Communiqué

“Liberty: The Age of Experiments & The Pursuit of Happiness” on the finale of THOMAS JEFFERSON – A Ken Burns film – Feb. 7 at 9pm


Posted on:

< < Back to

Thomas Jefferson – A Ken Burns Film

Part Two: “Liberty: The Age of Experiments/The Pursuit of Happiness”

Friday, February 7 at 9:00 pm

 

Black and white photograph close-up of Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, from the 1791 oil on canvas portrait of Jefferson by Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827). Source: Independence National Historical Park Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Black and white photograph close-up of Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, from the 1791 oil on canvas portrait of Jefferson by Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827). Source: Independence National Historical Park Collection, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

In part two: Jefferson was responsible for the Louisiana Purchase and commissioning Lewis and Clark’s expedition. Explore his battles with the Federalists, his controversial relationship with slave Sally Hemings and the personal tragedies in his later years.

 

Thomas Jefferson is a two-part portrait of one of the most fascinating and complicated figures ever to walk across America’s public stage – our enigmatic and brilliant third president. Thomas Jefferson embodies within his own life the most profound contradictions of American history: as the author of our most sacred document, the Declaration of Independence, he gave voice to our fervent desire for freedom, but he also owned more than 150 human beings and never saw fit to free them.

Jefferson also made himself into a true renaissance man – a scholar, a philosopher, a diplomat, an aesthete, and an architect. As a young man, he was transformed by the fire of the Enlightenment into America’s most articulate voice for human liberty. Torn between his desire for a serene family life at Monticello and his passion for politics, Jefferson endured ceaseless, heartrending personal loss. As President, he helped create the first American political party, and with the Louisiana Purchase, more than doubled the size of the new nation. Jefferson’s last years were spent founding the University of Virginia and reestablishing his friendship, after decades of estrangement, from his onetime rival John Adams. His influence on and vision for our country reverberates to this day.