Shockoe Hill Cemetery.
Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall (tomb foreground) is buried next to his wife, Mary Willis Ambler Marshall, who died in 1831, four-and-a-half years her husband in 1835.
Shockoe Hill Cemetery.
Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall (tomb foreground) is buried next to his wife, Mary Willis Ambler Marshall, who died in 1831, four-and-a-half years her husband in 1835.
Quotes and snippets from Jefferson have been used to suggest that he altered his views on slavery, or that these were inconsistent with each other. He can be quoted to sound like an ardent abolitionist, or to sound like the most oppressive of masters. But everything he wrote on the subject is consistent with the complex treatment he gave to slavery in his Notes [on Virginia]. He always opposed enslavement in general and further slave imports to Virginia in particular. He always supported the freeing of slaves en masse, but always and only in connection with a scheme of deportation ...