Monticello and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville
Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), author of the
American Declaration of Independence and third president of the United
States, was also a talented architect of neoclassical buildings. He
designed Monticello (1769–1809), his plantation home, and his ideal
'academical village' (1817–26), which is still the heart of the
University of Virginia. Jefferson's use of an architectural vocabulary
based upon classical antiquity symbolizes both the aspirations of the
new American republic as the inheritor of European tradition and the
cultural experimentation that could be expected as the country matured.