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Watercolor depicting the unboxing of artifacts and natural history specimens sent to Jefferson from the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Interactive Posters

Interactive posters developed by Monticello educators that depict the arrival of items sent back from the Lewis and Clark Expedition and Thomas Jefferson's office.

Unpacking objects from the Lewis and Clark Expedition

Watercolor depicting the unboxing of artifacts and natural history specimens sent to Jefferson from the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Painting of Thomas Jefferson as an older man with graying hair and wearing a dark coat with a brown fur collar.

Thomas Jefferson

This watercolor depicts Jefferson reviewing a list of objects from the Lewis and Clark Expedition that he had shipped to Monticello from the President's House.

Brief Biography of Thomas Jefferson 
Fry-Jefferson map of Virginia

Fry-Jefferson Map of Virginia

A reproduction of this map created by Jefferson's father and Joshua Fry hangs in the Monticello Entrance Hall.

Video on YouTube 
Profile of Francis Wayles Eppes as a young boy facing to his right with blond-brown hair, pink cheeks, and a slight overbite wearing a pink and purple garment with a wide white, frilled collar.

Francis Wayles Eppes

Francis Eppes, shown below, was Jefferson's grandson through his daughter Maria. Francis would have been about 5 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Learn more 

Elk Antler Bow

An elk antler bow and a set of arrow similar to these were part of the shipment. Butch Thunder Hawk and students at United Tribes Technical College in ND made these reproductions.

Closeup of a cutout depiction of Burwell Colbert at Monticello.

Burwell Colbert

Colbert served as a butler at Monticello and directed the work of other enslaved house servants. A member of the Hemings family, he was one of only seven slaves officially freed by Jefferson.

Burwell Colbert 
silhouette of Virginia Jefferson Randolph Trist facing proper right. Click for more information.

Virginia Jefferson Randolph

Virginia Randolph was Jefferson's granddaughter through his daughter Martha. Like her cousin Francis, she would have been about 5 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Virginia Jefferson Randolph 

Mary Jefferson Randolph

Mary Randolph (depicted above with a sister) was Jefferson's granddaughter through his daughter Martha. Mary would have been about 3 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Mary Jefferson Randolph 

Otter Pouch

The pouch depicted to the left here is a reproduction made from the hide of an otter and decorated with dyed porcupine quills, glass beads, and tin-plated sheet iron tinklers.

How these objects were displayed at Monticello 

Mandan or Hidatsa Leggings

The leggings depicted here were probably made from antelope or deer skin and decorated with porcupine quillwork designs. They are likely similar to ones included in the shipment sent from Fort Mandan.

How these objects were displayed at Monticello 
A set of large elk antlers with 7 and 6 points on the left and right antlers, respectively, mounted to a plaque

Elk Antlers

This set of Elk Antlers (from Cervus elaphus canadensis) is one of the few Lewis and Clark Expedition natural history items left in existence. They now hang on the wall of Monticello's Entrance Hall.

More on the Elk Antlers in the Monticello Collections Database 
A buffalo laid out flat (with limb skins, tail and bits of fur showing on the fringes) with image depict a battle involving warriors on foot and on horse fighting with bows, arrows, and other weapons.

Mandan Buffalo Robe

A robe similar to this reproduction was among the items Jefferson shipped to Monticello. The robe was "painted by a Mandan man representing a battle" by the Sioux against the Mandans and their allies.

More on this Buffalo Robe in the Monticello Collections Database 

Unpacking objects from the Lewis and Clark Expedition

Painting of Thomas Jefferson as an older man with graying hair and wearing a dark coat with a brown fur collar.

Thomas Jefferson

This watercolor depicts Jefferson reviewing a list of objects from the Lewis and Clark Expedition that he had shipped to Monticello from the President's House.

Brief Biography of Thomas Jefferson 
Fry-Jefferson map of Virginia

Fry-Jefferson Map of Virginia

A reproduction of this map created by Jefferson's father and Joshua Fry hangs in the Monticello Entrance Hall.

Video on YouTube 
Profile of Francis Wayles Eppes as a young boy facing to his right with blond-brown hair, pink cheeks, and a slight overbite wearing a pink and purple garment with a wide white, frilled collar.

