Read Master of the Mountain: Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves Online
Authors: Henry Wiencek
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Â
“âAbominable' New Trade” (Deyle)
Absalom, Absalom!
(Faulkner)
Adams, Abigail
Adams, John
Adams, John Quincy
African Americans,
see
enslaved people; free blacks; slavery/slaves
African Meeting House
Aggy (slave)
Alamo, Battle of the
Albemarle County, Va.
Albemarle County Historical Society
Alexander I, Tsar of Russia
Allegheny Mountains
“Amazing Grace”
“American Committee”
American Constellation
American Geography
(Morse)
“Americanists”
“American Paradox, The” (Boulton)
American Revolution; slavery during
American Slavery, American Freedom
(Morgan)
American Sphinx
(Ellis)
Anastasia, Grand Duchess of Russia
Andersonville prison
Annapolis, Md.
Appleby, Joyce
Aristotle
Armstrong, John, Jr.
Armstrong, Kosciuszko
Arnold, Benedict
Arthur (slave)
Â
Bacon, Edmund
Baldwin, James
ballooning
Baltimore, Md.
Bancroft, Edward
Bankhead, Charles
Banneker, Benjamin
Banning, Lance
Barger, Herbert
Barnaby (slave)
Barnett, Judath
Bear, James
Bedford County, Va.
Bell, Mary Hemings
Bell, Robert (slave)
Bell, Sally (slave)
Bell, Thomas
Bennett, Winifred
Berlin, Ira
Betts, Edwin
Billy (slave)
bin Laden, Osama
Black Sal (slave)
Blue Ridge Mountains
Bon-Harper, Sara
Boston, Mass.
Boswell, James
Boulton, Alexander O.
Bowles, Critta Hemings,
see
Hemings, Critta
Bowles, Zachariah
Breckinridge, John
Brissot de Warville, Jacques-Pierre
Brodie, Fawn
Brooks, David
Buckingham County, Va.
Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de
Burton, Cynthia H.
Burwell, William
Â
Caesar (slave)
Callender, James Thomson
Campbell, Charles
Campeche (“siesta”) chairs
“Captain Shields”
Caractacus (Jefferson's horse)
Carr, Dabney
Carr, Peter
Carr, Samuel
Carter, Landon
Cary (slave)
Cary, Archibald
ceramics
charcoal
Charlottesville, Va.
Chase-Riboud, Barbara
Chastellux, François-Jean de Beauvoir, Marquis de
Chicago Tribune
Chillicothe, Ohio
Chinatown
Civil War, U.S.
Claiborne, William
Clark, George Rogers
Clarkson, Manoah
Clemens, Samuel
Cleveland American
Clinton, Bill
Clinton, Catherine
Cocke, John Hartwell
Colbert, Brown (slave)
Colbert, Burwell (slave)
Colbert, Melinda (slave)
Coles, Edward
Coles, Isaac
color line
Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas de Caritat, Marquis de
Congress, U.S.
Constitution, U.S.
Constitutional Convention (1787)
Continental Congress
Conway, Moncure
Coolidge, Ellen Randolph
Coolidge, Harold Jefferson
Cornwallis, Charles, Lord
cotton
cotton gin
Coulter, Ann
Crawford, Randolph
Croswell, Harry
Â
Davis, David Brion
Dayton, Jonathan
Declaration of Independence
De la littérature des Nègres
(Grégoire)
Delaware
Démeunier, Jean Nicolas
Deyle, Steven
Dinsmore, James
DNA testing
Dos Passos, John
Dougherty, Joseph
Dougherty, Mary
Douglass, Frederick
Drayton, John
D'Souza, Dinesh
Duke, R.T.W., Jr.
