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Monticello
Thomas
Jefferson’s Pride and Joy
Thomas Jefferson was a man of many accomplishments. He served
as governor of Virginia, as minister to France, as secretary of state under
George Washington, as vice president in the administration of John Adams and as
third president of the United States.
But one of his greatest passions was Monticello, his
mountaintop home near the community of Charlottesville, Virginia. Described by
Jefferson as his “essay in architecture,” it is the only house in the United
States designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. It also became America’s
first National Horticultural Landmark in 1998.
Jefferson inherited a considerable estate from his father,
who was a well-to-do Virginia landowner. He began building a home on the
property in 1769. Although the mansion would take 40 years to complete, part of
it was ready for occupancy in 1772, when he married Martha Wayles Skelton.
Jefferson designed every detail of Monticello himself. The
low, red brick structure with a white dome and Doric portico reflected his
interest in neo-classical architecture.
The perspective of the dome and west-facing portico, pictured
on the U.S. nickel coin, is what most people think of as the front of
Monticello. But in Jefferson’s day, guests probably were admitted via the
entrance hall on the east side of the structure. Only the family likely used the
west entrance, which opens into the parlor.
Jefferson’s initial design of Monticello called for 14
rooms. The house was completed, except for porticos and decorative interior
woodwork, by 1784, when Jefferson left for Paris to help negotiate commercial
treaties on behalf of the United States. He had expected to stay away just a
year but was asked to succeed Benjamin Franklin as minister to France, which
resulted in his living abroad until 1789.
Jefferson served as George Washington’s secretary of state
from 1789 until 1793. He then spent three years in retirement, devoting himself
to farm and family. He still received distinguished guests, but he also welcomed
visits from his grandchildren, planted 1,000 peach trees, and experimented with
a new plow and other inventions.
Monticello was the center of a 5,000-acre plantation, where
an extended community of free men and slaves lived and worked. In addition to
raising crops and tending livestock, they made nails, barrels, cloth and
carriages. They also helped to build the house, crafted many of its furnishings,
and cultivated the gardens.
The gardens at Monticello were a botanical showpiece, a
source of food, and an experimental laboratory of useful and ornamental plants
from around the world. More than 330 varieties of vegetables were grown in a
1,000-foot-long garden terrace, and 170 kinds of fruit were produced in two
orchards on the grounds.
During his posting overseas, Jefferson had been greatly
influenced by European architecture. When he returned home, he began drafting a
new design for remodeling and enlarging Monticello. Work began in 1796, the same
year that Jefferson returned to public office as vice president to John Adams,
and was completed by 1809, shortly after he ended his second term as president.
The final complex includes 43 rooms and encompasses more than 11,000 square
feet.
Jefferson spent the last 17 years of his life at Monticello,
corresponding with old friends such as John Adams. He died there on July 4,
1826.
What Jefferson wanted remembered
Despite his love for Monticello, Jefferson did not expect to
be remembered as its architect. His tombstone, for which he wrote the
inscription, mentions only three of his achievements: “author of the
Declaration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for religious
freedom, and Father of the University of Virginia.”
Because Jefferson died more than $100,000 in debt, his
daughter and grandson were forced to sell most of the contents of Monticello
and, later, the plantation and mansion itself. However, the efforts of the
Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which owns Monticello today, have restored the home
and grounds to their former glory.
About 60% of the furnishings now on display at Monticello are
or may be items original to Jefferson. Others are period pieces or reproductions
of original pieces.
In 1993, the foundation commemorated the 250th anniversary of
the birth of Thomas Jefferson with a catalogue and loan exhibition entitled
“The Worlds of Thomas Jefferson at Monticello.” More than 150 objects and
works of art once belonging to Jefferson were returned to Monticello for the
show, and many of them remain on display.
Monticello welcomes more than 500,000 visitors each year. It
is open for tours every day of the year except Christmas.