During his time in France, Hemings learned the dish of pasta and cheese. He prepared a dish called "macaroni pie". This dish evolved to what Americans call macaroni and cheese today. James is believed to be one of the first American chefs to prepare the dish in this way. However, credit is often incorrectly attributed to Thomas Jefferson's cousin,
Mary Randolph, as it was later included in her seminal housekeeping book,
The Virginia House-Wife. Another dish James introduced to American cuisine is Snow Eggs, which is originally French and consists of meringue and custard. In 1789, however, both the Hemingses returned to the United States with Jefferson; he continued to pay James wages to work as his chef. They first returned to Monticello. They lived briefly in a leased house on Maiden Lane in New York City (when the national government was based there), where James Hemings ran the kitchen. Hemings was also the chef for one of the early United States's most famous dinners - one that then-Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson dubbed a meal "to save the union." On June 20, 1790, at a dinner cheffed by Hemings,
Alexander Hamilton and Jefferson reconciled after being well-known political enemies. In the spring of 1791, when James Hemings and Jefferson were residents in Philadelphia, then the capital, the young enslaved man accompanied Jefferson and
James Madison on a month-long vacation in the Northeast. The party traveled through New York and
Vermont, stopping at Albany, Lake George, Lake Champlain, and Bennington. Jefferson often entrusted Hemings to travel alone ahead of the others to arrange accommodations. After returning south through western Massachusetts and Connecticut, Jefferson and Hemings returned for a long-term stay in
Philadelphia. As
Pennsylvania did not allow slavery, Jefferson paid Hemings a wage while he worked there. After two years in Philadelphia, Jefferson made plans to return to
Virginia. Reluctant to return to a slave state, Hemings negotiated a contract with Jefferson by which he would gain freedom after training a replacement chef at Monticello to take his place. In the 1793 agreement, Jefferson wrote: Having been at great expence in having James Hemings taught the art of cookery, desiring to befriend him, and to require from him as little in return as possible, I hereby do promise & declare, that if the said James should go with me to Monticello in the course of the ensuing winter, when I go to reside there myself, and shall there continue until he shall have taught such person as I shall place under him for that purpose to be a good cook, this previous condition being performed, he shall thereupon be made free ... Considering that Hemings had served Jefferson well for years, some historians have described this as a grudging
manumission. Little is known about Hemings's personal life. He never married, nor did he have children. One of the difficulties in imagining his life outside of Thomas Jefferson is the scarcity of authenticated and preserved sources directly traceable to him. One of the only sources directly traceable to James is a handwritten list of kitchen utensils. According to culinary historian
Michael Twitty, it is possible that Hemings had a "somewhat fluid
sexuality". In 1801, Jefferson offered Hemings a position at the White House, which Hemings declined, as he felt he could not immediately leave his position in Baltimore. When Jefferson inquired a second time, Hemings responded through an intermediary, Francis Sayes, who had worked with Hemings in New York and Philadelphia. Sayes reported, "I have spoke to James according to your Desire he has made mention again as he did before that he was willing to serve you before any other man in the Union but sence he understands that he would have to be among strange servants he would be very much obliged to you if you would send him a few lines of engagement and on what conditions and what wages you would please to give him with your own hand wreiting." Jefferson did not write Hemings, reasoning that he did not want to "urge him against inclination." Hemings later returned briefly to Monticello, working for a month and a half in the kitchen and earning thirty dollars before leaving. Later, while employed as a cook in a tavern in Baltimore, he died by suicide at age 36. Jefferson's friend, William Evans in Baltimore, made inquiries, and on November 5, 1801, he wrote:The report respecting James Hemings having committed an act of suicide is true. I made every inquiry at the time this melancholy circumstance took place. The result of which was, that he had been delirious for some days prior to committing the act, and it was the general opinion that drinking too freely was the cause. On November 9, 1801, Jefferson wrote from Washington, DC, to James Dinsmore, the Irish
joiner managing much of the construction at Monticello, recounting the circumstances of Hemings's death, presumably with instructions to tell his mother Betty and his brother
John, who was Dinsmore's assistant. On December 4, 1801, Jefferson wrote to his son-in-law,
Thomas Mann Randolph, characterizing Hemings's death as a "tragical end". ==References==