Sally Hemings was a mixed-race enslaved woman who was owned by Thomas Jefferson
@Thomas Jefferson’s Slave, Family and Facts
Sally Hemings was a mixed-race enslaved woman who was owned by Thomas Jefferson
Sally Hemings born at
Born around 1773 in a plantation in Charles City County, Virginia Colony, Sally Hemings was the daughter of a biracial enslaved woman named Betty Hemings and her master John Wayles. Married and widowed three successive times, Wayles took Betty as his concubine. They had six children together, the youngest of whom was Sally Hemings.
Sally did not become well-acquainted with her step-siblings, except for Martha Wayles, Jefferson’s future wife. Betty Hemings’ children were three-quarters Europeans in ancestry and very fair skinned in appearance. However, according to the Virginia slave law, children who were birthed by enslaved women were considered slaves themselves under the principle of partus sequitur ventrem: the slave status of a child followed that of his or her mother. Hence, despite having their master as their father, Sally and all her siblings were considered slaves.
Jefferson married Martha in 1772, and after John Wayles passed away in the following year, the couple inherited his massive property of 11,000 acres as well as the 135 slaves, among whom were the Hemings family members.
Sally was 25 years younger than Martha and virtually grew up in Monticello. She and her family were put on the top of slave hierarchy. They never had to work in the fields and were exclusively trained to do housework. Some of them were artisans while the others were domestic servants.
Martha died in 1782. Two years later, Sally accompanied Mary (Polly), the nine-year-old daughter of Jefferson, to Paris as he was serving as the American envoy to France at the time. Initially, he wanted the old nurse who took care of his daughter to accompany her. But as she was sick, Sally was sent in her place.
She was in France for about 26 months. The country had abolished slavery following the Revolution in 1789. Jefferson was obligated to pay wages to Sally and others. He gave her the equivalent of $2 per month. Alongside other members of the household, she started learning French. Jefferson purchased her several expensive dresses, which suggest that she often accompanied Mary to social gatherings.
According to contemporary French law, Sally and other slaves could have petitioned for their freedom and they would have been allowed to live in France as free men and women. Her son, Madison Hemings, would later write in his memoir that it was in Paris that Jefferson and Hemings began a sexual relationship.
Soon, at 16 years of age, she became pregnant with their first child. She eventually decided to return to America with him, on the condition that her children would be free once they became adults (at 21). She also probably came back because of her mother with whom she shared a deep bond.
Sally and her brother James returned to the US in 1789 along with the Jefferson family. A widower, Jefferson followed the norm of the time and land, as previously demonstrated by his father-in-law, and had a long-term relationship with Hemings. One historian, Joshua D. Rothman, wrote that it was not unusual for Jefferson to have a relationship with an enslaved woman. White gentlemen were just expected to maintain a certain amount of discretion.
According to Madison, Sally’s first child passed away soon after the group came back from Paris. The Jefferson records reveal that Sally gave birth to six children after her return to America. They were Harriet Hemings (I) (October 5, 1795 – December 7, 1797), Beverley Hemings (April 1, 1798 – after 1873), unnamed daughter (born in 1799 and died in infancy), Harriet Hemings (II) (May 22, 1801 – after 1863), Madison (January 19, 1805 – 1877), and Eston Hemings (May 21, 1808 – 1856).
Jefferson kept a farm book in which he recorded every slave birth occurring in his plantation. The fact that none of Hemings’ children’s fathers was mentioned in the book further proves the theory that Jefferson indeed was the father of all of Hemings’ children.
Hemings worked exclusively inside the house. She served as a nursemaid-companion, lady's maid, chambermaid, and seamstress. While she could speak and understand at least two languages, English and French, it is unknown whether she was literate. In various writings, she has been described as very fair, with “Straight hair down her back” and as “light colored and decidedly good looking”.
Hemings never got married. While, being a slave, she could not enter into a marital union recognised under Virginia law, she could have taken a common-law husband, as many other slaves had at Monticello. Her children were always close to her. As Madison revealed in his writing, he and his siblings were allowed to be inside the “great house” and only had to perform light work such as running errands.