by Dick Hall-Sizemore

We hear a lot on this blog regarding the current state of the University of Virginia.ย The Jefferson Council wants to lead it โback to Thomas Jeffersonโs legacy of freedom and excellence.โ If one examines the actual early years of UVa under the direction of the Sage of Monticello, an interesting contrast arises.
Letโs examine the faculty.ย One of Jim Baconโs most frequent criticisms is how the current UVa president, Jim Ryan, has assembled a faculty of doctrinaire liberals.ย He longs for the good old days of free inquiry.
Mr. Jefferson was very particular about whom he hired as faculty at UVa. and was careful not to hire anyone who might espouse a heretical position.ย As described by Dumas Malone, the esteemed Jefferson biographer (The Sage of Monticello, pp. 397-418), those faculty members not selected by Jefferson or James Madison, his close collaborator, were selected by Jeffersonโs agent sent to Europe to find professors.ย
The most difficult position to fill was the professorship of law.ย Jeffersonโs first choice turned it down, perhaps preferring a promising law practice to a teaching position at a still non-existent university.ย Another possibility could have been James Kent, a distinguished New York jurist, but Jefferson would not even consider him due to Kentโs โconsolidationistโ views.ย โAn angel from heaven who should inculcate such principles in our school of government should be rejected by me,โ he wrote to his talent scout.ย To Madison, he expressed a fear that โRichmond lawyersโ or โsomeone infected with the doctrine of consolidationโ might be proposed.ย To guard against such an eventuality, he saw it as his duty to prescribe the textbooks in government that were to be used. (Malone, p. 417)
(more…)














