Up Next: "Museum... In the Entrance of the House"
Jefferson filled Monticello's Entrance Hall with such a variety of natural, historic, and artistic pieces that several guests described the room as a "museum" in their letters.
After inspecting the shops on Mulberry Row, Jefferson might have toured his gardens and farms.
The vegetable and fruit gardens lay just south of Mulberry Row and were surrounded by a ten-foot high wooden (or "paling") fence. Designed to keep deer and other foragers out, the boards were placed "so near as not to let even a young hare in." On at least one occasion, however, the fence failed -- rivals of Jefferson's grandson broke in and, in the words of the plantation overseer, "did a great deal of damage" while pelting each other with unripe apples and peaches. Today, a small segment of the fence has been recreated.
The 1000-foot-long vegetable garden was carved into the protected south side of Monticello Mountain. The terraced beds were supported by a massive stone wall, so that one visitor described it as a "hanging garden." The methodical Jefferson divided the garden into twenty-four "squares," or growing plots, arranged according to which part of the plant was harvested -- whether "fruits" (tomatoes, beans), "roots" (beets, carrots), or "leaves" (lettuce, cabbage).
Jefferson also ordered the landscape to create a "ferme ornée," or ornamental farm, combining function and beauty. For instance, he discussed planting an arbor of different shades of the scarlet runner bean; arranged adjacent rows of purple, white, and green sprouting broccoli; and planted cherry trees along the "long, grass walk" of the garden to provide blossoms and shade. In addition to the plantings, Jefferson also designed a pavilion to overlook the gardens and the majestic view from the mountaintop, and constructed a series of four circuitous roads, or Roundabouts, that provided access to his fields and offered scenic carriage rides.
Tended by elderly enslaved individuals (that he dubbed the "veteran aids") under Jefferson's supervision, the garden served as both a source of food for Jefferson's family and a kind of laboratory where Jefferson experimented with 330 varieties of more than seventy species of vegetables from around the world. Plants in the garden included squash and broccoli imported from Italy; beans and salsify collected by the Lewis and Clark expedition, figs from France, and peppers from Mexico. Jefferson documented his successes and failures in his Garden Book, noting, for instance the dates when seeds were planted, when leaves appeared, and when their fruits came "to table." He applied his analytical mindset to gardening, writing that "I am curious to select one or two of the best species or variety of every garden vegetable, and to reject all others."
Jefferson applied this same philosophy to the orchards and vineyard, which lay further down the south slope of the mountain. In addition to growing hardier apples, peaches, and cherries, Jefferson experimented with harder-to-grow pears, plums, almonds, and apricots, at which he succeeded only rarely. Jefferson also planted "berry squares" for currants, gooseberries, and raspberries, and beds for strawberries and figs. He noted his favorites of each fruit, declaring, for instance, that the Carnation cherry was "so superior to all others that no other deserves the name of cherry."
Similarly, Jefferson experimented with a variety of old and new world grape vines. Jefferson believed that his native land had the "soil, aspect, and climate of the best wine countries" and that "We could, in the United States, make as great a variety of wines as are made in Europe, not exactly of the same kinds, but doubtless as good." Though he aspired to make a Monticello-grown wine, his continual replanting of the vineyards suggests a losing struggle with grape cultivation. Many of his imported vines were probably dead on arrival, others were not planted properly, and some European vines were virtually impossible to grow in America before the development of modern pesticides. Nonetheless, Jefferson searched for native vines as an alternative, supported others' efforts, and amassed an impressive collection of wines from around the world.
Following his inspection of the vegetable and fruit gardens, Jefferson would mount a horse and visit his three outlying quarters farms (Lego, Shadwell, and Tufton), which covered approximately 5,000 acres. In the fields, he might check on the cutting of clover, the clearing of land for the fall grain planting, and the threshing of the June wheat crop. Jefferson was "attached to horticulture by inclination" and believed that "those who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God." He applied his love of good design to agriculture by innovating a portable version of the Scottish threshing machine. In addition, he received an award from the French Society of Agriculture for his invention of a plow moldboard that was, he claimed, "mathematically demonstrated to be perfect."
Of his daily inspections, Jefferson wrote: "From breakfast, or noon at the latest, to dinner, I am mostly on horseback, Attending to My Farm or other concerns, which I find healthful to my body, mind, and affairs." Towards the end of his life, Jefferson noted that though he was "too feeble, indeed, to walk much," he rode "without fatigue six or eight miles a day, and sometimes thirty or forty."
Jefferson filled Monticello's Entrance Hall with such a variety of natural, historic, and artistic pieces that several guests described the room as a "museum" in their letters.
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