Skip to content

Those Shutters Are Not Just for Show

For Thomas Jefferson, shutters provided shade protected the expensive window glass from storms.

Members of the Levy family sit on the slope of the west front portico with the large window to the Parlor shuttered behind them

Most exterior shutters today are eye-pleasing accents, decorative but not functional. But for Thomas Jefferson, shutters provided shade from what he described as "the constant, beaming, almost vertical sun of Virginia" while permitting airflow from summer breezes. They also protected the expensive window glass from storms and swung open, Jefferson’s words, "on hinges as in the winter we want both the light & the warmth of the sun."

The shutters closed on the west side of the house during a photo shoot by Robert Holsinger in the early 1900s.
The shutters closed on the west side of the house during a photo shoot by Robert Holsinger in the early 1900s.
Shutters closed on the west side of the house during the Levy ownership of Monticello
Members of the Levy family sit on the slope of the west front portico with the large window to the Parlor shuttered behind them.
Members of the Levy family sit on the slope of the west front portico with the large window to the Parlor shuttered behind them
East Front of Monticello in 1926.
The lower shutters close on two East Front windows while the upper shutters remain open.

Jefferson was characteristically precise in designing Monticello’s shutters. In 1804, while president, Jefferson contracted with Washington joiner Peter Lenox for the fine woodworking the job required. The project called for the blinds' slats to be "laths moving on 2. pivots" on the lower window sections while the upper shutters were fixed. Meanwhile, at Monticello, blacksmith William Stewart made the hinges and other hardware for hanging the blinds.

Assembling the reconstructed shutters at Gaston & Wyatt
Checking the setting of the shutter blinds at Gaston & Wyatt
Installing the reconstructed shutters at Monticello
A latch for keeping the shutters open
The reconstructed shutters in place on the exterior of one of the tall, triple-sash windows at Monticello

Jefferson's original shutters were replaced in the early 20th century. In 2013 the Thomas Jefferson Foundation opted to install new shutters based on Jefferson's original designs. Researching Jefferson's records and examining other examples led to measured drawings by Monticello's then-architectural historian Gardiner Hallock (who serves today as Vice President for Architecture, Collections, and Facilities). Gaston & Wyatt then fabricated prototype blinds out of heart pine, the same wood used in the originals. Once the design was finalized, Gaston & Wyatt custom-crafted authentic blinds for nearly all Monticello's first-floor windows.


Seal and logo of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
This blog post was made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.