The Founding Fathers too often appear to us
across the sea of time as rigid, stern, and
unemotional men, prone to piety in thought
and deed.
They gaze at us from cold marble statues and
aging portraits, upright and correct in manners
and morals.
Time and legend has dehumanized them.
In fact they were, for the most part, passionate
men of fiery temper, as befits a rebel against
legitimate and long-standing authority.
Their passions were not limited to venting
their anger against King George, and taxes,
or debating the issue of slavery in a new
and novel form of government.
For many, their barely contained passions
led to extramarital affairs, illegitimate
children, scandals whispered about in the
nation’s parlors and paraded in the nation’s
newspapers.
For some they led to appointments on the so-called
field of honor, facing an offended or offending
party with pistols in a gray dawn.
Sex was influential in the formation of government,
evidenced by the many letters written by Abigail
Adams to her husband John, as well as to many
of his colleagues.
And for some of the Founders, the pursuit
of sexual pleasure led to their being objects
of derision among their peers.
Here are 10 examples of the sex lives of America’s
Founders, some of which have remained the
subject of scandal through the centuries.
10.
Thomas Jefferson and Maria Cosway
Thomas Jefferson was in his early forties
and a recent widower when he was introduced
to Maria Cosway, 27, at the Hay Market in
Paris in 1786.
On her deathbed Jefferson’s wife had extracted
from her husband a promise to never remarry,
but the diplomat and polymath was instantly
smitten with Maria, cancelling his dinner
plans for that day and spending the rest of
it with her.
Their mutual interests in architecture and
art led them to tour the sights of Paris and
its suburbs in constant company over the course
of the next several weeks, until Maria’s
husband, a painter of miniatures named Richard
Cosway, insisted that his wife return with
him to London.
Jefferson remained for a time in Paris.
Whether their relationship was sexual or platonic
has been debated ever since.
Jefferson however wrote among many letters
to Maria after her departure one he entitled
The Dialogue of the Head vs. The Heart.
The 4,000 word letter is a discussion between
the two organs, one arguing for a continued
relationship and the other pointing out its
impracticalities.
The letter remains one of the most passionate
love letters ever written.
Both Jefferson and Cosway kept portraits of
each other for the rest of their lives, and
though their correspondence was temporarily
halted, it soon resumed and continued until
his death in 1826.
Ironically, the portrait of Maria Jefferson
kept at Monticello was based on a drawing
of her which had been completed by her husband.
9.
Benjamin Franklin’s advice to a young man
Benjamin Franklin developed over the course
of his long life the reputation of being what
later came to be called a ladies man.
He did nothing to discourage the belief.
As Poor Richard, writing in his almanac, he
gave often pithy advice in his aphorisms,
such as, “She that paints her face thinks
of her tail,” and, “Neither a fortress
nor a maidenhead will hold out long after
they begin to parley.”
Franklin was part of a common-law marriage
to which he brought a son born out of a previous
relationship, for most of his life.
In his long absences from his home in Philadelphia
he was constantly in attendance of women,
especially in pre-revolutionary France where
he was the talk of Paris, swarmed by the ladies
of the French nobility, though he was by then
a septuagenarian.
Long before then, in 1745, Franklin wrote
a letter to a young man, the son of a friend.
The subject was the proper manner of handling
sexual urges.
Franklin first counseled marriage, but after
acknowledging that such state may be impractical,
wrote of the desirability of taking an older
woman as a mistress.
He listed his reasons frankly, and they included,
“…regarding only what is below the girdle,
it is impossible of two women to know an old
from a young one,” particularly in the dark.
Franklin also cited the experience of an older
woman favorably when compared to a younger,
and gave as his final reason the fact that
they were “so grateful.”
The letter was censored in the United States
during the 19th and early 20th centuries before
obscenity laws preventing its publication
were overturned.
8.
Alexander Hamilton’s affairs were numerous
and scandalous at the time
In 1791 Secretary of the Treasury Alexander
Hamilton was visited at his Philadelphia residence
by a 23-year-old woman who claimed that her
abusive husband had abandoned her, leaving
her penniless.
He called on her at her residence that evening,
bringing both money and amorous inclinations,
and opening an affair which lasted throughout
that summer.
In the autumn her husband returned, and immediately
took the opportunity to blackmail Hamilton,
under threat of writing to the married Hamilton’s
wife.
The husband and wife, James and Maria Reynolds,
extracted large sums from Hamilton in order
to keep the affair secret.
Unbelievably, and with James Reynolds’ knowledge,
the affair continued even as Hamilton paid
for silence.
It was also documented with letters written
by Maria to Hamilton.
After Reynolds was arrested as a result of
his participation in an unrelated scam, he
appealed to Hamilton for assistance, threatening
to implicate the Secretary in both the scam
and the affair publicly.
Hamilton sought the assistance of James Monroe,
who determined Hamilton to be innocent of
the former, but guilty of the latter.
After the press got wind of both stories,
Hamilton publicly confessed to the affair
and apologized in a pamphlet he published,
refuting any wrongdoing other than cheating
on his wife.
