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Inventions in architecture in late 18th century America
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Problems Pierre LEnfant Encountered in Building Washington D.C.
Washington D.C., the capital of the United States of America, stands today as a monument to our country's unity and independence. "Its scheme of broad radiating avenues connecting significant focal points, its open spaces, and its grid pattern of streets" is credited to the genius of the French architect and engineer Pierre Charles L'Enfant. However, the process of designing and building Washington was far from easy a task for L'Enfant and he was not given due credit for his design until years after his death. L'Enfant was born in Paris in 1754; he studied at the Royal Academy, and then left for America to fight in the Revolutionary War. He served in the Corps of Engineers under Baron Von Steuben during the winter of 1777-78 at Valley Forge. He was wounded in 1779, and was later captured by the British. In 1783 the Continental Congress awarded him the rank of Major. He remained in America after the war and gained a "reputation as an urban designer and architect."
The purpose of this paper is to examine the problems that Pierre L'Enfant encountered in designing and building Washington D.C. What delays did the project have and how might they have been avoided? Why was L'Enfant dismissed from his work in 1792?
L'Enfant wrote to Washington in September of 1789 before the site of the city was chosen formally requesting the job of designing the capital. Washington was familiar with L'Enfant, having seen his 1787 renovation of New York's city hall. He hired L'Enfant and later justified his decision saying, "He was better qualified than any one who had come within my knowledge in this country"
Thomas Jefferson was Secretary of State at this t...
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Hood, Joseph. The L'Enfant Plan of 1791. Online. World Wide Web. Dec, 1999. Available: http://www.nps.gov/nama/lenfant.htm
Caemmerer, H. Paul. The Life of Pierre Charles L'Enfant. New York: Da Capo Press, 1950.
Elkins, Stanley and Mckitrick, Eric. The Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788-1800. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
Arnebeck, Bob. Through A Fiery Trial: Building Washington, 1790-1800. Lanham, MD: Madison Books, 1991.
Kite, Elizabeth S. L'Enfant and Washington 1791-1792. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1929.
Tindall, William. History of the City of Washington. Knoxville, TN: 1914.
Writings of Washington, Bicentennial Edition, United States Government Printing Office, Vol. 12
In the book Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis, the author relates the stories of six crucial historic events that manage to capture the flavor and fervor of the revolutionary generation and its great leaders. While each chapter or story can be read separately and completely understood, they do relate to a broader common theme. One of Ellis' main purposes in writing the book was to illustrate the early stages and tribulations of the American government and its system through his use of well blended stories. The idea that a republican government of this nature was completely unprecedented is emphasized through out the book. Ellis discusses the unique problems that the revolutionary generation experienced as a result of governing under the new concept of a democracy. These problems included- the interpretation of constitutional powers, the regulation of governmental power through checks and balances, the first presidential elections, the surprising emergence of political parties, states rights vs. federal authority, and the issue of slavery in a otherwise free society. Ellis dives even deeper into the subject by exposing the readers to true insight of the major players of the founding generation. The book attempts to capture the ideals of the early revolutionary generation leaders and their conflicting political viewpoints. The personalities of Hamilton, Burr, Adams, Washington, Madison, and Jefferson are presented in great detail. Ellis exposes the reality of the internal and partisan conflict endured by each of these figures in relation to each other. Ellis emphasizes that despite these difficult hurdles, the young American nation survived its early stages because of its great collection of charismatic leaders and their ability to ...
Soon after the fire, legislature decided to tear down the remains of the damaged structure and replace it with a larger and more stylish design. Chicago architect, Henry Ives Cobb, was selected to design and build the second capitol. The government gave him a budget of only $550,000, which was not nearly enough to reproduce the size and design that the legislature had envisioned. Due to limited funds, Cobb was unable to finish his intended design. Legislature was embarrassed and unimpres...
