarding TJ. Unless
the reader accords
Franklin
the central position in the revolutionary movement which the author
implicitly ascribes to him,
the
book as a whole may only convince those ready to be convinced
Reference: 94.
Name: Kappel,
, Andrew J.
Title: "Napoleon and Talleyrand in
Publication: The Cantos ."
Publication: Paideuma
Volume: 11
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 55-78.
Notes: These figures are introduced through the eyes of TJ and John
Adams, beginning with
Canto
XXXI. Peripheral.
Reference: 95.
Name: Kelso,
, William M.
Title: "Jefferson's Garden: Landscape Archaeology at Monticello."
Publication: Archaeology .
Volume: 35
Date: (July/August, 1982) .
Pages: 38-45.
Notes: Good account of excavations for a popular audience, pointing
out that archaeological
discoveries show how the kitchen garden and outbuildings were part of an
interdependent,
overall
landscape design. Illustrated.
Reference: 96.
Name: Ketcham,
, Ralph.
Title: "The Transatlantic Background of Thomas Jefferson's Ideas of
Executive Power."
Publication: Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture
Volume: 11
Date: (1982) .
Pages: 163-80.
Notes: Asks what conceptions, models, or guidelines were available to
the first presidents to
define
their roles as the leaders in a republic and suggests that TJ, and Washington
and Adams by
implication, was impressed with the cultural values of the Augustans, with
Pope, Swift, and
Bolingbroke. He tried to combine these values with Lockean notions of
freedom and
government
by consent. Rather overstates the case for an Augustan TJ (and in the
process incidentally tends
to
deny him any real historical sense), but valuable for suggesting an
alternative to the either/or
polemic
of civic humanist vs. Lockean liberal.
Reference: 97.
Name: Malajny,
, Ryszard M.
Title: "Doktryna Wolnosci Religynej `Ojcow Konstytucij' USA"
[The Doctrine of the
Freedom of Religion of the `Fathers of the Constitution' of the USA].
Publication: Czasopismo Prawno-Historyczne
[Poland].
Volume: 34
Date: (#2, 1982) ,
Pages: 111-38.
Notes: Focuses on John Adams, TJ, Madison, and Paine in order to
sketch the intellectual
background of the Bill of Rights' guarantee of religious freedom. Claims
the American thinkers
went beyond Europeans such as Locke and Montesquieu by demanding to
separate church and
state.
Reference: 98.
Name: Maschler,
, Chaninah.
Title: "Discussion."
Publication: Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy
Volume: 10
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 113-31.
Notes: Prompted by Eva T. H. Brann's Paradoxes of an
Education in a Republic (1979);
defends TJ and his educational theories against Brann's strictures, accusing
her of misreading
him.
Unfocused.
Reference: 99.
Name: Meschutt,
, David.
Title: "The Adams-Jefferson Portrait Exchange."
Publication: American Art Journal
Volume: 14
Date: (no. 2, 1982) .
Pages: 47-54.
Notes: Mather Brown did two portraits of each man, one to keep, one
to exchange. TJ received
the
copy, not the original, of his own portrait. Brown did the original of TJ
during his 1786 visit to
London but did not send the copy of this original to him until 1788. John
Trumbull helped TJ
get
the picture from Brown and placed an order for a portrait of Thomas Paine
in addition to that of
John
Adams. Trumbull himself did a small portrait of Paine for TJ as well as one
of TJ for "Miss
Jefferson."
Reference: 100.
Name: Peck,
, Ira.
Title: "Mr. Jefferson's Offer ... And the Issue of Book Banning."
Publication: Senior Scholastic
Volume: 115
Date: (October 15, 1982) ,
Pages: 21-23.
Notes: Present efforts to ban certain books from schools and libraries
are not new. TJ's political
enemies objected to the national acquisition of his collection containing
"books of an atheistic,
irreligious, and immoral character."
Reference: 101.
Name: Peterson,
, Merrill D.
Title: "Dumas Malone: The Completion of a Monument."
Publication: Virginia Quarterly Review
Volume: 58
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 26-31.
Notes: Celebrates the completion of Malone's
Jefferson in His Time and claims that in the final volume a
balanced portrait of TJ
emerges
in "the old image of the Apostle of Liberty."
Reference: 102.
Name: Anonymous
Title: "Portrait."
Publication: Canadian Collector
Volume: 17
Date: (Nov/Dec, 1982) .
Pages: 61.
Notes:
Not seen.
