Thomas Jefferson’s ancestor’s came to America from Wales and England and his father died when Tom was fourteen. Peter was a very large man who apparently had the strength of Paul Bunyan. Tom was one of eight children, six sisters and one brother. He learned to ride a horse and hunt with a gun by the age of ten. Peter surveyed Virginia and created a map in the 1700’s. Tom’s relationship and attitudes towards women was typical of the time period. He wrote that Marie Antoinette was responsible for the French Revolution and that women should not be involved in politics and should never disagree in public with their husbands. His antipathy towards religion started early. At fifteen, he lived with an Anglican minister of the fire and brimstone type. The Reverend James Mawry believed that the purpose of life was to prepare for death and eternity. T.J. replied; “the earth belongs to the living.” I share in the founding father’s disdain for organized religion. The young Thomas Jefferson learned Greek and Latin from Mawry, and was taught the violin by others. At nineteen, he unsuccessfully courted sixteen year-old Rebecca Burnwell. While practicing law, Jefferson built Monticello and became a fervent gardener, planting flowers, trees, and bushes with such a passion that he kept a detailed gardening journal. Those who labored the earth were the chosen people of God. Brodie devotes a couple of pages to John and Betsey Walker. John was a neighbor and best friend of Jefferson’s, and while away on a road trip, T.J. attempted to seduce Betsey. Tommy apologized for his bad manners in order to avoid a duel. At twenty-seven Thomas married Martha Wayles-Skelton, a widow. Her father, John Wayles, had children with a slave mistress, Betty Hemings. One of them was named Sally, T.J.’s future mistress; a very close family, indeed. The great paradox was Jefferson’s condemnation of slavery while living off of the labor of his over one hundred slaves. Shortly after the Boston Tea Party, loyalty to the crown divided families. Jefferson joined forces with Ben Franklin, John and Samuel Adams, John Hancock and others during the writing of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson was only thirty two at the time. Tom Paine’s Common Sense was the first and most powerful treatise against the British. At the state level, Jefferson proposed a public school and library system in Virginia. One of his greatest accomplishments was Bill #821, which proclaimed a separation of church and state. The Anglicans of the 18th century were similar to our modern day Evangelicals who believe that America is a “Christian” nation. They should read the writings of Jefferson and Paine. Jefferson’s one regret was his failure as the governor of Virginia. He had no military experience and the British pillaged Monticello, forcing Jefferson to flee. Martha died in 1782, and she extracted a promise from her husband never to remarry. As a diplomat in Paris 1786, T.J. met the unhappily married artist, Maria Cosway. The surviving letters show a close relationship. Brodie speculates an intimate bond, but we will never know. Sally Hemings is next and the questions have persisted for over 200 years. She may have been pregnant in 1789, at the age of sixteen, and when she returned to Monticello with Tommy. DNA tests in 1998 have proven that the butler didn’t do it. The founding father’s genes have been passed on to the Hemings descendents of Monticello. Deniers point out the thirty year age difference as a defense. News flash here; powerful men frequently link up with much younger women, hence the term, “trophy wife.” The latest is named Melania. Jefferson was secretary of state and had a bitter rivalry with treasury secretary Alexander Hamilton. In 1793, an investigation failed to prove any financial irregularities of which Hamilton was accused. Jefferson’s self imposed exile from politics lasted for three years. His days as a gentlemen farmer ended when he became vice president in 1797. He became president in 1781 and ended the Sedition Act which chilled free speech. The Louisiana Purchase was also his baby. In August of 1802, the Richmond Examiner published a story naming Sally Hemings as T.J.’s “concubine.” Jefferson never responded to the allegations. While serving as president he wrote what later became known as the “Jefferson Bible.” In it, the miraculous nature of Jesus is removed, and J.C. is seen as a philosopher with solid moral teachings. A chapter on Aaron Burr is both complicated and entertaining. His plan to kill Jefferson and take over the country reads like fiction. History repeated itself in the 1930’s when General Smedley Butler was approached by wealthy businessmen to remove FDR in a coup. Jefferson despised Napoleon, calling him a tyrant. The president took heated criticism for not going to war with Great Britain. He knew of the human cost from the British forces overtaking Monticello. In retirement, Jefferson designed and was responsible for the opening of the University of Virginia in 1824. He died in 1826 and his mistress, Sally Hemings was listed as worth $50 in 1827. During the census of 1830, she was described as white. She died in relative obscurity in 1835 at the age of sixty-two. This book is an amazing chronicle of the complex history of both Thomas Jefferson and America. The sins of our father’s; and great great… grandfathers continue to haunt our nation.