[133] Ford edition of Jefferson's Writings, VII, p. 310.
[134] Ibid., X, p. 200.
[135] Ibid., X, p. 292.
[136] Ibid., X, p. 293.
[137] In 1817 Jefferson had written Thomas Humphreys:
I have not perceived the growth of this disposition (to emancipate the slaves and settle them elsewhere) in the rising generation, of which I once had sanguine hopes. No symptoms inform me that it will take place in my day. I leave it, therefore, to time, and not at all without hope that the day will come, equally desirable and welcome to us as to them. Perhaps the proposition now on the carpet at Washington to provide an establishment on the coast of Africa for voluntary emigrations of people of color may be the corner stone of this future edifice.—Ford edition of Jefferson's Writings, X, p. 77.
[138] Ford edition of Jefferson's Writings, X, p. 344.
[139] Ibid., X, p. 385.