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While Harriet and Beverly disappeared into history, more is known about the lives of their brothers Madison and Eston Hemings, who married in Charlottesville and began their families there. They both moved to Chillicothe in the free state of Ohio after their mother died in 1835.
- Being daughter of Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson
- May 1801, Monticello, Albemarle County, Virginia, US
- Textile Worker
Relatives. Beverly Hemings (brother), Harriet Hemings (sister), Madison Hemings (brother) Eston Hemings Jefferson (May 21, 1808 – January 3, 1856) was born into slavery at Monticello, the youngest son of Sally Hemings, a mixed-race enslaved woman. Most historians who have considered the question believe that his father was Thomas Jefferson ...
- Eston Hemings, May 21, 1808, Monticello, Virginia, U.S.
- January 3, 1856 (aged 47), Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.
- 3, including John Wayles Jefferson
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The two oldest surviving children of Sally Hemings, Beverly Hemings (a male) and Harriet Hemings, were both allowed to leave Monticello without pursuit and were described as “run away” in Jefferson’s inventory of enslaved families.
Mar 13, 2019 · Harriet Hemings (1801-unknown) was the only surviving daughter of Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. She grew up with her three brothers and a large extended family at Monticello. Like her mother, Hemings was enslaved by her father, and she worked in the textile workshop as a wool spinner.
Decades after their negotiation, Jefferson freed all of Sally Hemings’s children – Beverly and Harriet left Monticello in the early 1820s; Madison and Eston were freed in his will and left Monticello in 1826.
When Eston Hemings was born on 21 May 1808, in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, United States, his father, President Thomas Jefferson, was 65 and his mother, Sally Hemings, was 34. He married Julia Ann Isaacs about 1832, in Charlottesville, Albemarle, Virginia, United States.
Science attempted to answer the question in 1998, when a DNA test revealed that descendants of Hemings’ youngest child, Eston, shared the same rare Y-chromosome markers as descendants of Jefferson’s paternal uncle, Field Jefferson.