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  1. 19 de may. de 2020 · Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson (1780 - 1781) LucyElizabeth Jefferson. Born 3 Nov 1780 in Monticello, Albemarle County, Virginia, United States of America. Ancestors. Daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Martha (Wayles) Jefferson. Sister of John Skelton[half], Martha (Jefferson) Randolph, Jane Randolph Jefferson, Unnamed Infant Jefferson, Mary (Jefferson ...

  2. 31 de ene. de 2002 · RC (ViU: Edgehill-Randolph Papers); addressed “Mrs. Maria Eppes Eppington”; franked.Enclosed in letter below. According to TJ’s letter to Thomas Mann Randolph on 4 Feb., it was John Wayles Eppes’s letter of Jan. 17, not that of the 25th, that brought news of his daughter’s death.

  3. 30 de ene. de 2002 · In hopes every day of recieving the long wish’d for & long expected summons to meet you at Monticello, I have delayed answering your last letter which you in laughing at reproved me so justly for my negligence & inattention in writing. from your last to Mr Eppes he does not expect that you will come in till near the 20th of next month, till which time unless your return should be sooner we ...

  4. classroom.monticello.org › view › middleThe Monticello Classroom

    When Mary was eight years old, Jefferson arranged for his daughter to travel to France to be with him and her older sister, Martha. However, Mary had become attached to the Eppes family. Before leaving, she wrote her father "I don’t want to go to France, I had rather stay with Aunt Eppes." Mary was nine years old when she arrived in Paris ...

  5. low in spirits & health: in a letter to her husband, Mary elaborated on her condition: “my health has been growing gradually worse, I have puked up a great deal of bile which I suppose is the cause of it, but am afraid to take any thing in my present situation, tho’ my stomach is so weak that it scarcely retains any thing” (Mary Jefferson Eppes to John Wayles Eppes, 6 Feb. 1804, RC in ViU).

  6. 14 de dic. de 2023 · So, too, did Jefferson’s nineteen-year-old half-brother-in-law James Hemings, albeit as Jefferson’s slave, in order to study the art of French cookery and thereafter serve as chef in Jefferson’s household. Mary Jefferson remained where she had been since late 1782, with her aunt Elizabeth Eppes, finally, and very reluctantly, coming to ...

  7. Tweet. From Thomas Jefferson to Mary Jefferson Eppes, 27 November 1803. To Mary Jefferson Eppes. Washington Nov. 27. 03. It is rare, my ever dear Maria, during a session of Congress, that I can get time to write any thing but letters of business: and this, tho’ a day of rest to others, is not at all so to me. we are all well here, and hope ...