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Jefferson's White House
Monticello on the Potomac
Jefferson's White House
Monticello on the Potomac
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Description
As the first president to occupy the White House for an entire term, Thomas Jefferson shaped the president’s residence, literally and figuratively, more than any of its other occupants. Remarkably enough, however, though many books have immortalized Jefferson’s Monticello, none has been devoted to the vibrant look, feel, and energy of his still more famous and consequential home from 1801 to 1809. In Monticello on the Potomac, James B. Conroy, author of the award-winning Lincoln’s White House offers a vivid, highly readable account of how life was lived in Jefferson’s White House and the young nation’s rustic capital.
Table of Contents
1. It Was More Than I Expected
2. With Very Decent Respect
3. True Republicanism
4. Men of 1776
5. Notions of Equality
6. Grumble Who Will
7. Chiefly of the Sneering Kind
8. A French Way of Cooking Them
9. Unfinished Persons
10. I Found It Detestable
11. By No Means Dangerous
12. This Will Be the Cause of War
13. Madame Eve
14. Highly Embellished With Indian Finery
15. Oriental Luxury and Taste
16. Age Has Some Effect Upon Him
17. Chained to a Writing Table
18. The Hermit of Monticello
Epilogue
Selected Bibliography
Notes
Product details
| Published | Oct 23 2019 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 328 |
| ISBN | 9781538108468 |
| Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield |
| Illustrations | 19 b/w photos |
| Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Those familiar with his previous book, Lincoln’s White House: The People’s House in Wartime (2017), will welcome Conroy’s present foray into an earlier “civil war”—a war between the dominant Jeffersonian Republicans and the minority political party at the time, the Federalists.
Washington History
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Impressively informative, detailed and documented, "Jefferson's White House: Monticello on the Potomac" is an extraordinary and deftly scripted study that is especially and unreservedly recommended for both community and academic library collections.
Midwest Book Review
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Jefferson’s White House opens the door to an amazing world. One can feel from the first pages the force of Jefferson’s determination to create a truly democratic space in that elegant, unfinished house, making dinner guests fresh from the wilderness the equal of the British ambassador. The reader meets the fascinating collection of people who crowded his presidency, while Jefferson is discovered as he wished to present himself, leading the emerging American democracy but, consistent with his hallmark of equality, also revealing his flaws. Mr. Conroy gives us a true and unvarnished portrait of this controversial man, totally at home in the lovely Irish-Palladian white palace set in the mud and muck of the bucolic capital.
Patrick Phillips-Schrock, Author of The White House: An Illustrated Architectural History
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James Conroy is a gifted writer and historian. There is something almost magical about the way he transports us back into the world of Thomas Jefferson, by recreating, through telling detail, the President’s House as it was in the beginning, new and raw but elegant and worldly, as contradictory as its brilliant occupant.
Evan Thomas, historian, journalist, and best-selling author
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Jefferson’s White House vividly captures the third president’s time in America’s most iconic home. James Conroy goes into incredible architectural and aesthetic detail, highlighting not only how Jefferson understood and used these spaces to project his political and ideological beliefs, but also how visitors, dignitaries, peers, and enslaved persons experienced them firsthand. For anyone interested in Jefferson’s presidency and the relationship between politics and place, this is a must read.
Matthew Costello, Assistant Director of the David M. Rubenstein National Center for White House History, White House Historical Association
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In his engaging narrative, Conroy surrounds his pivotal figure, Thomas Jefferson, with the vivid characters that formed the presidential sphere from political friends, foes and family members to the free and enslaved staff that insured the President’s House functioned properly. A strength of the book is the ample number of direct quotations from this wide array of characters, evincing the research that supports this compelling story of Jefferson and his use of the presidential mansion to promote his ideas of true republicanism.
G.S. Wilson, author of Jefferson on Display: Attire, Etiquette and the Art of Presentation
ONLINE RESOURCES
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