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  1. Thomas Jefferson was born April 13, 1743, the third child of ten and the first son of Peter and Jane Randolph Jefferson. His father was a classic Virginia frontiersman, a self-made man and judge, a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses. Thomas Jefferson was born at Shadwell, the family home in Virginia, built at the base of the Blue Ridge ...

  2. Jefferson's father was Peter Jefferson, a planter and surveyor in Albemarle County (Shadwell, then Edge Hill, Virginia.) He was of possible Welsh descent, although this remains unclear. When Colonel William Randolph, an old friend of Peter Jefferson, died in 1745, Peter assumed executorship and personal charge of William Randolph's estate in Tuckahoe as well as his infant son, Thomas Mann ...

  3. 3 de abr. de 2014 · Thomas Jefferson was a Founding Father of the United States who wrote the Declaration of Independence. As U.S. president, he completed the Louisiana Purchase.

  4. Thomas Jefferson, né le 13 avril 1743 à Shadwell (Virginie) et mort le 4 juillet 1826 à Monticello (Virginie), est un homme d'État américain, principal rédacteur de la Déclaration d'indépendance des États-Unis en 1776, puis secrétaire d'État entre 1790 et 1793, vice-président de 1797 à 1801, troisième président des États-Unis de ...

  5. His father was a Virginia planter, surveyor, and slave owner. At age fourteen, Jefferson’s father died, and Thomas inherited some thirty enslaved individuals. Jefferson fully embraced the lifestyle of an affluent member of the planter class, and over the course of his lifetime he owned over 600 enslaved people—the most of any American ...

  6. When President Thomas Jefferson was born on 13 April 1743, in Goochland, Virginia, British Colonial America, his father, Peter Jefferson, was 35 and his mother, Jane Isham Randolph, was 23. He married Martha Wayles on 1 January 1772, in The Forest, Goochland, Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 5 ...

  7. Thomas Jefferson: Family Life. The simplicity of Thomas Jefferson's first inauguration set the social tone of his administration. He thereafter reduced the number of presidential balls, state dinners, and formal parties while greatly expanding private dinners, evening discussions, and gatherings of guests for readings in philosophy and science ...