Francis Wayles Eppes

Francis Eppes, shown below, was Jefferson's grandson through his daughter Maria. Francis would have been about 5 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Learn more 

Elk Antler Bow

An elk antler bow and a set of arrow similar to these were part of the shipment. Butch Thunder Hawk and students at United Tribes Technical College in ND made these reproductions.

Closeup of a cutout depiction of Burwell Colbert at Monticello.

Burwell Colbert

Colbert served as a butler at Monticello and directed the work of other enslaved house servants. A member of the Hemings family, he was one of only seven slaves officially freed by Jefferson.

Burwell Colbert 
silhouette of Virginia Jefferson Randolph Trist facing proper right. Click for more information.

Virginia Jefferson Randolph

Virginia Randolph was Jefferson's granddaughter through his daughter Martha. Like her cousin Francis, she would have been about 5 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Virginia Jefferson Randolph 

Mary Jefferson Randolph

Mary Randolph (depicted above with a sister) was Jefferson's granddaughter through his daughter Martha. Mary would have been about 3 years old when Jefferson shipped the objects to Monticello.

Mary Jefferson Randolph 

Otter Pouch

The pouch depicted to the left here is a reproduction made from the hide of an otter and decorated with dyed porcupine quills, glass beads, and tin-plated sheet iron tinklers.

How these objects were displayed at Monticello 

Mandan or Hidatsa Leggings

The leggings depicted here were probably made from antelope or deer skin and decorated with porcupine quillwork designs. They are likely similar to ones included in the shipment sent from Fort Mandan.

How these objects were displayed at Monticello 
A set of large elk antlers with 7 and 6 points on the left and right antlers, respectively, mounted to a plaque

Elk Antlers

This set of Elk Antlers (from Cervus elaphus canadensis) is one of the few Lewis and Clark Expedition natural history items left in existence. They now hang on the wall of Monticello's Entrance Hall.

More on the Elk Antlers in the Monticello Collections Database 
A buffalo laid out flat (with limb skins, tail and bits of fur showing on the fringes) with image depict a battle involving warriors on foot and on horse fighting with bows, arrows, and other weapons.

Mandan Buffalo Robe

A robe similar to this reproduction was among the items Jefferson shipped to Monticello. The robe was "painted by a Mandan man representing a battle" by the Sioux against the Mandans and their allies.

More on this Buffalo Robe in the Monticello Collections Database 
  • Exploration of the American West was an interest of Thomas Jefferson's throughout his life. In 1803, while he was president (1801-1809), Jefferson commissioned the expedition of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore lands west of the Mississippi. In his letter of instruction to Lewis, Jefferson indicated all that he hoped the would be learned on the journey. The primary goals for the expedition were to establish trade ties with the Native American people and to find a water route to the Pacific Ocean. Jefferson also had a strong interest in scientific discovery, and asked that accurate maps be drawn, and previously unknown plants, animals, and minerals be noted and collected.

    On August 12, 1805 a large shipment of items sent by Lewis and Clark (from Fort Mandan in present-day North Dakota) arrived at the President's House in Washington. This shipment included natural history and Native American artifacts. There were animal skins, horns, skeletons, plant, soil and mineral specimens, and written reports. Some these items were shipped to Monticello, Jefferson's home in Albemarle County, Virginia. The crates and boxes that arrived there included some items Jefferson planned to exhibit in his Entrance or Indian Hall. There were Indian buffalo robes, one of which showed a battle scene, beaded Indian leggings, an otter skin bag, some Indian utensils, including an earthenware pot, clay pipes, and a bow and arrows. Some of the natural history items that arrived were antlers of the antelope, deer and elk, and samples of earth, salts, and minerals. All of these previously unrecorded artifacts helped to enlighten Jefferson and others interested in the western half of the country.

    This picture represents a day in the spring of 1806 when part of the shipment of artifacts sent back by the Lewis and Clark Expedition is being examined in the Entrance Hall at Monticello.

