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Margaret Smith Randolph

Margaret Smith Randolph

Female 1816 - 1842  (26 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Margaret Smith Randolph was born on 7 Mar 1816 (daughter of Thomas Jefferson Randolph and Jane Hollins Nicholas); died on 20 Dec 1842.

    Margaret married William Mann Randolph on 2 Sep 1839. William (son of John Randolph and Judith Archer Lewis) died in 1850. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Jane Margaret Randolph was born on 7 May 1840.
    2. William Lewis Randolph

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Thomas Jefferson Randolph was born on 12 Sep 1792 (son of Jr. Thomas Mann Randolph and Martha Jefferson); died on 8 Oct 1875; was buried .

    Notes:

    Birth:
    "Edge Hill", Albemarle Co., VA

    Died:
    "Edge Hill", Albemarle Co., VA

    Thomas married Jane Hollins Nicholas on 10 Mar 1815. Jane was born in 1798; died in 1871. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Jane Hollins Nicholas was born in 1798; died in 1871.
    Children:
    1. 1. Margaret Smith Randolph was born on 7 Mar 1816; died on 20 Dec 1842.
    2. Mary Buchanan Randolph was born on 17 Dec 1821; died on 23 Jun 1884.
    3. Eleonora Wayles Randolph was born on 1 Dec 1823; died on 15 Aug 1896.
    4. Maria Jefferson Carr Randolph was born on 20 Jul 1817; died on 16 Jul 1857.
    5. Mary Buchanan Randolph was born on 23 Nov 1818; died on 24 Oct 1821.
    6. Caryanne Nicholas Randolph was born on 22 Apr 1820; died on 24 Jul 1857.
    7. Wilson Cary Nicholas Randolph was born on 26 Oct 1834; died on 26 Apr 1907 in Charlottesville, VA.
    8. Jane Nicholas Randolph was born on 10 Dec 1831; died on 26 Aug 1868 in Lynchburg, VA.
    9. Meriwether Lewis Randolph was born on 17 Jul 1837; died on 1 Feb 1871.
    10. Sarah Nicholas Randolph was born on 10 Oct 1839 in Cleveland, Bradley County, TN; died on 25 Apr 1892.
    11. Thomas Jefferson Randolph was born on 29 Aug 1829; died on 8 Aug 1872.
    12. Caroline Ramsay Randolph was born on 15 Jan 1828; died on 28 Jun 1902.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Jr. Thomas Mann Randolph was born on 17 May 1768 (son of Thomas Mann Randolph and Anne Cary); died on 20 Jun 1828; was buried .

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: "Edgehill", Goochland Co., VA

    Notes:

    BIRTH: alternate date 5/17/1768

    Birth:
    "Tuckahoe", Goochland Co., VA

    Died:
    "Monticello", Albemarle Co., VA

    Thomas married Martha Jefferson on 23 Feb 1790. Martha (daughter of President Thomas Jefferson and Martha Wayles) was born on 27 Sep 1772; died on 10 Oct 1836. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Martha Jefferson was born on 27 Sep 1772 (daughter of President Thomas Jefferson and Martha Wayles); died on 10 Oct 1836.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    "Monticello", Albemarle Co., VA

    Died:
    "Edge Hill", King George Co., VA

    Notes:

    Married:
    "Monticello", Albemarle Co., VA

    Children:
    1. Anne Cary Randolph was born on 23 Jan 1791; died on 11 Feb 1826.
    2. 2. Thomas Jefferson Randolph was born on 12 Sep 1792; died on 8 Oct 1875; was buried .
    3. Ellen Wayles Randolph was born on 30 Aug 1794; died on 26 Jul 1795.
    4. Ellen Wayles Randolph was born on 13 Oct 1796; died on 21 Apr 1876.
    5. Cornelia Jefferson Randolph was born on 26 Jul 1799; died on 24 Feb 1871.
    6. George Wythe Randolph was born on 10 Mar 1818; died on 3 Apr 1867.
    7. Virginia Jefferson Randolph was born on 22 Aug 1801; died on 26 Apr 1882.
    8. Mary Jefferson Randolph was born on 2 Nov 1803; died on 29 Mar 1876.
    9. James Madison Randolph was born on 17 Jan 1806 in White House, Washington, DC; died on 23 Jan 1834.
    10. Benjamin Franklin Randolph was born on 14 Jul 1808; died on 18 Feb 1871.
    11. Meriwether Lewis Randolph was born on 31 Jan 1810; died on 24 Sep 1837 in Clarke County, AR; was buried in near Whelen Springs, Clarke County, AR.
    12. Septimia Anne Randolph was born on 3 Jan 1814; died on 14 Sep 1887.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Thomas Mann Randolph was born in 1741 (son of William Randolph and Maria Judith Page); died on 20 Nov 1794.

    Thomas married Anne Cary on 18 Nov 1761. Anne (daughter of Archibald Cary and Mary Isham Randolph) was born on 7 Feb 1744/45; died in 1789. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Anne Cary was born on 7 Feb 1744/45 (daughter of Archibald Cary and Mary Isham Randolph); died in 1789.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Ampthill, Chesterfield Co., VA

    Children:
    1. Virginia Randolph was born on 30 Jan 1786; died on 2 May 1852 in Alexandria, Virginia, USA.
    2. 4. Jr. Thomas Mann Randolph was born on 17 May 1768; died on 20 Jun 1828; was buried .
    3. William Randolph was born on 16 Jan 1770; died on 5 May 1848.
    4. Archibald Cary Randolph was born on 24 Aug 1771; was christened on 6 Sep 1771 in St James Northam Par., Goochland County, VA; died on 3 Oct 1771.
    5. Judith Randolph was born on 24 Nov 1772.
    6. Ann Cary Randolph was born on 16 Sep 1774; died on 28 May 1837.
    7. Mary Jane Randolph was born on 9 Aug 1762; died on 23 Jan 1828 in Washington, DC; was buried in Arlington, Fairfax County, TX.
    8. Henry Cary Randolph was born on 8 Jan 1764; died on 13 Mar 1765.
    9. Elizabeth Randolph was born on 19 Jun 1765.
    10. Jane Cary Randolph was born on 17 Dec 1776; died on 2 Mar 1842.
    11. John Randolph was born on 11 Sep 1779; died on 19 Aug 1834 in Amelia County, Virginia, USA.
    12. George Washington Randolph was born on 19 Dec 1781; died on 7 Jul 1785.
    13. Harriet Randolph was born on 24 Nov 1783; died on 1 Dec 1839.

  3. 10.  President Thomas Jefferson was born on 2 Apr 1743 in Shadwell, Albemarle County, Virginia, USA (son of Peter Jefferson and Jane Randolph); died on 4 Jul 1826 in Monticello, Albemarle County, Virginia, USA; was buried in Monticello, Albemarle County, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    THOMAS JEFFERSON

    Religion: No formal affiliation
    Education: Graduated from College of William and Mary (1762)
    Occupation: Lawyer, planter
    Political Party: Democratic-Republican
    Other Government Positions:
    Member of Virginia House of Burgesses, 1769-74
    Member of Continental Congress, 1775-76
    Governor of Virginia, 1779-81 Member of Continental Congress, 1783-85
    Minister to France, 1785-89
    Secretary of State, 1790-93 (under Washington)
    Vice President, 1797-1801 (under J. Adams)
    CF
    Thomas Jefferson, Son of Virginia
    http://www.history.org/other/journal/jeffart.htm
    by Dennis Montgomery

    JEFFERSON ON HIS CHILDHOOD & YOUTH

    "When I consider that at fourteen years of age the whole care and direction of myself was thrown on myself entirely, without a relative or a friend qualified to advise or guide me, and recollect the various sorts of bad company with which I associated from time to time, I am astonished that I did not turn off with some of them, and become as worthless to society as they were. From the circumstances of my position, I was often thrown into the society of horseracers, cardplayers, foxhunters, scientific and professional men, and of dignified men; and many a time have I asked myself, in the enthusiastic death of a fox, the victory of a favorite horse, the issue of a question eloquently argued at the bar, or in the great council of the nation, "Well, which of these kinds of reputation should I prefer--that of a horsejockey, a foxhunter, an orator, or the honest advocate of my country's rights?"