Dunmore, Lord
Durey, Michael
Dylan, Bob
Â
Edgehill plantation
Edy (slave)
Elk Hill plantation
Ellis, Joseph
Enlightenment
Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral Faculties and Literature of Negroes, An
(Grégoire)
enslaved people:
see
Aggy; Arthur; Barnaby; Bell, Mary Hemings; Bell, Robert; Bell, Sally; Billy; Black Sal; Caesar; Cary; Colbert, Brown; Colbert, Burwell; Colbert, Melinda; Douglass, Frederick; Edy; Evans, Jupiter; Evans, Phil; Evans, Suck; Fanny; Fennel; Flora; Fossett, Edith Hern; Fossett, Isabella; Fossett, James; Fossett, Maria; Fossett, Patsy; Fossett, Peter; Fossett, William; Freeman, John; Gawen; Goodman, Sally; Granger, Bagwell; Granger, George (“Great George”); Granger, George (“Smith George”); Granger, Isaac; Granger, Maria; Granger, Minerva; Granger, Ursula (“Queen”); Hall; Hannah; Hannibal; Harry; Hemings, Betty Brown; Hemings, Beverly; Hemings, Critta (b. 1769); Hemings, Doll; Hemings, Elizabeth “Betty”; Hemings, Eston; Hemings, Harriet; Hemings, James (b. 1765); Hemings, James “Jamey” (b. 1787); Hemings, Lucy; Hemings, Madison; Hemings, Martin; Hemings, Nance; Hemings, Peter; Hemings, Robert; Hemings, Sally; Hemings, Thenia; Hemings, Thomas; Hemmings, Betsy; Hemmings, John; Hemmings, Priscilla; Hercules; Hern, David; Hern, Frances “Fanny”; Hubbard, James; Hughes, Caroline; Hughes, Wormley; Jefferson, Israel Gillette; Jeffery; Jemmy; John; Lucy; Lundy; McCoy, Mary; Moses; Parthena; Patt; Phil; Quomina; Robin; Shackelford, Tom; Solomon; Tom; Turner, Nat; Washington, Booker T., Wheatley, Phillis; Will; Woodson, Tom
Eppes, Elizabeth Wayles
Eppes, Francis
Eppes, John Wayles
Eppes, Mary Jefferson (“Polly”)
Euclid
Evans, Jupiter (slave)
Evans, Phil (slave)
Evans, Suck (slave)
Evans family (slaves)
“Evening Shade”
Â
Fairfax County, Va.
Fanny (slave)
Family Letters of Thomas Jefferson, The
(Betts and Bear, eds.)
Farm Book (Jefferson)
Faulkner, William
Federalist Party
Fennel (slave)
First Families of Virginia (FFV)
Fleming, Thomas
Fletcher, Elijah P.
Flora (slave)
Ford, Henry
Forest plantation
Fossett, Edith Hern (slave)
Fossett, Isabella (slave)
Fossett, James (slave)
Fossett, Joseph (slave)
Fossett, Maria (slave)
Fossett, Patsy (slave)
Fossett, Peter (slave)
Fossett, William (slave)
Fossett family (slaves)
Foster, Ann
Foster, Augustus John
Foster, Clayton Randolph
Foster, Eugene
Foster, Susan Catharine
Founders
France
Franklin, Benjamin
Fredericksburg, Va.
free blacks
Free Colored Battalion of New Orleans
Freehling, William W.
Freeman, Douglas Southall
Freeman, John (slave)
Freeman, Melinda Colbert (slave):
see
Colbert, Melinda
Free Some Day
(Stanton)
Free State
Future Governor Edward Coles Freeing His Slaves While Enroute to Illinois 1819
Â
Garth, Thomas
Gawalt, Gerard W.
Gawen (slave)
George III, King of England
Georgia
German Americans
Gibboney, Stuart
Giles, Billy
Goodman, Jeremiah
Goodman, Sally (slave)
Grady, Reuben
Granger, Bagwell (slave)
Granger, George (“Great George”) (slave)
Granger, George (“Smith George”) (slave)
Granger, Isaac (also known as Isaac Jefferson) (slave)
Granger, Maria (slave)
Granger, Minerva (slave)
Granger, Ursula (b. 1787) (slave)
Granger, Ursula (“Queen”; b. 1737) (slave)
Granger family (slaves)
Great Britain
Great Wagon Road
Grégoire, Henri
Â
Hall (slave)
Hamilton, Alexander
Hannah (slave)
Hannibal (slave)
Harry (slave)
Hay, George
Heath, Barbara
Hemings, Betsy,
see
Hemmings, Betsy
Hemings, Betty Brown (slave)
Hemings, Beverly (slave)
Hemings, Captain
Hemings, Critta (b. 1769) (slave)
Hemings, Doll (slave)
Hemings, Elizabeth “Betty” (slave)
Hemings, Eston (slave)
Hemings, Harriet (slave)
Hemings, James (slave)
Hemings, James “Jamey” (b. 1787) (slave)
Hemings, John,
see
Hemmings, John
Hemings, Lucy (slave)
Hemings, Madison (slave)
Hemings, Martin (slave)
Hemings, Mary (slave),
see
Bell, Mary
Hemings Hemings, Nance (slave)
Hemings, Peter (slave)
Hemings, Robert (slave)
Hemings, Sally (slave)
Hemings, Thenia (slave)
Hemings, Thomas (slave)
Hemings family (slaves)
Hemmings, Betsy (slave)
Hemmings, John (slave)
Hemmings, Priscilla (slave)
Henry, Patrick
Hercules (slave)
Hern, David (slave)
Hern, Frances “Fanny” (slave)
Hochman, Steven H.
