Oct

30

I can only do a few paragraphs at a time there is so much in this book; turns thoughts upside down.

One I just read; Thomas Jefferson's illicit affair and fathering a child with his slave. Wait! Hold on a moment —while widely believed— all the DNA tests shows is there is Jefferson bloodline. That’s all it can show. There were 26 Jefferson's living in the area and Toms brother Ralph was caretaker and overseer of slaves.

Thomas? Ralph? Someone else? Will never know for sure but for sure it may well have been another Yet the revisionist historians have hung it on Tom. Lots more like this.

Peter Penha writes:

Just an anecdote on your example: I know of two families where a child was fathered/sired with a female who was a slave or an emancipated slave. Both families discuss it as part of the family history and each specified that a home was built for the mother/child and in one case the family name given to them.

Considering Thomas Jefferson finances, perhaps the answer would lie in the building records and who owned the home in Charlottesville where Ms. Hemings moved to after Jefferson's death with her sons.

I was recently searching for other books by Frederick Lewis Allen as IMHO a wonderful writer and objective historian of his day and that brought me to a series titled the Forbidden Bookshelf (27 books in the series) - I only picked up Allen’s The Lords of Creation but there were a few titles that were “out there” as subject matter.

Gyve Bones adds:

There was a lot more inter-mixing between Africans and French colonials in the Louisiana colony, which had a Code Noir body of ordinances governing who could own slaves (only Catholics, no Jews nor Mohommedans), and how they must be treated. As a Catholic nation France required that owners of slaves must educate and raise their slaves in the Catholic faith, and could not break up families in a sale. Slaves could purchase their own freedom, and in New Orleans there was a large population of "free people of color". Many of the wealthiest of these freedmen were slave traders, and there were several large plantations in French colony owned and operated by free persons of color. Slavery was not a racial thing—just a matter of property. There was much less stigma around the idea of "race", and that culture has persisted to an extent into current day New Orleans, although those seeking to divide people along racial lines for political purpose have made significant inroads in destroying inter-racial comity in that community.

History records that French Canadian trappers had very good relations with the indigenous populations, and there were many such mixed marriages made. This same phenomenon was seen in Mexico after Our Lady of Guadalupe converted 9 million indigenous Mexicans to the faith. The Mexican nationality gave birth to a new "mestizo" race which came about when the Spanish intermarried with the native population.

Zubin Al Genubi suggests:

Trust by Hernan Diaz. Pulitzer prize. Stories About a stock market operator in 1920's and his wife. Very good with minor market relevance.

Stefan Jovanovich links:

Sally Hemings


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