The Monticello Mystery
Let us delve deeper into the land’s history. The plot of land belonged to Thomas Jefferson’s father, who left it to him. Wheat and tobacco were grown on the plantation back then. Monticello, like other plantations in the country at the time, was a part of one of America’s darkest chapters: slavery. Jefferson used indentured labor to build the house, according to a lot of evidence. Hundreds of slaves lived on the property and worked the land. While acknowledging that a powerful figure owned slaves is difficult, one must accept it and learn from their mistakes.
A Woman Called Sally Hemings
Sally Hemings was a slave on Thomas Jefferson’s plantation, and she was one of many. Although she was a slave, her life seemed to have been inextricably linked to Jefferson’s. For more than a century, historians have been fascinated by the figure known as Sally Hemings. There wasn’t much evidence that Sally Hemings was anything more than a slave. However, almost 200 years after her death, a discovery has revealed new details about her life and the events that led to the Monticello estate’s mystery.