Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826) was the third president of the United States from 1801 to 1809.
Thomas Jefferson may also refer to:
People
edit- Thomas Jefferson (Caymanian politician) (1941–2006)
- Thomas Jefferson (musician) (1920–1986), American Dixieland smooth trumpeter
- Tom Jefferson (epidemiologist), British epidemiologist
- Thomas Jefferson (actor) (1856–1932), American actor
- Thomas Garland Jefferson (1847-1864), VMI cadet killed at the Battle of New Market
- Thomas Jefferson Byrd (1950–2020), American actor
Fictional characters
edit- Thomas "Tommy" Jefferson, a character from Harry's Law
Arts and entertainment
edit- Thomas Jefferson: Author of America, a short biography by Christopher Hitchens
- Thomas Jefferson (film), a 1997 film by Ken Burns
Sculptures
edit- Thomas Jefferson (Bitter), a 1915 sculpture by Karl Bitter in Cleveland, Ohio
- Statue of Thomas Jefferson (Columbia University), a 1914 sculpture by William Ordway Partridge in Manhattan, New York
- Thomas Jefferson (University of Virginia), a statue in front of the Rotunda
Ships
edit- USS Thomas Jefferson, a U.S. Navy shipname
- USS Thomas Jefferson (APA-30), an attack transport in service from 1941 to 1949
- USS Thomas Jefferson (SSBN-618), an Ethan Allen-class ballistic missile submarine commissioned in 1963
- NOAAS Thomas Jefferson (S 222), a United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration hydrographic survey ship
Schools
edit- Thomas Jefferson Junior High School (disambiguation)
- Thomas Jefferson Middle School (disambiguation)
- Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Thomas Jefferson School of Law, San Diego, California
Other uses
edit- Thomas Jefferson Association Building, Brooklyn, New York, demolished in 1960
- Thomas Jefferson Hotel, a former hotel in Birmingham, Alabama
- Thomas Jefferson Library, the main library for the University of Missouri–St. Louis
- Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, a national laboratory in Newport News, Virginia
See also
editSearch for "Thomas Jefferson" on Wikipedia.