From Thomas Jefferson to Aaron Burr, 1 February 1801
To Aaron Burr
Washington Feb. 1. 1801.
Dear Sir
It was to be expected that the enemy would endeavor to sow tares between us, that they might divide us and our friends. every consideration satisfies me you will be on your guard against this, as I assure you I am strongly. I hear of one stratagem so imposing & so base that it is proper I should notice it to you. mr Munford, who is here, says he saw at N. York before he left it, an original letter of mine to Judge Breckenridge in which are sentiments highly injurious to you. he knows my handwriting and did not doubt that to be genuine. I inclose you a copy taken from the press copy of the only letter I ever wrote to Judge Breckenridge in my life: the press copy itself has been shewn to several of our mutual friends here. of consequence the letter seen by mr Munford must be a forgery, and if it contains a sentiment unfriendly or disrespectful to you I affirm it solemnly to be a forgery: as also if it varies from the copy inclosed. with the common trash of slander I should not think of troubling you: but the forgery of one’s handwriting is too imposing to be neglected. a mutual knolege of each other furnishes us with the best test of the contrivances which will be practised by the enemies of both. accept assurances of my high respect and esteem.
Th: Jefferson
PrC (DLC); at foot of text: “Colo. A. Burr.” Enclosure: Dupl of TJ to Hugh Henry Brackenridge, 18 Dec. 1800.
According to James Cheetham, who by the time he made the charge was passionately opposed to Burr, William G. Munford resided at Conrad and McMunn’s boardinghouse during his stay in Washington and energetically urged congressmen to support Burr in the presidential voting. Munford denied the accusation. According to Cheetham the young Virginian claimed to have been the author, under Burr’s supervision, of the series of essays signed “Epaminondas,” which first appeared in the New-York Gazette and General Advertiser and constituted “a philippic against Mr. Jefferson; a prodigal eulogium on Mr. Burr” (James Cheetham, A View of the Political conduct of Aaron Burr, Esq. Vice-President of the United States [New York, 1802], 66–9; 1:494n; , 4:47). The Washington Federalist reprinted the “Epaminondas” essays beginning 15 Jan. 1801. For Munford’s career and relations with Burr, see also Vol. 30:596–7n.