Roofing

From Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia

Shoffner aerial over house looking west. Old red painted metal roof
Shoffner aerial over house looking west. Old red painted metal roof

Thomas Jefferson had a strong interest in roofing[1] On June 24, 1826, Jefferson penned a note to his physician Robley Dunglison, asking him to come to Monticello. Dr. Dunglison went at once and after examing his patient was "apprehensive that the (latest) attack would prove fatal." He noted that Jefferson, himself, did not "indulge any other opinion."

Unaware of the illness, Francis Eppes wrote to his grandfather on June 23 from Poplar Forest-the house that Jefferson had designed and used as a retreat before turning it over to his grandson in 1823. Francis's letter was filled with distressing news about the effects of recent heavy rain, about wheat "fairly buried in the mud" and a roof leaking "not in one but a hundred places." He reported that "the plaistering of the parlour is so entirely wet every rain, that I begin to fear it will fall in. Large buckets of water pass through it." Although he speculated that water on the roof boards was being drawn up under the shingles he was uncertain that he had discovered the true cause and was left "so completely baffled in every attempt to stop the leaking" that he felt "quite at a loss." Francis inquired, "knowing that all of your pavilions at the university have tin coverings, I write to learn whether they have ever leaked, and if so what method of prevention has been used." The letter closed, "my love to all. my tenderest love to vou my dear grandfather"

Only the year before Jefferson interrupted his own re-roofing campaign at Monticello and sent his slave carpenter John Hemings and two assistants to Poplar Forest to repair damage caused by a fire. Jefferson was unable to accompany them as planned, but the letters to and from Hemings show that he directed the covering of the house with tin shingles. This was the latest of the modem materials that he had used at the University of Virginia and more recently for Monticello. He claimed that it was the "lightest, and most durable cover in the world" and that it would "last 100. years, and how much more we do not know."

Francis's letter was received, for on the back, in a clear strong hand is Jefferson's customary endorsement Eppes Francis. P.F. June 23.26 rec.d June 27.

As far as we know, Jefferson wrote no letters after June 24. and by the 27th he was confined to his bed. He died seven days later on July 4. Whether a response was given in those final days through his grandson Thomas Jefferson Randolph, who was handling his affairs, or, more directly, to John Hemings is not known.

From the time Jefferson began planning Monticello in the 1760s, he took a keen interest in the question of how to shelter oneself effectively and economically from the weather. He approached it as an architect and engineer and considered some of the most progressive roof structures and coverings of his time for a variety of buildings. In at least one case be can be credited with a truly innovative roof form. This interest went beyond the theoretical and was based on observation and experience, as might be expected from a man who, according to his overseer, always carried around a little pocket ruler.

An opportunity to greatly advance his knowledge of building technology came during his stay in France from 1784 to 1789. It was just such an interest that led him one morning in 1786 to the Halle au Ble-the meal market at Paris-to see the architects Legrand and Molinos's great skylighted dome completed three years before. There he met Maria Cosway, and from the friendship that ensued came the famous letter to Maria following her departure from Paris. It is known as the dialogue between the Head and the Heart and is, perhaps, the most self-revealing letter that Jefferson ever wrote. Jefferson recreates the circumstances of their first encounter and reveals the workings of heart and mind. The Head complains to the Heart, "I never cease whispering to you that we had no occasion for new acquaintance; that the greater their merit and talents, the more dangerous their friendship to our tranquillity, because the regret at parting would be greater."

Heart. Accordingly, Sir, this acquaintance was not the consequence of my doings. It was one of your projects which threw us in the way of it. It was you, remember, and not I, who desired the meeting, at Legrand & Malinas. I never trouble myself with domes nor arches. The Halle aux bleds might have ratted down before I should have gone to see it. But you, forsooth, who are eternally getting us to sleep with your diagrams and crotchets, must go and examine this wonderful piece of architecture. And when you had seen it, oh! it was the most superb thing on earth! What you had seen there was worth all you had yet seen in Paris! I thought so too. But I meant it of the lady and gentleman to whom we had been presented, and not of a parcel of sticks and chips put together in pens. You then, Sir, and not I, have been the cause of the present distress.

