"DNA Tests Offer Evidence That Jefferson Fathered a Child With His Slave," by Dinitia Smith and Nicholas Wade, New York Times, November 1, 1998

John Jefferson, 52, of Norrisville, Pa., said he was not particularly surprised at the news that he was a descendant of President Jefferson and his slave, Sally Hemings. "I've known it practically all of my life." The report is based on blood samples collected by Eugene A. Foster, a retired pathologist who lives in Charlottesville, Va. Foster's finding rests on analysis of the Y chromosome, an unusual genetic component because, except at its very tips, it escapes the shuffling of the genetic material that occurs between every generation. The only changes on the Y chromosome are rare sporadic mutations in the DNA that accumulate slowly over centuries. Male lineages can therefore be distinguished from one another through the characteristic set of mutations carried in their Y chromosomes. One of the blood samples in the study was taken from John Jefferson, 52, of Norrisville, Pa., who is believed to be a direct descendant of Hemings through Eston Hemings Jefferson. John Jefferson's Y chromosome matched blood samples taken from the lineal descendants of Jefferson's uncle, Field Jefferson. (NYT)
NA tests performed on the descendants of Thomas Jefferson's family and of Jefferson's young slave, Sally Hemings, offer compelling new evidence that the third president of the United States fathered at least one of her children as has long been speculated, according to an article in the next issue of the scientific journal Nature.

The report is based on blood samples collected by Eugene A. Foster, a retired pathologist who lives in Charlottesville, Va. The finding undercuts the position of historians who have long said that Jefferson did not have a liaison with the slave some 28 years his junior and confirms, but with a surprising twist, the oral tradition that has been handed down among Sally Hemings' descendants.

The new evidence is likely to send historians scurrying to re-evaluate Jefferson, particularly his role in the anti-slavery movement. It may also have a wider resonance. The accusation of an affair with Hemings, one of several charges considered in a mock impeachment trial staged by the Massachusetts state Legislature in 1805, was indirectly denied by Jefferson.

"Now, with impeccable timing," the historian Joseph Ellis and the geneticist Eric Lander write in a joint commentary on the new report, "Jefferson reappears to remind us of a truth that should be self-evident. Our heroes -- and especially presidents -- are not gods or saints, but flesh-and-blood humans."

Foster's finding rests on analysis of the Y chromosome, an unusual genetic component because, except at its very tips, it escapes the shuffling of the genetic material that occurs between every generation. The only changes on the Y chromosome are rare sporadic mutations in the DNA that accumulate slowly over centuries. Male lineages can therefore be distinguished from one another through the characteristic set of mutations carried in their Y chromosomes.

Foster said he began his research almost on a whim, at a friend's suggestion. He soon grew more serious, and with the help of many colleagues, has tracked down four male lineages that bear on the paternity of Sally Hemings' children. They are Jefferson's lineage, derived from his paternal grandfather; the lineages of Tom Woodson and Eston Hemings Jefferson, Sally Hemings' oldest and youngest sons; and the lineage of the Carrs, two of Jefferson's nephews on his sister's side.

Sally Hemings had other children, but they left no surviving male heirs. The Carrs come into the picture because of the story spread by Jefferson's heirs that one or the other of the nephews fathered Hemings' children, explaining their pronounced resemblance to the Jeffersons.

Foster's samples were analyzed by Christopher Tyler-Smith, a population geneticist at the University of Oxford in England, and his colleagues. They found that the Jeffersonian Y chromosome had a distinctive set of mutations, unmatched in any of 1,200, mostly European, men who were analyzed by the same method.

The set of mutations on the Y chromosomes of three descendants of John Carr were almost identical to one another and different from the Jeffersonian chromosome, ruling out the Carrs as possible fathers.

The Y chromosome of a descendant of Eston Hemings Jefferson made a perfect match to Jefferson's, but those of five descendants of Thomas Woodson were completely different.

"The simplest and most probable explanations" for the findings, Foster and colleagues report, "are that Thomas Jefferson, rather than one of the Carr brothers, was the father of Eston Hemings Jefferson, and that Thomas Woodson was not Thomas Jefferson's son."

Lander, a DNA expert at the Whitehead Institute in Boston, said Foster's evidence showed there was a less than 1 percent chance that a person chosen at random would share the same set of Y chromosome mutations that exist in the Jefferson lineage.

