Thomas Jefferson Papers
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From Thomas Jefferson to William Dunbar, 24 June 1799

To William Dunbar

Monticello in Virginia June 24. 99

Sir

Though I have not the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with you, yet the liberty I take of introducing myself to you will I hope find it’s excuse in the motives leading to it. much enquiry you know was excited on the discovery of America as to the origin of it’s inhabitants found here at the time of that discovery. many hypotheses have been hazarded but none of them satisfactory. I have long imagined that if there exists at this day, any evidence of their descent from any nation of the old world, it will be found in their languages. it must require an immense tract of time indeed for two languages, originally the same, to recede from each other till all appearances of their common origin shall be lost. it is therefore interesting to make as copious a collection as possible of the languages of the Indian tribes inhabiting America. I have for some time been availing myself of such opportunities of doing this as have occurred to me. some others in this quarter have done the same; so that we are likely to make a tolerable collection of those on this side the Missisipi. beyond that river our means fail. it is therefore with great pleasure I have learnt that so advanced a post as the Natchez possesses a gentleman so well qualified as yourself to extend enquiries into the regions beyond that. a lover of science cannot want the zeal requisite to engage his aid in it’s promotion. on this ground I have presumed to ask you to procure for us what, with convenience, you can procure in this way, from the country beyond your position. the Chickasaws & Choctaws are the most remote of those whom our enquiries have reached. and as it is material, for the purpose of comparison, that our enquiries should go to the same objects, I take the liberty of inclosing to you some blank copies of the vocabularies we have used & of asking the favor of you to procure them to be filled from such tribes beyond the Missisipi as are within our reach. some explanation as to the orthography used will always be necessary in committing to writing sounds for the expression of which our alphabet is not adapted.

We possess little which can be relied on relating to the part of the continent you inhabit, except it’s mere geography. it’s natural history is but little known. accounts too of the Indians of those regions would be very acceptable to the curious. any information you would be so good as to favor me with on these subjects would be thankfully recieved, & through the channel of the American Philosophical society might be communicated to the public. Letters addressed to me at this place (near Charlottesville) & lodged in any post office of the United States either in our Western country or the Atlantic ports will be safely forwarded to me. be pleased to accept assurances of the respect with which I am Sir

Your most obedt & most humble servt

Th: Jefferson

PrC (MHi); at foot of first page: “Mr. Dunbar.” Enclosed in TJ to Daniel Clark, 23 June 1799.

William Dunbar (ca. 1750–1810) was born near Elgin, in Morayshire, Scotland. Private tutors prepared him for a university education in Scotland, where he excelled in mathematics and science. After graduating from college, Dunbar emigrated to America in 1771, entering the profitable trade around Fort Pitt before starting a plantation in Louisiana. For two decades business dealings along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers helped to establish him financially, but it was not until the 1790s, when he developed a cotton and indigo plantation (“The Forest”) near Natchez in Spanish West Florida, that Dunbar achieved financial success. In 1798 the Spanish government appointed him surveyor general of the Natchez District and commissioned him to survey the boundary between the United States and Spanish West Florida. As a surveyor in the Southwest, he was positioned to collect a wide range of information about the territory. Upon TJ’s recommendation, Dunbar was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1800. Between 1801 and 1810 he continued to pursue his scholarly interests, publishing several articles in the society’s Transactions, researching Indian vocabularies and languages, recording observations in astronomy and meteorology, and coordinating scientific expeditions into the West (Arthur H. DeRosier, Jr., “William Dunbar: A Product of the Eighteenth Century Scottish Renaissance,” Journal of Mississippi History, 28 [1966], 185–227; ANB description begins John A. Garraty and Mark C. Carnes, eds., American National Biography, New York and Oxford, 1999, 24 vols. description ends ; APS description begins American Philosophical Society description ends , Proceedings, 22, pt. 3 [1884], 290, 294).

Although TJ did not have a Personal acquaintance with Dunbar, a letter from Dunbar to TJ of 9 Nov. 1790 is recorded in SJL as received from Alexandria, Louisiana, 15 Dec. 1790.

Blank copies of the vocabularies: see note to TJ to William Linn, 5 Feb. 1798.

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