레이블이 Monticello인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Monticello인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 30일 토요일

About 'monticello catalogue'|First Response Team in Monticello







About 'monticello catalogue'|First Response Team in Monticello








I               don't               know               how               many               years               ago               it               was               that               I               made               my               first               purchase               through               a               catalog,               but               since               then,               the               number               of               them               I               receive               -               especially               in               the               Autumn               -               has               grown               so               dramatically               as               to               require               a               larger               mailbox!

Although               that               may               sound               like               a               complaint,               it               isn't.

I               have               come               to               appreciate               the               convenience               of               shopping               at               home               and               ordering               either               by               phone               or               online               with               a               catalog               open               to               the               item               I               want               in               front               of               me.

In               just               today's               mail               alone,               there               were               eighteen               of               them,               including               "The               Sportsman's               Guide,"               "TravelSmith,"               "AutoSport,"               "Magic               Cabin,"               Hearth               Song,"               "What               On               Earth,"               "Wind               and               Weather,"               "Monticello,"               "International               Male,"               "Orvis,"               "Chadwick's,"               "Warm               Things,"               "Plow               and               Hearth,"               "Bits               and               Pieces,"               "Paul               Frederick,"               "Blair,"               "Harry               and               David"               and               "L.L.

Bean."               I               have               ordered               from               a               few               of               these               in               the               past               -               but               at               least               six               of               them               are               new               to               me,               having               never               heard               of               them               before               -               let               alone               purchased               anything               from               them.
               They               will               all               be               granted,               however,               a               cursory               review               by               either               my               wife               or               I               to               pre-select               which               go               immediately               into               recycling               and               which               make               it               to               the               next               level               of               consideration               -               whereupon               we               actually               open               and               browse               at               the               first               few               pages.

In               just               today's               batch,               the               bulk               was               so               substantive               that               the               postmistress               had               them               bound               in               back               with               a               notice               in               the               box               for               me               to               pick               them               up,               as               though               I               had               received               a               large               package               of               some               kind.

They               simply               would               not               all               fit               into               the               box.
               I               know               how               my               name               got               around.

Mailing               lists               are               shared.

I               have               no               idea               how               I               got               on               lists               for               companies               like               "The               Sportsman's               Guide"               or               "Today's               Weaponry"               (received               yesterday)               as               I               have               never               purchased               any               such               item               from               anywhere               that               I               can               recall               -               but               they               come               to               me               right               along               with               the               others.

It               generally               takes               ten               of               fifteen               minutes               to               do               a               quick               sort               through               them               to               set               out               the               ones               I               might               want               to               look               through.

Then,               there               is               the               time               spent               looking               through               them,               placing               markers               in               pages               containing               things               I               just               'might'               be               interested               in               buying               and               then               time               for               the               final               review               and               decisions.
               All-in-all,               it               sounds               like               a               lot               of               time               -               but               I               assess               it               to               be               far               less               than               spending               a               day               or               two               running               around               from               one               crowded               retail               store               to               the               other               looking               for               'just               the               right               thing'               for               everyone               on               my               holiday               list.

I               can               take               a               break               and               read               (something               other               than               more               catalogs,               watch               TV,               go               for               a               walk               -               whatever               -               and               then               come               back               to               it               when               I               feel               like               it.

Usually,               by               the               end               of               a               half-day               or               so,               all               of               my               holiday               shopping               has               been               ordered.

I               am               done.

Finis.

Until,               of               course,               next               year               when               the               number               of               catalogues               I               receive               will               predictably               increase               exponentially               according               to               the               number               of               catalogs               I               have               actually               ordered               from.
               There               are               certain               things               one               needs               to               be               cautious               about               buying               without               touching               or               trying               on.

Clothing               for               yourself               or               others               can               be               risky               for               example.

Everyone               who               has               ever               bought               clothing               knows               that               the               sizing               varies               by               manufacturer               and               is               not,               in               and               of               itself,               a               reliable               indicator               of               how               (or               if)               the               item               will               fit               you               or               anyone               else               you               may               have               in               mind               for               it               correctly.

