Saving Monticello: The Newsletter
The latest about the book, author events, and more
Newsletter Editor - Marc Leepson
Volume XVIII, Number 12 December 1, 2021
“The study of the past is a constantly evolving,
never-ending journey of discovery.” – Eric Foner
To say this is welcome and exciting news is the understatement of the
millennium. Since Saving Monticello
was published in November 2001, many people have told me that the story would
make a great documentary—and I certainly agreed. Over the years, in fact, I
have been approached by documentarians who’ve expressed interest in turning the
book into a film. Emails were exchanged. Meetings were held. Nothing came of
them.
It looked as though a doc was going to happen in 2004 as a partnership between a small Northern Virginia documentary film company and WHRO, the public TV station in Norfolk, Virginia. Funds were raised; I helped write a treatment; and a video promo was produced. Then WHRO backed out and the project died.
Steve had finished Holy Silence, and told me he was seriously considering making a film telling the Levy family’s Monticello story. I readily and wholeheartedly agreed. Then the stars aligned and he went to work. Steve did all the heavy lifting, lining up talking heads, searching for images, writing the script, and a hundred other things, including conducting a long on-camera interview with me.
I helped him find other folks to interview and provided an introduction to Susan Stein, Monticello’s curator whom I’ve known since I started researching Saving Monticello in 1997. Susan kindly met with Steve to share her extensive knowledge about the Levys and Monticello and also did an extensive interview for the film.
Steve has just begun working with a film distribution company, Menemsha Films, and has created a terrific trailer for the documentary. You can see it online at https://bit.ly/SMDocTrailer
I have watched it—about
sixteen times.
Stay tuned for more news on The Levys of
Monticello soon.
THE STATUE MOVES: Last month I reported on the New York City Council’s
decision to remove a larger-than-life statue of Thomas Jefferson from the
Council chambers in Manhattan mainly because Thomas Jefferson enslaved more
than 600 people during his lifetime. As the Council’s Black, Latino and
Asian Caucus put it: the statute was a “constant reminder of the injustices
that have plagued communities of color since the inception of our
country.”
The statue was donated to the city in 1833 by then
U.S. Navy Lt. Uriah Levy, a NYC resident who had commissioned it from the noted
French sculptor Pierre-Jean David d’Angers in Paris. I tell the story in detail
in Saving Monticello.
After that vote in October, the Council announced that
it was negotiating the details about loaning the statue to The New-York
Historical Society. The details, for a 10-year loan, were announced November 15.
A week later, the statue was removed from its pedestal, boxed up, and shipped
to the Historical Society. It will soon be on public exhibit in its lobby
gallery for six months, and then move to the Society’s museum reading room,
which also is accessible to the public.
The statue, the Historical Society said in a press release, “will be given appropriate historical context, including details of Thomas Jefferson’s complicated legacy—his contributions as a founder and draftsman of the Declaration of Independence and the contradiction between his vision of human equality and his ownership of enslaved people—and the statue’s original purpose as a tribute to Jefferson’s staunch defense of freedom of religion and separation of church and state.”
The Historical Society’s president and CEO, Louise
Mirrer told The New York Times that
the statue will be part of an upcoming exhibition focusing on “the principal
contradiction of our founding ideals.” From “the start,” she said, “we have
seen the opportunity to display the statue as consistent with the ways in which
we look at our institution. Jefferson [is] one of those figures that really
draws attention to the distance between our founding ideals and the reality of
our nation.”
THE JEWISH AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
Dr. Jonathan Sarna is one of the world’s
foremost scholars of American Jewish history, religion, and life. A professor
of American Jewish History at Brandeis University, he also directs the Schusterman Center for Israel Studies, and—among other
things—is a past president of the Association for Jewish Studies and the Chief
Historian of the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia.
His latest book, Coming to
Terms with America: Essays on Jewish History, Religion, and Culture (Jewish Publication Society, 430 pp., $45, hardcover;
$39.75, Kindle), is an annotated collection of 15 fascinating and illuminating
essays Dr. Sarna has written in the last four decades. A longtime subscriber to
this newsletter, I have turned to him more than a few times for guidance about
Jewish American history.
I was particularly fascinated by the chapter in his new book titled “Subversive Jews and Early American Culture.” It in, Dr. Sarna examines Jewish Americans who were “creators and shapers of the nascent national culture” during the Early Republic. He looks at Jewish Americans—who made up fewer than one-tenth of a percent of the U.S. population—who “cast themselves as critics, subversives, and dissenters.”
That group includes the “journalist-politician-playwright” Mordecai Noah, and his second cousin, Uriah Philips Levy. Dr. Sarna makes a good case that Levy was a “subversive,” primarily because of the way he fought back against the vicious anti-Semitism he repeatedly faced during his fifty-year Navy career. “Many in the Navy considered him a subversive threat to tradition and order,” Dr. Sarna writes.
EVENTS: I
have two this month, both on Wednesday,
December 8. At noon, I’ll be doing at talk on Desperate Engagement, my history of the Civil War Battle of
Monocacy and the subsequent attack on Washington, D.C., for the Fairfax City
(Virginia) Military History Group. In the evening it’s a discussion with a local
history book group on the life of the Marquis de Lafayette, the subject of my
2011 book, Lafayette: Idealist General.
If you’d like to arrange an event for Saving Monticello—or for any of my other books, please email me at marcleepson@gmail.com
For details
on other upcoming events, check out the Events page on my website: https://bit.ly/NewAppearances
GIFT IDEAS: Want a personally autographed, brand-new paperback copy of Saving Monticello? Please e-mail me at marcleepson@gmail.com I also have a few as-new, unopened hardcover
copies, along with a good selection of brand-new copies of my other books: Flag: An American Biography; Desperate
Engagement; What So Proudly We Hailed; Flag:
An American Biography; and Ballad of
the Green Beret: The Life and Wars of Staff Sgt. Barry Sadler.