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March 10, 2011

Thomas Jefferson’s Bible Is Sent to the Conservation Lab

The 191-year-old work, a scrapbook of Bible passages cut and pasted together by Thomas Jefferson, will receive a specialized conservation treatment.

A 191-year-old national treasure, one that has resided at the Smithsonian Institution since 1895, is now in the care of conservators and will undergo a specialized long-term preservation treatment. The stiff and torn pages of this document will be removed from their binding, stabilized, rebound and then the entire book will be stored in a custom-made protective enclosure. Additionally, each of the original pages will be carefully scanned to make high-resolution digital images of the document and a complete set of color photographs will be made, so that visitors and researchers will be able to access and read the precious document on-line later this year.

The artifact? It is an 86-page scrapbook of sorts, measuring 8 and 1/4-inch by 4 and 15/16-inch. Bound in red morocco leather and ornamented with gilt tooling, it is entitled The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth. The little volume is best known as “Thomas Jefferson’s Bible. ” But it is not a Bible like any other.

Sometime during the winter and fall months of 1819 and 1820, the 77-year-old Jefferson created the book himself at his Monticello home. Using a razor knife, he cut passages out of eight six copies of the New Testament—two Greek and Latin, two French and two English—and rearranged his select passages into a chronological order. Jefferson’s Bible begins with Luke 2: 1-7, the account of Joseph and Mary’s journey to Bethlehem, and ends with Mathew 27: 60, the story of the stone rolled across the door of the sepulchre, after the body of Jesus is laid to rest. The passages all relate to the moral teachings of Jesus. There are two old world maps pasted in the front behind the title page and Jefferson’s hand-written notes are scattered throughout.

But missing from the work are all mentions of miracles or life after death and the Old Testament.

“He’s trying to get to the essence of the teachings of Jesus Christ,” says curator Harry Rubenstein, chair of the museum’s division of political history. “He removes those things that could not be proven by reason and thought.”

Rubenstein says that the document, one of the most significant of the museum’s Jefferson artifacts, reveals much about the third president. “Looking at it,” he says of the book as well as two of the original source books that Jefferson used to make his Bible, “you can almost see the thought processes of this elderly gentleman, Jefferson, going on as he assembled the book. . . .What is amazing to me, is he decides to save the source books, possibly to add something later, or if he has other thoughts.”

Jefferson had earlier made another  version of his book and over many years corresponded with a number of close friends, including Benjamin Rush and John Adams, detailing his idea for creating the guide from “the very words only of Jesus.”

“I, too, have made a wee little book,” Jefferson wrote in 1816 of the earlier version, “from the same materials, which I call the Philosophy of Jesus; it is a paradigm of his doctrines, made by cutting the texts out of the book, and arranging them on the pages of a blank book, in a certain order of time or subject. A more beautiful or precious morsel of ethics I have never seen; it is a document in proof that I am a real Christian, this is to say, a disciple of the doctrines of Jesus.”

The book was never meant to be published. Jefferson shared his thoughts on the topic with only a select group of friends and his family did not know of the book’s existence until after the nation’s third president had died. A Smithsonian librarian Cyrus Adler (1863-1940), who had learned of the Bible from one of Jefferson’s biographers, purchased it from his great-granddaughter Carolina Randolph for $400 in 1895.

In the museum’s paper conservation lab, the Jefferson Bible, is now partially disassembled, a few of its pages are laid out on a table along with color photographs that document the book in its current condition. Two of the six source Bibles that Jefferson cut passages from are also on hand. Conservator Janice Stagnitto Ellis says that “time and age and oxygen and moisture have contributed to the pages of the book becoming less flexible, so that when it is opened, the pages crack and tear.” Conservators, she says, view the book as an assemblage of 12 different kinds of paper, six different types of printing ink, as well as the ink from the pen that Jefferson used to make notations in the margins. “The first thing we did was really look at it. that survey had 20,000 data points.” The analysis, she said, offered relatively good news. The Jefferson Bible was in a condition that Ellis described cautiously as “not bad.”

The treatment calls for the page leaves to be removed from the binding, treated and reassembled in the original binding, but sewn together in a way so that the pages can be turned without harm.