Electronics               can               be               risky               because               if               something               is               wrong               you               can't               just               take               it               back               to               where               you               bought               it.

You               need               to               ship               and               often               pay               for               that               return               shipping.
               Yet,               with               all               the               appropriate               and               necessary               caveats               that               apply,               catalog               shopping               has               become               my               primary               means               of               beating               the               crowds,               the               over               burdened               (and               sometimes               over               zealous)               sales               people               and               the               parking               debacles               that               await               either               downtown               (for               me,               San               Francisco)               or               at               the               major               malls               in               the               pre-Christmas/Holiday               season               that               seems               to               begin               these               days               right               around               Halloween.
               So,               unless               you               suffer               from               some               particularly               catalog               version               of               papyrophobia               (an               unrealistic               fear               or               phobia               of               paper,)               you               may               want               to               consider               saving               some               gas               and               some               time               by               doing               more               of               your               holiday               shopping               by               phone               or               online               using               what               the               post               office               brings               you               as               basic               resource               material.
               It               might               actually               save               you               some               time,               money               and               aggravation               at               a               time               of               year               when               we               don't               really               want               to               spend               more               time               or               money               than               we               feel               is               right               and               certainly               can               enjoy               our               own               holiday               seasons               with               a               tad               less               of               the               irritation               frequently               brought               about               by               being               pushed               and               shoved               into               waiting               in               endless               lines               in               understaffed               stores.
               Catalogs               are               a               good               thing.






Image of monticello catalogue






monticello catalogue
monticello catalogue


monticello catalogue Image 1


monticello catalogue
monticello catalogue


monticello catalogue Image 2


monticello catalogue
monticello catalogue


monticello catalogue Image 3


monticello catalogue
monticello catalogue


monticello catalogue Image 4


monticello catalogue
monticello catalogue


monticello catalogue Image 5


  • Related blog with monticello catalogue





    1. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   12/23/2005
      ... hung on Przybilla -- the former University of Minnesota center and hoops hero of Monticello -- by Timberwolves forward Kevin Garnett a few years ago after the two...
    2. dyslexia.wordpress.com/   10/22/2008
      ...ISBN 978-0-393-06477-3. There are audio versions on CD. Note: FYI — Monticello Catalog Item # 111006 is the Campeachy chair, crafted by plantation joiner John ...
    3. talesfromthelaboratory.typepad.com/   03/02/2010
      ...that fit the occasion -- which, of course, you keep to yourself. 8. You get the Monticello catalogue and still secretly want your own revolving book stand or campeache chair...
    4. sevenpalms.blogspot.com/   05/12/2010
      Have your ever seen Monticello? The on-line catalog that is? I stumbled on this site and really liked some of what...
    5. cliopolitical.blogspot.com/   08/03/2008
      ...Jefferson--to chart the intellectual provenance of the Sage of Monticello. Unsurprisingly, the list of books cataloged by Hayes is immense and impressive. But the insight that...
    6. acommonplacejbl.blogspot.com/   11/15/2007
      .... I bought my wife a present from the catalog of colonial reproductions sold at Monticello, the home of presidential slaveholder Thomas Jefferson. Lo and behold...
    7. jshaffner.wordpress.com/   02/15/2012
      ...a taste of the past. Select visual materials covers from this old catalog so staff can fetch them for you. I got a chance to chat with the Librarian...
    8. lfntextiles.blogspot.com/   01/09/2012
      ... later, in the recent past, Monticello built a grand new Visitor's center... now available in their spring catalogue , as well as in the shop in Charlottesville...
    9. gottagarden.blogspot.com/   04/09/2007
      ...of the Day-The Bulbs that Bloom at Monticello". As the Director of the Thomas Jefferson Center... and the editor of Twinleaf , the journal and catalog of same, knowledge and a love of Jefferson's...
    10. adderabbi.blogspot.com/   08/06/2007
      ...overdose? Contracting STDs? I think that a hierarchy of ‘risks’ must be catalogued, and fast, lest mountains be turned into molehills and vice...