Horace
Howell, Samuel
Howell v. Netherland
Hubbard, James (slave)
Hughes, Caroline (slave)
Hughes, Stephen
Hughes, Wormley (slave)
Hylton, Daniel
Â
Illinois
immigration
impeachment
indentured servants
Indian Camp plantation
“Inscription for an African Slave”
interracial relations
Irony of American History, The
(Niebuhr)
Irvine, Reed
Ivory, James
Â
James River
Jay, John
Jefferson, Field
Jefferson, Isaac (slave):
see
Granger, Isaac
Jefferson, Israel Gillette (slave)
Jefferson, Jane
Jefferson, John Wayles
Jefferson, Lewis
Jefferson, Lucy
Jefferson, Martha (“Patsy”)
Jefferson, Martha Wayles Skelton
Jefferson, Mary (“Polly”)
Jefferson, Peter
Jefferson, Randolph
Jefferson, Thomas: in American Revolution; architectural interests of; Bacon's recollections of; biographies of; birth of; blankets given by; in Boston; British creditors of; British criticism of; British pursuit of; butler of; cabinet of; carriages and wagons of; Chastellux's relationship with; childhood of; Clinton compared with; clothing of; coffin of; Coles's emancipation as viewed by; at College of William and Mary; congressional relations of; contradictions of; courtship by; criticism of; death of; debts of; Declaration of Independence written by; descendants of (
see also specific descendants
); DNA testing and; emancipation as viewed by; encyclopedia article by; Enlightenment ideals of; equal rights as viewed by; estate of; as father; fictional portrayals of; financial situation of; as Founder; “4 percent” formula of; free trade supported by; as governor of Virginia; as grandfather; Granger's memoir of; grave site of; grocery bills for; guilt felt by; handwriting of; Hannah's letter to; health of; height of; historical assessment and legacy of; in House of Burgesses; Howell defended by; Hubbard's escapes as viewed by; hunting by; immigration opposed by; inaugural address of; interracial relationships as viewed by; inventions of; Kosciuszko's will thwarted by; Lafayette's relationship with; land owned by; as lawyer; legal documents of; libel case regarding; as liberal; library of; Louisiana Purchase approved by; Madison Hemings's memoir of; manumission plans suggested by; as minister to France; Monticello plantation of,
see
Monticello; moral values of; musical interests of; Native Americans as viewed by; in New York City; Paine's correspondence with; personality of; personal servant of; in Philadelphia; as philosopher and scientist; physical appearance of; plow designed by; political opposition to; polygraph used by; Poplar Forest plantation of; popular image of; portraits owned by; in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; as president; presidential campaign of (1796); press coverage of; psychoanalytic interpretation of; racial views of; rationalizations used by; religious beliefs of; reputation of; revolving book holder of; in Richmond; salary received by; Sally Hemings's relationship with; as secretary of state; sexuality of; Short's appeal to; slave children of (
see also Hemings relations
); as slave owner; slavery as viewed by; slaves bought by; slaves freed by; slaves sold by; spectacles worn by; University of Virginia established by; as vice president; violin played by; as Virginian; Wayles slaves inherited by; white children of (
see also Jefferson and Randolph relations
); at White House; white servants of; as widower; will of; in Williamsburg; wine cellar of; writings of;
see also specific writings
Jefferson at Monticello
(Bear, ed.)
Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson
(Pierson)
“Jefferson Fathered Slave's Last Child” (Foster et al.)
Jefferson-Hemings Myth: An American Travesty, The
(Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society)
Jefferson Image in the American Mind, The
(Peterson)
Jefferson in Paris
(film)
“Jefferson's Hints to Americans Travelling in Europe” (Jefferson)