Chapter 4: A. Books and monographs, 1983.


Reference: 111.
Name: Abrahams, , Mildred K.
Publication: Formerly in the Possession Of: Books from the Libraries of William Byrd II, Landon Carter, Thomas Jefferson, and Their Contemporaries .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: Department of Rare Books,
Date: University of Virginia Library, 1983.
Pages: 81.
Notes: Keepsake of an exhibition, 16 October--31 December, 1983, with a brief introduction; the Library houses 152 titles once owned by TJ, mostly from his last library formed after the great library had been sold to the Library of Congress.


Reference: 112.
Name: Adams, , William Howard.
Publication: Jefferson's Monticello .
City: New York:
Publisher: Abbeville Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: x, 276.
Notes: Well informed, elegantly written and presented treatment of TJ's life-long architectural project. Separate chapters cover his architectural reading and the buildings he would have known in Virginia before he began building Monticello, the first Monticello project, the second Monticello, his landscaping of the grounds, his furnishings for the house, and the subsequent history of Monticello. Illustrated with handsome photographs and with reproductions of TJ's architectural drawings. Argues more strongly than some other architectural historians do for a fairly direct, significant Palladian influence. A major book on Monticello.


Reference: 113.
Name: Allison, , Andrew M. , with M. Richard Maxfield, K. DeLynn Cook, and W. Cleon Skansen.
Publication: The Real Thomas Jefferson .
City: Washington, D.C.:
Publisher: National Center for Constitutional Studies,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xvi, 709.
Notes: "Second edition, revised." (1st in 1981, not seen). First 334 pages are a biography by Allison, "Thomas Jefferson, Champion of Liberty," and the rest is a collection of quotations arranged topically under the heading of "Timeless Treasures from Thomas Jefferson." In contradistinction to the "analyses" and "interpretations" of other historians, this volume purports to give the "real" TJ in his own words. Naive and uncritical.


Reference: 114.
Name: Brick, , Blanche Henderson.
Title: "Changing Concepts of Equal Educational Opportunity: A Comparison of the Views of Thomas Jefferson, Horace Mann, and John Dewey."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Texas A & M University,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 248.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 45
Date: (1984),
Pages: 435-A.
Notes: Examines changing concepts of equal educational opportunity in order to develop better policies in the present. Examines what each man meant by the term equal educational opportunity [a term TJ never used as such] and relates it to each man's philosophical views regarding human nature, individual responsibility, and the "Good Society." TJ realized the threat of institutions to personal liberty, but because Mann and Dewey lived in a world beginning to view man more as a creature than a creator of his institutions, they sought to equalize opportunity by expanding rather than by limiting institutional power.


Reference: 115.
Name: Cable, , Carole.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson, Architect: A Bibliography of Scholarship from 1968-1981 .
City: Monticello, IL:
Publisher: Vance Bibliographies,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 10.
Notes: Intended to supplement O'Neal's 1969 bibliography of work on TJ's architectural activities. Annotated.


Reference: 116.
Name: Carson, , David Allen.
Title: "Congress in Jefferson's Foreign Policy, 1801-1809."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Texas Christian University,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 302.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 44
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 2553-A.
Notes: Examines the composition of the Seventh through the Tenth Congresses in order to consider the relationship between President and Congress on specific foreign policy issues. Contends that TJ's changing relationship with Congress helps explain the foreign policy successes of his first term and the failures of his second. In TJ's first term Congress was relatively docile, disciplined, and cooperative, and he was able to turn even the Federalist opposition to use in acquiring Western territory. Congress also gave him extensive authority to deal with the Barbary Pirates. In the Ninth Congress, however, the relationship began to break down relative to foreign affairs as a consequence of the revolt led by John Randolph and the Federalist opposition headed by Timothy Pickering. In the first session of the Tenth Congress TJ dominated Congress completely, but his support collapsed in the second session with the apparent failure of the embargo policy. He all but abdicated his authority during the last four months in office and left the Congress and nation virtually leaderless.