Head. It would have been happy for you if my diagrams and crotchets had gotten you to sleep on that day, as you are pleased to say they eternally do. My visit to Legrand & Molinos had publick utility for it's object. A market is to he built in Richmond. What a commodious plan is that of Legrand & Malinas: especially if we put on it the noble dame of the Halle aux bleds. If such a bridge as they shewed us can be thrown across the Schuylkill at Philadelphia, the floating bridges taken up, and the navigation of that river opened, what a copious resource will be added, of wood and provisions, to warm and feed the poor of that city. While I was occupied with these objects, you were dilating with your new acquaintances, and contriving how to prevent a separation from them.

The object of admiration by the Head was one of the wonders of Paris. The superb dome, he learned, was derived from ideas developed by the sixteenth-century architect Philibert Delorme and published in a book that Jefferson made a point to acquire and bring back to America. He was struck by what he called the "honeycombed" folm, with short wooden members joined to create cells small enough to be covered with glass.

Jefferson's hope of seeing a similar roof structure used over a market at Richmond as not realized, but by 1800 a dome based on Delorme's principles was under construction at Monticello. Jefferson simplified the complicated joinery of mortises, tenons and wooden keys by substituting laminated sections fabricated with an abundance of nails readily available from his plantation nail factory. He described his version of the Delorme dome in notes accompanying drawings for a proposed town house dating from about 1800. The fortunate recipient of the design is not identified. He stated that "the ribs (or rafters) are made of oak plank inch thick, 13 1/2 I. wide, and cut into lengths of about 4.f. Four thicknesses are put together, mitered together at their ends according to the curve, and breaking joints so that no two joints come together. They are nailed together with half crown nails, going through and clinched. When set up, they are honeycombed by short pieces put in cross wise from rafter to rafter. The rafter is 60" in length."

Jefferson's enthusiasm for what must have been viewed by the recipient as a radical idea for covering a house is apparent. He reassured the would-be possessor of this design: "Nothing is more simple than this structure, and it is so cheap that it is used for barns in France. A very coarse and uninformed carpenter is making mine, who never heard of a dome before. It is the only way of framing a dome so as to give it's hollow to the height of the room." Jefferson stated that "a model of one of the ribs shall be sent" so that there would be no doubt how to construct it. Surely his remark that similar domes were not uncommon on barns in France is an exaggeration, although he might have had in mind the lavish stable with a Delorme dome built for the Duc de l'Infantado at Paris.

By 1802 Jefferson had conceived a more stunning application of the Delorme system. As president, he proposed building a great dry dock at Washington so that, in the interest of economy and peace, the number of Navy frigates in active service could be greatly reduced. He envisioned a single span structure over an area 175 feet wide and 800 feet long (more than three acres). He asked the English architect Benjamin Latrobe, then working in Philadelphia, to come to Washington and develop the scheme from his preliminary design. Jefferson was "convinced it will be a work of no great cost, that it will save us great annual expense, and be an encouragement to prepare in peace the vessels we shall need in war." Latrobe developed the scheme. The House of Representatives considered its cost and promptly tabled it.

Aerial after completion of roof, October 1992, looking almost directly down on house
Aerial after completion of roof, October 1992, looking almost directly down on house

