__________
“The
most extreme Democrat of his time.”
John Clark Ridpath on Thomas Jefferson.
__________
March 4: The following selection is from Charles
Coffin, Building a Nation, published
in 1882. “President Jefferson was a plain man. When he was inaugurated he would
have no parade of military, but rode alone and on horseback to the capital,
tied the horse to a post, entered the Capitol, took the oath of office, and
rode back to his home. (72/119)
Ridpath has a similar description:
Though of aristocratic birth, Jefferson
was the most extreme Democrat of his time. He was the first of his social class
to substitute pantaloons for knee breeches, and to fasten his shoes by leather
strings instead of by silver buckles. When elected President he set aside the
custom of his predecessors, who rode to the place of their inauguration in a
magnificent court-like carriage drawn by four horses, and accompanied by
liveried servants, but proceeded thither on horseback and unattended. Arriving
at the place, he hitched his horse to a rack, and going into the Capitol
delivered an address that occupied less than fifteen minutes. So opposed was he
to the Austin tatian and homage paid to greatness, that he abolished Presidential
levees, and kept the date of his birth secret in order that it might not be
celebrated. The American decimal system of coinage, is statute of religious
freedom in Virginia, the Declaration of Independence, the University of
Virginia, and the Presidency of the Union are the immutable foundations of his
fame. (1219/283-284)
Van Loon notes, Mr. Jefferson out of
office was against every form of official interference with the rights of the states
and the individual. Mr. Jefferson in office soon recognized that no government
can hope to survive unless it actually “governs.” (124/270)
“The Sedition Act was of course
repealed,” he writes. “The navy, in so far as it was reducible, was diminished
to something resembling zero.” Van Loon adds, “political improvement without a
corresponding amount of economic improvement is absolutely without value and is
not worth bothering about.” (124/272)
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