Reference: 117.
Name: Egan, , Clifford L.
Publication: Neither Peace Nor War: Franco-American Relations, 1802-1812 .
City: Baton Rouge:
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xxvi, 226.
Notes: As the title suggests, the focus is not primarily on TJ but it offers a useful account of his foreign policy concerns after the Louisiana Purchase agreement. Argues for TJ's neutrality as president towards Great Britain and France and a deep-seated desire for peace. Neither his domestic opponents nor the British believed in his neutrality, however, and the British in consequence rode rough-shod over American rights. French diplomatic observers more correctly saw him as an American nationalist above all, even if he was sympathetic to France.


Reference: 118.
Name: Garver, , Newton.
Publication: Jesus, Jefferson, and the Task of Friends .
City: Wallingford, PA:
Publisher: Pendle Hill,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 30.
Notes: In discussing the work of Friends (Quakers) in the world, the author appeals to the examples of Jesus (especially Matthew 25:31-40) and TJ. TJ is interesting because his ideas "delimit the domain of politics" and because he exemplifies a hope necessary for survival in the world. This hope "that things in general will work out" is not the same as optimism, "hope made specific," and thus includes a necessary skepticism about any single human endeavor.


Reference: 119.
Name: Jordan, , Daniel P.
Publication: Political Leadership in Jefferson's Virginia .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xiv, 284.
Notes: Only a few pages directly on TJ; analyzes the political system and practice rather than focusing on "leaders" as such.


Reference: 120.
Name: Kirtland, , Robert Bevier.
Title: "George Wythe: Lawyer, Revolutionary, Judge."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. University of Michigan,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 335.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 44
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 1896-A.
Notes: Regrets that Wythe is not better known, since the better we knew him and his close relationship with TJ, the better, too, we would understand Jefferson. Wythe the revolutionary wished to establish an American jurisprudence within the framework of the English common law, and with TJ and Edmund Pendleton proposed a drastic, simplified redrafting of Virginia statutory law.


Reference: 121.
Name: Lewis, , Jan.
Publication: The Pursuit of Happiness: Family and Values in Jefferson's Virginia .
City: New York:
Publisher: Cambridge University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xix, 289.
Notes: Not specifically about TJ but discusses him and members of his family in passing through the book. First rate social history which has much to say about the values and experience of family life in Virginia, particularly among the literate middle and upper classes at the end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth centuries. After an opening portrayal of the pre-Revolutionary gentry, chapters are organized thematically around religion, death (TJ's response to his wife's death bridged two modes of mourning; his determination to reenter public life and obliterate the traces of his grief was typical of the eighteenth century, but his near collapse after her death prefigured later sentimental responses), worldly success, and love. A final chapter considers the transformation of values that took place between the revolutionary generation for whom civic affairs had been a way of life and the generation of their grandchildren who found greatest meaning in private family life.


Reference: 122.
Name: Llewellyn, , Robert.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson's Monticello .
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher: Thomasson-Grant,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 112.
Notes: A collection of handsome color photographs taken by Llewellyn; foreword by Dumas Malone; commentary by Charles Granquist.


Reference: 123.
Name: Cullen , Charles T.
Publication: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson .
Volume: Volume 21. Index, volumes 1-20. ed. Charles T. Cullen, R.R. Crout, Eugene R. Sheridan, Ruth W. Lester.
City: Princeton :
Publisher: Princeton University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xi, 592.
Notes: Replaces three "temporary" indexes, but the editors caution that they have made no systematic attempt to prepare new subject entries for this index. Some categories were not covered in each of the earlier indexes, e.g. "farm implements" is a category in the second index but not in the first or third, and in preparing the present index the editors did not review Volumes 1-6 and 13-20 to complete the category. Thus, the "temporary" indexes may retain some value.


Reference: 124.
Name: Adams , Dickinson W.
Publication: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson: Second Series: Jefferson's Extracts from the Gospels . ed. Dickinson W. Adams and Ruth W. Lester, Introduction by Eugene R. Sheridan.
City: Princeton :
Publisher: Princeton University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xii, 438.
Notes: The first volume in the Papers edition's second series, which will include the longer items most amenable to topical rather than chronological arrangement. Included here are a reconstructed version of "The Philosophy of Jesus," a major piece of textual scholarship on the part of Dickinson W. Adams, and TJ's later scissors edit of the Gospels, "The Life and Morals of Jesus." Sheridan's "Introduction" traces the evolution of TJ's religious opinions and examines the three versions he constructed of the life of Jesus, from the "Syllabus" included in the letter of April, 21, 1803, to Benjamin Rush to the final "Life and Morals." Points out the genesis of TJ's beliefs in his early reading of Bolingbroke, the influence of Joseph Priestley, and the effect of his correspondence with Benjamin Rush. Contends that TJ is best understood as a "demythologized Christian," whose rationalism and religiousness have variously been distorted in the accounts of partisans of one position or the other. This essay is probably the best single account of TJ's religious beliefs and will have to be consulted by all future scholars on the subject; the volume also includes a useful appendix of TJ's correspondence pertaining to religion.


