SUPPORT - Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Inc - www.Monticello.org
For almost 90 years, Monticello has been maintained and kept open to the public by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Inc., which owns over 2,500 acres of Jefferson's 5,000-acre plantation. As a private, nonprofit 501(c)3 corporation, the Foundation receives no ongoing federal, state, or local funding in support of its dual mission of preservation and education.
Mission Statement
Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s plantation near Charlottesville, Va., was the center of his world. To understand Jefferson, one must understand Monticello; it can be seen as his autobiographical statement.
Monticello encompassed a house, an ornamental landscape, a farm, a plantation, a small mountain, and a large and diverse community. It encapsulated the interests, talents, ideals, ambitions, and realities of its creative and complex owner.
In 1923, Monticello was purchased by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, a private nonprofit corporation and was opened as a public attraction in 1924. Since then, the Foundation has instituted numerous research and educational programs and major restoration and renovation projects, and Monticello has attracted more than 27 million people.
Today, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation remains committed to a twofold mission:
- preservation -- to conserve, protect, and maintain Monticello in a manner which leaves it enhanced and unimpaired for future generations -- and
- education -- to interpret and present Thomas Jefferson to the widest possible audiences, including scholars and the general public.
Monticello is a National Historic Landmark and the only house in the United States designated a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Vision:
The Thomas Jefferson Foundation engages a global audience in a dialogue with Jefferson’s ideas.
The Foundation seeks to facilitate conversations and to use its extensive research and knowledge to stimulate interactions on a variety of topics that were of keen interest to Jefferson, the most powerful of which are liberty and self government. Through virtual, off-site and on-site engagement, the Foundation seeks to excite the world about Jefferson’s relevance today and ignite a passion for history.
Guide to citing sources found on this Web site.
For an introduction on citing Web sites please consult the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers or sections 27 and 28 of this helpful guide by Professor Diana Hacker: http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/humanities/list.html#27.Information specific to this Web site:
- Author's Name: Noted on page, if available. May also be listed in meta tags, which are viewable by using your browser's "Reveal Codes" or "View Source" function.
- Title: Printed in Green lettering just below breadcrumb trail and accessible in
tags, which are viewable by using your browser's "Reveal Codes" or "View Source" function. </li><li><strong>Site Name: </strong>Monticello, Home of Thomas Jefferson.</li><li><strong>Date of publication or last update:</strong> If not otherwise noted on page, use February 2003. May also be listed in meta tags, which are viewable by using your browser's "Reveal Codes" or "View Source" function. </li><li><strong>Sponsor of site:</strong> Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Inc.</li><li><strong>URL:</strong> Accessible in your browser's address bar. Also, when this site's "Print this Page" is invoked, the page's URL is listed at bottom.</li></ul><p>An example:</p><p>Stanton, Lucia C. "Was Jefferson a Vegetarian?"<br> <a href="http://www.monticello.org/">Monticello, Home of Thomas Jefferson</a>. January 1998.<br> Thomas Jefferson, Foundation, Inc. November 25, 2003<br> <<a href="http://www.monticello.org/reports/life/vegetarian.html">http://www.monticello.org/reports/life/vegetarian.htm</a>l>.</p></DIV></body>
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