His reputation and political standing were
all but destroyed.
In another example of historical irony, Maria
Reynolds eventually sued her husband for divorce.
The attorney who represented her in the proceedings
was Aaron Burr.
7.
Gouverneur Morris enjoyed a potentially exhibitionist
affair on France
The person who wrote one of the most famous
phrases of all time, “We the People of the
United States,” was Gouverneur Morris.
Nearly forgotten today, Morris was renowned
among his fellows for his sexual proclivities.
A bachelor until the age of 57, Morris was
involved in affairs with married women in
the United States and France, and he had little
inclination to practice discretion.
In Paris he was known to have enjoyed sexual
trysts in the Louvre, then a palace for the
King of France.
One such meeting occurred in a public room
in the palace, with the doors and windows
open to servants and visitors, while the lady’s
husband was in the room directly below them.
Morris gleefully recorded the event in his
diary, as he did many of his trysts.
When Morris finally did marry, in 1809, it
was to his housekeeper, 22 years younger than
he, and with the baggage of having once been
tried for adultery and murder.
In 1792 she had been accused of adultery with
her brother in law, a union which resulted
in her pregnancy.
After the infant died, she was accused of
murdering it, though she convinced the court
the child was stillborn.
By the time he married, Morris had only one
leg, having lost the other when he was hit
by a carriage.
Morris had been fleeing from an irate husband
who had just discovered the Founding Father
sleeping with his wife.
Morris continued to seduce women throughout
his life, leading John Jay to comment to him
that he wished Morris had lost something else.
6.
George Washington was subject to accusations
of affairs throughout his life
In his youth, George Washington was referred
to in the Virginia Tidewater as the “young
stallion of the Potomac.”
Washington throughout his life enjoyed the
company of young ladies, with whom he often
lost much of his famous reserve.
One of his favorite activities was dancing,
and he found many partners all too happy to
dance with him.
It was said of him that he never sat out a
dance.
During his later youth, before he became famous
throughout the United States and Europe, Washington
was passionately in love with the wife of
neighbor and friend George William Fairfax.
The Fairfax’s estate was at Belvoir, near
Mount Vernon, and Washington visited Lady
Fairfax, whom he addressed as Sally, as well
as corresponded with her in letters which
professed his love for her.
During the Revolutionary War several attempts
were made by Loyalists and British intelligence
to discredit Washington by writing of his
affairs with servants, slaves, the wives of
his officers, and the existence of illegitimate
children as a result.
During his administration as President, especially
in the second term, many of these stories
were resurrected by political enemies, and
some are still bandied about by revisionists
today.
Washington had no children of his own with
his wife Martha, though he adopted hers from
her previous marriage (Martha was a widow
when she wed George).
Other than a few letters to Sally Custis,
which survived, Washington’s papers do not
contain references to his sex life, either
as a bachelor or married, though his fondness
for the company of young ladies was well documented
by his contemporaries of both sexes.
5.
John Adams despised licentiousness and had
six children with his wife Abigail
John Adams was very much the image of the
prim and proper New Englander, descended from
the Puritan stock of Massachusetts.
A lawyer and farmer, Adams married Abigail
Smith in 1754, entering into a marriage in
which his mother in law treated him with thinly
veiled contempt.
Mrs. Smith opposed Abigail’s entering into
any marriage, and virulently opposed her choice
of a Boston lawyer, then unencumbered with
any property.
Adams did not inherit his small farm until
seven years later.
Both husband and wife maintained a lengthy
correspondence with each other during John’s
many long absences, and it is through their
correspondence that the impressions and actions
of many of the Founders is known to history.
While Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson,
and Gouvernor Morris reveled in the licentiousness
of Paris of the late 18th and early 19th century,
Adams found it shocking and distasteful, as
did the often barbed tongued Abigail.
Together they had six children, one stillborn
and one who died in infancy, His three sons
followed their father in the practice of law.
Two failed in their careers and died alcoholics.
The other, John Quincy, became president of
the United States.
Most of the correspondence between John and
Abigail survives, and it reveals a marriage
of mutual respect, adoration, and frank criticism,
as well as the trials their marriage was forced
to endure.
Their marriage lasted 54 years, until Abigail’s
death in 1818.
John Adams died on the Fourth of July, eight
years after the death of his wife, on the
same day as Thomas Jefferson.
4.
James and Dolley Madison were the talk of
Washington after their marriage
James Madison was considered by his contemporaries
to be a reserved, even dour man.
Studious and less than enthralled with public
speaking, his genius was exhibited through
his writing and his private conversations.
Madison was introduced to socialite (though
the term was not yet known that was what she
was) and widow Dolley Payne Todd by the seemingly
ubiquitous Aaron Burr while the US capital
was still located in Philadelphia.
They married in that city in 1794.
Dolley was a leader of society in Philadelphia
and later in the new capital city of Washington,
serving as hostess at White House dinners,
levees, and other events, and while Washington
tongues wagged at the picture of the slightly
built, withdrawn Madison, 17 years older than
his buxom and popular wife, their marriage
was a solid union.
