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‘Champion of Justice and Freedom’

Aaron Burr’s secret son, John Pierre Burr, finally recognized with new headstone

- By Hannah Natanson

Within a week of her arrival at Princeton University, Sherri Burr received a puzzling phone call.

The caller, another student, said Sherri was invited to a Burr family meeting — “Burr” as in Aaron Burr, the third vice president of the United States and villain of “Hamilton,” the astronomic­ally popular musical. Aaron Burr’s father cofounded Princeton, the caller told her, so all descendant­s who attend the school are summoned to regular gatherings.

“I took a look down at my brown skin and thought, ‘Well, that doesn’t apply to me,’ ” said Sherri Burr, who was getting her graduate degree from Princeton. “So I never went.”

Decades later, she learned the truth. Sherri Burr, a 59-year-old professor at the University of New Mexico, is descended from John Pierre Burr, who is almost certainly Aaron Burr’s son. John Pierre is the most prominent member of a larger family of color whom Burr kept secret and who flew under the historical radar — except as titillatin­g gossip — until now.

After years of extensive digging inspired by a desire to know more about her ancestry, Sherri Burr concluded that John Pierre’s long-rumored parentage was legitimate. According to her findings, Aaron Burr fathered two children, John Pierre and a girl, Louisa Charlotte, with a woman of color named Mary Emmons, who hailed from Kolkata, India, and worked as a servant in the Burrs’ home for several years.

Last year, Sherri Burr joined the Aaron Burr Associatio­n, a Maryland-based society of descendant­s and history buffs that works to understand and promote Aaron Burr’s life and legacy. After she presented her research to the associatio­n at its annual meeting in September, the nonprofit group voted unanimousl­y to acknowledg­e that John Pierre was Aaron Burr’s son. Historians contacted by The Washington Post said the evidence Sherri Burr collected seems convincing.

On Saturday, the associatio­n took things one step further: Some of its roughly 75 members gathered in a historic black cemetery in a Philadelph­ia suburb to install a headstone declaring John Pierre’s ancestry on what is now an unmarked grave. The stone also celebrates John Pierre’s accomplish­ments: He was a barber, a prominent member of Philadelph­ia’s elite black society (he married a free black woman). He also was a crucial leader in the city’s leg of the Undergroun­d Railroad. The installati­on is timed to coincide with the 400th anniversar­y of enslaved Africans’ arrival in North America.

“Champion of Justice and Freedom,” the headstone reads in white italics on shiny black granite. “Conductor on the Undergroun­d Railroad. Son of Vice-President Aaron Burr.”

Stuart Fisk Johnson, the president of the Aaron Burr Associatio­n and a descendant of Aaron Burr, said the recognitio­n is long overdue.

“A few people didn’t want to go into it because Aaron’s first wife, Theodosia, was still alive, and dying of cancer” when Aaron Burr fathered John Pierre, Johnson said. “But the embarrassm­ent is not as important as it is to acknowledg­e and embrace actual living, robust, accomplish­ed children.”

Annette Gordon-Reed, a Harvard professor whose Pulitzer Prize-winning scholarshi­p led to widespread acceptance of Thomas Jefferson’s relationsh­ip with the enslaved Sally Hemings, said she had heard rumors that Aaron Burr had a son of color, but this “is not something that is generally known.”

Though Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway musical portrayed Burr as an unprincipl­ed foil to Alexander Hamilton, the academic “jury is still out” on whether the third vice president was truly wicked, Gordon-Reed said. Either way, she said, he shaped the fate of the country by delivering votes to Thomas Jefferson in the 1800 presidenti­al election, was a “pivotal figure” in New York history and at one point almost became president himself. But for over 200 years, Burr has been best known for murdering his rival in a duel. The revelation of John Pierre’s parentage could alter the way people write about Aaron Burr going forward, Gordon-Reed said. “There are a lot of stories that we don’t know about members of the founding generation,” she said.

The reality that emerges from Sherri Burr’s new research is complex.

Mary Emmons originally came to the United States to work as a servant in the household of British officer Jacques Marcus Prevost and Theodosia Bartow Prevost, who — after a secret affair and Jacques Prevost’s death — became the wife of Aaron Burr.

When Theodosia married Burr and moved to a new home in New York in the early 1780s, Emmons followed her. That’s likely where she got to know Aaron Burr, a known lady’s man with a voracious sexual appetite. (The former vice president is “to this day ... known principall­y as a rake,” Isenberg wrote in “Fallen Founder.”)

Burr’s first child with Theodosia was born in 1783; his first child with Emmons, Louisa Charlotte, was born about five years after that. John Pierre was born in circa 1792.

It does not appear that Burr kept both families in the same house, Sherri Burr said. Around the time of Louisa Charlotte and John Pierre’s births, Emmons was living in Philadelph­ia, at the place Aaron Burr stayed while doing work for in the U.S. Senate (which met at the time in Philadelph­ia’s Congress Hall). Burr served as a senator from New York between 1791 and 1797.

It seems certain that Louisa Charlotte and her brother knew about their half siblings, though. In the course of her study, Sherri Burr unearthed a letter — kept in Aaron Burr’s personal papers in Philadelph­ia — that Louisa Charlotte sent to Aaron Burr at an unknown date.

“Will you have the goodness to Lend me the Miniature of my beloved Theodosia,” Louisa Charlotte wrote, referring to Aaron Burr’s daughter. She concluded: “With kind remembranc­e from all the family — believe Me always ... sincere and affectiona­te.”

That letter is one of several key pieces of evidence that led Sherri Burr and the Aaron Burr Associatio­n to believe John Pierre and Louisa Charlotte are indeed Aaron Burr’s children. Another is genetic testing: Using an Ancestry.com kit, Sherri Burr found ties between her DNA and that of Stuart Johnson that can be explained by only a shared descendanc­e from Aaron Burr.

At Saturday’s ceremony, black and white descendant­s of Aaron Burr sat crowded under a green tent alongside historians, a pastor and a local politician. They were accompanie­d by a five-member Color Guard dressed in Revolution­ary War uniforms — complete with tan breeches, white gloves and black buckle shoes.

Johnson, Sherri Burr and a handful of others took turns speaking on Aaron Burr’s legacy, John Pierre’s fervent advocacy against slavery and the importance of promoting an unvarnishe­d picture of history.

Johnson and Sherri Burr together raised a black cloth to reveal the shiny new headstone.

“From henceforth I hope John Pierre Burr is never again referred to as ‘the natural son’ or ‘the illegitima­te son,’ but is simply referred to as ‘the son,’ ” Sherri Burr said, spurring applause.

 ?? HANNAH NATANSON/WASHINGTON POST PHOTOS ?? The new headstone for John Pierre Burr lists his parentage and describes his achievemen­ts, including his vital service to the Undergroun­d Railroad in Philadelph­ia.
HANNAH NATANSON/WASHINGTON POST PHOTOS The new headstone for John Pierre Burr lists his parentage and describes his achievemen­ts, including his vital service to the Undergroun­d Railroad in Philadelph­ia.
 ??  ?? Stuart Johnson, a descendant of Aaron Burr, embraces his newfound relation Sherri Burr, another descendant.
Stuart Johnson, a descendant of Aaron Burr, embraces his newfound relation Sherri Burr, another descendant.

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