history.com
April 13, 2013
Future President Thomas Jefferson, drafter of the Declaration of Independence and the nation’s preeminent
political theorist, is born on this day in 1743.
Historian and biographer Joseph Ellis has called Jefferson, who had a
monumental role in shaping American politics, the American sphinx for his
enigmatic character. Since his terms in office, presidents and politicians from
both ends of the political spectrum have borrowed from Jefferson’s political
philosophy in an attempt to link their own leadership with this most influential
and admired founding father.
Jefferson’s character–as a man or a president–defies definition in black and
white. He was at once an intellectual, architect, philosopher, musician and
essayist. His fascination with science prompted his study and collection of
fossils. He projected a down-to-earth, relaxed and unconventional attitude and
his desire to be seen as a common man was reflected in his penchant for
receiving White House visitors in a robe and slippers. Jefferson denounced
oppressive government and was a fierce proponent of freedom of speech and
religion. He worried that fellow founding fathers George
Washington, John Adams and Alexander Hamilton had designs to fashion the American
presidency after a monarchy. When Washington and Hamilton proposed a national
bank and state assumption of national debt, Jefferson resigned from Washington’s
cabinet in protest. He adamantly rejected Hamilton’s plan to build a strong
federal military, fearing it might be used by a tyrannical leader against
American citizens.
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Saturday, April 13, 2013
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