    Related Video with monticello catalogue







    monticello catalogue Video 1








    monticello catalogue Video 2








    monticello catalogue Video 3




    monticello catalogue































    2013년 11월 24일 일요일

    About 'monticello track'|... us landing in Lock Haven (LHV), Pennsylvania, White Lake, New York or Monticello (MSV) Sullivan County International, Bennington (DDH), Vermont, Concord (CON), New Hampshire, and our...







    About 'monticello track'|... us landing in Lock Haven (LHV), Pennsylvania, White Lake, New York or Monticello (MSV) Sullivan County International, Bennington (DDH), Vermont, Concord (CON), New Hampshire, and our...








                   Just               as               there               are               many               ways               to               track               time               through               the               calendar               year,               there               can               be               various               methods               for               charting               the               lands               of               this               remarkable               continent.
                   A               notable               effort               to               reconceive               "America"               on               the               basis               of               culinary               geography               is               documented               in               the               recent               book               Renewing               America's               Food               Traditions.

    Edited               by               ethnobotanist               Gary               Paul               Nabhan,               this               lavishly               illustrated               volume               grew               from               the               timely               collaboration               of               seven               major               organizations               committed               to               "saving               and               savoring               the               continent's               most               endangered               foods."
                   Nabhan               and               his               colleagues               have               mapped               North               America-including               Northwest               Mexico               and               most               of               Canada-by               identifying               thirteen               regional               "food               nations"               distinguished               by               place-based               foodways.

    Each               food               nation               is               named               for               an               iconic               dish,               and               anyone               familiar               with               Mvskoke               tastes               will               be               gratified               to               learn               that               Mvskoke               country,               both               before               and               after               Removal,               is               encompassed               by               "Cornbread               Nation."               Back               east,               this               region               borders               "Chestnut               Nation"               and               "Gumbo               Nation"               in               the               Mvskoke               homeland;               out               west,               this               agricultural               complex               shares               a               boundary               with               "Bison               Nation"               running               across               the               Muscogee               (Creek)               Nation.
                   The               RAFT               collaborative               has               inventoried               more               than               a               thousand               heirloom               varieties               and               heritage               breeds               that               are               currently               threatened,               endangered,               or               functionally               extinct.

    Nearly               a               hundred               are               profiled               in               the               book,               at               least               half               of               which               were-or               still               are-indigenous               staples.

    The               ten               plants               and               animals               detailed               in               a               chapter               on               Cornbread               Nation               are               as               colorfully               named               as               they               are               appetizing:               Yellow               Hickory               King               Dent               corn,               Mulefoot               hog,               Southern               Queen               yam,               Early               Golden               persimmon.
                   But               the               most               intriguing               story               here,               from               a               Mvskoke               perspective,               is               surely               the               so-called               Chickasaw               plum.
                   Early               colonists               coveted               the               different               "wild               Plums               of               America,"               the               trees               as               well               as               their               fruits,               which               was               "considered               to               be               of               extraordinary               excellence               in               flavor."               The               name               was               coined               in               1773               by               botanist               William               Bartram,               who               mistakenly               believed               this               particular               species               had               been               brought               to               Mvskoke               country               "from               the               S.

    W.

    beyond               the               Missisippi,               by               the               Chicasaws."               This               identification               was               codified               in               1785               when               the               plum               was               assigned               a               scientific               name:               "Prunus               angustifolia,               Chickasaw               Plumb."
                   George               Washington               planted               three               long               rows               of               P.

    angustifolia               behind               the               garden               at               Mount               Vernon.

