Conclusion: Jefferson Survives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2013
Summary
On 17 February 1826, Thomas Jefferson, who was then eighty-two years old and in declining health, wrote a letter to his old friend and political ally James Madison. He wrote at length about securing funding, qualified faculty and books for the new University of Virginia. He expressed particular concern that he and Madison should be ‘rigorously attentive’ to political principles when appointing the university's law professor. Jefferson felt that legal education in the United States was dominated by conservative counter-revolutionaries imbued with ‘toryism’, as he termed it. The new lawyers, complained Jefferson, ‘no longer know what whigism or republicanism means’. By hiring the right law professor, Jefferson believed, the University of Virginia might initiate a revival of republican principles. ‘It is in our seminary’, he wrote, ‘that the vestal flame is to be kept alive; it is thence it is to spread anew over our own and the sister States. If we are true and vigilant in our trust, within a dozen or twenty years a majority of our legislature will be from one school, and many disciples will have carried its doctrines home with them to their several States, and will have leavened thus the whole mass.’ Jefferson then complained about the crippling debts that threatened his legacy and his scheme for a lottery of his lands to solve the problem and save his home, Monticello.
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- Thomas JeffersonReputation and Legacy, pp. 259 - 268Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2006