“THE MOST DETAILED STUDY… AVAILABLE FOR MORE THAN A CENTURY”: RANDALL’S IMPORTANT LIFE OF THOMAS JEFFERSON, 1858
RANDALL, Henry S. The Life of Thomas Jefferson. New York: Derby & Jackson, 1858. Three volumes. Octavo, original blind-stamped brown cloth.
First edition, illustrated with ten plates, including a two-plate folding facsimile of Jefferson’s draft of the Declaration of Independence.
Author and politician Randall “devoted much of his energy during the decade [of the 1850s] to writing a superior three-volume biography of his political hero, Thomas Jefferson. He had the help of [Virginia gentleman farmer Hugh Blair] Grisby and the Jefferson family in obtaining access to materials he rightly feared would eventually be lost. The resulting Life of Thomas Jefferson (1858), though highly partisan, provided the most detailed study of Jefferson available for more than a century” (ANB). In an 1868 letter, Randall related that “the story that Mr. Jefferson kept one of his slaves, (Sally Henings) as his mistress and had children by her, was once extensively believed by respectable men,” but noted that the Jefferson family believed Jefferson’s nephew Peter Carr was the father of Sally Hemmings’ children, a theory now disproven. Howes R48. Sabin 67785. Contemporary owner signatures.
Occasional scattered light foxing to interiors, more so to preliminary and concluding leaves; damp staining to bottom margin of Volume III. Light rubbing to cloth extremities; wear to spine head on Volume I and spine foot on Volume III. An extremely good set.