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historians are not quite sure why Jefferson didn't set his slaves free.

he inherited slaves from various people including his father, but Jefferson knew that slavery was wrong. so your question is a good one... why did he continue to own slaves? some people have suggested that Thomas Jefferson thought that setting his slaves free would only make them subject to re-enslavement by someone else. The next person who owned them might end up being very harsh to them. So why did he relly keep them though? No one really knows for sure.

> I would say rather, that Jefferson was a man of his time, and as such was a white supremacist. Jefferson speaks extensively on his feelings (and they are just that, and in no way scholarly or scientific) about the "races" or "species" of man in his "Notes on The State of Virginia"(1781). He states that, "...never yet could I find that a black had uttered a thought above the level of plain narration..."(266) He goes on to bash and attempt to discredit Black artists of the time Ignatius Sancho and Phyllis Wheately.

He goes on to make asinine comparisons between American Slavery and Ancient Roman Slavery, and the intellectual and artistic development of Free whites and enslaved Blacks before eventually concluding, "...as a suspicion only, that the blacks, whether originally a distinct race, or made distinct by time and circumstances, are inferior to the whites in endowments both of body and mind" (270).

And why would he keep his inherited slaves? Well, he goes on to say that, "This unfortunate difference of colour, and perhaps of faculty, is a powerful obstacle to the emancipation of these people" (270).

And all of this was written several years before Jefferson impregnated his slave girl Sally Hemings (about 16 at the time). Inherited from Jefferson's wife Martha , Sally and Martha are said to have been half-sisters (i.e. Martha's dad enjoyed sex with his slaves as well). Their children, remained his slaves into adulthood as did Sally who wasn't freed until after Jefferson's death in 1826.

So Thomas Jefferson is a founding father, and known as a great thinker and proponent of liberty, however, a closer look at his life reveals that he was FAR from perfect, and like many white Americans (and Europeans) of his time did not believe that non-whites were equal to whites.

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10y ago
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7y ago

Prior to the invention of modern farm machinery such as the combine harvester, the cheapest way to grow crops was with slave labor. Slave owners of the old south got very rich off of the labor of their slaves.

It cannot be overlooked, however, that slavery was introduced by early British colonists. It was finally outlawed in the UK in about 1830. The Framers of the US Constitution did have the opportunity to abolish slavery but they failed.

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11y ago

"Jefferson tried his best, as an enlightened, thoughtful individual might. But the structure of American society, the power of the cotton plantation, the slave trade, the politics of unity between northern and southern elites, and the long culture of race prejudice in the colonies, as well as his own weaknesses-that combination of practical need and ideological fixation-kept Jefferson a slaveowner throughout his life." written by Howard Zinn in A People's History of The United States.

<<It took me for ever to find this so I help this helps someone out there that need this answer.>>

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11y ago

He did not want to own slaves

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11y ago

He did cause he thought that it was wrong

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Q: Why did the South own slaves?
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Related questions

Did yeoman farmers own slaves?

Yeoman farmers didn't own slaves and they made up the largest group of whites in the south.


Did blacks in the south own slaves?

Yes, it is true.


How many slaves were owned by white families in the antebellum South?

White familes in the south during the antebellum time did not own any slaves. At least the majority of whits did not own any


Did families in the south own slaves?

yes. in the early history of America, it was almost necessary for southern plantation owners to have slaves. But most families in the south only had one or two slaves.


What was the disagreement between the north and the south over states' rights?

the north and south were having the ''civil war'' a fight between freedom of slaves or keeping them. the south thought it was good to own slaves and the north thought it was wrong to have slaves.


Did all landowners in the south own slaves?

No, not all landowners in the South owned slaves. In fact, the majority of white families in the Southern states did not own any slaves. Slavery was more prevalent among large plantation owners, who made up a smaller percentage of the population.


In which part of the country was wealth based on the amount of land and numbers of slaves you own?

south


In which part of the country was wealth based on the amount of land and number of slaves you own?

south


Did Johnathan Edwards own the largest plantation and the greatest number of slaves in south Carolina?

No


Did everyone in the south own slaves?

No actually only a small amount of people actually did own slaves but those who did ran huge plantations, also the amount of people that owned slaves also greatly increased after the invention of the cotton gin which made cotton the main cash crop in the south causing many farmers to want to buy slaves.


Why was the civil war ever fought?

to determine whether the south would continously own slaves


What rights did the south think you were taking away from them in the civil war?

Majorly, the right to own slaves