Thomas Jefferson and the Mammoth Cheese
by
Daniel
L.
Dreisbach
On New Year’s Day, 1802, President Thomas Jefferson
received a gift of mythic proportions. Amid great fanfare, a mammoth cheese
was delivered to the White House by the itinerant Baptist preacher John Leland.
It measured more than four feet in diameter, thirteen feet in circumference,
and seventeen inches in height; once cured, it weighed 1,235 pounds.
The colossal cheese was made by the staunchly Republican,
Baptist citizens of Cheshire, a small farming community in the Berkshire Hills
of western Massachusetts. The religious dissenters created the cheese to commemorate
Jefferson’s long-standing devotion to religious liberty and to celebrate
his recent electoral victory over Federalist rival John Adams.
At the time, the Federalist party dominated New England politics,
and the Congregationalist church was legally established in Massachusetts. The
cheese-makers were, thus, both a religious and a political minority subject
to legal discrimination in Massachusetts.
The idea to make a giant cheese to celebrate Jefferson’s
election was announced from the pulpit by Leland and was enthusiastically endorsed
by his congregation. Much preparation and material were required for such a
monumental project. Organizers had to calculate the quantity of available milk
and instruct housewives on how to prepare and season the curds. No ordinary
cheese press could accommodate a cheese of such gargantuan dimensions, so a
modified “cyder press” with a reinforced hoop was constructed.
On the morning of July 20, 1801, the devout Baptist families,
in their finest Sunday frocks, turned out with pails of curds for a day of thanksgiving,
hymn singing, and cheese pressing. The cheese was distilled from the single
day’s milk production of nine hundred or more “Republican”
cows. (Because this was a gift for Mr. Jefferson, the new Republican president,
the milk of “Federalist” cows was scrupulously excluded.)
The cheese was transported down the eastern seaboard by sloop
and sleigh, arriving in the Federal City on the evening of December 29.
(By the time it reached Baltimore, one wag reported, the ripening cheese, now
nearly six months removed from the cows, was strong enough to walk the remaining
distance to Washington.) The “Mammoth Priest,” as the press dubbed
Leland, recounted that along the route he paused frequently to preach to “large
congregations” of curious onlookers.
According to press accounts, Jefferson personally received
the cheese on New Year’s morning. Dressed in his customary black suit,
he stood in the White House doorway, arms outstretched, eagerly awaiting the
cheese’s arrival. The gift was received with cordial expressions of gratitude
and exuberant cheese-tasting. The cheese-makers heralded their creation as “the
greatest cheese in America, for the greatest man in America.”
Wall of Separation
On the same day, Jefferson penned a letter to a Baptist association
in Danbury, Connecticut, in which he said that the First Amendment built “a
wall of separation between church and state.” In a carefully crafted missive,
the president wrote:
Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man
& his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship,
that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions,
I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people
which declared that their legislature should “make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,”
thus building a wall of separation between Church & State.
No phrase in American letters has had a more profound influence
on church-state discourse and policy than Jefferson’s “wall of separation.”
Although nowhere to be found in the U.S. Constitution, this trope is accepted
by many Americans, including influential jurists, as a virtual rule of
constitutional law and the organizing theme of church-state jurisprudence. “In
the words of Jefferson,” the Supreme Court famously declared in 1947,
the First Amendment “erect[ed] ‘a wall of separation’ …
[that] must be kept high and impregnable. We could not approve the slightest
breach.” The metaphor, in our time, has become the locus classicus
of the notion that the First Amendment separated religion and the civil state,
thereby mandating a strictly secular polity.
Jefferson was inaugurated as the third president of the United
States on March 4, 1801, following one of the most bitterly contested elections
in history. His religion, or the alleged lack thereof, was a critical issue
in the campaign. The Federalists vilified him as an unreformed Jacobin and atheist.
The campaign rhetoric was so vitriolic that, when news of Jefferson’s
election swept across the country, housewives in New England were seen burying
family Bibles in their gardens or hiding them in wells because they fully expected
the Holy Scriptures to be confiscated and burned by the new administration in
Washington.
One pocket of support for the Jeffersonian Republicans in
Federalist New England existed among the Baptists. The Danbury Baptist Association
wrote to Jefferson on October 7, 1801, congratulating him on his election to
the “chief Magistracy in the United States.” They celebrated Jefferson’s
zealous advocacy for religious liberty and chastised those who criticized him
“as an enemy of religion Law & good order because he will not, dares
not assume the prerogative of Jehovah and make Laws to govern the Kingdom of
Christ.”
The Danbury Baptists, like the Cheshire cheesemongers, were
outsiders—a beleaguered religious and political minority in a state where
a Congregationalist-Federalist axis dominated political life. They were drawn
to Jefferson’s political cause because of his unflagging commitment
to religious liberty.
Jefferson’s missive was written not only to reassure
pious Baptist constituents of his continuing commitment to their rights of conscience
but also to strike back at the Congregationalist-Federalist establishment in
Connecticut for shamelessly vilifying him as an “infidel” and “atheist”
in the 1800 presidential campaign.
What the Wall Separates
Jefferson’s “wall,” according to conventional
wisdom, represents a universal principle on the prudential and constitutional
relationship between religion and the civil state. To the contrary, this “wall”
had less to do with the separation between religion and all civil government
than with the separation between federal and state governments on matters pertaining
to religion. The “wall of separation” was a metaphoric construction
of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment, which Jefferson said imposed
its restrictions on the federal government only. In other words, the “wall”
Jefferson constructed separated the federal regime on one side and state governments
and religious authorities on the other.