    He caroused with the boys, flirted with the girls, studied late into the night, and fixed his eye on Rebecca Burwell, a beautiful orphan whom moony 19 year old Tom petnamed Belinda. For months his adolescent letters--embarrassing now to read--were full of Belinda. His selfconscious infatuation soon embarrassed him, too. When he gathered up his courage to approach her, Tom made a fool of himself. He wrote "in the most melancholy fit that ever any poor soul was":

    "Last night, as merry as agreeable company and dancing with Belinda in the Apollo could make me, I never could have thought the succeeding sun would have seen me so wretched as I now am. I was prepared to say a great deal. I had dressed up in my own mind such thoughts as occurred to me, in as moving language as I know how, and expected to have performed in a tolerably creditable manner. But, good God! when I had an opportunity of venting them, a few broken sentences, uttered in great disorder, and interrupted with pauses of uncommon length, were the too visible marks of my strange confusion."

    PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
    Six feet two and a half inches tall, thin, square shouldered, strong, Jefferson was straight as a gun barrel. He neglected fashion in clothes and hair, never lost a tooth, but seldom smiled or showed any expression. Stiff with strangers and acutely sensitive to personal slights, he found nothing so goading as to be contradicted in company by his wife. Under stress he was prone to migraines that lasted weeks. He liked to toss off bits of his learning, but when he spoke in public his voice was hoarse and guttural. He ate little meat, and then as a condiment for his vegetables. Peas were his favorite. He did not drink strong wines or spirits, rose by dawn, and left his room by eight after bathing his feet in cold water.

    1781/82 Francois Jean, Marquis de Chastellux, who found Jefferson at his best. Chastellux wrote:

    Let me describe to you a man not yet forty, tall, and with a mild pleasing countenance, but whose mind and understanding are ample substitutes for every exterior grace. An American who without ever quitting his country, is at once a musician, skilled in drawing, a geometrician, an astronomer, a natural philosopher, legislator, and statesman . . . and it seems as if from his youth he had placed his mind, as he had done his house, on an elevated situation, from which he might contemplate the universe. . . . We may safely aver that Mr. Jefferson is the first American who has consulted the arts to know how he should shelter himself from the weather.

    A LEGAL ANALYSIS OF THE PARENTAGE OF SALLY'S CHILDREN
    by Richard E. Dixon - Attorney at Law
    IX. Conclusion
    Under Virginia law, unless there is an admission of paternity by the father, a claim must be pursued under the statutory procedure. Evidence to establish paternity means oral testimony or documents that pass the legal test of admissibility. The case against Thomas Jefferson is devoid of admissible evidence.

    There is no direct evidence from any source during JeffersonÃss%sss lifeeeee that he was the fatttheeer of any of the children born to Sally Hemings between 1790 and 1808. Although Jefferson was present at Monticello during each of SallyÃss%s conceptions, there is no proof thattt shhhee waaasss att Monticello during these periods. There is also not a scintilla of proof of any cohabitation or physical intimacy between Jefferson and Hemings during the approximate thirty years she resided at Monticello.

    The two prominent documents written after Jefferson's death and relied on as paternity evidence are hearsay and inadmissible. These are the Parton letter, which raised for the first time the resemblance claim against Jefferson, and the Madison Hemings memoirs which created the treaty legend.

