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[Quoted Post: Removed]
Well, for the audience, I will add some interesting details about what this sidebar is about.
Thomas Jefferson was married once. He married his wife (who was a distant cousin of Jefferson) when she was 18 years old. As part of her marriage dowry, his wife Martha, inherited slaves from her wealthy father. Included in those slaves was a woman Betty Hemmings who had several children. The children were fathered by Martha's father. This means that Betty's children were Martha's half-siblings. Oh... Betty Hemmings was mulatto- at least half-white, which means that Betty Hemmings' children were 3/4 white or "quadroons" in the terminology of the time.
So, Martha Jefferson owned her father's mulatto mistress and she owned her own half-brothers and half-sisters.
This is where modern understanding of these complexities doesn't work. It was very common for both black and white free people to own enslaved relatives. For example, a free black man who married an enslaved black woman might "buy" his wife from her owner. Mixed race children were at the mercy of the laws of the State; in some States, an owner might free his mixed-race children in their will but in other States where manumission was not legal, the children were passed to other relatives who became their owner.
Resuming the story... Martha had six children. She died in childbirth at age 33. Only two of her children lived to adulthood. She had exacted a promise from Thomas Jefferson that he should never remarry. Thomas Jefferson never remarried.
Thomas, at some point, undertook a relationship of some sort with his wife's half-sister, Sally Hemmings. Sally was one of the quadroon children of Betty Hemmings. Sally was probably in her early teens when her half-sister (Martha Jefferson) died. Sally went to Paris with Thomas Jefferson around the time that she was 15 or 16. Because slavery was not legal in France, Sally was a paid servant. In Paris, Jefferson and Hemmings began a sexual relationship. This relationship lasted years and produced 6 children.
When Jefferson returned to the US, Sally Hemmings agreed to return to Virginia where she would again be considered "a slave". According to her descendants, part of the arrangement was that Hemmings' children would be freemen when they turned age 21.
Now... how this bizarre complicated 18th century scenario relates at all to a rich, powerful man who, in the 20th century, drugged and sexually assaulted a whole lotta women who were not his wife... well, that I cannot provide an answer to.
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