Contrary to popular belief, Thomas Jefferson did not father the children of his slave, Sally Hemings, according to William G. Hyland Jr., author of 'In Defense of Thomas Jefferson: The Sally Hemings Sex Scandal.' It was his brother, Randolph, "a ne'er-do-well,'' who had a history of consorting with his brother's slaves.Hyland, a lawyer and member of the board of directors of the Thomas Jefferson Society, says the DNA results that established a link between Hemings and Thomas Jefferson implicated the wrong man. Randolph, 13 years younger, would have the identical Jefferson Y chromosome as his older brother and would have been a match for the DNA, he says.
Further, Randolph was at Monticello around the time Hemings conceived her children, including Eston, the youngest. Hyland spends a great deal of time trying to link Hemings and Randolph, while exculpating Thomas Jefferson. Hyland argues, in part, that a ruffian, not a refined man, would mingle with slaves.
"From all accounts, he was just a ne'er-do-well farmer,'' Hyland says of Randolph in a telephone interview. "He certainly didn't have the intellect or the training or education that Thomas Jefferson had. But very little is known about him. We do know he was married a couple of times. Sally Hemings didn't have any other children after he got married. He was at Monticello nine months before she got pregnant with Eston, and he was known to kind of socialize with the servants and the slaves.''
Hyland also tries to overturn theories mapped out in Annette Gordon-Reed's groundbreaking tome 'Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy.' The effort is not new. A long line of historians has concluded that the affair was unfounded. But Gordon-Reed's research put it on the map. Hemings was the half-sister of Jefferson's wife, Martha Wayles, who died in 1782. Jefferson never remarried, and he and Hemings remained silent on the affair.
Hyland took time from his busy schedule to discuss his book with BV Bookshelf:
Your book takes a different viewpoint than others that have been written recently.
It really does. It's a different viewpoint on the affair. It kind of questions some of the evidence. Since I'm a trial lawyer, I've taken the perspective and acted like Jefferson's lawyer and how he would kind of analyze the case if it went to court. I found there were a lot of inaccuracies and misstatements and really a lot of pure hearsay that hasn't been verified.
We've never really heard Jefferson's side of the story. You address that.
He basically denied the allegation in private. He wrote a long letter to his secretary of Navy, Robert Smith, and basically denied the allegations. But he never in public denied it. That was kind of his routine and practice. He believed if he denied one thing in public that another thing would crop up and then another thing. So he never denied it in public, but he did deny it in private to his friends and family. Randolph is really the one who had the affair with Sally. There is no doubt that a Jefferson fathered one or more of her children. It's just a question of whether it was Thomas Jefferson or some other Jefferson.
Why do you think it's Randolph?
There were a number of factors. They had the same Y chromosome DNA that would have matched. Again, DNA was never taken from Thomas Jefferson because he didn't have any male children. Randolph had six male children. Thomas had all female children except for a small infant who died, and the DNA match was to a male child. So Randolph was more likely to be the father.

Also, he was kind of a ne'er-do-well partier. I mean he actually socialized with the slaves. The kicker and hard evidence I found was a really obscure letter that was in the archives at the University of Virginia, written from Thomas Jefferson to his brother on August 12, 1807. That was about nine months before [Sally] gave birth to Eston, who was the DNA match. The letter invites Randolph to Monticello. In all probability, he was there at the conception time for Eston.
You say that like it's a bad thing, socializing with the servants and the slaves.
That was something that Thomas Jefferson, a refined person, would not think to do at that time. But for Randolph, it perfectly was natural. It wasn't a bad thing. I just put it out as a different mindset of the two brothers.
What prompted you to write the book?
I was born and raised in Virginia. I've always had an affinity for history and certainly for Thomas Jefferson. My late father encouraged me to write the book. He kind of put together some material presenting the other side of the controversy. I took that and wrote a law review article that was published. Then I just had an idea to make it into a book.
It will be interesting to see how the book will be received.
There is no doubt it was a Jefferson. The question is which Jefferson? I just think the public hasn't heard the other side of the story. They've only heard one side, especially after the DNA findings. That was the nail in the coffin. There are a lot more facts on both sides that need to be heard. I say in the book that I wanted to stabilize both sides to give a different perspective than what you've heard. There are other facts and there are other inaccuracies. I really think the truth does matter.
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Comments: (408)
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By: Valena on 6/28/2009 9:57AM
Thomas Jefferson fathered his children with Sally. He respected her and fell in love with her. Love is color blind as well as catagory blind. This author just cannot accept the fact that Thomas Jefferson did love Sally in a most refine manner of character. His book is just another piece of fiction.
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By: LANETTE on 7/03/2009 12:49AM
being a rapist does not make one a father...i am so sick of this topic. it is pathetic.
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By: Lisa on 6/28/2009 10:03AM
This lawyer is a fool and OJ needed him for his last trial. Everyone knows these are this mans decendants and its crtazy for them to fight this.
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By: chas on 6/28/2009 1:33PM
jefferson was the father,stop trying to make money on propagander,he jefferson like most white men prefferred mullotto women over there own,this is a known fact.sen.thurmond is an example of today,jefferson was yesterday.it's no same they were more attractive and healthy.makeup wasn't like it is today.
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By: sha flu flu on 6/30/2009 1:54AM
did anybody know that the spanish enslaved 2/3 more africans than the white man did, just go visit mexico and all the way south, cuba, dominican republic, all of south america is a mix of black slaves, spanish settlers and native indians. how many of you knew that?
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By: sachet on 6/30/2009 1:54AM
The book is the case of a another white man trying to re-write history. Jefferson DID father children with Sally Hemings.
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By: mmgflow on 6/30/2009 7:19AM
Does it really matter, just the other brother did tha raping..
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By: mmgflow on 6/30/2009 8:51AM
Thomas Jefferson fathered his children with Sally. He respected her and fell in love with her.
It was slavery u mooron, how can u compare rape with love..Jefferson own her body, she was his property..Sally had no choice in the matter..
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