    Thomas               Jefferson               established               the               species               at               eight               different               locations               on               his               estate,               and               "of               all               the               tree               fruits               grown               at               Monticello               today,               the               Chickasaw               plum               is               the               healthiest               and               most               vigorous               with               its               clean,               shiny,               pest-free               foliage               and               abundant               fruit               production."
                   The               plot               thickened               during               the               Creek               War,               nearly               two               centuries               ago,               when               frontier               militia               and               their               Cherokee               allies               massacred               residents               of               the               Hillabee               villages               near               the               Tallapoosa               River               on               November               18,               1813.

    Having               also               chanced               upon               a               patch               of               fruit               trees,               one               settler               returned               home               with               a               supply               of               native               plum               pits,               which               he               cultivated               in               Knox               County,               Tennessee.
                   Locals               loved               the               new               plum               and               took               to               calling               it               "General               Jackson"               and               "Old               Hickory,"               commemorating               the               spoils               of               war.

    The               looted               fruit               later               made               its               way               to               Illinois,               where               it               was               propagated               under               the               name               "Chickasaw               Chief,"               and               to               Wisconsin,               where               it               came               to               be               known               as               the               "Miner"               plum,               now               the               Chickasaw's               best-known               cultivar.
                   Writing               in               1911,               horticulturalist               U.

    P.

    Hedrick               described               this               species               as               "one               of               the               most               distinct               of               plums"               and               "the               first               of               the               native               plums               to               be               named,"               of               which               there               were               already               more               than               forty               named               cultivars.

    "The               fruits               are               good               in               quality,               attractive               in               appearance,               comparatively               curculio-proof               [pest-resistant],"               and               "especially               suited               for               culinary               uses."               But               industrial               agriculture               had               little               use               for               this               native               commodity,               and               over               the               past               century               P.

    angustifolia               was               nearly               lost               and               forgotten.
                   Recent               discoveries               near               Horseshoe               Bend               on               the               Tallapoosa               River,               however,               have               shed               new               light               on               both               the               plum               and               its               history.
                   Most               immigrant               writers               have               assumed               this               indigenous               fruit               to               be               wild.

    Yet               Bartram               saw               plenty               of               Chickasaw               plums               during               his               travels               in               Mvskoke               country,               and               he               "never               saw               it               wild               in               the               forests,               but               always               in               old               deserted               Indian               plantations."               Hedrick               also               noted               that               "it               is               usually               found               near               human               habitations               and               on               the               margins               of               fields,"               and               that               "a               careful               study               of               recent               botanical               works               indicates               that               the               species               is               indigenous               to               the               southeastern               United               States."
                   Finally,               in               2004,               botanists               working               at               Horseshoe               Bend               National               Military               Park               found               six               cross-compatible               species               of               native               Prunus-including               P.

    angustifolia-near               the               site               of               Tohopeka               village.

    It               now               seems               clear               that               the               original               specimens               taken               from               Hillabee,               a               few               miles               to               the               west,               had               been               carefully               cultivated               by               Mvskoke               growers.
                   Nabhan               and               his               RAFT               colleagues               extol               this               plum               for               its               "primacy               among               the               continent's               great               fruits,"               concluding               that               "perhaps               the               Creek               were               more               accomplished               horticulturalists               than               anyone               has               given               them               credit               for."






