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    Martha Wayles Skelton[1]

    Female 1748 - 1782  (33 years)


    Personal Information    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

    • Name Martha Wayles Skelton 
      Born 19 Oct 1748  The Forest Plantation, Charles City, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location 
      Gender Female 
      Died 06 Sep 1782  Monticello, Albermarle, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location 
      Notes 
      • MARTHA WAYLES SKELTON JEFFERSON
        First husband:
        18 years old, to Bathurst Skelton (June 1744 - 30 September 1768) planter, on 20, November 1766 likely at "The Forest" plantation; they lived at his Charles City County plantation for one year and ten months, the endurance of their marriage as Bathurst died in 1768.
        Born:
        1748, October 19
        "The Forest" plantation, Charles City County, Virginia
        Father:
        John Wayles, barrister and landowner, born 31 January, 1715 in Lancaster, England; died 23 May, 1773 in Charles City County, Virginia
        Mother:
        Martha Eppes Wayles, born 10 April, 1712 in Bermuda Hundred, Chesterfield County, Virginia; married John Wayles on 3 May, 1746; died 5 November, 1748
        When Martha Eppes married John Wayles, she brought with her, as part of her dowry, an African slave woman and the woman's half-black, half-white daughter. The woman, enslaved in Africa, sailed to Virginia on a slave ship commanded by an English sea captain with the last name Hemings. Captain Hemings impregnated the slave who gave birth to a daughter she named Betty. The slave and her daughter were sold to Francis and Frances Eppes, and they gave the young enslaved "Betty Hemings" to their daughter Martha Eppes family. When Captain Hemings learned that the newly married Wayles had inherited his concubine and their daughter Betty, he offered to buy the pair. Wayles refused to sell them. He would eventually have six children by her.
        Martha Wayles Jefferson never knew her mother Martha Eppes Wayles since she had died two weeks and three days after giving birth to her.
        After the death of his first wife, Martha Eppes (the mother of Mrs. Jefferson), John Wayles married two more times; he married secondly to Mary Cocke by whom he had one [name unknown] daughter who died young; John Wayles married a third time, on 3, January 1760 to Elizabeth Lomax, with whom he had three daughters. After the death of Elizabeth Lomax (28 May 1763), Wayles took the half-black half-white slave Betty Hemings as his concubine and had six children by her. Betty Hemings was mentioned in the will of John Wayles, thus providing evidence that she really was his mistress and not merely his slave. The first husband of Elizabeth Lomax was Reuben Skelton - he was the brother of Martha Jefferson's first husband, Bathurst Skelton; thus Martha Wayles Skelton's brother-in-law was her stepmother's first husband:

        http://www.firstladies.org/biographies/firstladies.aspx?biography=3
      Person ID I12363  Devin Timber
      Last Modified 8 Sep 2011 

      Father John Wayles,   b. 31 Jan 1715, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 23 May 1773, Charles City Co., Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 58 years) 
      Mother Martha Eppes,   b. 10 Apr 1712, Bermuda Hundred, Chresterfield Co., Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 5 Nov 1748, Prob. Charles City Co., Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 36 years) 
      Family ID F3929  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

      Family POTUS* Thomas Jefferson,   b. 02 Apr 1743, Shadwell Estate Goochland, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 04 Jul 1826, Monticello, Albermarle, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 83 years) 
      Children 
       1. Martha Jefferson,   b. c 1772, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location
      Last Modified 8 Jul 2011 
      Family ID F3869  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    • Sources 
      1. [S67727] Mary Frances Reynolds Eggleston.
        Martha Wayles Skelton married Thomas Jefferson d/o John and Martha Epps Wayles. They had six children, Martha b. 1772, Jane b. 1774, Jefferson infant son b. 1777, Mary b 1780, Jefferson infant b. 80, and Lucy b. 1782.
        Marriage:
        First husband:
        18 years old, to Bathurst Skelton (June 1744 - 30 September 1768) planter, on 20, November 1766 likely at "The Forest" plantation; they lived at his Charles City County plantation for one year and ten months, the endurance of their marriage as Bathurst died in 1768.

        Second Husband:
        23 years old, to Thomas Jefferson (13, April 1743? 4, July 1826) lawyer and member of the House of Burgesses for Albermarle County (1769-1775), on 1, January, 1772 at "The Forest" plantation; they departed for a honeymoon in the cottage on the property of what would become later famously known as Monticello, though the mansion house was not yet built

        Children:
        by her first marriage, one son; John Skelton (1767?1771)

        by her second marriage, five daughters, one son; Martha "Patsy" Jefferson Randolph (1772?1836), Jane Randolph Jefferson (1774?1775), an unnamed son (died in infancy, 1777), Maria ?Polly? Jefferson Eppes (1778?1804), Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson [1] (1780-1781), Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson [2] (1782?1785)

        Polly Jefferson married John Wayles Eppes (1773-1823), her first cousin (her mother Martha Wayles Jefferson and his mother Elizabeth Wayles Eppes were half-sisters) and also her second cousin (her maternal grandmother Martha Eppes Wayles and his paternal grandfather Richard Eppes were siblings)

        Occupation after Marriage:
        Much as she had for her father during his periods of widowhood, Martha Jefferson ran the plantation life of Monticello. It was a considerable responsibility: reading recipes to slaves and overseeing food preparation in the kitchens; food preservation; clothing needs for the family and slaves; and managing the house slaves and their responsibilities. Among the few remaining examples of her handwriting is a precise ledger of the plantation's main cash crop, tobacco, suggesting she worked with Jefferson more as a full partner in this one aspect of life at Monticello than would be otherwise usual.

        Numerous contemporary accounts of visitors and guests to Monticello consistently suggest that Martha Jefferson was an active hostess when she felt well; her beauty, grace and especially her musical skills were frequently commented upon; she and Jefferson read literature and poetry to each other, and played musical duets together, he on the violin.