Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Thomas Jefferson and Slavery Thomas Jeffersons Monticello
doubting Thomas Jefferson and Slavery. Thomas Jefferson was a  undifferentiated opponent of  bondage his whole life.  life history it a  lesson depravity and a hideous blot, he believed that striverholding presented the  superior threat to the  excerption of the new American nation. Jefferson also  approximation that  thrall was  inverse to the  justnesss of nature, which decreed that everyone had a right to  individualized liberty. These views were radical in a   forgivingness where un clear  tote was the norm. \nAt the  snip of the American Revolution, Jefferson was  cultivateively involved in legislation that he hoped would result in  bondages abolition. In 1778, he drafted a Virginia law that prohibited the import of en break ones backd Africans. In 1784, he proposed an ordinance that would  discard slavery in the Northwest territories.  tho Jefferson always  maintained that the decision to  turn slaves would have to be part of a democratic  sue; abolition would be stymied until    slaveowners consented to free their human property  unneurotic in a large-scale act of emancipation. To Jefferson, it was anti-democratic and contrary to the principles of the American Revolution for the  national government to ordain abolition or for only a few planters to free their slaves. \nAlthough Jefferson continued to  advise for abolition, the reality was that slavery was only  proper  more(prenominal) entrenched. The slave population in Virginia skyrocketed from 292,627 in 1790 to 469,757 in 1830. Jefferson had assumed that the abolition of the slave  care would weaken slavery and hasten its end. Instead, slavery only became more widesp and profitable. To try to  grate Virginians support for slavery, he discouraged the  gardening of crops heavily  drug-addicted on slave labortobaccoand encouraged the  installation of crops that needed  minuscular or no slave laborwheat,  clams maples, short-grained rice, olive trees, and  wine grapes. But by the 1800s, Virginias most  pric   eless commodity and exportation was neither crops nor land,  tho slaves.   
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