    Image of monticello track






    monticello track
    monticello track


    monticello track Image 1


    monticello track
    monticello track


    monticello track Image 2


    monticello track
    monticello track


    monticello track Image 3


    monticello track
    monticello track


    monticello track Image 4


    monticello track
    monticello track


    monticello track Image 5


  • Related blog with monticello track





    1. leftatthegate.blogspot.com/   10/06/2008
      ... ; a project which includes a new Monticello Raceway and its accompanying racino...and turns in order to keep his baby on track. For one thing, the Bank of Scotland, one of his...
    2. tcraftbowden.blogspot.com/   01/12/2006
      ... us landing in Lock Haven (LHV), Pennsylvania, White Lake, New York or Monticello (MSV) Sullivan County International, Bennington (DDH), Vermont, Concord (CON), New Hampshire, and our...
    3. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   12/23/2005
      ..., the team concept. In the beginning of the year, Kobe was on track to attempt the most shots ever. Kobe is learning that it ...
    4. leftatthegate.blogspot.com/   02/18/2007
      ... widespread use of the blood doping agent EPO at the upstate harness track Monticello Raceway. It's well worth reading, with a lot of increasingly familiar talk about snake...
    5. canadianhorsedefencecoalition.wordpress.com/   04/11/2012
      ...like gentle locusts on harness racing’s Monticello Harness Racing track in Monticello, New York. They are offering hefty sums — some as absurdly high...
    6. gforcef1.wordpress.com/   05/21/2010
      ... like a bad plan. We need a proper circuit, in a proper location, and not a private track like Monticello. I still think we should take a look at Watkins Glen.
    7. www.autoblog.com/   09/28/2013
      ... to help. Her dad, Ari, is the president at Monticello, so it makes sense that she'd start her time on the track before having a driving license. This video...
    8. theclippingpoint.blogspot.com/   09/19/2010
      Check out this clip of the Monticello Motor Club . More than just a track, the Monticello Motor Club is a luxury destination with an array of services and...
    9. nwcarrollton.blogspot.com/   10/04/2011
      ... and S&W about the restriction (narrowing) of the Monticello at the railroad tracks near Airline. They will tell you it is real. They will tell you it...
    10. hickscarworks.blogspot.com/   11/30/2008
      ...it was abandoned, and now operates on the IC tracks into downtown Monticello. This is the depot in Monticello, with some Christmas ...



    Related Video with monticello track







    monticello track Video 1








    monticello track Video 2








    monticello track Video 3




    monticello track































    About 'monticello associates'|Monticello







    About 'monticello associates'|Monticello









    Watching               the               Jefferson-Hemings               Scholars               Commission               would               remind               someone               of               an               attorney               who               defends               a               guilty-as-sin               client               by               tossing               everything               he               could               possibly               think               of               against               a               wall               in               the               hopes               that               something               would               stick               and               change               the               mind               of               a               single               juror.

    The               members               of               the               Scholars               Commission               seem               much               like               the               late               historian               Dumas               Malone,               who               worked               for               43               years               on               a               six-volume               Jefferson               biography.

    No               matter               how               much               evidence               was               presented               linking               Jefferson               to               Sally               and               her               children,               Malone               found               convenient               ways               to               dismiss               the               evidence.
                   
                   A               couple               members               of               the               Jefferson-Hemings               Scholars               Commission               recently               held               a               press               conference,               carried               on               C-SPAN3,               to               discuss               their               book               The               Jefferson-Hemings               Controversy:               Report               of               the               Scholars               Commission.

    Made               up               of               genealogists,               historians,               lawyers               and               scientists,               the               Scholars               Commission               presented               theories               to               contradict               the               overwhelming               evidence               that               Thomas               Jefferson               fathered               children               with               his               slave,               Sally               Hemings.

    The               commission               argued               that               the               original               DNA               report               indicated               only               that               a               Jefferson               male               had               fathered               one               of               Sally               Hemings'               children               and               that               the               available               DNA               could               not               specify               Thomas               Jefferson               as               the               father.
                   When               something               can               be               proven               with               about               99               percent               certainty,               how               much               credence               should               be               given               to               the               other               one               percent?

    There               are               many               things               that               when               put               together               make               a               compelling               case               that               Jefferson               had               a               long-running               affair               with               Sally               and               fathered               all               of               her               children.
                   Sally               was               a               logical               choice.

    Sally               Hemings               probably               reminded               Jefferson               of               his               late               wife.

    Jefferson               promised               his               dying               wife               Martha               that               he               would               never               remarry.

    Hemings               was               the               half-sister               of               his               wife,               with               the               two               having               the               same               father.

    "Dusky"               Sally               was               described               by               Thomas               Jefferson               Randolph,               Jefferson's               grandson,               as               "light               colored               and               decidedly               good               looking,"               according               to               the               article               Not               Much               Is               Sure               About               Hemings,               the               Person,               published               in               USA               Today,               Friday,               May               14,               1999.