Reference: 125.
Name: Peterson, , Sanford William.
Title: "The Genesis and Development of Parliamentary Procedure in Colonial America, 1609-1801."

Publication: Ph.d. dissertation. Indiana University,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 383.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 44
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 3206-A.
Notes: Discusses TJ's contributions to evolving understanding of parliamentary procedure in America during his career as Burgess, Delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention, Delegate to the Continental Congress, and President of the Senate. Uses TJ's notes from his "Parliamentary Pocketbook" which led up to his Manual . Argues for an emergence of colonial rules of order entirely unlike those of the Houses of Commons or Lords and contends there is no direct evidence for transportation in fact, language, or substance of the English rules of order to the colonies. Includes Giles Gray's transcription of and notes to TJ's "Parliamentary Pocketbook."


Reference: 126.
Name: Sheldon, , Garrett Ward.
Title: "Classical and Modern Influences on American Political Thought: The Political Theories of Thomas Jefferson."

Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Rutgers,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 337.

Publication: DAI
Volume: 44
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 1564-A.
Notes: Seeks to situate "Jefferson's political theory ... within the entire history of Western Political Thought." Argues that TJ's early, Revolutionary writings targeted at the organic ideology of the British Empire were defined by a Lockean liberalism which emphasized freedom, independence, equality, limited government and revolution. After the Revolution his writings increasingly drew upon classical Greek concepts of human nature, politics, and ethics to support the construction of a new republic. When he later saw the possibility of a remote and corrupt national government as a threat to local freedoms, the liberal tendencies in his politics reasserted themselves, once again employing Lockean metaphors on behalf of Aristotelean commonwealths.


Reference: 127.
Name: Shuffelton, , Frank.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson: A Comprehensive, Annotated Bibliography of Writings about Him: 1826-1980 .
City: New York:
Publisher: Garland Publishing,
Date: 1983.
Pages: xix, 486.
Notes: Predecessor to this volume. Lists 3,447 items about Jefferson arranged under five topical headings. Includes brief introduction, subject index, and list of authors.


Reference: 128.
Name: Yonkers, , Tescia Ann.
Publication: Shrine of Freedom: Thomas Jefferson Memorial .
City: Washington, D.C.:
Publisher: The author,
Date: 1983.
Pages: [52].
Notes: Sketch of TJ, the work of the Memorial Commission , and the building of the Memorial. Souvenir booklet, good of its kind.

B. Essays and book chapters.


Reference: 129.
Name: Adams, , William Howard.
Title: "Historic Houses--Thomas Jefferson's Monticello."

Publication: Architectural Digest
Volume: 40
Date: (August, 1983) ,
Pages: 116-26.
Notes: Brief account, generously illustrated with photographs by Langdon Clay.


Reference: 130.
Name: Allen, , Esther A.
Title: "Jefferson's Naval Policy and the Southern Congressional Response."

Publication: M.A. thesis. Georgia Southern College,
Date: 1983.
Notes: Not seen.


Reference: 131.
Name: Barnouw, , Jeffrey.
Title: "The Pursuit of Happiness in Jefferson and Its Background in Bacon and Hobbes."

Publication: Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy
Volume: 11
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 225-48.
Notes: Argues for a connection between the ideas of the pursuit of happiness and a spirit of enterprise, "a sense of venturesome self-reliance which is essential to happiness" and is grounded in the thinking of Bacon and Hobbes. Claims their "psychology of endeavor" differs from Locke's denial of the freedom of the will, (although it is debatable if TJ and most of his compatriots would have read Locke in this way). Interestingly suggests that Bacon's conception of science as a disciplining of the mind through deliberate experience figures in the tradition of American republicanism which notably differed from classical republicanism in its acceptance of time as a medium of change and chance. Concedes that Hobbes had no overt influence in Revolutionary America, but suggests that his ideas made their influence felt through the works of Priestley, Blackstone, Hume, Hutcheson, and Locke. An ambitious and challenging essay.


