The Lord's Prayer in
Jefferson's Hand Jefferson liked to experiment with and
use cryptology. There are several different codes in his papers at
the Library of Congress, including this one based on the Lord's
Prayer, which Jefferson carefully wrote out as a block of
consecutive letters.
The Lord's
Prayer Thomas Jefferson, Holograph manuscript Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (161)
The Jefferson Bible It is thought that
Jefferson prepared what is referred to as the "Jefferson Bible" in
1820. In this volume, Jefferson used excerpts from New Testaments in
four languages to create parallel columns of text recounting the
life of Jesus, preserving what he considered to be Christ's
authentic actions and statements, eliminating the mysterious and
miraculous. He began his account with Luke's second chapter,
deleting the first in which the angel Gabriel announced to the
Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the Messiah by the Holy
Spirit. On the pages seen here, Jefferson deleted the part of the
birth story in which the angel of the Lord appeared to the
shepherds. The text ends with the crucifixion and burial and omits
any resurrection appearance.
The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth extracted
textually from the Gospels in Greek, Latin, French &
English [index
page one] -- [index
page two] -- [index
page three] Thomas Jefferson, c. 1820 National
Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
(162a)
The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth extracted
textually from the Gospels in Greek, Latin, French &
English. [title
page] - [page
one] - [page
two] Thomas Jefferson. Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office, 1904 General Collections,
Library of Congress (162c)
A Wall of
Separation The celebrated phrase, "a wall of separation
between church and state," was contained in Thomas Jefferson's
letter to the Danbury Baptists. American courts have used the phrase
to interpret the Founders' intentions regarding the relationship
between government and religion. The words, "wall of separation,"
appear just above the section of the letter that Jefferson circled
for deletion. In the deleted section Jefferson explained why he
refused to proclaim national days of fasting and thanksgiving, as
his predecessors, George Washington and John Adams, had done. In the
left margin, next to the deleted section, Jefferson noted that he
excised the section to avoid offending "our republican friends in
the eastern states" who cherished days of fasting and thanksgiving.
Thomas
Jefferson to Nehemiah Dodge, Ephraim Robbins and Stephen S.
Nelson, a committee of the Danbury Baptist Association in the
state of Connecticut, January 1, 1802. Holograph draft
letter, 1802 Jefferson Papers, Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (163a)
The Danbury Baptist
Letter, as Originally Drafted The Library of Congress is
grateful to the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory for
recovering the lines obliterated from the Danbury Baptist letter by
Thomas Jefferson. He originally wrote "a wall of eternal separation
between church and state," later deleting the word "eternal." He
also deleted the phrase "the duties of my station, which are merely
temporal." Jefferson must have been unhappy with the uncompromising
tone of both of these phrases, especially in view of the
implications of his decision, two days later, to begin attending
church services in the House of Representatives.
Thomas
Jefferson to Nehemiah Dodge, Ephraim Robbins and Stephen S. Nelson,
a committee of the Danbury Baptist Association in the state of
Connecticut, January 1, 1802. Letter, digitally
revised to expose obliterated sections. Copyprint Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (163b)
Jefferson at Church in
the Capitol In his diary, Manasseh Cutler (1742-1823), a
Federalist Congressman from Massachusetts and Congregational
minister, notes that on Sunday, January 3, 1802, John Leland
preached a sermon on the text "Behold a greater than Solomon is
here. Jef[ferso]n was present." Thomas Jefferson attended this
church service in Congress, just two days after issuing the Danbury
Baptist letter. Leland, a celebrated Baptist minister, had moved
from Orange County, Virginia, and was serving a congregation in
Cheshire, Massachusetts, from which he had delivered to Jefferson a
gift of a "mammoth cheese," weighing 1235 pounds.
