I have long loved the Commonwealth of Virginia, and everything else being equal, I might have chosen to live there. The sheer beauty of the state’s pastoral and mountainous landscapes soothed a New Jersey boy’s heart. Walking across the University of Virginia campus along the white-pillared porticoes on The Lawn afforded me a glimpse of an ordered life I’d hardly dared imagine.

But I digress. “Mr. Jefferson’s academical village,” as it’s called, stands as a sort of 18th-century theme park — a monument to a serene life its creator idealized but never lived. As a slave owner Jefferson was one of the great men of the age; and among history’s great hypocrites. Yet today, his white and African-American descendants — cousins all — meet there to celebrate their mutual heritage.