Background
He was the son of Betty “Bett” Brown, the second child of Elizabeth “Betty” Hemings, the matriarch of the Hemings family in the United States.
President of the United States
He was the son of Betty “Bett” Brown, the second child of Elizabeth “Betty” Hemings, the matriarch of the Hemings family in the United States.
There he served an important role in the day to day operation and maintenance of the Jefferson estates, including Poplar Forest, as butler, personal valet, glazier, and painter. He was held in high esteem by President Jefferson as a "faithful servant" who was "absolutely excepted from the whip." When Jefferson died on the night of July 4, 1826, Colbert was counted among those at the bedside of the former president According to Edmund Bacon, chief overseer at Monticello for nearly two decades from 1806 to 1822, "Mr.
Jefferson had a large number of favorite servants, that were treated just as well as could be.
Burwell was the main, principal servant on the place." Jefferson was also said to have had "the most perfect confidence" in his servant Colbert. As such, he was one of two artisans at Monticello who brought particular distinction to themselves in both the operation of the estate and the life of the master of Monticello, Thomas Jefferson.
Number one else was given this privilege. This is notable because slaves were typically given a predetermined allotment of rudimentary clothing and foodstuffs by their owner, and had no freedom of choice in the matter.
Colbert was ultimately given his freedom in Jefferson’s will, and bequeathed the sum of $300.00 for the purchase of tools necessary to continue working in his trade.
In 1819, Critta died at only thirty-six years of age. Several years later in 1834, Burwell married Elizabeth Battles, a free woman of color with whom he had three daughters. Pierson, Hamilton West., Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson From Entirely New Materials.
Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press, 1862.
Note: This work includes the memoir written by Edmund Bacon himself two years previously entitled Mr. Jefferson’s Servants.
Gordon-Reed, Annette, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: an American controversy, West. West. Norton & Company, 2009., 97803933377612009
Gordon-Reed, Annette, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family, University of Virginia Press, 1997.
Rinaldi, Ann, Wolf by the Ears, 1993.