Jefferson said that his response to the Danbury Baptists “furnishes
an occasion too, which I have long wished to find, of saying why I do not proclaim
fastings & thanksgivings, as my predecessors [Presidents Washington and
Adams] did.” The president was eager to address this topic because his
Federalist foes had demanded religious proclamations and then smeared him as
an enemy of religion when he declined to issue them.
President Jefferson’s refusal to set aside days in the
public calendar for national fasting and thanksgiving contrasted with his actions
in Virginia, where he framed “A Bill for Appointing Days of Public Fasting
and Thanksgiving” and, as governor in 1779, designated a day for “publick
and solemn thanksgiving and prayer to Almighty God.”
This apparent contradiction is reconciled in the Danbury letter.
Jefferson firmly believed that the First Amendment, with its metaphoric “wall
of separation,” prohibited religious establishments by the federal government
only. Addressing this same topic, Jefferson elsewhere relied on the Tenth Amendment,
arguing that because “no power to prescribe any religious exercise …
has been delegated to the [federal] government, it must then rest with the states,
as far as it can be in any human authority.” (He also affirmed this principle
in his second inaugural address.) Thus, as a matter of federalism, he thought
it inappropriate for the nation’s chief executive to proclaim days for
religious observance; however, he acknowledged the authority of state officials
to issue religious proclamations.
A Controversial Metaphor
After two centuries, Jefferson’s trope remains controversial.
The question bitterly debated is whether the “wall” illuminates
or obfuscates the constitutional principles it metaphorically represents.
Proponents argue that the metaphor promotes private, voluntary
religion and freedom of conscience in a secular polity. The “wall”
graphically and concisely conveys the essence of the First Amendment, defenders
say. It prevents religious establishments, discourages corrupting entanglements
between governmental and ecclesiastical authorities, and avoids sectarian conflict
among denominations competing for governmental favor and aid. An impenetrable
barrier prohibits not only an ecclesiastical establishment but also all other
forms of governmental assistance for religious objectives. A regime of strict
separation, defenders insist, is the best, if not the only, way to promote religious
liberty, especially the rights of religious minorities.
Opponents counter that the graphic metaphor has been a source
of much mischief because it reconceptualizes—indeed, misconceptualizes—First
Amendment principles. The First Amendment explicitly denies Congress the authority
to make laws respecting an establishment of religion, whereas a “wall
of separation” restricts the activities of religion, as well as the civil
state. Jefferson’s trope emphasizes the separation between church
and state, unlike the First Amendment, which speaks in terms of the non-establishment
and free exercise of religion. (In the lexicon of 1802, the expansive concept
of “separation” was distinct from the institutional concept of “non-establishment.”)
The Baptists agitated for disestablishment and liberty of conscience, but they,
like most Americans, did not want religious influences separated from
public life and policy.
For this reason, Jefferson’s Baptist correspondents
(like many pious citizens today) were apparently discomfited by the metaphor.
They were alarmed by the erection of a wall that would separate religion from
the public square. Few evangelical dissenters (Leland being an exception) challenged
the widespread assumption of the age that republican government was dependant
on a moral people and that morals were necessarily informed by the Christian
religion.
The very nature of a wall further reconceptualizes First Amendment
principles. A wall is a bilateral barrier that inhibits the activities of both
the civil state and religion; this is in contrast to the First Amendment, which
imposes restrictions on the civil state only. In short, a wall not only prevents
the civil state from intruding on the religious domain but also prohibits religion
from influencing the conduct of civil government. The various First Amendment
guarantees, however, were entirely a check or restraint on civil government,
specifically Congress. The free press guarantee, for example, was not written
to protect the civil state from the press; rather, it was designed to protect
a free and independent press from control by the federal government. Similarly,
the religion provisions were added to the Constitution to protect religion and
religious institutions from interference by the federal government—not
to protect the civil state from the influence of religion. Any construction
of Jefferson’s wall that imposes restraints on entities other than civil
government exceeds the limitations imposed by the First Amendment.
A “high and impregnable” wall inhibits religion’s
ability to inform the public ethic and policy, deprives religious citizens of
the civil liberty to participate in politics armed with ideas informed by their
spiritual values, and infringes on the right of religious communities and institutions
to define and extend their prophetic ministries into the public square. This
wall, critics say, has been used to silence the religious voice in the marketplace
of ideas and, in a form of religious apartheid, to segregate faith communities
behind a restrictive barrier.
Two Symbols of Religious Liberty
The communications of two persecuted, minority communities
coincidentally commanded President Jefferson’s attention on the same day.
Both the Cheshire and the Danbury Baptists celebrated his election as the harbinger
of a new dawn of religious liberty. Jefferson, in return, expressed solidarity
with the Baptists in their aspirations for political acceptance and religious
liberty.
Accounts vary as to what happened to the legendary cheese.
A pungent remnant remained in the executive mansion for another two years or
more where it was prominently displayed and served at Republican party functions.
According to one graphic account, the decaying, maggot-infested remains were
unceremoniously dumped into the Potomac River.
The mammoth cheese was, for a brief season, at once the most
celebrated and most lampooned object in America, but it eventually faded from
public memory as a symbol of the religious dissenters’ aspirations for
religious liberty. The “wall of separation,” by contrast, represents
an idea that was quietly introduced into American discourse and that, in the
last two centuries, has become firmly rooted in political and legal thought.
The wall stands as a defining image of the prudential and constitutional role
of religion in the public arena. Serious consideration should be given to whether
that wall accurately represents constitutional principles and usefully contributes
to American democracy and civil society.
Daniel L. Dreisbach is a professor in the
department of justice, law, and society at American University in Washington,
D.C. This essay is adapted from his forthcoming book, Thomas Jefferson and
the Wall of Separation between Church and State (New York University Press).