Browse by Interest



The Rooms
bullet Entrance Hall (1)
bullet South Square Room (2)
bullet Library (3), or Bookroom
bullet South Piazza (4), or Greenhouse
bullet Cabinet (5)
bullet Jefferson's Bedchamber (6)
bullet Parlor (7)
bullet Dining Room (8)
bullet Tea Room (9)
bullet
bullet North Square Room (11)
bullet Dome Room Panorama

Related Links
bullet House FAQ
   
Related Books
bullet Monticello in Measured Drawings
bullet Worlds of Thomas Jefferson at Monticello

Home » House, Gardens, Plantation » House » Room-by-Room Tour »

South Square Room

Dimensions: 14' 10" x 15' 4"; ceiling 10' 0"

Order: Tuscan

Source: Palladio

Color: Currently, blue; recent investigations show multiple layers of paint.

Purpose of Room: Martha Jefferson Randolph's sitting room, where she sewed, taught her children, and directed the slaves who worked as household servants; the room also housed some of the overflow of Jefferson's books from his Library.

Unusual features: Rumford fireplace altered by Jefferson to burn -- in a more efficient manner -- wood instead of coal.

Furnishings of note: Tables and chairs for reading, writing, and sewing, including a sewing table made in the Monticello joinery and attributed to John Hemmings; today a portrait of Martha Jefferson Randolph, painted by James Westhall Ford, hangs over the fireplace. Silhouettes of family members and engravings hung on the walls.

Further Information: The "Jefferson" section called "Our Breakfast Table" alludes to the use of this room and provides information about Jefferson's immediate family.