    Watercolor painting by G. B. McIntosh

    Related

Thomas Jefferson's office

A view of Jefferson's Cabinet office focusing on his writing arrangement of revolving desk with Polygraph, chair with candlesticks, bench, and revolving stand.
A small writing desk with two pens joined side-by-side on a bar joined to a pantograph apparatus consisting of hinged arms, rollers, and springs all supported by a wooden frame.

Polygraph

Jefferson regularly used this copying machine. It allowed him to send an original of the letter and to keep a copy for himself. Many of his surviving letters are polygraph copies.

More on the Polygraph 
A red chair and bench under a table with an unusual device (the Polygraph) is the center of a small, green-and-white-colored room with three large windows and lined with globes, busts, and scientific instruments.

Cabinet Overview

The writing setup in the cabinet today closely resembles the way it looked during Jefferson's life. Jefferson designed this space for efficiency & comfort during long hours spent at the writing table.

Audio Overview (1.5 minutes) 
Brass theodolite composed of a brass telescope on a large turn gear over the horizontal compass and spirit level housing, with a second stationary telescope on a central pivot below the horizontal disk. The sighting apparatus can be adjusted with four levelling screws that holds it on the base. Rests on straight collapsible mahogany tripod legs with brass bands. The disk plate is engraved "Ramsden-London".

Theodolite

Trained as a surveyor by his father, Peter Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson used this theodolite to map his lands.

More on the Theodolite in the Monticello Collections Database 
A 19th-century barometer on a tall wooden mount topped by a measuring piece that allows the viewer to determine current atmospheric presssure.

Barometer

Jefferson kept daily records of temperatures and other weather observations that are still useful today. He used an English barometer similar to this and a thermometer to capture this information.

Jefferson's Weather Observations 
Square-back sofa with green, brass-tacking upholstery, flat veneered crest rail with incurvate corners, and curved arm supports with applied pads.

Sofa

Jefferson commissioned this sofa in 1790 from New York cabinetmaker Thomas Burling and, according to a granddaughter, placed it under this window.

More on this sofa in the Monticello Collections Database 
The inside of a French grammar book used at Monticello with part of a green and orange pattern wall paper stuck to the inside cover behind a note that links the book to Martha Jefferson Randolph's education in Paris during her father's time as the American Minister to France.

Wallpaper

Analysis of the walls revealed evidence of wallpaper in the Cabinet. The reproduction wallpaper now shown wasderived from samples found in a grammar book used at Monticello in the early 19th century.

Jefferson's revolving stand is a wooden box with hinged sides and top that can be raised/extended to hold papers, pamphlets, and small books and rotated.

Revolving Stand

Jefferson designed and commissioned this singular five-sided stand to enable him to view multiple documents and small books at one time.

More on this object in the Monticello Collections Database 
A pair of brown-hued globes on short stands, the left of the earth (terrestrial) and the right of the sky (celestial).

Globes

In 1806, Jefferson bought two London-made globes, one of the earth and one of the sky, intending to place them under two lecterns in his Cabinet. The two shown here replace Jeffeson's lost originals.

Globes in the Monticello Collection 

Dumbells

Jefferson used this pair of lead dumbbells to exercise his wrists after he broke one in a fall. The family saved these humble objects because of their intimate association with Jefferson.

More on Jefferson's Wrist Injury 
A green folding screen with a thin central column attached by hinges to two large wings and covering the Cabinet-side opening of Jefferson's alcove bed.

Folding Screen

This folding screen replicates one that Jefferson had made in 1808. It provided warmth and privacy when closed and allowed for the passage of light and air when open.

More on Alcove Beds 

Thomas Jefferson's office

A small writing desk with two pens joined side-by-side on a bar joined to a pantograph apparatus consisting of hinged arms, rollers, and springs all supported by a wooden frame.

Polygraph

Jefferson regularly used this copying machine. It allowed him to send an original of the letter and to keep a copy for himself. Many of his surviving letters are polygraph copies.

More on the Polygraph 
A red chair and bench under a table with an unusual device (the Polygraph) is the center of a small, green-and-white-colored room with three large windows and lined with globes, busts, and scientific instruments.

Cabinet Overview

The writing setup in the cabinet today closely resembles the way it looked during Jefferson's life. Jefferson designed this space for efficiency & comfort during long hours spent at the writing table.