    The 1998 DNA test results identify a chromosomal link between Eston Hemings and the male Jefferson line. Thomas Jefferson is included among the twenty-five possible fathers, but he is eliminated because of the lack of admissible evidence.

    It is surprising that the sources and the nature of the information that make up the Tom and Sally myth has put the academic community into such a quandary. It is a tale which should return to its status as no more than a footnote to the Jefferson legacy.

    The Report may be downloaded from
    http://www.monticello.org/plantation/hemings_report.html. Special attention should be given to the Minority Report. See also, Research Report on the Jefferson-Hemings Controversy, A Critical Analysis, by Eyler Robert Coates at
    http://www.angelfire.com/va/TJTruth
    Richard E. Dixon
    Attorney at Law
    4122 Leonard Drive
    Fairfax, Virginia 22030
    703-691-0770
    redixonlaw@aol.com
    April 2000

    Poplar Forest Commentary

    "Thomas Jefferson and his wife, Martha, inherited the plantation known as Poplar Forest from her father in 1773. Theworking tobacco farm of 4,812 acres eventually provided Jefferson with a significant portion of his cash income. The plantation also offered the perfect site for his most personal architectural achievement -- a unique octagonal house set withinan elaborately designed landscape. In this meticulously planned retreat he had the seclusion to pursue his passion forreading, writing, studying, and gardening." In the early years of his ownership of Poplar Forest, Jefferson was increasingly active in public service. He practiced law, was a member of the House of Burgesses, Governor of Virginia, Minister to France, and President of the United States for two terms. Even with these responsibilities, he began managing the plantation operations at Poplar Forest and moved slave labor there. In 1781, Jefferson eluded capture by the British by retreating to his Bedford County plantation. During this extended visit Jefferson compiled much of the material for his only book, Notes on the State of Virginia. Little is known about the dwelling used by Jefferson during these early visits.

    In 1806, Jefferson supervised the laying of the foundation for the octagonal house he had designed. After his second term as President ended in 1809, Jefferson made regular visits to his Bedford retreat. He usually took three to four trips per year and stayed from two weeks to two months. His visits often coincided with the seasonal responsibilities of the working plantation and he also oversaw the embellishment of the house, the planting of his vegetable garden and the adornment of the grounds. Family members, usually his grandchildren, joined Jefferson on many of his visits. At Poplar Forest he could escape the almost perpetual round of visitors at Monticello and enjoy what he called "the solitude of a hermit."

    Jefferson made his last trip to Poplar Forest in 1823 when he settled his grandson, Francis Eppes, on the property. Ill health prevented future visits to his retreat. In 1828, two years after Jefferson's death, Eppes sold Poplar Forest to a neighbor.
    http://www.poplarforest.org/history.html

    Famous Folks, Anc Thos. Jefferson http://www.genealogy.com/famousfolks/Jefferson/i0000001.htm
    rhondam@magicnet.net

    Jefferson, Thomas 1743 -- 1826
    Famous Folks http://www.genealogy.com/famousfolks/index.html
    Biography.com http://www.biography.com/
    Apart from Jefferson's philosophical stance on slavery, there was the paradox inherent in his own life. Though he undoubtedly believed that slavery violated the principles of natural law he had included in the Declaration of Independence, he was a wealthy slave owner whose lifestyle depended upon the institution. Jefferson viewed himself and his slaves as victims of mankind's failure to rid itself of this terrible institution, and he contented himself with the idea that he would be a benevolent master to those he owned, until the "peculiar institution" met with its rightful end.