    In               the               same               article,               Isaac               Jefferson,               a               Monicello               slave,               said,               "Sally               was               mighty               near               white…               very               handsome."               Jefferson               could               keep               his               pledge               not               to               remarry               that               he               made               to               his               wife               on               her               death               bed,               take               up               with               someone               who               probably               looked               and               behaved               in               a               similar               way               to               his               wife,               and               meet               his               primal               urges               and               needs.

    Cohabitating               with               Sally               was               quite               a               bargain               for               him.
                   Jefferson               was               present               nine               months               before               each               of               Sally's               children               was               born.

    Jefferson,               who               not               only               traveled               often               but               also               far               and               wide,               was               found               by               his               own               Farm               Book               records               and               accounts               to               have               been               present               in               Monticello               nine               months               prior               to               each               of               Sally's               pregnancies,               except               for               her               first               one.

    On               that               occasion               she               conceived               in               Paris               while               Jefferson               was               serving               as               a               minister               to               France               and               Sally               was               there               as               his               daughter's               servant.
                   Eston               Hemings               was               the               spittin'               image               of               Jefferson.

    It               was               through               a               descendant               of               Sally's               youngest               child               Eston               that               the               DNA               match               was               made               linking               him               through               the               Y               chromosome               to               the               descendant               of               Jefferson's               paternal               uncle               Field               Jefferson.

    In               an               article               first               appearing               in               a               Chillicothe,               Ohio,               newspaper               where               Eston               had               once               lived,               Eston               is               described               as               having               had               a               "striking               resemblance               to               Jefferson."               The               writer               of               the               article,               while               visiting               Washington               D.C.

    and               going               from               Pennsylvania               Avenue               to               the               White               House,               came               upon               a               bronze               statue               of               Jefferson               that               was               located               on               the               walk               leading               from               the               avenue               to               the               famed               mansion.

    Immediately               he               thought               the               statue               looked               more               like               Eston               Hemings               than               anyone               else               he               had               ever               seen.

    Upon               returning               to               Chillicothe,               he               relayed               the               incident               to               Eston.

    "Well,"               answered               Eston,               "my               mother,               whose               name               I               bear,               belonged               to               Mr.

    Jefferson…               And               she               was               never               married."
                   The               notorious               Carr               nephews               were               ruled               out.

    There               was               no               denying               that               Sally's               children               possessed               a               light               skin               color               and               a               startling               resemblance               to               Jefferson.

    To               explain               this               dilemma,               Jefferson's               grandchildren,               Thomas               Jefferson               Randolph               and               Ellen               Randolph               Coolidge,               tried               to               assign               the               paternity               of               her               children               to               Jefferson's               philandering               nephews,               Peter               and               Samuel               Carr.

    However,               the               DNA               research               spearheaded               by               pathologist               Dr.

    Eugene               Foster               in               1998               showed               the               three               Carr               descendants               who               were               tested               had               no               Y-chromosome               haplotype               match               to               the               Eston               Hemings               descendant,               and               therefore               the               Carr               nephews               did               not               father               Eston.
                   DNA               evidence               won               over               even               the               toughest               skeptics.

    Joseph               Ellis,               the               history               professor               who               won               the               1997               National               Book               Award               for               American               Sphinx:               The               Character               of               Thomas               Jefferson,               admitted               in               a               U.S.

    News               and               World               Report               (Nov.

    1998)               commentary               that               he               was               "one               of               those               students               of               Jefferson               who               had               previously               questioned"               the               Jefferson-Hemings               affair.

    In               addition,               Ellis               wrote,               "The               Eston               match               is               really               all               that               matters               because,               in               conjunction               with               the               circumstantial               evidence               that               already               existed,               it               proves               beyond               any               reasonable               doubt               that               Jefferson               had               a               long-term               sexual               relationship               with               his               mulatto               slave."
                   Great               hypocrisy               from               the               Scholars               Commission.