Audio Overview (1.5 minutes) 
Brass theodolite composed of a brass telescope on a large turn gear over the horizontal compass and spirit level housing, with a second stationary telescope on a central pivot below the horizontal disk. The sighting apparatus can be adjusted with four levelling screws that holds it on the base. Rests on straight collapsible mahogany tripod legs with brass bands. The disk plate is engraved "Ramsden-London".

Theodolite

Trained as a surveyor by his father, Peter Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson used this theodolite to map his lands.

More on the Theodolite in the Monticello Collections Database 
A 19th-century barometer on a tall wooden mount topped by a measuring piece that allows the viewer to determine current atmospheric presssure.

Barometer

Jefferson kept daily records of temperatures and other weather observations that are still useful today. He used an English barometer similar to this and a thermometer to capture this information.

Jefferson's Weather Observations 
Square-back sofa with green, brass-tacking upholstery, flat veneered crest rail with incurvate corners, and curved arm supports with applied pads.

Sofa

Jefferson commissioned this sofa in 1790 from New York cabinetmaker Thomas Burling and, according to a granddaughter, placed it under this window.

More on this sofa in the Monticello Collections Database 
The inside of a French grammar book used at Monticello with part of a green and orange pattern wall paper stuck to the inside cover behind a note that links the book to Martha Jefferson Randolph's education in Paris during her father's time as the American Minister to France.

Wallpaper

Analysis of the walls revealed evidence of wallpaper in the Cabinet. The reproduction wallpaper now shown wasderived from samples found in a grammar book used at Monticello in the early 19th century.

Jefferson's revolving stand is a wooden box with hinged sides and top that can be raised/extended to hold papers, pamphlets, and small books and rotated.

Revolving Stand

Jefferson designed and commissioned this singular five-sided stand to enable him to view multiple documents and small books at one time.

More on this object in the Monticello Collections Database 
A pair of brown-hued globes on short stands, the left of the earth (terrestrial) and the right of the sky (celestial).

Globes

In 1806, Jefferson bought two London-made globes, one of the earth and one of the sky, intending to place them under two lecterns in his Cabinet. The two shown here replace Jeffeson's lost originals.

Globes in the Monticello Collection 

Dumbells

Jefferson used this pair of lead dumbbells to exercise his wrists after he broke one in a fall. The family saved these humble objects because of their intimate association with Jefferson.

More on Jefferson's Wrist Injury 
A green folding screen with a thin central column attached by hinges to two large wings and covering the Cabinet-side opening of Jefferson's alcove bed.

Folding Screen

This folding screen replicates one that Jefferson had made in 1808. It provided warmth and privacy when closed and allowed for the passage of light and air when open.

More on Alcove Beds 
  • Thomas Jefferson designed his office, which he called his “cabinet,” to make long hours of writing letters as comfortable as possible. His setup included a red leather chair that swiveled on its wooden base, a table with a revolving top, and a bench to stretch out his legs. The nearby revolving stand was designed for quick reference of letters and documents. Everything could be arranged for the greatest convenience. The room is a partial octagon, bringing in light from multiple windows. Jefferson had immediate access to the outdoors through a set of small glass doors on the left and could directly enter his alcove-style bed on the opposite side.

    Jefferson viewed the world around him with the eye of a scientist. His interests were limitless and encompassed archaeology, astronomy, botany, geography, horticulture, meteorology, natural history, and paleontology. He was a strong promoter of the sciences and felt that new discoveries would benefit the new nation. In the performance of his everyday tasks, Thomas Jefferson meticulously recorded his observations, from documenting the first appearance of the peas in his vegetable garden and the number of bricks that it would take to build his garden pavilion to calculating the provisions allotted to his slaves. Jefferson's daily habit of recording-keeping gave expression to his passion for scientific inquiry.

    The cabinet (or office) was the center of Jefferson's scientific world at Monticello. From this room he corresponded with the leading philosophers and scientists of his day. His cabinet illustrates Jefferson's wide-ranging interests and shows us examples of some of his advanced scientific instruments, such as his theodolite and telescope.