Reference: 132.
Name: Beiswanger, , William L.
Title: "The Temple in the Garden: Thomas Jefferson's Vision of the Monticello Landscape."

Publication: Eighteenth-Century Life
Volume: 8
Date: (January, 1983) ,
Pages: 170-88.
Notes: Surveys TJ's proposed temples and garden buildings for Monticello, only one of which was built. The temple he built on the edge of the stone wall overlooking the vegetable garden collapsed by 1827, perhaps because of a poorly laid foundation. His earliest projects were inspired by literary and romantic associations, but he was also interested in constructing historically and archaeologically accurate designs of Chinese, classical, and Palladian architecture. By 1800 he showed more interest in the symbolic values of structures, with a preference for classic forms suggesting the republican vision.


Reference: 133.
Name: Bell, , Barry.
Title: "Reading and `Misreading' the Declaration of Independence."

Publication: Early American Literature
Volume: 18
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 71-83.
Notes: Notes the tendency many of our most persuasive readings of the Declaration to map its text against the tradition which supposedly contains its key terms; if it seems hopeless to assess the precise degree of credit each contending "tradition" bears, the history of the Declaration's interpretations points to the complex problem of intertextuality, here evidenced by one of its first interpreters, Peter Whitney, a minister in Northborough, Massachusetts, in 1776. His sermon, American Independence Vindicated , "misreads," i.e. creatively interprets, the Declaration as congruent with the political concerns of Real Whigs as well as with those of evangelical Christians. Encouraged by textual images of slavery, of paternal and Christian responsibility, and of involuntary social and historical rupture, Whitney exploited the protean qualities of the Declaration's text which allowed diverse and even divergent interpretations.


Reference: 134.
Name: Bell, , David.
Title: "Knowledge and The Middle Landscape: Thomas Jefferson's University of Virginia."

Publication: Journal of Architectural Education
Volume: 37
Date: (Winter, 1983) .
Pages: 18-26.
Notes: Argues that TJ's plans for the University of Virginia reflect his awareness of his own mediating position between the natural and cultural universes. he thus invented a "middle landscape," one neither wild nor refined, for America, and the University represents his "architectural incarnation." Interesting analysis of the pavilions, concentrating upon the elevations.


Reference: 135.
Name: Bradley, , Bert E.
Title: "Jefferson and Reagan: The Rhetoric of Two Inaugurals."

Publication: Southern Speech Communication Journal
Volume: 48
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 119-36.
Notes: Using "analog-criticism," compares the 1801 and 1981 inaugural speeches, both addresses following a "pivotal election," for responses to questions about excessive federal powers, mistaken foreign policy, and the large number of citizens with negative perceptions of each man. Claims both men developed effective rhetorical strategies of conciliation and moderation to gain voter approval, and goes on to contend that this similarity in two pivotal election inaugurals suggests the high degree to which rhetorical response is contingent upon the situation. "The situation controls the rhetorical response," in effect. See below for critique by Gregg Phifer which exposes the simplistic attitude toward comparison of texts from different historical periods.


Reference: 136.
Name: Bradley, , Bert E.
Title: "A Response to `Two Inaugurals: A Second Look'."

Publication: Southern Speech Communication Journal
Volume: 48
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 386-90.
Notes: Rebuts Phifer's critique (see below) of the preceding piece by accusing it of being politically biased.


Reference: 137.
Name: Clark, , Clifford E.
Title: "American Architecture : The Prophetic and Biblical Strains"
in
Publication: The Bible and American Arts and Letters , ed. Giles Gunn.
City: Philadelphia:
Publisher: Fortress Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 105-27.
Notes: Argues that from TJ on American architects have functioned (whether they recognized it or not) within what Perry Miller and Sacvan Bercovitch have called the jeremiad tradition. TJ was "an initiator and cornerstone of this tradition" because of his concern for the moral purpose of architecture and for raising the practice of architecture to standards appropriate for a nation that was in effect a "city upon a hill."


Reference: 138.
Name: Dewey, , Frank L.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Law Practice: The Norfolk Anti-Inoculation Riots."