In time, Jefferson had the satisfaction of seeing Delorme principles employed in a variety of buildings. It was used for the dome he designed for the Rotunda at the University of Virginia as well as the roof over the heads of the very representatives who had rejected his dry dock proposal. Although it can be said that Jefferson was responsible for introducing the Delorme method of roofing to this country, his real innovation was the zig-zag roof." In January, 1803, he wrote to his joiner at Monticello, "I conclude absolutely to cover my terras with sheet iron, and have accordingly written to Philadelphia to see if I can procure sheets 15.I. wide and 9 1/2 f. long." He was referring to the "terras," the low hipped roof concealed behind a Chinese railing on top of the house. The iron was to come from the recently established mill at Philadelphia that rolled wrought iron slabs into sheets. Jefferson's problem had been that the pitch of the hipped roof was too low to prevent water from being driven up under the wood shingles. His solution was to take off the shingles and fix what he called serrated lath on top of the sheathing. The serrations formed hips and valleys of what looked like a series of miniature gabled roofs or "rooflets." Sheathing nailed to the configuration of the lath was then covered with sheet iron-one piece bent and placed in the "gutter" or valley and another similar sheet placed over the ridge and lapping the valley piece. The object was to make a watertight roof without the need for complicated metal seams. Jefferson's scheme involved considerable carpentry to create the rooflets but the end result allowed him to maintain the same low pitch of the original hipped roof while insuring that water would run off as effectively as on a roof of regular pitch. He developed several variations including one for the walkways over the dependencies flanking the house. In some versions shingles were substituted for sheets of iron, but they all had in common the series of rooflets.

Rebuilding south terrace. View of pillars, serrated roof. 1941
Rebuilding south terrace. View of pillars, serrated roof. 1941

Latrobe, who stayed on in Washington after his appointment by Jefferson as Surveyor of the Public Buildings of the United States, credits him with the idea. In September, 1803, he wrote to his clerk of the works that he had decided to take off the roof of the north wing of the Capitol and "put on one of the President's zigzag roofs of sheetiron" which, he said, is a "species of roof uniting all the good qualities of the pantile, without its bad ones." Jefferson had, in fact, created an equivalent of the interlocking S-shaped clay tile roofs that he saw in Europe.

Jefferson claimed another advantage to his zigzag roofs: they did not require rafters. More than twenty years after constructing his first serrated roof, he continued to promote the idea. In a letter to Ferdinand Hassler he summarized its virtues and went so far as to offer it as an improvement to Hassler's design for an observatory. "Permit me. . . to suggest to you a construction of flat roofs different from yours. . . . In the house in which I live, and it's offices I have flat roofs of a different construction." He went on to explain in detail how they were made and concluded "I have had upwards of 20 years experience of these roofs in this house, also in one I built at another residence, and more than half our buildings at the University are flat and so covered. They never have leaked, cost less than a rafter roof, as needing no rafters and admit repairs more easily than any other. I think it the best possible roof for art observatory."

Over the years Jefferson tried a variety of roofing materials including wood shingles of several types, lead, sheet iron, and copper, but it was the lightness and, as he understood it, the durability of tin shingles that was favored in later years. Although tin was known to him by the 1790's it appears that he did not use it until his work at Central College (later the University of Virginia). Jefferson had the distinction of being not only the architect of the college buildings, but the chairman of the board of visitors as well. In that latter role he requested in 1818 one of the builders, James Dinsmore (well known to him from his work at Monticello), to report on the recent use of tin at Staunton, Virginia.

Dinsmore closely examined two roofs, one belonging to a Mr. Smith and another to Mr. Cowan, and he met with Ase Brooks who performed the work. His report concluded that a tin shingle roof "may be made as tight as one of any other metal and he had it "from good authority that they have been in use in Montreal and Quebeck for forty or fifty years without painting and are still sound." The shingles he was describing were tincoated iron measuring about 13 1/4 by 10 1/8 inches. A box usually contained 225 shingles, which was sufficient to cover about a square and a half (150 square feet). They were imported from Wales. Dinsmore stated that the cost of material sufficient to cover one square (100 square feet) was eight dollars. Ase Brooks's charge for putting on was seven dollars per square, the cost of nails noted as "trifleing."

A few days after the report was submitted, Jefferson received from Dinsmore what he needed to know: a square of heart pine shingling (materials, cutting and putting on) "cannot present be done for less than ten dollars." Jefferson and the board elected to pay the premium for longer lasting material and engaged Ase Brooks to cover the college buildings.

