Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society presents Cracking the Fable: The Truth Behind Jefferson and Hemings The Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society will host a panel of distinguished authors, researchers and nationally acclaimed scholars to address the Thomas Jefferson-Sally Hemings controversy in a comprehensive review of the facts from the historic record. This academic seminar, Cracking the Fable: The Truth Behind Jefferson and Hemings, will be held on Saturday, October 27, 2012, in Charlottesville, Virginia, on the grounds of the University of Virginia in the Commonwealth Room at Newcomb Hall, from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Admission to this special event is free and open to the public. The seminar will include a presentation by Robert F. Turner, Chairman of the independent JeffersonHemings Scholars Commission. This group of thirteen distinguished scholars, independent and unpaid, spent a year studying all the available evidence relating to whether Jefferson could have been the father of a child by Sally Hemings. They voted 12-1 that it was “probably not true.” It was their “unanimous view that the allegation is by no means proven; and we find it regrettable that public confusion about the 1998 DNA testing and other evidence has misled many people into believing that the issue is closed.” A public question-and-answer, panel discussion will be held following each lecture session. The day will conclude with book signings of The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission; In Defense of Thomas Jefferson and Jefferson Vindicated. Guest presenters for the Morning Session are John Works, The Monticello Association and the Graveyard at Monticello; Cynthia H. Burton, Did Poor Scholarship Affect the Paternity Debate? and M. Andrew Holowchak, “As Well-Established As … Many More Things in History.” The Afternoon Session will feature Guest Presenters William G. Hyland, In Defense of Thomas Jefferson: What Sally Hemings Tells Us About Our Times, followed by Robert F. Turner, Is the Jefferson-Hemings Debate Over? Report of the Scholars Commission.
John Works is a Jefferson descendant, past president of The Monticello Association and of the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society. His published articles include “A Primer on Jefferson DNA,” published in 2000 and available online at: http:// www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/true/primer.html , as well as “The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: A New, Critical Look,” published in Volume 28, Number 3 of the Fall 2010 edition of the Sons of the Revolution’s Drumbeat Magazine and available online at: http://www.tjheritage.org/newscomfiles/WorksJeffersonHemingsArticle.pdf He was instrumental in influencing The Monticello Association’s deliberations on whether to admit the Hemings into the Association. Cynthia H. Burton is a professional researcher; veteran genealogist; and she is an authority on Jefferson's private life, his brother Randolph Jefferson, and the enslaved community at Monticello. She has 35 years’ experience studying the historic neighborhood and its inhabitants, and she has worked closely with several authors writing about the Hemings controversy. Ms. Burton is the author of Jefferson Vindicated - Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions in the Hemings Genealogical Search, with Foreword by James A. Bear, Jr., Emeritus Director and Curator at Monticello. She is currently working on a publication focusing on new research and the scholarship in the Hemings debate. M. Andrew Holowchak, Ph.D., is a Professor of Philosophy at Rider University. He has published over 70 peer-reviewed papers in areas such as ethics, psychoanalysis, ancient philosophy and science, philosophy of sport, and social and political philosophy and has authored 19 books. His articles on Thomas Jefferson include: The Historical Pillorying of Thomas Jefferson: The ‘Seismic Effect’ of a DNA Study Gone Wrong and Jefferson’s Moral Agrarianism. He is the author of Dutiful Correspondent: Philosophical Essays on Thomas Jefferson (forthcoming) and, Framing a Legend: Exposing the Distorted History of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings (forthcoming). William G. Hyland, Professor of Law, Stetson College of Law and attorney, is the author of In Defense of Thomas Jefferson: The Sally Hemings Sex Scandal. The belief that Thomas Jefferson had an affair and fathered a child (or children) with slave Sally Hemings- and that such an allegation was proven by DNA testing- has become so pervasive in American popular culture that it is not only widely accepted but taught to students as historical fact. In this startling and revelatory argument, William G. Hyland shows not only that the evidence against Thomas Jefferson is lacking, but that in fact he is entirely innocent of the charge of having sexual relations with Sally Hemings. Robert F. Turner, is a cofounder of the Center for National Security Law (1981) at the University of Virginia School of Law. Professor Turner holds both professional and academic doctorates from the University of Virginia School of Law, and is a former Charles H. Stockton Professor of International Law at the U.S. Naval War College Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society Box 4482, Charlottesville, VA 22905 TJHeritage.org
