"You belong to Thomas Jefferson"
Cynthia Stratton describes learning about her connection to Monticello from her aunt, Martha Boston.






Martha Boston, who carried on the Hern/Hearns family tradition of a belief in the importance of education, was the youngest of eight children of Bernard Clinton Hearns and Clara Jones Hearns. Her father, “a very progressive man” in her eyes, worked on the railroad to save money to buy the family farm. Her mother, “seeking the best for her children,” sent her as a child to Baltimore to live with a sister, so she would have the opportunity for better schooling. She and her six sisters all became teachers. A graduate of West Virginia State University in Education and Home Economics, she pursued graduate studies at Temple University and taught school in Albemarle County and elsewhere.
2 May 2001, Philadelphia, PA
Interviewee: Martha Boston
Also present: Lillian Miles
Cynthia Stratton describes learning about her connection to Monticello from her aunt, Martha Boston.
Martha Boston remembers the difficulties of getting schooling in early 20th century Virginia.
Theme: Education
Martha Boston recalls her father’s determination to be a landowner.
Theme: Property
Martha Boston tells of an ancestor carried down from Monticello in a “crocus” [burlap] bag.
Theme: Family
Martha Boston describes the feeling of standing where her ancestor stood when she went to Monticello for the first time.
Theme: Monticello
Martha Boston pays tribute to her parents.
Theme: Family