Jefferson's "diagrams" and "crotchets" gained him a reputation as an amateur architect and occasionally he was called upon for designs. In July 1821 he received a letter from Charles Yancey of Buckingham County, Virginia, who inquired, "believing that you have devoted much of your valuable time and reflection to subjects of architecture, I have taken the liberty to trespass upon your time and talents (a common stock) which we all seem to have a right to draw upon, growing out of a long and useful life devoted both to publick and private good, to draft for us a plan of our Court house, as much in detail as will comport with your convenience." In a matter of eleven days from when Yancey wrote, Jefferson responded, "I duly received your favor of the 12th and cheerfully undetook a compliance with your request. I now inclose the drawings you desired. Everything proposed in them is in the plainest style, and will be cheap, altho' requiring skill in the workmanship. Without that it will be rendered barbarous in the execution. Of one truth I have hail great experience that ignorant workmen are always dearest." He then explained some of the particulars of the building. His final recommendation: "I would advise you to cover with tin instead of shingles." It was here that he stated "it is the lightest, and most durable cover in the world. We know that it will last 100 years, and how much more we do not know."

At just about the time he produced the design for the Buckingham County courthouse he engaged Ase Brooks to come to Monticello and cover the small pavilion at the end of the north terrace. Jefferson made a point to observe him closely. About a year later, after his design for the courthouse was finally accepted and the building committee happened to be considering Brooks, he revealed to Yancey how the little job at Monticello had enlightened him on both the subject of tin roofing and workmanship. He was quick to point out "Mr. Brooke's price of 6.D 30 the square for laying on the tin of a roof, is exorbitant. It may be done, as well as be can do it for 1. Dollar the square. We went on at the University giving him that price until 3/4 of the houses were covered. We were led to it from a belief that it could not be done without the very expensive and complicated machine which he used to bend the tin, which he told us was a patent machine, costing 40.D. and not to be had in the U.S. At that stage of our business I got him to come and cover a small house for me. Seeing his machine at work, and how simple the object was, I saw that the same effect could be produced by two boards hinged together. I had this done accordingly, and it did the work as neatly and something quicker than his 4.0.D. machine, while this could be made for 50. cents. We then ceased employing Mr. Brokes, and set a common negro man to work with our board machine, and he has covered all the remaining houses as neatly and securely as those done before. Any person will learn to do it in a day as well as in a year. . . ."

There were others who wrote seeking Jefferson's wisdom on the use of tin. To James Paxton in 1824 he cautioned "I would advise against painting it. It certainly does no good, and possibly may corrode the tin." He said some workmen put the tin on in whole sheets (13 1/4 by 10 1/8 inches) but he claimed that "the half sheet is what 100 years of experience elsewhere has approved. In larger pieces it may contract and dilate too sensibly."

When a Mr. Pryor from Nashville, Tennessee wrote him about problems with his tin roof Jefferson speculated that, "if your tin covering has failed, it must have been from unskilfulness. Perhaps it has been put on in the whole sheets, or plain like shingles, which will not do. Altho the operation is so simple that any person of common sense may learn it in 3 hours as well as 3 years it would take sheets of writing to give all its details."

He continued to promote tin covering but it should not come as a surprise that we find him early in 1825 intrigued with a new material. William Coffee had been producing cast ornaments for the University of Virginia and Poplar Forest and mentioned his idea for lightweight tile roofs. Jefferson reasoned "I should suppose manufacturing of flat tiles, as light as slate would probably succeed. Costing but 5 D. 70C. the square they will come cheaper than any other covering known, and the sufficiency of tile is well enough established by experience."

Jefferson's more than half century of experience with roofs might well have led him to reflect philosophically on the merits of roofing systems: but what would he have written, what what instruction given, in response to Francis's news that the roof at Popular Forest was leaking not in one but a hundred place? One suspects that in a dialogue between the Head and the Heart, the Heart would have been troubled but the Head, with reason firmly fixed, apt to repeat the admonition to John Hemings from 1819: "Miss no opportunity of every possible further search whenever rain falls, because if the cause can be unquestionably ascertained, we can remedy it."

Footnotes

  1. This article is based on William L. Beiswanger, Monticello Keepsake, November 5, 1992.