Fun Facts on Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Jefferson was tall (6 feet 2 1/2 inches)
and had reddish hair.
- Thomas Jefferson was the primary author of the Declaration
of Independence.
- One of Jefferson's greatest achievements as
President was the Louisiana Purchase, which cost the U.S. approximately 15
million dollars.
- President Jefferson also sent Lewis and Clark on
their famous expedition across America in 1803.
- The Thomas Jefferson Memorial in
Washington, D.C. is modeled after the Pantheon of Rome. Jefferson
introduced the circular style of structure with columns to America.
- Thomas Jefferson was not well skilled in public
speaking. His strength was in his written words.
- While President, Thomas Jefferson cut the budget,
eliminated the tax on whiskey and still reduced the national debt by a
third
- One of the newer facts on Thomas Jefferson that I
recently discovered was about his involvement in archaeology. Thomas
Jefferson is sometimes referred to as the "father of American
archaeology", because he was the first to use the method of stratification
in an archaeology dig on his property. He organized the dig to explore a
mound on his property that turned out to be an old burial ground for
Piedmont Indians. As a boy, he had noticed Native American Indians passing
by the spot in what appeared to be sadness, and was always curious about
it.
- While at William and Mary College, he stayed in
the building that is known today as the Sir Christopher Wren Building
- After college, Thomas Jefferson studied law under
George Wythe, who would one day join his friend Jefferson in signing the Declaration of Independence
- Thomas Jefferson grew many tomatoes ate, even
though many people at that time thought that they were poisonous. Once, in
Lynchburg, he publicly ate a tomato, apparently causing quite a stir.
- While in the White House, President Thomas
Jefferson kept a pet mockingbird named Dick. Dick was sometimes allowed to
fly around Jefferson's office.
- Also while President, Thomas Jefferson kept two
grizzly bears on the White House lawn, briefly. A gift from Zebulon Pike's
expedition, they were eventually give to the museum in Philadelphia.
- Some of Thomas Jefferson's favorite foods were
macaroons, macaroni and peas. He ate little meat..."I have lived
temperately, eating little animal food, and that . . . as a condiment for
the vegetables, which constitute my principal diet."
- Jefferson experimented with planting many
varieties of vegetables and fruits at Monticello. Heirloom seeds from
Monticello were planted in the Obama White House garden in 2010. You can
purchase seeds for your own garden when you visit Monticello!
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