The Art of Citizenship
A hub of stories, quotes, videos, biographies, podcasts, and timelines on civics in America.
Check out the different types of primary sources that researchers and scholars at Monticello use to learn about Thomas Jefferson, the Monticello plantation, and the free and enslaved people who lived and labored here.
A guide to some excellent online collections of his writings and manuscripts.
26 | Monday
| 1 doz. hen eggs from kosted John | 1 | 6
| 7 from Cretia | |
|_________________________________________________
27 | Tuesday | |
| 1 doz. eggs from Joel | |
| 9 eggs from Nance | x |
|_________________________________________________
28 | Wednesday | |
| John Hem. 1 doz. eggs | x |
| 9 eggs from Nance | x |
|_________________________________________________
29 | Thursday | |
| | |
|_________________________________________________
30 | Friday | |
– right page –
| Sunday
| September
|
| from Squire 7 simelines** | x |
| 6 cabbages | x |
| 2 doz. eggs | x |
| from Martin 11 chickens | 6 |
| 1 due from him | |
| Nance 2 doz egg | x |
| Abraham 2 doz | x |
| Wormley 2 1/2 doz | x |
| Ursula 1 1/2 doz cucumbers | x |
| 1 water melon | x |
| 1 musk melon | x |
| Bartlet fish | x |
| Charles 1 doz eggs | x |
| Isham 1 doz eggs | 9 |
| Jenny chickens 1 doz + 3 | 7 | 6
| Paid J. Hemmings 4 doz eggs | 4 | 6
| Caesar 1 doz eggs | | 9
| | |
**possibly "cymlings", a kind of squash.
Transcription not verified.
(Image 1, left column/page)
Jan: 1777
1 31 hogs killed
9 17 hogs killed
27 20 hogs killed
Feb: 1 a beef killed
11 a mutton killed
18 a beef killed (66 lb. of tallow in cellar)
Mar: 5 11 doz. & 2 candeles in the cellar
8 made 100 lb of soft soap 2 geese killed
7 beds 7 bolsters 10 pillows 7 pr of blankets
5 mattresses one straw bed 6 counterpains
14 made a pot of hard soap not weighed
15 made 40 lb of soft soap
25 made a pot of hard soap not weighed
made 6 doz & 10 candles
28 a beef killed kept only one quarter 10 lb. tallow
a goose killed 2 ducks killed a shoat killed
April 7 2 ducks killed
9 a shoat killed
T.Jeff. 14 old fine shirts 9 ruffled ditt. 12 new plain
(Image 1, right column/page)
M. Jefferson 10 old ruffled shifts 4 new ones, not made
8 old ones ditto 8 night caps 6 fine linen Aprons
8 coarse ditto 6 pr of silk hoes 6 pr ditto of
cotton
Pattey Jef. 7 new shift 2 night caps 9 frocks 4 pr
stockings 2 laced tuckers 2 hemstitched do
April 15 a beef killed sold one quarter yield 10 lb. of tallow
17 made 8 doz candles
a shoat killed
20 made 68 lb of soaft soap
31 a shoat killed
May 4 a shoat killed
6 a mutton killed
8 made 2 doz candles
12 french beans planted sugar, 2 & ditto mazzeis,
13 a shoat killed made 17 candles
sowed – pudding peas & gallevance ditto a shoat killed
19 a shoat killed
26 a lamb killed
(Image 2, left column/page)
June bought 15 chickens from old Jenny
bought 11 [ditto] of Juno bought 8 [ditto] of Jackson
bought 10 ditt of Squire bought 4, ditt Fanny
bought of Jupiter bought O[?] of Phill
bought of Will bought of Mrs Scot 8 ditt
n:b: all these were pd. for with bacon
July bought 7 doz from Ellkhill
bought 14 ducks & 4 geese
Aug 3 2 ducks killed
4 packed up for our own eating 28 hams
of bacon 21 shoulders 27 middlings
packed up for workmen 40 hams
50 shoulders a goose
12 killed 2 ducks killed
13 a goose killed
14 2 ducks killed & a shoat
15 a goose killed
a goose bought
6 geese at 18d a peice 2 geese given me
bought 5 ducks
(Image 2, right column page)
23 2 ducks killed
24 a goose killed
28 a lamb killed
2 ducks killed
29 a goose killed
30 a shoat 2 ducks killed
Sep. 1 a goose killed
2 a goose & shoat killed
3 a mutton killed
4 2 ducks killed
A hub of stories, quotes, videos, biographies, podcasts, and timelines on civics in America.
Conversations about society, politics, and community shape life in the United States. Thomas Jefferson understood this and hosted dinners known for stunning food and sparking conversation.
Enhance your day at Monticello by using the free Bloomberg Connects app, with foreign language self-guided tour options available, or try out a family-friendly scavenger hunt.
Our guided virtual experiences bring Monticello into your classroom. Explore Jefferson's life, the American Revolution, the Early Republic, and the legacy of slavery.
ACTIVITY A
Thomas Jefferson gave Captain Meriwether Lewis a detailed list of things he wanted Lewis and the Expedition to ascertain during their journey. As the explorers traveled across the continent, they encountered a number of new regions formerly unknown to Thomas Jefferson and others living on the East Coast. Thomas Jefferson asked for the following information to be found and recorded. Refer to Jefferson's Instructions to Lewis and have your students identify or locate:
ACTIVITY B
Ask students the question: "If you had been chosen to join the Expedition, what would you have thought essential to pack?" Have students compare Lewis's list with their own. Refer to Capt. Lewis's packing list.
ACTIVITY C
Thomas Jefferson required members of the Expedition to keep accurate and detailed journals. Have your students keep a journal recording their daily activities.
ACTIVITY D
Lewis had planned to bring a theodolite on the journey in order to survey land and help with mapping. Upon further consideration, he concluded that it was too heavy an instrument and decided to use a sextant instead. Contact a local surveyor in your community and have him/her talk to your class about surveying and map-making.
ACTIVITY E
Have students research the importance of buffalo to Native American people and have students create masks of buffalo or other animals of the Great Plains.
ACTIVITY F
Native American tribes were very important to the Expedition. Have students write a report or give a presentation on how these tribes are active and viable today.
ACTIVITY G
Have students write a letter to Thomas Jefferson describing in detail three things found in their immediate surroundings that would be unknown to him.
ACTIVITY H
What would students choose to send to Jefferson as examples of their current culture that he would not have seen before?
ACTIVITY I
Lead a discussion with students about the challenges encountered by the members of the Expedition. Possible topics might be:
ACTIVITY J
Lewis and Clark sent back numerous samples of pressed flowers and plants unknown to Thomas Jefferson. Have your students create a botanical (a notebook of pressed flowers) made up of flowers or plants found in your region. Have students properly identify the specimen by name (Latin and common) and have them measure the plants.
ACTIVITY K
Lead a discussion on what students think were the major contributions of the Lewis & Clark Expedition.
ACTIVITY L
Have students create a newspaper on their experiences as members of the Expedition. Don't forget to include artwork. Possible article topics: Indian people encountered, difficulties along the trail (Great Falls, prickley pear cactus, mosquitoes, lack of food, grizzly bears, etc.), and highlights of the trip.
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