Publication: Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
Volume: 91
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 39-53.
Notes: TJ represented Dr. Archibald Campbell and James Parker against the charge of maintaining a public nuisance when they had their families inoculated against small pox. Mobs in Norfolk had rioted in 1768 and 1769 against their practice of inoculation, and Dr. Campbell's house was burned. TJ was also employed by Campbell and Parker to assist in the prosecution of the rioters.


Reference: 139.
Name: Downs, , Robert B.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: Memorable Americans , ed. Downs, John T. Flanagan, Harold W. Scott.
City: Littleton CO:
Publisher: Libraries Unlimited,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 172-74.
Notes: Biographical sketch; the usual.


Reference: 140.
Name:
Title: "The Edgehill Portrait of Thomas Jefferson."

Publication: Virginia Cavalcade
Volume: 32
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 148-49.
Notes: Brief account of the history behind the Edgehill portrait, Gilbert Stuart's second oil portrait of TJ. During the June 1805 sitting, Stuart mixed a sample of the grass green color TJ wished to use on the entrance hall floor at Monticello.


Reference: 141.
Name: Falk, , Richard.
Title: "Beyond Internationalism"
in
Publication: The End of the World Order: Essays on Normative International Relations .
City: Princeton:
Publisher: Princeton University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 105-41.
Notes: Argues that "the Jeffersonian perspective on America's role in the world is suggestive, although no more than that, for those who favor a value-oriented foreign policy with roots in the historical past and that can yet respond to likely discontinuities in the probable future." TJ placed his hopes and faith in an America dedicated to liberty as well as to independence. His importance today, symbolic rather than literal, owes to his recognition of the dangers in the materialist cult of progress, of the need for a balanced social and economic order in which rural, agrarian patterns are not displaced by urban and industrial modes, and of the need to trust people to care for themselves.


Reference: 142.
Name: Fender, , Stephen.
Title: "The Declaration of Independence"
in
Publication: American Literature in Context, 1620-1830 .
City: London:
Publisher: Methuen,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 97-121.
Notes: Observes that George III is arraigned as the emperor of dullness and reads Pope's Dunciad not as an influence per se but as an intertextual reference. Contends that "this intertextual reference to Augustan satire is the rhetorical equivalent of the Declaration's appeal to natural law," lifting the argument to a disinterested standard of order and chaos. Follows with a more conventional account of TJ's intellectual sources in Locke and the common sense philosophers and discusses themes of natural rights, liberty, etc.


Reference: 143.
Name: Hatch, , Peter.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson, Gardener."

Publication: Flower and Garden
Volume: 27
Date: (July, 1983) ,
Pages: 6-9, 28.
Notes: On the restoration of the Monticello gardens, written by the Superintendent of Grounds there. Slanted towards gardeners, with information on TJ's mulching practices, manuring, and varieties planted.


Reference: 144.
Name: Hauer, , Stanley R.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Anglo-Saxon Language."

Publication: PMLA
Volume: 98
Date: (1983) . 879-98.
Notes: Authoritative study of TJ's interest in and knowledge of Old English which began with his early legal studies. Includes an analysis of his "Essay on the Anglo-Saxon Language" and the translations from the Old English Heptateuch and a critique of the importance and validity of his ideas. Finds TJ admirable as a pioneer in the study of Old English, but criticizes his sweeping generalizations and heedless oversimplifications of Old English grammar.
Publication:


Reference: 145.
Name: Henderson, , Phillip G.
Title: "Marshall versus Jefferson: Politics and the Federal Judiciary in the Early Republic."

Publication: Michigan Journal of Political Science .
Volume: 2
Date: (No. 2, 1983) ,
Pages: 42-66.
Notes: Explains the differences between TJ and Marshall over the constitutional role of the judiciary and contends that their debates remain strikingly relevant. Their legacy, however, is misunderstood by those who praise Marshall's activism without acknowledging the elitist dimension of his political philosophy as well as by those who want the judiciary to advance principles of Jeffersonian democracy while ignoring TJ's concern, at least after 1800, to limit the Supreme Court's authority. Claims that in recent years paradoxically it is Justice Rehnquist who "has taken on a distinctly Jeffersonian tone in judicial conduct," but if TJ were alive today, he might have preferred the work of the activist Warren Court.


