Tag Archive: thomas jefferson

Muffin Man

English Muffin

By Beth Dunn

Was George Handel and a buttered muffin inadvertently responsible for the creation of the British Museum?

Well, probably not.

But honestly? I wouldn’t rule it out, either.

So you know the British Museum. First public secular museum, established in 1753 when Sir Hans Sloane passed away and left his absurdly large and varied collection of rare books, antiquities, and just downright oddities to the British Crown.

Sloane was a wildly successful London doctor, one who counted Samuel Pepys and Queen Anne among his patients, and who had amassed a cabinet of curiosities so large that he had to buy the house next door just to give him enough shelf space for it all.

Distinguished visitors would come from all over to peer at his whatnots, to marvel at his whoosits.

Then he passed away and left it all to the nation, who responded with characteristic ingratitude, a great deal of Parliamentary wrangling, and no small amount political corruption that eventually resulted in the creation of the British Museum.

What’s odd about this story is that it is hardly possible to research the early days of the British Museum without coming across the following story with what one can’t help but notice is alarming frequency:

Sloane’s house was visited by numerous people. Among them was the composer Handel, who is said to have outraged his host by placing a buttered muffin on one of his rare books.

For the life of me, I cannot stop thinking about that damn buttered muffin.

What kind of muffin was it? Was it more extravagantly buttered than most? Exactly what sort of baked good was called a muffin back in the 18th century, anyway?

Was Handel some sort of countrified rube, who simply thought that rare books made excellent substitutes for plates and saucers, or was he trying to make some kind of point? What book was it?

Was it this near catastrophe that convinced Sloane that his collection needed the protection of the British Crown, once he himself was no longer around to protect his books from the menace of butter-laden muffins, crumpets, and scones?

Even more intriguingly, is there in some dim and dusty corner of the British Library (where all the books of the British Museum eventually found a home) an old, rare book with one very faded, but barely discernable circular grease stain on it?

These are the sorts of questions that leads one to investigate, late at night and into the early morning hours, the history of the English Muffin, and to discover (to one’s great delight) that the muffin was in fact a highly fashionable foodstuff in the 18th century.

Which would explain why it was being served to distinguished visitors to what one has to assume was one of the more exclusive drawing rooms in London at the time.

Muffins were huge. They were a tremendous fad, catching on among the snacking classes with such fervor that scores of muffin factories soon popped up all over London. Jane Austen even mentioned muffins in her novel Persuasion, and not merely as a particularly apt way of describing the hot, buttery Captain Wentworth.

Did Sloane realize the peril his collection might be in, if left open to the slings and arrows of outrageous baked goods?

Or was Handel just a bit of a jerk?

Hard to say.

But in the midst of this deeply appealing line of research, I suddenly remembered another buttered muffin story, this time about one of the American founding families. I got very excited for a few minutes, imagining that the tale of the buttered muffin was some sort of universal flood story, found in one form or another in all known cultures, varying only in the shape and size of the muffin, or in the amount of butter involved.

Alas, it was a more prosaic tale that that. Something about a young lad who was named after Benjamin Franklin, and who took it upon himself to instruct First Lady Dolley Madison in the art of properly buttering your muffin. If you’ll excuse the expression.

‘Why, you must tear him open, and put butter inside and stick holes in his back! And then pat him and squeeze him and the juice will run out!’

Which seems a very sensible way to eat a buttered muffin, if you ask me.

What’s truly excellent about this story is that it is a reminiscence of Thomas Jefferson’s great-granddaughter, Ellen Wayles Harrison. And that the story took place at Monticello.

Buttered muffins. Present at the creation of so many great things.

Perhaps now you, like me, wish to know just how Thomas Jefferson ate his muffins.

Very well, I shall tell you.

To a quart of flour put two table spoonsfull of yeast. Mix . . . the flour up with water so thin that the dough will stick to the table. Our cook takes it up and throws it down until it will no longer stick [to the table?] she puts it to rise until morning. In the morning she works the dough over . . . the first thing and makes it into little cakes like biscuit and sets them aside until it is time to back them. You know muffins are backed in a gridle [before?] in the [fire?] hearth of the stove not inside. They bake very quickly. The second plate full is put on the fire when breakfast is sent in and they are ready by the time the first are eaten.

Who’s hungry?

 

Beth Dunn is a novelist, blogger, and geek. She writes at An Accomplished Young Lady, and gets pretty worked up sometimes about baked goods.

 

Image by foonus

Theodore Roosevelt, Critic of Thomas Jefferson

By Daniel Ruddy

Does Theodore Roosevelt seem angry as he stares out at us from atop Mount Rushmore? If so, it would not be surprising, stuck as he is in immovable granite next to Thomas Jefferson, a man he thoroughly despised.