Journal
entry, January 3, 1802 Manasseh Cutler Charles
Deering McCormick Library of Special Collections, Northwestern
University Library (164)
Jefferson and Family at Church Manasseh
Cutler to Joseph Torrey, January 3, 1803. [page one] -- [page
two] -- [page
three] -- [page
four] In this letter Manasseh Cutler informs Joseph
Torrey that Thomas Jefferson "and his family have constantly
attended public worship in the Hall" of the House of
Representatives. Manuscript letter Charles Deering McCormick
Library of Special Collections, Northwestern University Library
(165)
Reserved Seats at
Capitol Services Here is a description, by an early
Washington "insider," Margaret Bayard Smith (1778-1844), a writer
and social critic and wife of Samuel Harrison Smith, publisher of
the National Intelligencer, of Jefferson's attendance at
church services in the House of Representatives: "Jefferson during
his whole administration was a most regular attendant. The seat he
chose the first day sabbath, and the adjoining one, which his
private secretary occupied, were ever afterwards by the courtesy of
the congregation, left for him."
Reminiscences.
[left page] - [right
page] Margaret Bayard Smith, 1837. Manuscript volume.
(Copyprint of verso) Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (166-166a)
Incident at
Congressional Church Services In this letter Catherine
Mitchill, wife of New York senator Samuel Latham Mitchill, describes
stepping on Jefferson's toes at the conclusion of a church service
in the House of Representatives. She was "so prodigiously
frighten'd," she told her sister, "that I could not stop to make an
apology, but got out of the way as quick as I could."
Catherine
Akerly Mitchill to her sister, Margaret Miller, April 8,
1806. Manuscript letter Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (167)
Madison Seen at House
Church Service Abijah Bigelow, a Federalist congressman
from Massachusetts, describes President James Madison at a church
service in the House on December 27, 1812, as well as an incident
that had occurred when Jefferson was in attendance some years
earlier.
Abijah
Bigelow to Hannah Bigelow, December 28, 1812. [left page] - [right
page] Manuscript letter The American Antiquarian
Society, Worcester, Massachusetts (168)
Hymns Played at
Congressional Church Service According to Margaret
Bayard Smith, a regular at church services in the Capitol, the
Marine Band "made quite a dazzling appearance in the gallery . . .
but in their attempts to accompany the psalm-singing of the
congregation, they completely failed and after a while, the practice
was discontinued."
"The
President's Own" United States Marine Corp Band, ca.
1798. Watercolor, Lt. Col. Donna Neary, USMCR, late
twentieth century. Copyprint. United States Marine Corp Band,
Washington, D.C. (169)
The Old House of
Representatives Church services were held in what is now
called Statuary Hall from 1807 to 1857. The first services in the
Capitol, held when the government moved to Washington in the fall of
1800, were conducted in the "hall" of the House in the north wing of
the building. In 1801 the House moved to temporary quarters in the
south wing, called the "Oven," which it vacated in 1804, returning
to the north wing for three years. Services were conducted in the
House until after the Civil War. The Speaker's podium was used as
the preacher's pulpit.
The Old
House of Representatives Oil on canvas by Samuel F.B.
Morse, 1822. Copyprint. In the collection of the Corcoran Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C. Museum Purchase, Gallery Fund (170)
A Millennialist Sermon
Preached in Congress This sermon on the millennium was
preached by the Baltimore Swedenborgian minister, John Hargrove
(1750-1839) in the House of Representatives. One of the earliest
millennialist sermons preached before Congress was offered on July
4, 1801, by the Reverend David Austin (1759-1831), who at the time
considered himself "struck in prophesy under the style of the Joshua
of the American Temple." Having proclaimed to his Congressional
audience the imminence of the Second Coming of Christ, Austin took
up a collection on the floor of the House to support services at
"Lady Washington's Chapel" in a nearby hotel where he was teaching
that "the seed of the Millennial estate is found in the backbone of
the American Revolution."
A Sermon
on the Second Coming of Christ, and on the Last
Judgment. Delivered the 25th December, 1804 before
both houses of Congress, at the Capitol in the city of Washington.