Reference: 146.
Name: Kelso, , William M.
Title: "Landscape Archaeology: A Key to Virginia's Cultivated Past."

Publication: Eighteenth-Century Life
Volume: 8
Date: (January, 1983) ,
Pages: 159-69.
Notes: Discusses archaeological work on the gardens at Carter's Grove, Kingsmill, and Monticello, with emphasis on the latter. Archaeological research has proved invaluable in providing physical details for reconstruction and help in interpreting TJ's garden notes and sketches more accurately. Describes TJ's landscaping and improvements on Mulberry Row and his ha-ha designed to protect the lawn.


Reference: 147.
Name: Kessler, , Sanford.
Title: "Jefferson's Rational Religion"
in
Publication: The Constitutional Polity: Essays on the Founding Principles of American Politics , ed. Sidney A. Pearson, Jr.
City: Washington:
Publisher: University Press of America,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 58-73.
Notes: Offers a conventional account of TJ's "rational religion," but goes on to argue that although his religious views were never as popular as he hoped they would become, TJ's beliefs have deeply influenced the doctrines of most American churches. These churches do not teach the right of a favored few to rule over the rest, nor for the most part do their clergymen seek to prevent their members from regulating their own "pursuit of industry and improvement."


Reference: 148.
Name: Kessler, , Sanford.
Title: "Locke's Influence on Jefferson's `Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom'."

Publication: Journal of Church and State
Volume: 25
Date: (1983) . 231-52.
Notes: Extensive examination of the influence of the Letter on Toleration and The Reasonableness of Christianity establishes the strength of Locke's influence. Considers important differences as well. TJ trusted government less than Locke did and thus sought to alter the Lockean framework in the direction of greater religious freedom. He also trusted people more and was willing to see their "good sense" as a defense against error. Does not overturn earlier similar analyses but offers more comprehensive examination.


Reference: 149.
Name: Leiner, , Frederick C.
Title: "The `Whimsical Phylosophic President' and His Gunboats."

Publication: American Neptune
Volume: 43
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 245-66.
Notes: A detailed and critical survey of TJ's naval policies. Faults him for undervaluing the strategic importance of a high-seas fleet and for persisting in the untested gunboat scheme. (Although initial support by Commodore Preble for the gunboats may have contributed to his mistaken enthusiasm.) Obstinately maintained despite evident failures, this came close to undoing the country.


Reference: 150.
Name: Llewellyn, , Robert.
Title: "A New View of Monticello."

Publication: Historic Preservation .
Volume: 35
Date: (no. 5, 1983) ,
Pages: 48-51.
Notes: Photographs.


Reference: 151.
Name: Loss, , Richard.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson Versus Wellesley High School."

Publication: Teaching Political Science: Politics in Perspective
Volume: 11
Date: (Fall, 1983) ,
Pages: 15-19.
Notes: Contends that one reason for concern with the quality of American high schools concerns the limits their performance places on what colleges or universities can accomplish. Uses TJ's views of education as criteria to judge the education he received in Wellesley MA. Wellesley High is considered to be an excellent school, at least compared to those in seriously disadvantaged communities, but it fell far short of realizing its potential or what TJ hoped schools would accomplish.


Reference: 152.
Name: MacFadyen, , J. Tevere.
Title: "The Once and Future Gardens of Thomas Jefferson."

Publication: Horticulture
Volume: 59
Date: (September, 1983) ,
Pages: 12-19.
Notes: Restoration of Monticello gardens. Substantive account with emphasis on archaeological research and the original design of the gardens. Best account of the fence TJ had built around the garden.


Reference: 153.
Name: Malone, , Dumas.
Title: "Monticello."

Publication: Horizon
Volume: 26
Date: (June, 1983) ,
Pages: 53-61.
Notes: Text from Malone's Jefferson and His Time accompanies illustrations by Robert Llewellyn to promote a forthcoming volume of photographs.


Reference: 154.
Name: McCabe, , Carol.
Title: "Mr. Jefferson's Garden."

Publication: Early American Life
Volume: 14
Date: (no. 3, 1983) .
Pages: 44-49.
Notes: On Monticello's gardens as now restored; for a popular audience. Gives account of efforts by Peter Hatch and staff to find varieties of fruits and vegetables which TJ planted.