Two Americans icons could never be more unlike than Roosevelt, the unapologetic jingo who charged up a hill in Cuba towards glory and fame during the Spanish-American War, and Jefferson, the peaceful idealist who charged down one escaping British troops, who were attempting to capture him at Monticello during the Revolutionary War.

Roosevelt never forgot Jefferson’s “cowardly infamy” as President in failing to build an adequate army and navy, and placed on his doorstep blame for the humiliating defeats inflicted by the British on the United States during the War of 1812. It was a just criticism. A nation of eight million people should have been able to defend its capital against a few thousand British invaders, who burned the White House and other public buildings to the ground.

Roosevelt had other reasons to despise Jefferson. He condemned Jefferson for creating the so-called “Nullification Doctrine,” which opened the door to a horrific Civil War that almost destroyed the United States. Jefferson was “the father of nullification and therefore secession,” said Roosevelt, and the historical evidence supports his assertion.

Roosevelt also accused Jefferson of “tortuous intrigues” against George Washington for secretly opposing his policies while serving as Washington’s Secretary of State. Washington came to distrust Jefferson, so Roosevelt is not the only President on Mount Rushmore who had issues with the author of the Declaration of Independence.

Thomas Jefferson is revered today as one of the greatest of our Founding Fathers for good reason, but there is some justice in Roosevelt’s denunciation of him as “slippery demagogue.” It is hard to find any important occasions when Jefferson took an unpopular stand in the larger interests of the United States. He believed in the American people (one of his greatest strengths), but he also seems to have slavishly followed them when they went wrong.

Daniel Ruddy grew up on Long Island, New York where a childhood trip to Roosevelt’s home, Sagamore Hill in Oyster Bay, triggered a lifelong interest in TR. He is a marketing consultant for Fortune 500 companies, and he holds a Master’s Degree in International Relations from the London School of Economics. An avid researcher into U.S. History and the Presidency, Theodore Roosevelt’s History of the United States: His Own Words, Selected and Arranged by Daniel Ruddy is his first work.

IMAGE: Depictions of former President’s Theodore Roosevelt and Thomas Jefferson on Mount Rushmore by Gutzon Borglum, et. al, circa 1927-1941

Congratulations to the winners of this book:

James, Jonathan, Gordon, Michael, and John

We’ll be contacting you soon!

Benedict Arnold versus Thomas Jefferson

By Michael Kranish

In December 1780, three months after Benedict Arnold failed in his traitorous mission to capture West Point, he launched an audacious new quest on behalf of the British: An invasion of Virginia, which was governed by his former ally, Thomas Jefferson.

What followed would pit one of the infamous men in American history, Arnold, against one the revered, Jefferson. It was this clash that drew me to write Flight from Monticello: Thomas Jefferson at War.

Arnold left New York harbor with a fleet of 27 ships carrying 1,600 men. Governor Jefferson had moved the capital of Virginia from Williamsburg to Richmond partly on grounds that it would more protected from an invading force. Jefferson had no idea that the British were coming. A Virginia naval officer spotted the fleet but could not determine its origin, sending a messenger on horseback to deliver the vague news to Jefferson. The governor wavered, deciding he needed more information before calling out the militia. Crucial days passed as Arnold’s fleet made its way up the James River.

In the weeks that followed, Arnold terrorized Virginia. Jefferson, who years earlier had called Arnold a “fine sailor,” supported two plans to capture or kill Arnold, both of which failed. Arnold seized plunder and astonished his British superiors with the ease with which he had free reign over Virginia. Eventually, Arnold departed Virginia, replaced by other British commanders, some of whom later made the fateful decision to assemble in Yorktown. But the criticism of Jefferson’s handling of the invasion left a wound on his spirit that he said would only be cured by “the all-healing grave.”

Michael Kranish is a reporter in the Washington Bureau of The Boston Globe and author of Flight from Monticello: Thomas Jefferson at War. For more information, go to: www.michaelkranish.com

Giveaway: Abigail Adams Biography

If you read about how Abigail Adams, proto-feminist and wife of the second president of the United States, was able to exert unprecedented control over her family finances here, you’ll want to know more about not only her, but also the people surrounding her: her mother; Benjamin Franklin; James Lovell; John Quincy; and John, her husband.

In Abigail Adams, the new biography by Woody Holton, it is illustrated how Adams passionately campaigned for women’s education and denounced sex discrimination. She matched wits with her husband, Thomas Jefferson and even George Washington. And defying centuries of legislation that assigned married women’s property to their husbands, she amassed a fortune in her own name.

At Wonders & Marvels, we are giving away two copies of Abigail Adams. To enter, please comment in response to this question: Name the American woman you most admire. Contest is open until midnight EST, December 15, 2009. Sorry, but at this time we can only ship books to U.S. addresses only. (The winner of the MICHELANGELO contest was Caroline — congratulations!) Good luck!