Thomas
Jefferson was born on April 13, 1743, in Shadwell, Virginia. He was a
draftsman of the U.S. Declaration of Independence; the nation's first
secretary of state (1789-94); second vice president (1797-1801); and, as
the third president (1801-09), the statesman responsible for the
Louisiana Purchase. Jefferson died in bed at Monticello (located near
Charlottesville, Virginia) on July 4, 1826.
Thomas
Jefferson, author of the American Declaration of Independence and the
third U.S. president, was born on April 13, 1743, at the Shadwell
plantation located just outside of Charlottesville, Virginia -- near the
western edge of Great Britain's American Empire.
Jefferson was
born into one of the most prominent families of Virginia's planter
elite. His mother, Jane Randolph Jefferson, was a member of the proud
Randolph clan, a family claiming descent from English and Scottish
royalty. His father, Peter Jefferson, was a successful farmer as well as
a skilled surveyor and cartographer who produced the first accurate map
of the Province of Virginia. The young Jefferson was the third born of
ten siblings.
As a boy, Thomas Jefferson's favorite pastimes were
playing in the woods, practicing the violin and reading. He began his
formal education at the age of nine, studying Latin and Greek at a local
private school run by the Reverend William Douglas. In 1757, at the age
of 14, he took up further study of the classical languages as well as
literature and mathematics with the Reverend James Maury, whom Jefferson
later described as "a correct classical scholar."
In 1760,
having learned all he could from Maury, Jefferson left home to attend
the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia's capital.
Although it was the second oldest college in America (after only
Harvard), William and Mary was not at that time an especially rigorous
academic institution. Jefferson was dismayed to discover that his
classmates expended their energies betting on horse races, playing cards
and courting women rather than studying. Nevertheless, the serious and
precocious Jefferson fell in with a circle of older scholars that
included Professor William Small, Lieutenant Governor Francis Fauquier
and lawyer George Wythe, and it was from them that he received his true
education.
After three years at William and Mary, Jefferson
decided to read law under Wythe, one of the preeminent lawyers of the
American colonies. There were no law schools at this time; instead
aspiring attorneys "read law" under the supervision of an established
lawyer before being examined by the bar. Wythe guided Jefferson through
an extraordinarily rigorous five-year course of study (more than double
the typical duration); by the time Jefferson won admission to the
Virginia bar in 1767, he was already one of the most learned lawyers in
America.
From 1767-'74, Jefferson practiced law in Virginia with
great success, trying many cases and winning most of them. During these
years, he also met and fell in love with Martha Wayles Skelton, a recent
widow and one of the wealthiest women in Virginia. The pair married on
January 1, 1772. Thomas and Martha Jefferson had six children together,
but only two survived into adulthood: Martha, their firstborn, and Mary,
their fourth. Only Martha survived her father.
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Biography Thomas Jafferson [] U.S. President (1743–1826)
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