It was reinforced by breaks from the city
and politics at Madison’s Virginia estate,
which he called Montpelier.
Visitors to the plantation were astounded
to see the President carried about the grounds
piggyback by his wife, a practice which continued
into his retirement.
Madison and Dolley often engaged in piggyback
races with guests and the multitude of children
which visited his plantation.
Though James Madison married relatively late
in life – he was in his early forties; she
was 26 – their marriage was a long and happy
one.
Madison fathered no children of his own, but
he did adopt Dolley’s from her first marriage.
Dolley became an important political ally
of the President, using her influence with
Washington ladies to sway the opinions of
their husbands, and more or less established
the position of First Lady of the United States
as a source of Washington power.
3.
The Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings debate
Since he was still alive the relationship
between Thomas Jefferson and his slave Sally
Hemings has continued to be debated by historians
and scholars.
At its core is whether Jefferson fathered
some of her six children, making Hemings a
slave concubine.
By the late 20th century DNA evidence indicated
that Jefferson was likely the father of at
least one of the Hemings children, her youngest
son, Eston.
In the early 21st century the curators of
Jefferson’s Monticello estate began changing
references to the relationship between Jefferson
and Hemings, indicating that he was indeed
the father of several children with her.
The debate continues, with the argument often
presented that the available evidence is inconclusive.
What is certain is that Sally Hemings traveled
to Paris in company with Jefferson’s daughter
Maria.
According to Jefferson’s letters Sally was
called to Paris to gain instruction in French
cooking, and upon her return to Monticello
lived in the main house, rather than slave
quarters.
During Jefferson’s subsequent lifetime it
was frequently rumored that he had fathered
children by his slave.
The emotional nature of their relationship
is unknown, Jefferson never discussed it other
than to deny its existence.
Most of what is supposed of the relationship
is the result of oral traditions handed down
by Hemings’ descendants.
One particularly interesting aspect of the
relationship is that Hemings had six pregnancies,
and tracing back nine months from the date
of birth for each, recorded by Jefferson in
his Farm Books, indicates that he was at Monticello
at the time of conception for each.
2.
Wilhelm (Baron) von Steuben was among the
first to practice “don’t ask, don’t
tell” in the American Army
One of the duties assumed by Benjamin Franklin
in France during the Revolutionary War was
the recruitment of European officers to support
the American cause.
Franklin, as was his wont, often used local
scandals and the indiscretions committed by
officers to lure them to American service,
as a form of honorable exile.
One such officer was Wilhelm von Steuben,
formerly of Prussian service, but at the time
of meeting Franklin, awaiting prosecution
on charges of homosexual acts with several
young officers to which he was senior in rank.
Franklin wrote a letter of introduction for
the Prussian, addressed to George Washington,
in which he cheerfully embellished von Steuben’s
military credentials, ignored the pending
accusations, and sent him on his way to America.
Von Steuben arrived in America in the company
of several young aides, including Pierre Etienne
du Ponceau, his paramour and aide.
Whether Franklin notified Washington of the
Baron’s sexual orientation in advance is
debated, but Washington was soon aware of
the fact and pointedly ignored it as the Baron
helped to create a new army out of the American
units.
Following the Revolution von Steuben chose
to remain in America, living with a succession
of young men, in addition to Ponceau, which
he referred to as his “sons.”
He never married and never had children.
His heirs, Benjamin Walker and William North,
had both been young officers who were his
aides as far back as the winter at Valley
Forge.
To them he bequeathed his New York estate
upon his death in 1794.
1.
John Randolph of Roanoke was asexual
John Randolph was an influential congressman
in the early days of the United States, serving
in both the House of Representatives and the
Senate, as well as serving as the United States
Minister to Russia for a time.
Randolph was a slave owner who supported the
establishment of a colony in Africa for freedmen
and former slaves; he violently opposed the
expansion of the federal government; he similarly
opposed the Missouri Compromise, which added
Missouri to the Union as a slave state.
He dressed flamboyantly, strutted about Washington
and the House floor with his dogs trailing
him, and fought a duel with Henry Clay.
He also twice fought fellow congressman Willis
Alston with fists, once in the Capitol building,
where the combatants were separated by fellow
legislators.
Randolph retained the voice of a young boy
all of his life, never developed facial hair,
and took no interest in either sex, though
it was said by contemporaries he had a crush
on Andrew Jackson.
He did demonstrate interest in alcohol and
opium.
Randolph carried latent tuberculosis for most
of his life, and the pain of his condition
was likely the reason for the opium, at least
at first.
The disease ensured that he never entered
puberty, the reason for his youthful voice
and appearance, and his lack of interest in
sexual matters.
He once responded to criticism of his impotence
as an evident lack of manhood by saying, “Why
should a man take pride in a quality in which
a jackass is his infinite superior?”
Randolph died at the age of 60, finally succumbing
to the ravages of tuberculosis, opium, and
alcohol.