"The fact that Eston Hemings' descendant has this rare chromosome, together with the historical evidence, seals the case that Jefferson fathered Eston," Lander said.

The evidence that Thomas Woodson was not Jefferson's son is surprising, Foster said, because of the particularly strong oral tradition that has come down independently in the five lines of the Woodson family. Woodson, born shortly after Jefferson's return from his service as minister in Paris, was 12 when James Callender, a journalist, published accusations in a Richmond newspaper that Jefferson was Hemings' lover. Shortly afterward, Woodson was sent off to live with a relative.

One of the blood samples in the study was taken from John Jefferson, 52, of Norrisville, Pa., who is believed to be a direct descendant of Hemings through Eston Hemings Jefferson. John Jefferson's Y chromosome matched blood samples taken from the lineal descendants of Jefferson's uncle, Field Jefferson.

In a telephone interview, Jefferson said he was not particularly surprised at the news that he was descended from a president and his slave. "I've known it practically all my life," said Jefferson, who is disabled and does not work. "I guess I was happy about it, but not really surprised since I've believed it all along."

Jefferson's sister, Julia Jefferson Westerinen, 64, had a more ebullient reaction. "Isn't that wild," said Ms. Westerinen, who lives on Staten Island and sells furniture and office equipment to architects and corporations.

"I've known for about 15 years, but I thought I was related to Jefferson's nephew," she said.

Robert Gillespie, a lawyer in Richmond who is the head of the Monticello Association, which includes the descendants of Jefferson's two daughters, said, "We've always agreed with mainstream historians that Jefferson wouldn't have fathered Sally Hemings' children." But, Gillespie said, the DNA results are "changing my attitude."

Gillespie said he had always believed that "Jefferson would have shown the second set of children love and affection just as he did the first set. Apparently he was a product of the 18th century, and had a double standard."

Ellis, author of "American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson," (Knopf, 1997), and other Jefferson scholars like Dumas Malone have long said that Jefferson did not have a relationship with Hemings. Ellis once dismissed the possibility as "a tin can tied to Jefferson's reputation."

Now, he said, the DNA tests have changed his mind. "This evidence is new evidence and it seems to me to be clinching," he said. Ellis said circumstantial evidence, including a quotation attributed to another of Hemings' sons, James Madison, also pointed to a liaison. "It includes the timing of her pregnancies, the physical resemblance of her children to Jefferson and Madison saying late in life that his mother told him."

Well before Y chromosome testing entered the picture, a minority of historians were asserting that Jefferson had the affair, notably Fawn Brodie, in her book "Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History." Another scholar, Annette Gordon-Reed, an associate professor of law at New York Law School and author of "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy" (University Press of Virginia), said she felt vindicated by the DNA tests. "If people had accepted this story, he would never have become an icon," Professor Gordon-Reed said. "All these historians did him a favor until we could get past our primitive racism. I don't think he would have been on Mount Rushmore or on the nickel. The personification of America can't live 38 years with a black woman."

The new DNA evidence is likely to renew questions about Jefferson's position on slavery, Lander and Ellis believe. "Jefferson's stated reservations about ending slavery included a fear that emancipation would lead to racial mixing and amalgamation," they wrote in their commentary in Nature. "His own interracial affair now personalizes this issue, while adding a dimension of hypocrisy."

Sally Hemings, who was born in 1772 or 1773, was the illegitimate half-sister of Jefferson's wife, Martha, the offspring of a relationship between John Wayles and Elizabeth (Betty) Hemings, a slave. Sally became Jefferson's property when he inherited the Wayles estate in 1774, and arrived at Monticello as a little girl in 1776. She was later described by one of Jefferson's slaves, Isaac Jefferson, as "mighty near white . . . very handsome, long straight hair down her back." Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, described her as "light colored and decidedly good looking."

In her early childhood, Hemings probably acted as a "nurse" to Jefferson's daughter, Mary, a custom in slave culture. Then in 1787, Jefferson, a widower, who was then the U.S. ambassador to France, summoned his daughter Maria to live with him. Maria was accompanied by her young attendant, Sally, who was then about 13. Sally's son Madison, who was born in 1805, at the end of his life said that his mother became Jefferson's "concubine" in Paris.

