". . .In authoring the Declaration, Jefferson’s achievements and contradictions are an embodiment of the story even more than is widely realized: from his initial effort to retain ties with the monarchy to being a leader in the effort against it; to the vast gap between his stated ideals of equality and his actions as an enslaver; to his desperate flight from the British army five years after he wrote the Declaration that set the war in motion.
Whatever Jefferson meant, there is no debate that the Declaration and its call that all men are created equal has inspired at least 120 nations and peoples to adopt their own versions, leading it to be called the greatest spark for democracy the world has known.
Nearly a century after the Declaration was written, President Abraham Lincoln elevated its status as a foundational document amid the Civil War and debate over slavery.
Yet it has also been noted that when it was written, the Declaration in effect excluded the enslaved and Native Americans — famously not mentioning slavery in a compromise to appease southern states.
Washington Post reporter Michael Kranish is a former fellow at the International Center for Jefferson Studies and the author of “Flight from Monticello: Thomas Jefferson at War.”
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