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This is a brief biography that explores the life of Sally Hemings.
This book is a part of Westview?s `Lives of American Women? series,
edited by Carol Berkin. Each title in the series features brief
biographies of figures whose lives serve as a lens onto a major
trend, event, movement, or crisis of their eras, and whose stories
will be the entry point for a deeper understanding of a particular
historical time.
From the acclaimed author of "A Wilderness So Immense "comes a
pioneering study of Thomas Jefferson's relationships with women,
both personal and political.
The author of the Declaration of Independence, who wrote the words
"all men are created equal," was surprisingly uncomfortable with
woman. In eight chapters, Kukla examines the evidence for the
founding father's youthful misogyny, beginning with his awkward
courtship of Rebecca Burwell, who declined Jefferson's marriage
proposal, and his unwelcome advances toward the wife of a boyhood
friend. Subsequent chapters describe his decade-long marriage to
Martha Wayles Skelton, his flirtation with Maria Cosway, and the
still controversial relationship with Sally Hemings. A riveting
study of a complex man, "Mr. Jefferson's Women "is sure to spark
debate.
The remarkable story of the land purchase that doubled the size of our young nation, set the stage for its expansion across the continent, and confronted Americans with new challenges of ethnic and religious diversity. In a saga that stretches from Paris and Madrid to Haiti, Virginia, New York, and New Orleans, Jon Kukla shows how rivalries over the Mississippi River and its vast watershed brought France, Spain, Great Britain, and the United States to the brink of war and shaped the destiny of the new American republic. We encounter American leaders--Jefferson and Jay, Monroe and Pickering among them--clashing over the opening of the West and its implications for sectional balance of power. We see these disagreements nearly derailing the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and spawning a series of separatist conspiracies long before the dispute over slavery in the territory set the stage for the Missouri Compromise and the Civil War. Kukla makes it clear that as the French Revolution and Napoleon's empire-building rocked the Atlantic community, Spain's New World empire grew increasingly vulnerable to American and European rivals. Jefferson hoped to take Spain's territories--piece by piece, --while Napoleon schemed to reestablish a French colonial empire in the Caribbean and North America. Interweaving the stories of ordinary settlers and imperial decision-makers, Kukla depicts a world of revolutionary intrigue that transformed a small and precarious union into a world power--all without bloodshed and for about four cents an acre. "From the Hardcover edition.
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