In 1789, Sally Hemings returned with the Jefferson family to Virginia. By then, Sally was 16 or 17, and pregnant, according to Madison Jefferson.

Her first child, Thomas, who the new studies say was not genetically linked to Jefferson, was born soon after her return.

Jefferson's grandson, Thomas Jefferson Randolph, said later that the boy looked like Thomas Jefferson. "At some distance or in the dusk the slave, dressed in the same way, might have been mistaken for Mr. Jefferson," he said.

The evidence of Jefferson's relationship with Hemings will only add to a re-evaluation of Jefferson that has been going on among historians for some time, Ellis said. "The take on Jefferson for 30 years or so has become more and more critical," he said. "Increasingly, he is a window in which race and slavery are the panes."

Jefferson, as portrayed by Ellis and others, was an ambivalent figure. "He plays hide and seek within himself," Ellis said.

But most Americans, he predicted, would have a kinder reaction to what he called "the longest-running mini-series in American history."

"Within the larger world," Ellis said, "the dominant response will be Jefferson is more human, to regard this as evidence of his frailties, frailties that seem more like us. The urge to regard him as an American icon will overwhelm any desire to take him off his pedestal."

Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company


Group flags younger Jefferson as father

USA Today, 01/06/99

A group of Thomas Jefferson's defenders said Wednesday that Jefferson's younger brother ‹ not the president himself ‹ is the man most likely to have fathered a child by the slave Sally Hemings. At a news conference in Washington, D.C., the group said the news media and many historians had misinterpreted the meaning of genetic tests released in November that showed Thomas Jefferson's DNA was consistent with that of Eston Hemings, born May 21, 1808, to slave Sally Hemings.

Jefferson's defenders didn't dispute the DNA tests. Rather, they argued that historical evidence suggests seven other Jefferson males with the same Y chromosome could have fathered Eston Hemings. Their leading contender: Randolph Jefferson, 12 years younger than his famous brother. ''DNA can only tell us so much,'' said Willard Sterne Randall, author of the biography Thomas Jefferson: A Life. ''You have to look at all the evidence. Remember that Jefferson was a 65-year-old man'' when Eston Hemings was born, ''in a pre-Viagra era.'' But several historians say evidence implicating Randolph Jefferson is extremely skimpy. ''This is a rescue mission, not a search for historical truth, and they don't care whose reputation gets hurt in the process ‹ as long as it's not Thomas Jefferson's,'' said Annette Gordon-Reed, author of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy.

The news conference was organized by Herbert Barger, an amateur historian whose wife is a sixth-generation descendant of a first cousin of Thomas Jefferson. Barger was supportive of the DNA tests and helped locate Jefferson descendants to give blood for the genetic tests. But he said Nature, the scientific journal that published the results, failed to present the historical evidence that implicates Randolph, his five sons and a cousin who sometimes visited Monticello, the Jefferson estate in Virginia. The evidence linking Thomas Jefferson to Sally Hemings included oral histories, the physical appearance of the children and the fact that Jefferson was at Monticello nine months before the birth of the four Hemings children sometimes said to be his. DNA results tied him to Eston, the only Hemings with a direct male descendant who could be tested.

Only two pieces of evidence point to Randolph Jefferson:

€ In 1847, Isaac Jefferson, a former slave of Thomas Jefferson, told a historian recording stories about Monticello: ''Old master's brother, Mass Randall (sic), was a mighty simple man: used to come out among black people, play the fiddle and dance half the night.''

€ Jefferson invited Randolph to Monticello in a letter Aug. 12, 1807. If he visited, he would have been at Monticello when Eston was conceived.

However, Cinder Stanton, a senior historian at Monticello, says Randolph Jefferson rarely visited Monticello. ''There was a general pattern of his being invited but not coming, saying he had wheat to harvest or the roads were muddy,'' she says. Randolph Jefferson's three documented visits, in 1805, 1808 and 1814, do not coincide with the birth of a Hemings child. Stanton and Gordon-Reed note that Randolph Jefferson had never been mentioned as a potential father until after the DNA tests ruled out Jefferson's cousins, Samuel and Peter Carr, the prime suspects in Jefferson family lore for more than a century.

By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY