Thursday, November 7, 2019
Thomas Jefferson Essays - Thomas Jefferson, Free Essays, Term Papers
Thomas Jefferson Essays - Thomas Jefferson, Free Essays, Term Papers    Thomas Jefferson        Thomas Jefferson is remembered in history not only for the   offices he held, but also for his belief in the natural rights of man   as expressed in the Declaration of Independence and his faith in the   people?s ability to govern themselves. He left an impact on his times   equaled by few others in American history. Born on April 13, 1743,   Jefferson was the third child in the family and grew up with six   sisters and one brother. Though he opposed slavery, his family   had owned slaves. From his father and his environment he developed an   interest in botany, geology, cartography, and North American   exploration, and from his childhood teacher developed a love for Greek   and Latin. In 1760, at the age of 16, Jefferson entered the College of   William and Mary and studied under William Small and George Wythe.   Through Small, he got his first views of the expansion of science and   of the system of things in which we are placed. Through Small and   Wythe, Jefferson became acquainted with Governor Francis Fauquier.   After finishing college in 1762, Jefferson studied law with Wythe and   noticed growing tension between America and Great Britain.   Jefferson was admitted to the bar in 1767. He successfully practiced   law until public service occupied most of his time. At his home in   Shadwell, he designed and supervised the building of his home,   Monticello, on a nearby hill. He was elected to the Virginia House of   Burgesses in 1769. Jefferson met Martha Wayles Skelton, a wealthy   widow of 23, in 1770 and married her in 1772. They settled in   Monticello and had one son and five daughters. Only two of his   children, Martha and Mary, survived until maturity. Mrs. Martha   Jefferson died in 1782, leaving Thomas to take care of his two   remaining children.      Though not very articulate, Jefferson proved to be an able   writer of laws and resolutions he was very concise and straight to the   point. Jefferson soon became a member in a group which opposed and   took action in the disputes between Britain and the colonies.   Together with other patriots, the group met in the Apollo Room of   Williamsburg?s famous Raleigh Tavern in 1769 and formed a   nonimportation agreement against Britain, vowing not to pay import   duties imposed by the Townshend Acts. After a period of calmness,   problems faced the colonists again, forcing Jefferson to organize   another nonimportation agreement and calling the colonies together to   protest. He was chosen to represent Albermarle County at the First   Virginia Convention, where delegates were elected to the First   Continental Congress. He became ill and was unable to attend the   meeting, but forwarded a message arguing that the British Parliament   had no control over the colonies. He also mentioned the Saxons who   had settled in England hundred of years before from Germany and how   Parliament had no more right to govern the colonies than the Germans   had to govern the English. Most Virginians saw this as too extreme,   though. His views were printed in a pamphlet called A Summary of the   Rights of British America (1774). Jefferson attended the Second   Virginia Convention in 1775 and was chosen as one of the delegates to   the Second Continental Congress, but before he left for Philadelphia,   he was asked by the Virginia Assembly to reply to Lord North?s message   of peace, proposing that Parliament would not try to tax the   settlers if they would tax themselves. Jefferson?s "Reply to Lord   North" was more moderate that the Summary View. Instead of agreeing   with Lord North, Jefferson insisted that a government had been set up   for the Americans and not for the British.       The Declaration of Independence was primarily written by   Jefferson in June 1776. Congress felt that the Declaration was too   strong and gave Dickinson the responsibility of redrafting the   document, but the new version included much of Jefferson?s original   text and ideas. In 1779, Jefferson became governor of Virginia,   guiding Virginians through the final years of the Revolutionary War.   As a member of the Second Continental Congress, he drafted a plan for   decimal coinage and composed an ordinance for the Northwest Territory   that formed the foundation for the Ordinance of 1787. In 1785, he   became minister to France. Appointed secretary    
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