Reference: 155.
Name: McGraw, , Joseph.
Title: "`To Secure These Rights': Virginia Republicans on the Strategies of Political Opposition, 1788-1800.

Publication: VMHB
Volume: 91
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 54-72.
Notes: Discusses within the context of statewide moves to oppose the Federalists TJ's Kentucky Resolutions, his concern for electing Republicans, and his interest in publicizing Republican principles in journals, pamphlets, and letters from representatives to constituents. Useful view of TJ as a party builder.


Reference: 156.
Name: Peterson, , Merrill D.
Title: "Jefferson, Madison, and Church State Separation"
in
Publication: Conceived in Conscience: An Analysis of Contemporary Church-State Relations , ed. Richard A. Rutyna and John W. Kuehl.
City: Norfolk :
Publisher: Donning,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 34-42.
Notes: Sees policy of church-state relations as resulting from rationalistic theory mixed with the practical experience of religious pluralism. Points out two versions of the purpose of religious freedom: to protect the state from church interference and to protect religious life from the secular state. TJ's Statute was passed with support from both points of view; he upheld the former, secular-Enlightenment version, but Madison in his "Memorial and Remonstrance" appealed to both arguments.


Reference: 157.
Name: Phifer, , Gregg.
Title: "Two Inaugurals: A Second Look."

Publication: Southern Speech Communications Journal
Volume: 48
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 375-85.
Notes: Critiques Bert E. Bradley's essay of this year (see above), contending that comparison between TJ and Reagan speeches is suspect because "even when the words look alike, the social setting makes it unlikely that Jefferson and Reagan meant the same thing." Concedes the difficulty of scholarly objectivity when dealing with controversial contemporary issues, but claims that it is important to look not just at what is said in a literal sense, but at what is done, at the difference in settings, the difference in times.


Reference: 158.
Name: Preyer, , Kathryn.
Title: "Crime, The Criminal Law and Reform in Post-Revolutionary Virginia."

Publication: Law and History Review
Volume: 1
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 53-85.
Notes: Rejects Julian Boyd's contention that TJ's Bill to Proportion Crimes and Punishments did little more than restore generally accepted practice concerning capital offenses. Traditional means of mitigating the law's severity were swept away with the idea that "none may be induced to injure through hope of impunity." Claims that the Jeffersonian formulation was intended to supercede the immediate past, as were the Statute of Descents and the Bill for Religious Freedom, by embracing what were understood as ancient realities. Points out that it is difficult to evaluate TJ's bill since we have insufficient knowledge about crime and the criminal system in Virginia at this time.


Reference: 159.
Name: Quinn, , Sandra L. , and Sanford Kanter.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson's Children"
in
Publication: America's Royalty: All the President's Children .
City: Westport CT:
Publisher: Greenwood Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 15-22.
Notes: Briefly discusses each of TJ's children; includes the Hemings children, but withholds final judgment on the question of his paternity.


Reference: 160.
Name: Schulz, , Constance B.
Title: "`Of Bigotry in Politics and Religion': Jefferson's Religion, The Federalist Press and the Syllabus."

Publication: Virginia Magazine of History and Biography .
Volume: 91.
Pages: 73-91.
Notes: Intelligently discusses the Federalist attacks on TJ's supposed religious principles during the first term of his presidency; credits them (along with Priestley's Jesus and Socrates Compared ) with motivating him to write the Syllabus of the merits of the doctrines of Jesus which he sent to Benjamin Rush and also with reawakening his curiosity about theological matters. Thus sees TJ's interest in religion as at first reactive, motivated by a desire to counter accusations of irreligion, but then becoming an interest for its own sake.


Reference: 161.
Name: Simpson, , Lewis P.
Title: "The Concept of the Historical Self in Brother to Dragons "
in
Publication: Robert Penn Warren's Brother to Dragons: A Discussion , ed. James A. Grimshaw, Jr.
City: Baton Rouge :
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 244-49.
Notes: Discusses Warren's revision of Brother to Dragons in terms of the representation of TJ; the most important change involves a lessened hope for the melioration of the human condition and a more pessimistic attitude, expressed by the character TJ, toward the human heart and its capacity to love.


