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"Sally Hemings destroys the myth that she was a victim of Thomas Jefferson's lust and describes in detail their 38-year affair that survived family wars, scandal, and bankruptcy."

This is the premise of the historical fiction Sally of Monticello by Jefferson historian N.M. Ledgin. This is the first novel of its kind to portray Sally as intelligent, feisty, and influential over founding father Jefferson. The book threads its way through their long and strong love affair, demonstrating it was nothing less than that.

In Sally of Monticello, Hemings is a self-assured young woman who grows into maturity as she becomes assertive and pivotal in the life and legacy of our third president. Author N.M. Ledgin has taken the cue for this work directly from Jefferson's own copious notes he made throughout his lifetime.

This candid depiction of Sally, half-sister to Thomas’s late wife, elevates her from others’ portrayals as a passive and brooding victim to a self-educated, lively, and often assertive person. She bore eight children by Jefferson, four of whom survived and went free. She was a helpmate who became Monticello housemistress and was often in conflict with his daughter (and her niece) Martha Randolph.

Critical to note is that when their affair began in Paris, Sally was a free woman, for France did not acknowledge slavery. Pregnant with their first child from a romance consummated between exceptional equals, Sally chose Thomas over freedom and returned willingly to enslavement in Virginia, where their intimate relationship would continue until his death.

The author contends Jefferson would not have spent 38 years faithfully—in a relationship he defended uncompromisingly and quietly—with a woman of any less character and commitment.

Click here for more about Sally of Monticello.

About Norm

Author Norm Ledgin says he takes “greatest moral pride” in peace and civil rights activism, regardless of blacklisting consequences he endured early in his professional career. He is listed in a U.S. House of Representatives Report, 82nd Congress, First Session, which condemned a “Peace Offensive” by a few hundred “distinguished patriots with whom I’m proud to be forever listed as opposing manufacture, storage, and use of nuclear weapons, either by the U.S. or U.S.S.R.” Had Congress instead heeded such cautioning, “we might not be keeping a ‘doomsday clock’,” he adds.

Ledgin is remembered at his alma mater Rutgers University for an “officially unpopular move”—his joining of Omega Psi Phi, a predominantly African-American social fraternity. “I joined in hopes of ending the university-sponsored racial and religious profiling for fraternity recruitment that I’d attacked in The Targum,” the campus newspaper he later served as editor-in-chief. “It worked,” he notes, “and Rutgers also eventually restored Paul Robeson to his rightful recognition as its most distinguished alumnus.”

Born in Passaic, New Jersey, he attended schools there and in Clifton, where he edited The Clifton High-Way, the high school’s first newspaper. He received a bachelor of letters degree in journalism as well as a master of arts in political science at Rutgers, where he was also tapped for Cap and Skull, an elite honor society. After he served minor daily and weekly newspapers in North Jersey (and was blacklisted from job access to others), he accepted a teaching post at McNeese State College, Lake Charles, LA. He became manager of the Calcasieu Safety Council, a branch of the National Safety Council, and led accident prevention efforts in Southwest Louisiana where the Junior Chamber of Commerce acclaimed him “outstanding young man of the year” shortly before Ledgin accepted a similar post in Kansas City, MO. There he won the National Safety Council Trustees’ award—the Flame of Life—his first year as manager. He founded Kansas City’s Municipal Court Driver Improvement School, received numerous other national awards, became the nation’s first Certified Safety Council Executive, and chaired the national Defensive Driving Program.

He resigned to return to newspaper work as editor-publisher of the Arthur (IL) Graphic-Clarion and was later editor-publisher of The Blue Valley Gazette, Stanley, KS.

Future Horizons, Inc., Arlington, TX, published Ledgin’s first book, Diagnosing Jefferson, in 2000 and his second, Asperger’s and Self-Esteem, in 2002. The latter has been translated and republished in Paris under the title, Ces autistes qui changent le monde. He has spoken on autism topics throughout the United States, often appearing on programs with Dr. Temple Grandin, autistic animal scientist and author, and Dr. Tony Attwood, one of the world’s foremost authorities on Asperger’s Syndrome. In 2006 Ledgin turned to fiction, reworking and publishing his previously serialized account of the 1850s Kansas-Missouri Border War, The Jayhawker. In 2009 he collaborated with Bethine Louise of Lee’s Summit, MO, on a mystery, Sour Notes, the first of an expected series featuring middle-aged piano teacher Sally Freberg, who solves crimes through her knowledge of opera.

Sally of Monticello is Ledgin's latest work, an historical fiction novel that revolves around the long love affair between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings. Jefferson's extensive notes that he kept throughout his lifetime serve as the basis for this candid new portrayal.

Ledgin has served on the boards of the National Safety Council, the Missouri Congress of Parents and Teachers, the Kansas City Youth Symphony (chairman and European tour leader), the Kansas Learning Disabilities Association, the Barstow School, Oxford Park Academy, and the Heritage Trust Fund Grant Review Board of Johnson County, KS. At one time chairman of the Johnson County Democratic Central Committee, he also served in the elected post of clerk of historic Oxford Township, KS.

Ledgin is married to the former Marsha Montague of Wichita, with whom he partnered in weekly newspaper publishing and who illustrated his second book. They have two sons, Alfred, a graduate student in Regional and Community Planning at Kansas State University, and Nicholas, working in home remodeling in Kansas City, KS. By a previous marriage Ledgin has three children, Stephanie P. Ledgin of Alexandria Township, NJ, who is also a published author; David H. Ledgin of Long Beach, NY, a trial attorney in Mineola; and Allison Dey, a teacher living in Sydney, Australia. He has five grandchildren.