and a Distinguished Lecturer at West Point. He has taught both in Virginia's Department of Government and Foreign Affairs and the Law School, and is the author or editor of more than a dozen books. Professor Turner served as Chairman of the independent Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission, and he is the editor of The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission. The Report documents the results of a year-long, independent panel inquiry by thirteen distinguished academics from across the nation. Working without compensation, the scholars were unanimous in their conclusion that "the allegation is by no means proven," and with but a single mild dissent their views "ranged from serious skepticism about the charge to a conviction that it is almost certainly untrue." Each argument in the debate is examined in careful detail in the comprehensive 412-page volume, with more than 1,400 footnotes documenting their analysis. Many of the commonly accepted premises behind the story were found to be false, according to the panel of scholars. Cracking the Fable: The Truth Behind Jefferson and Hemings A fable has been defined as “A fictitious narrative; usually of known origin.” Robert Turner notes the Thomas Jefferson-Sally Hemings Fable is clearly documented in the historic record as political smear allegations originating from the pen of a disreputable journalist named James Thomson Callender in October, 1802, and subsequently picked up by Federalist editors and abolitionists in the United States and abroad. While the significant evidence in the historic record to date overwhelmingly vindicates Thomas Jefferson as a man of great character and moral rectitude; and as someone wholly innocent of the charges of fathering slave children, Dr. Donald Livingston, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Emory University, National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow, President of the Abbeville Institute for the Study of Southern Culture and Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society Board Member, notes there is a great deal of ideologically driven "advocacy scholarship" throughout academia, foundations, museum institutions, and the pop culture media today, which is more interested in changing public behavior than in truth. Dr. Livingston asserts solid scholarship and truth will eventually out those omissions of fact; intentional or unintentional errors in the transcriptions of historic documents; and other blatant falsehoods which contradict everything known about Thomas Jefferson contained in the historic record to date.
For further information contact: Mr. Gar Schulin at (540) 3495864; or: tjheritage@aol.com Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society Box 4482, Charlottesville, VA 22905 TJHeritage.org
THOMAS JEFFERSON HERITAGE SOCIETY OCTOBER 27, 2012 FORUM CRACKING THE FABLE: THE TRUTH BEHIND JEFFERSON AND HEMINGS 10:00
MORNING SESSION WELCOME Richard E. Dixon, President, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society
10:10
INTRODUCTION OF SPEAKERS W. Mackenzie Wallenborn, former President, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society
10:15
THE MONTICELLO ASSOCIATION AND THE GRAVEYARD AT MONTICELLO John Works, former President, Monticello Association; former President, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society
10:50
DID POOR SCHOLARSHIP AFFECT THE PATERNITY DEBATE? Cynthia Burton, author of Jefferson Vindicated - Fallacies, Omissions, and Contradictions in the Genealogical Search
11:25
Break
11:35
“AS WELL-ESTABLISHED AS… MANY MORE THINGS IN HISTORY ” M. Andrew Holowchak , Rider University, Philosophy; author of Dutiful Correspondent: Philosophical Essays on Thomas Jefferson (forthcoming), and Framing a Legend: Exposing the Distorted History of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings (forthcoming)
12:10
Panel Discussion: Works- Burton-Holowchak; Moderator, W. MacKenzie Wallenborn
12:40
Lunch
1:40 AFTERNOON SESSION WELCOME Richard E. Dixon, President, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society 1:40
INTRODUCTION OF SPEAKERS John Works, former President, Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society
1:45
IN DEFENSE OF THOMAS JEFFERSON: WHAT SALLY HEMINGS TELLS US ABOUT OUR TIMES William G. Hyland, Professor of Law Stetson University College of Law; author of In Defense of Thomas Jefferson.
2:30
IS THE JEFFERSON-HEMINGS DEBATE OVER? REPORT OF THE SCHOLARS COMMISSION Professor Robert F. Turner, University of Virginia Chairman of the Jefferson-Hemings Scholars Commission and Editor of The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission
3:15
Break
3:30
Panel Discussion: Hyland-Turner; Moderator, John Works
4:30
Conclusion Richard Dixon