According to the oral history of her descendants, Betty was the daughter of a "
White captain of an English trading vessel" and "a full-blooded African" mother, making Elizabeth a
mulatto. In his memoir, Madison Hemings said the captain's surname was Hemings; the family tradition was that he had tried to buy Betty when he discovered his daughter had been born.
Annette Gordon-Reed speculated that Elizabeth's mother's name was Parthenia, based on the wills of Francis Eppes IV and John Wayles. The place of her birth is uncertain (Hemings said it was
Williamsburg she was hired out to Thomas Bell and later purchased by him in 1792; she became his common-law wife and they had two children together.) • Nance Hemings (1761 – after 1827), in 1785, Jefferson gave her to his sister as a wedding gift. Ten years later, he repurchased her, as she was a skilled
weaver; he had started a cotton factory at Monticello. Betty's enslaver, John Wayles, was widowed three times. In 1761, after the death of his third wife, Wayles and Betty began a relationship that produced six children. If that is true, they were half-siblings to his eldest daughter Martha Wayles, who married Thomas Jefferson. As the historians
Philip D. Morgan and
Joshua D. Rothman have written, there were numerous such interracial relationships in the Wayles-Hemings-Jefferson families and Albemarle County and Virginia, often with multiple generations repeating the pattern. Her children by Wayles were: • Robert Hemings (1762–1819), who purchased his freedom from Thomas Jefferson in 1794; •
James Hemings (1765–1801), freed by Jefferson in 1796 after training his brother Peter for three years to replace him as a chef; • Thenia Hemings (1767–1796), who was sold to
James Monroe in 1794. • Critta Hemings Bowles (1769–1850), who married Zachariah Bowles, a
free man of color. Sometimes called Critty, she was a domestic slave at Monticello from 1775 until 1827, when most of Jefferson's slaves were sold following his death. Critta was purchased and freed by
Francis W. Eppes, whom she had cared for as a nurse when he was young, starting in 1802. (His parents were
John Wayles Eppes and
Mary Jefferson Eppes, Jefferson's second daughter, who had died young). She then lived with her husband at his 96-acre farm north of Charlottesville in Albemarle County. She had seven children, five of whom survived and whom Jefferson freed. Sally was with him to his death in 1826, after which she was "given her time" (informal freedom) by his surviving daughter Martha Randolph. After Wayles died in 1773, all eleven members of the Hemings family and 124 other slaves were inherited by his daughter Martha Wayles and her husband Thomas Jefferson. ==John Wayles==