Thomas Jefferson's ideas on education evolved over sixty years - from his adolescent years at
The College of William and Mary through the Revolution and election of 1800 to his death in
1826. In 1776 he saw public education as the cornerstone of Virginia's revolution and hoped it
would help destroy aristocratic and denominational privilege create opportunities based on
merit foster humanism and encourage the political awareness necessary for a republican
society. Though limited to white males public education was a progressive idea for its time.
All his bills failed. Even though Jefferson's own machinations stymied bills for a statewide
system in the 1810s the hobby of his old age the University of Virginia opened in 1825 .
Jefferson's Vision for Education 1760-1845 examines why Jefferson subverted the democratic
spirit of his early plans and how well other political and religious dimensions of his vision
materialized at the University of Virginia during its first twenty years.