John Hargrove. Baltimore: Warner & Hanna, 1805 Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (171)
First Catholic Sermon in
the House On January 8, 1826, Bishop John England
(1786-1842) of Charleston, South Carolina, became the first Catholic
clergyman to preach in the House of Representatives. The overflow
audience included President John Quincy Adams, whose July 4, 1821,
speech England rebutted in his sermon. Adams had claimed that the
Roman Catholic Church was intolerant of other religions and
therefore incompatible with republican institutions. England
asserted that "we do not believe that God gave to the church any
power to interfere with our civil rights, or our civil concerns." "I
would not allow to the Pope, or to any bishop of our church," added
England, "the smallest interference with the humblest vote at our
most insignificant balloting box."
John
England, Bishop of Charleston, South Carolina Oil on
canvas Diocese of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina (173)
The
substance of a discourse preached in the hall of the House of
Representatives of the United States, January 8,
1826. John England. Baltimore: F. Lucas, 1826 Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (172)
Woman Preacher in the
House In 1827, Harriet Livermore (1788-1868), the
daughter and granddaughter of Congressmen, became the second woman
to preach in the House of Representatives. The first woman to preach
before the House (and probably the first woman to speak officially
in Congress under any circumstances) was the English evangelist,
Dorothy Ripley (1767-1832), who conducted a service on January 12,
1806. Jefferson and Vice President Aaron Burr were among those in a
"crowded audience." Sizing up the congregation, Ripley concluded
that "very few" had been born again and broke into an urgent, camp
meeting style exhortation, insisting that "Christ's Body was the
Bread of Life and His Blood the drink of the righteous."
Harriet
Livermore. Engraving by J.B. Longacre, from a painting
by Waldo and Jewett, 1827 National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian
Institution (174)
Communion Service in the
Treasury Building Manasseh Cutler here describes a
four-hour communion service in the Treasury Building, conducted by a
Presbyterian minister, the Reverend James Laurie: "Attended worship
at the Treasury. Mr. Laurie alone. Sacrament. Full assembly. Three
tables; service very solemn; nearly four hours."
Journal
entry, December 23, 1804 Manasseh Cutler. Manuscript
Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special Collections,
Northwestern University Library (175)
The Treasury Building
The first Treasury Building, where several
denominations conducted church services, was burned by the British
in 1814. The new building, seen here on the lower right, was built
on approximately the same location as the earlier one, within view
of the White House.
Washington
City, 1820. Watercolor sketch by Baroness Hyde de
Neuville, 1820 I. N. Phelps Stokes Collection, The Miriam and Ira
D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, The New York
Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations (176)
Adams's Description of a
Church Service in the Supreme Court John Quincy Adams
here describes the Reverend James Laurie, pastor of a Presbyterian
Church that had settled into the Treasury Building, preaching to an
overflow audience in the Supreme Court Chamber, which in 1806 was
located on the ground floor of the Capitol.
Diary
entry, February 2, 1806 John Quincy Adams.
Copyprint Adams Family Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society,
Boston (177)
The Old Supreme Court
Chamber Description of church services in the Supreme
Court chamber by Manasseh Cutler (1804) and John Quincy Adams (1806)
indicate that services were held in the Court soon after the
government moved to Washington in 1800.
The Old
Supreme Court Chamber, ca. 1810, U. S. Capitol
Building Photograph by Franz Jantzen.
Copyprint Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States
(178)
Church Services in
Congress after the Civil War Charles Boynton (1806-1883)
was in 1867 chaplain of the House of Representatives and organizing
pastor of the First Congregational Church in Washington, which was
trying at that time to build its own sanctuary. In the meantime the
church, as Boynton informed potential donors, was holding services
"at the Hall of Representatives" where "the audience is the largest
in town. . . .nearly 2000 assembled every Sabbath" for services,
making the congregation in the House the "largest Protestant Sabbath
audience then in the United States." The First Congregational Church
met in the House from 1865 to 1868.
Fundraising
brochure Charles B. Boynton. Washington, D.C.:
November 1, 1867 Rare
Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress (180)
House of
Representatives, After the Civil War The House moved to
its current location on the south side of the Capitol in 1857. It
contained the "largest Protestant Sabbath audience" in the United
States when the First Congregational Church of Washington held
services there from 1865 to 1868.
The House
of Representatives, 1866 Chromo-lithograph by E.
Sachse & Co, 1866 Prints and Photographs
Division, Library of Congress (179)
|