Reference: 103.
Name: Quinby,
, Lee.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: The Virtue of Aesthetics and the Aesthetics
of Virtue."
Publication: American Historical Review
Volume: 87
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 337-56.
Notes: Argues that TJ's morality was ruled by neither science or reason
alone but by an
"aesthetics
of virtue, a fusion of art and morals, whereby reflective beings are capable
of discerning the path
to
virtue through aesthetic experience." Describes a dynamic moral model with
two fundamental
dialectics, between the Heart (sentiment) and the Head
(reason/memory/imagination) and
between
humanity and nature. Describes the roots of this in Shaftesbury, incidentally
offering an
important
corrective to Garry Wills's claims for the primacy of Hutchesonian moral
sense. Reads
Notes as "Notes on the State of Virtue," focusing on the
sublime passages as aesthetic
and
moral demonstrations of the interaction of memory, reason, imagination and
sentiment;
comments
also on TJ's understanding of blacks and his notion of happiness. A
suggestive and important
essay.
Reference: 104.
Name: Schmitt,
, Gary J.
Title: "Sentimental Journey: Garry Wills and the American Founding."
Publication: Political Science Reviewer
Volume: 12
Date: (Fall, 1982) ,
Pages: 99-128.
Notes: Severe critique of Wills for arguing from extremely inadequate
evidence, and claims he
has
not succeeded in turning TJ's Declaration into a product of the Scottish
Enlightenment.
Reference: 105.
Name: Schwartz,
, Ann.
Title: "Jefferson's Garden Reborn."
Publication: Garden (New York Botanical Garden).
Volume: 6
Date: (November/December, 1982),
Pages: 6-11.
Notes: On the restoration of the Monticello gardens under Peter Hatch.
This is possible both
because TJ's memoranda record the plans and development of the garden
and the orchard and
because of ongoing archaeological research. Good treatment of the topic in
terms of restoration
procedures.
Reference: 106.
Name: Sheehan,
, Bernard W.
Title: "Jefferson and the West."
Publication: Virginia Quarterly Review
Volume: 58
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 345-52.
Notes: Review essay on Donald Jackson's
TJ & the Stony Mountains , contending that, although
TJ was in
many
ways the quintessential modern man, he nevertheless depended upon
information from the past
conditioned in turn by his agrarian proclivities. Defends him against charges
of credulousness
about
the West, but points out the way in which his ideas of progress supported
an ultimately tragic
Indian
policy.
Reference: 107.
Name: Stevens,
, Michael E.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson, Indians, and the Missing Privy Council
Journals."
Publication: South Carolina History Magazine
Volume: 82
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 177-85.
Notes: A recently discovered, unpublished extract from the South
Carolina Privy Council
Journals,
dated March 27, 1789, reveals the council's authorization of TJ as their
agent in Europe to
receive
old bonds from the Van Staphorsts as part of a scheme to retire the state's
Revolutionary War
debt.
(A second extract is about Indians, no connection to TJ.)
Reference: 108.
Name: Volker,
, Joseph F.
Title: "A Jefferson Commentary on Physiology and Theology."
Publication: Alabama Journal of Medical Sciences .
Volume: 19.
Pages: 365-67.
Notes: Describes and quotes TJ's correspondence with Lafayette, John
Adams, and Francis
Adrian
van der Kemp on the subject of Pierre Flourens' Recherches
experimentales sur les proprietes
et
les fonctions du systeme nerveux dans les animaux vertebres (1822).
TJ was interested in
evidence for the material basis of thought.
Reference: 109.
Name: Wood,
, Gordon S.
Title: "The Bigger the Beast the Better."
Publication: American History Illustrated .
Volume: 17
Date: (no. 8, 1982) ,
Pages: 30-37.
Notes: Account of the controversy with Buffon over the relative size
of European and American
life forms. For a popular audience.
Reference: 110.
Name: Yoder,
, Edwin M.
Title: "The Sage at Sunset."
Publication: Virginia Quarterly Review
Volume: 58
Date: (1982) ,
Pages: 32-37.
Notes: Responding to Malone's last volume, looks at TJ's late years
and sees him as not
quiescently
settling into old age but "still battling on all sorts of fronts on which the
war was to go badly for
him." Notes his mounting personal debts, his concern about centralizing
political power, threats
to
popular sovereignty, but also his ability to rise above the storm. Praises
Malone's TJ as sage as a
portrayal valuable for its sympathies and for its critical stance.