Annette Gordon-Reed

[5] Gordon-Reed is married to Robert R. Reed, a justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, whom she met while at Harvard Law School.[6] Gordon-Reed spent her early career as an associate at Cahill Gordon & Reindel, and as counsel to the New York City Board of Corrections.[7] In 2010, she joined Harvard University with joint appointments in history and law, and as Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.In 1974, Fawn M. Brodie wrote the first biography of Jefferson to seriously examine the evidence related to Sally Hemings; she thought the Hemings-Jefferson liaison was likely.Gordon-Reed "drew on her legal training to apply context and reasonable interpretation to the sparse documentation" and analyzed the historiography as well.Critics such as John Works and Robert F. Turner of the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society have pointed out several transcription errors in Gordon-Reed's first book.Although he was long considered a hero, his reputation became tainted after 1900, as white historians researched his actions or lack thereof regarding integration of African Americans.Without land, African Americans in the Deep South generally earned livings as sharecroppers, primarily (if not totally) under white land-owners.She likens their situation to that of immigrant workers in the New York garment industry (sweat shops) in the 1890s, and coal miners, who were captives of mining company stores until the UMWA was founded in 1890.She discussed the intimate relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, as well as issues that American black women face today.
Lee C. Bollinger , President of Columbia University , presents the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for History to Annette Gordon-Reed
Livingston, TexasDartmouth CollegeHarvard UniversityProfessorauthorhistorianHarvard Law SchoolRadcliffe Institute for Advanced StudyNational Book Award for NonfictionMacArthur FellowshipPulitzer Prize for HistoryCarl M. LoebCharles WarrenThomas JeffersonSally HemingsHemingsNational Humanities MedalNational Humanities CenterAmerican Philosophical SocietyGilder Lehrman Institute of American HistoryJim CrowConroe, Texasfirst black childelementary schoolHarvard Law ReviewSupreme Court of the State of New YorkUpper West SideCahill Gordon & ReindelNew York Law SchoolRutgers UniversityLee C. BollingerColumbia UniversityPulitzer PrizeJefferson–Hemings controversyFawn M. BrodieMadison HemingsIsaac JeffersonWinthrop JordanDumas MaloneC-SPANChristopher HitchensEston HemingsVernon JordanAnisfield-Wolf Book AwardMetropolitan Black Bar AssociationThe Hemingses of MonticelloAndrew JohnsonfreedmenabolitionistFrederick DouglassDeep Southsharecropperscoal minersSociety for Historians of the Early American RepublicGeorge Washington Book PrizeFrederick Douglass PrizeSouthern Historical AssociationLibrary of VirginiaBarack ObamaGuggenheim FellowshipRamapo CollegeCollege of William and MaryClaudine Gaycorresponding fellow of the British AcademyVincent J. DooleyGeorgia Historical SocietyUniversity of Virginia PressOxford University PressW. W. Norton & CompanyWABE-FMWayback MachineTavis SmileyNational Book FoundationHistoryJoseph J. EllisLouis MenandRick AtkinsonSteven HahnDavid Hackett FischerDavid OshinskyGene RobertsHank KlibanoffDaniel Walker HoweLiaquat AhamedEric FonerManning MarableFredrik LogevallAlan TaylorElizabeth A. FennT. J. StilesHeather Ann ThompsonJack E. DavisDavid W. BlightW. Caleb McDanielMarcia ChatelainNicole EustaceAda Ferrer