In 1902, Congress directed that 9,000 black and white lithographs of Thomas Jefferson’s bible be printed and distributed to new Congressional members as a gift when the lawmakers arrived in Washington, D.C. The act drew controversy when the Presbyterian Ministers’ Association of Philadelphia objected to the stripped down version of Jefferson’s Bible, saying that the book removed the deity of the doctrine of Jesus.

According to the museum’s press release, “Jefferson had no intention of publishing his work, rather intending it to be private reading material and not for a larger audience. He considered his and others’ religious beliefs a private matter that should not be subjected to public scrutiny or government regulation. He knew his beliefs could be viewed as unorthodox and would offend some religious authorities, and he knew that his views could be used against him by his political opponents.”

“The volume provides an exclusive insight to the religious and moral beliefs of the writer of the Declaration of Independence,” says Brent Glass, director of the museum, “as well as his position as an important thinker in the Age of Enlightenment.”

The newly conserved Jefferson Bible will once again go on view this November along with two of the source books Jefferson used, and an original copy of the 1904 printing in the museum’s Albert H. Small Documents Gallery. A lavish color reproduction offered by Smithsonian Books is due in bookstores later this fall. And the Smithsonian Channel is currently at work on an hour-long special on the Jefferson Bible.

Updates 3/10/ and 3/11/2011: This post was updated to include additional information and corrections from the curator and the conservator.



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7 Comments »

  1. Jo D. Malessa says:

    I have had a copy of Jefferson’s Bible for many years and have given it as gifts as I have viewed it as a simple and direct exposition of the teachings of Jesus Christ, not to be used instead of the Bible, but as a companion work and guide. I have a paperback published in 1976 by David McKay company, a copy from the Family Inspirational Library published by Grosset and Dunlap, and an edition published by Anerican Book Distributors with a forward by William Murchison copywrited 1996. I am very happy that the original is being properly preserved as much as that is possible.

  2. Paper Conservator Valeria Orlandini participated actively in the Thomas Jefferson Bible Project from August 2010 thorough February 2011.

    Because the bible is a complex object and the deterioration problems of the materials and specific need to use the object for display, consultation by scholars and reformatting the preservation of these materials should begin with an overall condition assessment. The preservation priority were addresed during an item-level survey that compared the relative value, use, and risk inherent across the bible matrix, as well as their effectiveness and possible side-effects of preservation measures and conservation treatment.

    A Risk Management Methodology borrowed from other international institutions leaders in the field for the care, access, display and storage of cultural heritage from Canada, Italy and The Netherlands was used to implement this survey/ database. Also, extensive iron gall ink’s reference materials and selected bibliography were compiled from the Netherlands Cultural Heritage Agency (RCE), Movable Heritage Knowledge Sector and former Instituut Collectie Nederland (ICN) and the “Ink Corrosion Website” from the Canadian Conservation Institute, the Library and Archives Canada, the Library of Congress Division’s Protocols for Iron Gall Ink Treatment Group (PIT); and the British Library.

  3. Cora Wilson says:

    I had obtained a copy of the Jefferson Bible last year from a flea market. It has a copyright date of 1940. The paper cover has minimal damage and the hard cover looks to be in perfect condition and there are no torn pages. I truly enjoyed reading this book, once I got past the old English. My question is: How should I store this book so that I can pass it down to my son?
    Thank you for any suggestions.

  4. Pat O'Connor says:

    How could I obtain a copy of the Bible?

  5. Richard N. Major says:

    As a retired Presbyterian minister and English teacher, I would be interested in seeing what the Thomas Jefferson Bible looks like.

    P.S. I just found a copy of “The Smithonian” in my retirement facility. It looks interesting. Would probably look at it in the library. (I have too many books in my one-bedroom apartment.)

  6. Robert C. Sollars says:

    I have a copy of the 1904 printing of Thomas Jefferson book “Morals of Jesus” by the Washington Government Printing Office. It is in 2012 109 years old. I would like to know if it holds any value. Can you answer that question or refer me to someone who can?
    Thank you,
    Robert C. Sollars

  7. I saw a Jefferson Bible about 20 years ago that had cut-out pieces of Bible passages in different languages pasted onto the pages. Was the 1904 version printed, or did they actually paste the passages in? I don’t remember a hand-written title page, but it said it was by Thomas Jefferson.

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