    The               commission               was               quick               to               rally               behind               the               DNA               evidence               that               contradicted               the               claims               of               the               Thomas               Woodson               descendants               concerning               Sally's               putative               first               son.

    For               two               centuries               the               Woodson               family               had               passed               along               the               now               discredited               notion               that               Woodson               was               Jefferson's               first               son.

    If               we               accept               that               the               DNA               rules               out               Woodson               as               a               Jefferson               son,               then               we               should               also               accept               that               there               is               a               conclusive               link               between               Jefferson               and               Eston               Hemings.

    When               the               British               journal               Nature               presented               the               results               of               the               scientific               tests,               they               indicated               the               Jefferson-Hemings               findings               provided               "proof               positive               of               a               genetic               linkage"               and               "removed               any               shadow               of               a               doubt               that               Thomas               Jefferson               sired               at               least               one               son               of               Sally               Hemings."
                   Madison               Hemings               was               spot               on.

    In               the               late               UCLA               historian               Fawn               Brodie's               1974               book               Thomas               Jefferson,               An               Intimate               Biography,               she               reprinted               the               reminiscences               of               Madison               Hemings               that               first               appeared               in               the               Pike               County               Ohio               Republican               in               March               of               1873.

    Madison,               Sally's               penultimate               child,               explains               the               intimate               relationship               between               Sally               Hemings               and               Thomas               Jefferson.

    He               says               their               first               child               Tom               died               shortly               after               birth.

    He               also               indicates               that               he               and               his               siblings               Beverly,               Harriet               and               Eston               are               the               children               of               Thomas               Jefferson.

    The               DNA               tests               bore               out               all               of               Madison's               claims,               from               the               Eston               Hemings               link               to               the               Thomas               Woodson               non               match.

    His               account               has               been               proven               to               be               plausible.
                   Sally's               children               had               unique               access               to               freedom.

    Jefferson               liberated               Sally's               children               when               they               became               a               certain               age,               supposedly               to               fulfill               a               promise               to               Sally               he               had               given               her               in               Paris.

    In               France               Sally               was               legally               a               free               person.

    To               entice               her               to               return               with               him               to               America,               Jefferson               reportedly               promised               to               free               all               of               her               future               children               when               they               turned               twenty-one.

    Jefferson               gave               freedom               to               no               other               slave               family               and               no               other               Monticello               slaves               gained               their               freedom               before               the               age               of               thirty-one,               with               one               exception.
                   Report               of               the               Research               Committee               on               other               possible               paternity.

    The               Jefferson-Hemings               Scholars               Commission               has               speculated               that               some               other               Jefferson               who               shared               Thomas               Jefferson's               Y               chromosome               may               have               fathered               Sally's               children.

    These               could               include               Jefferson's               brother               Randolph               and               his               five               sons               as               well               as               two               grandsons               of               Field               Jefferson,               Thomas               Jefferson's               paternal               uncle.

    In               February               2000,               the               monticello.org               website,               known               as               "the               home               of               Thomas               Jefferson,"               released               the               Report               of               the               Research               Committee               on               Thomas               Jefferson               and               Sally               Hemings.

    This               research               was               conducted               through               the               Thomas               Jefferson               Memorial               Foundation.

    The               report               concluded               that               "convincing               evidence               does               not               exist               for               the               hypothesis               that               another               male               Jefferson               was               the               father               of               Sally               Hemings'               children.

    In               almost               two               hundred               years               since               the               issue               first               became               public,               no               other               Jefferson               has               ever               been               referred               to               as               the               father."               The               report               goes               on               to               say               there               was               never               any               suggestion               that               Sally's               children               had               more               than               one               father.
                   Report               of               the               Research               Committee               conclusions.

    Appointed               by               the               then-president               of               the               Thomas               Jefferson               Memorial               Foundation,               the               research               committee               was               charged               with               evaluating               the               DNA               study               of               Dr.