Reference: 162.
Name: Somerville, , Terry.
Title: "Did America's Founding Fathers Really Stand on the Word of God?"

Publication: Christianity Today
Volume: 27
Date: (June 17, 1983) ,
Pages: 17-19.
Notes: Warns Christians not to turn to TJ for spiritual or theological teaching, no matter how much he has to offer us politically.


Reference: 163.
Name: Stockdale, , Eric.
Title: "John Stockdale of Piccadilly: Publisher to John Adams and Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: Author/Publisher Relations During the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries , ed. Robin Meyers and Michael Harris.
City: Oxford UK:
Publisher: Oxford Polytechnic Press,
Date: 1983.
Pages: 63-87.
Notes: Stockdale was introduced to bookselling and publishing by John Almon, who had established a reputation for printing and selling material friendly to British Whigs such as Wilkes and Americans such as Benjamin Franklin. When John Adams visited London in late 1783, he took rooms at Stockdale's, and in turn Franklin and Adams referred TJ to Stockdale as a bookseller and otherwise useful London connection. Stockdale first approached TJ about publishing Notes in London, but eventually TJ stopped doing business with him because of his slowness in providing requested books. Discusses circumstances surrounding Stockdale's publication of Notes in some detail.


Reference: 164.
Name: Summy, , Ralph.
Title: "Comparative Political Biography: Jayaprakash Narayan and Thomas Jefferson."

Publication: Biography
Volume: 6
Date: (1983) .
Pages: 220-37.
Notes: Compares the two men as embodiments of world revolutionary ideals and finds a marked similarity in their proposals, doubts, fears, dilemmas, and styles. Somewhat facile generalizations limit the usefulness of the comparison.


Reference: 165.
Name: Thompson, , Peggy.
Title: "Jefferson Trimmed the Bible to His Taste."

Publication: Smithsonian .
Volume: 14
Date: (September, 1983) .
Pages: 139-45, 47-48.
Notes: Popular account of TJ's preparation of the Life and Morals of Jesus, noting the new Princeton edition (listed above).


Reference: 166.
Name: Tucker, , Spencer C.
Title: "Mr. Jefferson's Gunboat Navy."

Publication: American Neptune
Volume: 43
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 135-41.
Notes: The shortcomings of TJ's gunboat policy stand out in view of the principles of seapower espoused by A. T. Mahan (and thus offer more evidence for the strength of Mahan's argument). Gunboats were plagued with problems, were not economical to build in terms of the numbers of cannon they made available, and were in proportion more expensive to maintain than the navy's frigates. Their poor showing in the War of 1812 was their undoing.


Reference: 167.
Name: Welsh, , Frank S. and Charles L. Granquist.
Title: "Restoration of the Exterior Sanded Paint at Monticello."

Publication: APT Bulletin
Volume: 15 (#2)
Date: (1983) .
Pages: 2-10.
Notes: Account of restoring the sand finish paint, made by dusting dry sand over a freshly painted surface so as to imitate the appearance of stone. The east and west portico columns were originally done this way, as were the east front rustication and the door and window frames within the portico.


Reference: 168.
Name: Wetmore, , Robert George.
Title: "Seditious Libel Persecutions in 1806 in the Federal Court in Connecticut: United States v. Tapping Reeve and Companion Cases."

Publication: Connecticut Bar Journal
Volume: 57
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 196-210.
Notes: Prosecutions of ardent Federalist Tapping Reeve for libeling TJ raises questions about TJ's genuine commitment to civil liberties. This will not be new to readers of Leonard Levy, but it is a good account of the Reeve case. TJ knew what was going on in Connecticut, but he apparently made no comment on it nor tried to stop it. Does not explain why he made no comment on the case.


Reference: 169.
Name: Whitehead, , John S.
Title: "Caught Between Two Worlds: Mr. Jefferson's University and the Literature of American Higher Education."

Publication: South Atlantic Quarterly
Volume: 82
Date: (1983) ,
Pages: 206-15.
Notes: Essay inspired by Virginius Dabney's Mr. Jefferson's University (1981), comparing it to other recent studies of institutions of higher learning. Where many of them go beyond the traditional parochialism of such works, this history seems still caught up in it in various ways. Given the significance of TJ's founding vision for the University, we might have hoped for a better, more thoughtful account of how his institution evolved.