Near Charlottesville in Albemarle County, Virginia — The American South (Mid-Atlantic)
Nail-Making
Photographed By J. Makali Bruton, February 8, 2015
1. Nail-Making Marker
Inscription.
Nail-Making. . Jefferson set up a nail-making operation in 1794 to provide income until he could “put my farms into a course of yielding profit.” He calculated the nailers’ daily output, the waste of nailrod, and profits. In its first years, the “nailery” was a financial success and Jefferson expanded it. Using nailrod shipped from Philadelphia, the enslaved nailers produced thousands of pounds of nails sold in local stores and to neighbors. Profits dwindled over the years because of management problems and competition from cheaper imported nails. Nail-making continued until the War of 18 12 impeded the shipment of nailrod from Britain. Small-scale nail production resumed on Mulberry Row in 1815 after the war ended., The Nail-Makers , In 1794, nine enslaved boys aged 10 to 15 worked at forges, making as many as 10,000 nails a day. From dawn to dusk, Ben Hix, David and Moses Hern, Burwell Colbert, Barnaby Gillette, James Hubbard, Sheperd, Wormley Hughes, and Joseph Fossett, hammered iron nailrod into nails of four sizes on their anvils. Head blacksmith George Granger, Jr. supervised their work and received a small percentage of the profits. Jefferson weighed the nailrod and nails daily to assess the efficiency of his workers. Moses Hern (15) was the most efficient, while James Hubbard (11) “wasted” the most iron., I am engaged in a nail manufactory, which I carry on altogether with my own boys. Thomas Jefferson, 1795. , Treatment of Slaves , “My first wish”, Jefferson wrote to his son-in-law in 1792, “is that labourers may be well treated.” He struggled to balance humane treatment of slaves with the need for profit at Monticello. Jefferson tried to mitigate the coercion and violence from slavery; he asked his manager to refrain from whipping the boys in the nailery except “in extremities.” Jefferson’s instructions lessened, but did not eliminate, severe punishment. On occasion, he ordered a whipping for repeated misbehavior as an example to other slaves., Captions: , (left to right): Buildings on Mulberry Row during Jefferson’s era., “Estimate on the actual work of the autumn of 1794.” Jefferson’s Farm Book. Massachusetts Historical Society, Horseshoe nail, iron. Cut nail, iron. Scupper nail, iron. Wrought iron nail. Anvil hardy, iron. Anvil waster, iron. Probable tinsmithing hammer head, iron. Nailrod binder and nailrod fragments, iron. This piece is missing from the marker., “Storehouse for iron” digital model. At various times nails were made in the “smith’s shop”, “nailery”, and the “storehouse for iron.”, Isaac (Granger) Jefferson. Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Tinsmithing. For a brief period in the 1790s, the “storehouse for iron” was the site of a tinsmithing operation. George Grainger, Jr.'s brother Isaac, trained by a Philadelphia tinsmith, recalled that he “carried on the tin business two years” before it failed. Archaeological excavations uncovered tin scraps and a tin cup., Tin cup. Thomas Jefferson Foundation . This historical marker is Near Charlottesville in Albemarle County Virginia
Jefferson set up a nail-making operation in 1794 to provide income until he could “put my farms into a course of yielding profit.” He calculated the nailers’ daily output, the waste of nailrod, and profits. In its first years, the “nailery” was a financial success and Jefferson expanded it. Using nailrod shipped from Philadelphia, the enslaved nailers produced thousands of pounds of nails sold in local stores and to neighbors. Profits dwindled over the years because of management problems and competition from cheaper imported nails. Nail-making continued until the War of 1812 impeded the shipment of nailrod from Britain. Small-scale nail production resumed on Mulberry Row in 1815 after the war ended.
The Nail-Makers
In 1794, nine enslaved boys aged 10 to 15 worked at forges, making as many as 10,000 nails a day. From dawn to dusk, Ben Hix, David and Moses Hern, Burwell Colbert, Barnaby Gillette, James Hubbard, Sheperd, Wormley Hughes, and Joseph Fossett, hammered iron nailrod into nails of four sizes on their anvils. Head blacksmith George Granger, Jr. supervised their work and received a small percentage
Photographed By J. Makali Bruton, February 8, 2015
2. Wide view of the Nail-Making Marker
The marker is the farthest marker seen here on the left of Mulberry Row.
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of the profits. Jefferson weighed the nailrod and nails daily to assess the efficiency of his workers. Moses Hern (15) was the most efficient, while James Hubbard (11) “wasted” the most iron.
I am engaged in a nail manufactory, which I carry on altogether with my own boys. Thomas Jefferson, 1795.
Treatment of Slaves
“My first wish”, Jefferson wrote to his son-in-law in 1792, “is that labourers may be well treated.” He struggled to balance humane treatment of slaves with the need for profit at Monticello. Jefferson tried to mitigate the coercion and violence from slavery; he asked his manager to refrain from whipping the boys in the nailery except “in extremities.” Jefferson’s instructions lessened, but did not eliminate, severe punishment. On occasion, he ordered a whipping for repeated misbehavior as an example to other slaves.
Captions:
(left to right): Buildings on Mulberry Row during Jefferson’s era.
“Estimate on the actual work of the autumn of 1794.” Jefferson’s Farm Book. Massachusetts Historical Society
Horseshoe nail, iron. Cut nail, iron. Scupper nail, iron. Wrought iron nail. Anvil hardy, iron. Anvil waster, iron. Probable tinsmithing hammer head, iron. Nailrod binder and nailrod fragments, iron. This piece is missing
Photographed By J. Makali Bruton, February 8, 2015
3. The reconstructed "storehouse for iron" at Monticello on Mulberry Row.
from the marker.
“Storehouse for iron” digital model. At various times nails were made in the “smith’s shop”, “nailery”, and the “storehouse for iron.”
Isaac (Granger) Jefferson. Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Tinsmithing. For a brief period in the 1790s, the “storehouse for iron” was the site of a tinsmithing operation. George Grainger, Jr.'s brother Isaac, trained by a Philadelphia tinsmith, recalled that he “carried on the tin business two years” before it failed. Archaeological excavations uncovered tin scraps and a tin cup.
Location. 38° 0.554′ N, 78° 27.195′ W. Marker is near Charlottesville, Virginia, in Albemarle County. Marker can be reached from Monticello Loop north of Thomas Jefferson Parkway (Virginia Route 53), on the left when traveling north. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Charlottesville VA 22902, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker. Wood Trades (within shouting distance of this marker); Discovering Mulberry Row
(within shouting distance of this marker); Nursery (within shouting distance of this marker); The Levy Legacy (within shouting distance of this marker); Smokehouse/Dairy (within shouting distance of this marker); Mulberry Row (about 400 feet away, measured in a direct line); Charcoal (about 400 feet away); Textiles (about 500 feet away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Charlottesville.
Credits. This page was last revised on February 2, 2023. It was originally submitted on February 15, 2015, by J. Makali Bruton of Accra, Ghana. This page has been viewed 507 times since then and 18 times this year. Photos:1, 2, 3. submitted on February 15, 2015, by J. Makali Bruton of Accra, Ghana. • Bernard Fisher was the editor who published this page.