    Eugene               Foster               and               his               associates.

    The               committee               reached               the               following               conclusion:               "Dr.

    Foster's               DNA               study               was               conducted               in               a               manner               that               meets               the               standards               of               the               scientific               community,               and               its               scientific               results               are               valid.

    The               DNA               study,               combined               with               multiple               strands               of               currently               available               documentary               and               statistical               evidence,               indicates               a               high               probability               that               Thomas               Jefferson               fathered               Eston               Hemings,               and               that               he               most               likely               was               the               father               of               all               six               of               Sally               Hemings               children,"               two               of               whom               died               in               infancy.
                   Sources:
                   U.S.

    News               and               World               Report,               Jefferson               and               Sally,               pages               58-69,               Nov.

    9,               1998               issue
                   Thomas               Jefferson,               An               Intimate               History,               Fawn               M.

    Brodie,               Bantam               Books,               1974
                   Report               of               the               Research               Committee               on               Thomas               Jefferson               and               Sally               Hemings,               Thomas               Jefferson               Memorial               Foundation,               January               2000
                   C-SPAN3,               Sunday               Oct               16,               2011
                   Nature,               396,               27-28               (1998)               Macmillan               Publishers               Ltd.
                   Not               Much               is               Sure               About               Hemings,               the               Person,               USA               Today,               Friday,               May               14,               1999






    Image of monticello associates






    monticello associates
    monticello associates


    monticello associates Image 1


    monticello associates
    monticello associates


    monticello associates Image 2


    monticello associates
    monticello associates


    monticello associates Image 3


    monticello associates
    monticello associates


    monticello associates Image 4


    monticello associates
    monticello associates


    monticello associates Image 5


  • Related blog with monticello associates





    1. delanceyplace.blogspot.com/   06/16/2009
      ...a 'theatrical show' in which the man from Monticello had 'run away with all the stage...very publicly - many of his closest associates thought differently. Charles Lee, who...
    2. nathaliemasonfleury.blogspot.com/   11/19/2009
      ...Like most Americans, I associated Monticello with Thomas Jefferson. Although I hadn... came with her to Monticello. One of these half-...
    3. uvagreendining.blogspot.com/   04/27/2012
      ...Italy, for example) and his meticulous notes about gardening at Monticello. Natasha Sienitsky, Associate Director of Planning and Facilities at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation...
    4. anthropologynow.wordpress.com/   02/01/2013
      ...consider him to be America’s first scientific archaeologist . http://www.monticello.org Most people associate archaeology with prehistory. This makes perfect sense because the vast majority...
    5. flip.typepad.com/buzz/   04/28/2011
      ...that operates Monticello receives more... to Thomas Jefferson. [ Associated Press ] The Gates... in 2010. [ Associated Press ] The Philadelphia Orchestra...
    6. flip.typepad.com/buzz/   04/28/2011
      ...foundation that operates Monticello receives more than 200... to Thomas Jefferson. [ Associated Press ] The Gates Foundation...
    7. oldtimeparty.wordpress.com/   05/04/2012
      ...on the side of the road.” LIME STREET BLUES (named for the street in Monticello where W.L. lives) features a slide, knife-style banjo. The banjo ...
    8. votebrandoncollins.wordpress.com/   09/20/2011
      ...range of county developers and the Monticello Business Alliance than they are the regular...plan our water supply, and the costs associated with it directly affect how much money we can...
    9. koocbor.blogspot.com/   07/04/2011
      ... born in the U.S.A. I typically associate overt displays of patriotism with suspicion...Cyrus enjoyed the free flags. Monticello Reflected We stuck around...
    10. randomaxis.blogspot.com/   06/22/2011
      .... Most of this seems associated with the transition of California from Mexican...full of productive farms. The town of Monticello was established shortly thereafter...



    Related Video with monticello associates







    monticello associates Video 1








    monticello associates Video 2








    monticello associates Video 3




    monticello associates