    In hindsight, Jefferson's stance on slavery is inescapably hypocritical. History's view of him has been complicated even more by the increasingly unavoidable conclusion that he was sexually involved with one of his house servants, Sally Hemings, and that he fathered at least one, if not several, of her children. Allegations that he was sexually involved with Hemings surfaced as early as 1802, when the disgruntled journalist James Callendar (allegedly the same man Jefferson had hired to libel Adams during the 1796 presidential election) published the accusation, which had been circling as gossip in Virginia for several years. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, contradictory evidence surfaced: Madison Hemings, born in 1805, claimed to be Jefferson's child; just a year later, an account was published claiming that Jefferson's nephew, Peter Carr, had confessed to Jefferson's daughter Martha that he had been the father of all or most of Sally's children. Jefferson's direct descendants, Thomas Jefferson Randolph and Ellen Randolph Coolidge, stood by the conclusion that either Peter or Samuel Carr (both Jefferson's nephews) had fathered Hemings' children.

    The question of a Jefferson-Hemings liaison remained a bone of contention among branches of the Jefferson, Randolph, and Hemings familiesÃssaassssss welllll as Jefferson scholars throughouuuut tthee nineteenth and twentieth centuries... In November 1998, dramatic new scientific evidence became available through the analysis of the DNA of male descendants of both Hemings and Jefferson. After comparing the Y-chromosome component of the DNA of a descendant of Jefferson's paternal uncle, Field Jefferson, with that of a descendant of another of Hemings' sons, Eston (born 1808), Dr. Eugene Foster of the University of Virginia found an exact match of certain portions of the DNA (the odds of a perfect match in a random sample are less than one in a thousand). In January 2000, the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation accepted the conclusion, supported by Foster's DNA evidence, that Jefferson and Hemings were sexual partners, and that they had between one and six children between 1790 and 1808.

    Thomas married Martha Wayles on 1 Jan 1772 in The Forest, Charles City County, Virginia, USA. Martha (daughter of John Wayles and Martha Eppes) was born on 30 Oct 1748 in Charles City County, VA; died on 6 Sep 1782 in Monticello, Albemarle County, VA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Martha Wayles was born on 30 Oct 1748 in Charles City County, VA (daughter of John Wayles and Martha Eppes); died on 6 Sep 1782 in Monticello, Albemarle County, VA.

    Notes:

    MARTHA WAYLES
    Martha Wayles, d/o John Wayles
    REF: Rev. Philip Slaughter, "The True Thomas Jefferson", E.E. Curtis, 1908. Much of what Rev. Slaughter says, needs verification; the material on the Skipwiths is drawn primarily from his work. He was not a genealogist and
    concerned by accuracy, using rumor and gossip and some records.
    Martha m2. Nov 20 1766 Virginia Bathurst Skelton [d. Sep 30 1768] had 1 son, John Skelton [Nov 7 1767-Jun 10 1771]

    Michael Ragan, MWRagan@aol.com:
    Martha m. Jan 1 1771/72 Thomas Jefferson [Apr 2 1743, Shadwell VA-Jul 4 1826, Alemarle Co VA]

    SJG NOTE: Well, if it is the same MARTHA WAYLES in all 3 marriages, she had to have mar. THOMAS JEFFERSON last, 3rd and would be buried under WAYLES or JEFFERSON.

    Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1998 00:10:57 -0700
    From: Katherine Snow
    To: VA-SOUTHSIDE-L@rootsweb.com
    Message-ID:
    Subject: Re: [VA-SOUTHSIDE-L] EPES/WAYLES/JEFFERSON

    On Mon, 09 Nov 1998 19:34:48 -0700 Katherine Snow writes:
    who are descended from EPES/WAYLES/JEFFERSON might be interested in
    this lineage:

    Re: Martha (Patty) Wayles (Jefferson): her lineage was:

    Francis I Eppes of England, settled in VA @ Isle of Wight
    ... Francis Eppes II
    ...... Francis Eppes III
    ......... Francis Eppes IV m. Sarah Hamlin Hett
    ............ Child: Martha Eppes m. (1)Llewellin Eppes (2)John Wayles
    ............... Child of Martha & John Wayles:
    .................. Martha (Patty) Wayles born 19 Oct 1748 d. 6 Sep 1782
    .................. m. (1)Bathurst Skelton
    ..................... Child by Skelton: John born 7 Nov 1767
    .................. m. (2?)Thomas Jefferson 1 Jan 1772
    .................. OR DID SHE MARRY HENRY SKIPWITH 2ND, AND JEFFERSON 3RD??
    .................. Children by Thomas Jefferson:
    ..................... Martha (Patsy) Jefferson born 27 Sep 1772;
    ..................... Jane Randolph Jefferson born 3 Apr 1774;
    ..................... Son Jefferson born 28 May 1777;
    ..................... Mary (Maria (Polly) Jefferson born 1 Aug 1778;
    ..................... Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson born 30 Nov 1780 d.bfr May 1782
    ..................... Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson born 8 May 1782

    Lila of VA email: Genealogy98@juno.com

    Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson
    1748-1782
    http://www2.whitehouse.gov/WH/glimpse/firstladies/html/mj3.html Biography:

    When Thomas Jefferson came courting, Martha Wayles Skelton at 22 was already a widow, an heiress, and a mother whose firstborn son would die in early childhood. Family tradition says that she was accomplished and beautiful--with slender figure, hazel eyes, and auburn hair--and wooed by many. Perhaps a mutual love of music cemented the romance; Jefferson played the violin, and one of the furnishings he ordered for the home he was building at Monticello was a "forte-piano" for his bride.

    They were married on New Year's Day, 1772, at the bride's plantation home "The Forest," near Williamsburg. When they finally reached Monticello in a late January snowstorm to find no fire, no food, and the servants asleep, they toasted their new home with a leftover half-bottle of wine and "song and merriment and laughter." That night, on their own mountaintop, the love of Thomas Jefferson and his bride seemed strong enough to endure any adversity.

    The birth of their daughter Martha in September increased their happiness. Within ten years the family gained five more children. Of them all, only two lived to grow up: Martha, called Patsy, and Mary, called Maria or Polly.

    The physical strain of frequent pregnancies weakened Martha Jefferson so gravely that her husband curtailed his political activities to stay near her. He served in Virginia's House of Delegates and as governor, but he refused an appointment by the Continental Congress as a commissioner to France. Just after New Year's Day, 1781, a British invasion forced Martha to flee the capital in Richmond with a baby girl a few weeks old--who died in April. In June the family barely escaped an enemy raid on Monticello. She bore another daughter the following May, and never regained a fair measure of strength. Jefferson wrote on May 20 that her condition was dangerous. After months of tending her devotedly, he noted in his account book for September 6, "My dear wife died this day at 11:45 A.M."

    Apparently he never brought himself to record their life together; in a memoir he referred to ten years "in unchequered happiness." Half a century later his daughter Martha remembered his sorrow: "the violence of his emotion...to this day I not describe to myself." For three weeks he had shut himself in his room, pacing back and forth until exhausted. Slowly that first anguish spent itself. In November he agreed to serve as commissioner to France, eventually taking "Patsy" with him in 1784 and send for "Polly" later.

    Famous Folks http://www.genealogy.com/famousfolks/index.html
    Biography.com http://www.biography.com/
    Jefferson, Martha (b. Wayles Skelton) 1748 -- 1782
    http://search.biography.com/print_record.pl?id=16222
    Wife of Thomas Jefferson; born near Richmond, Virginia Daughter of a well-known lawyer, she was a young widow when she married Thomas Jefferson in 1772 and settled at Monticello. Her premature death left Jefferson devastated; it was said he promised her he would never marry again, and he did not. Two of their children, Martha and Mary, survived to maturity and assisted their father as hostesses in the White House.

    Children:
    1. Jefferson was born on 28 May 1777.
    2. Jefferson was born on 3 Nov 1780.
    3. Mary Jefferson was born on 1 Aug 1778.
    4. Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson was born on 8 May 1782.
    5. 5. Martha Jefferson was born on 27 Sep 1772; died on 10 Oct 1836.
    6. Jane Randolph Jefferson was born on 3 Apr 1774.