During the American Revolutionary War, all of the states had incurred a lot of debt from other foreign nations. So Hamilton decided that America must pay back this debt so that they could maintain peace and regulate commerce with European countries. The southern states had paid off their debt but the northern states were still in debt. So he composed a compromise - The south would not protest the Federal government paying off any northern states that still had debt, in the condition that the south chose where the national capital would be built. This compromise worked as the entire United States debt was paid off and the capital was constructed in the District of Columbia (DC) within a few years. In the construction of the capital, Maryland and Virginia donated land for the capital. The importance of this plan was that they had no debt, so this would bring power and respect to the United States from the European countries by keeping peace with everybody and allowing for continued trade. Because who would trade with a country that has debt with
L’Enfant was fond of design of streets in Versailles, just outside Paris, France. Jefferson provided L’Enfant with maps of several European cities. Instead of copying design ideas from one city, L’Enfant used ideas taken from several European cities. L’Enfant designed the new city centered around a public walkway and the Capital Building (Fletcher). This plan allowed for spaces of various shapes and sizes to allow future monuments to be built at a later time (Encyclopaedia Britannica).
Following the failure of the Articles of Confederation, a debate arose discussing how a centralized government ought to be organized. The prevailing opinion ultimately belonged to the Federalists, whose philosophy was famously outlined in The Federalist Papers. Recognizing that in a free nation, man would naturally divide himself into factions, they chose not to remedy this problem by stopping it at its source; instead, they would limit its effects by placing strict structural safeguards within the government's framework. The Federalists defined a facti...
Slowly but surely Jefferson finished a small brick building, which was the south pavilion, in 1770. Later the north pavilion was finished and served as a study for his son-in-law.
Roark, James L. et al., eds. The American Promise: A Compact, Vol. I: To 1877. 3rd edition. Boston and New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2007.
The redesign of Paris was one of the greatest ambitions for Napoleon III. He wanted to create another London, with large parks and open spaces. It also came out of the need for more efficient housing, wider streets to prevent riots and the building of a sewer system to stop the spread of diseases. The master behind Napoleon’s visions was Baron Von Haussmann, prefect of the Seine. He created the Paris we know today with spacious boulevards and beautiful sights.
Roark, J.L., Johnson, M.P., Cohen, P.C., Stage, S., Lawson, A., Hartmann, S.M. (2009). The american promise: A history of the united states (4th ed.), The New West and Free North 1840-1860, The slave south, 1820-1860, The house divided 1846-1861 (Vol. 1, pp. 279-354).
Daniel H. Burnham was born in 1846 and he was a modern city planner. The lack of attention paid by historians to Daniel Burnham seems peculiar in spite of his enormous contribution to the architectural field. Also an influential planner, he was the prime organizer and chief of construction for the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893. Burnham developed plans for Washington D.C., Cleveland, San Francisco, Chicago, and Manila. At his death in 1912, Frank Lloyd Wright said, “Burnham was not a creative architect, but he was a great man.”
His design was a Neo-classical plan that followed the classical style of ancient Greece and Rome. He drew a building that consists of two wings that extended north and south of a centural section. A huge cast-iron dome rests on the central section of the building.(World, 196) President Washington was very pleased with Dr. Thorton's plans and he was awarded first prize. Now it was time for Washington to lay the cornerstone on September 18, 1793.(National Park)
I choose Charles Bulfinch because he was an influential architect of the Washington D.C. Capital Building. I chose Charles Bulfinch because this Summer I hope to be in Washington D.C. for an internship. While I am there I would like to visit the capital building, which Charles Bulfinch designed. Bulfinch is known as one of the first native-born American, professional architect (Place, 16). Charles Bulfinch was born in Boston on August 8, 1763 (Franklin, 11). Bulfinch
I chose to study Jean-Antoine Houdon’s statue of George Washington. In the 1780’s the Virginia legislature commissioned a statue "to be of the finest marble and the best workmanship,". This indicated they wanted European craftsmanship.
Throughout everything about the Capitol, the fact major political meetings went on there, gave it an important significance during the Colonial Era. In the past, one essential meeting that took place in the capitol was the decision for war against Great Britain. If the General Assembly decided differently that would affect humanity today. On the other hand, Patrick Henry gave a famous speech, the “Caesar, Brutus”
He was chosen because he was held in very high regard. He was a “developer of an influential Neoclassical architectural style” (Britannica School). After he completed the design, construction started when the first stone was symbolically laid on Napoleon’s 37th birthday. While he was able to see “a full-scale depiction of the completed design, created from wood and painted canvas” (Britannica School), he was not able to see the completed Arch, as he died while construction was halted. The Arc de Triomphe was his final architectural project. When construction resumed, Chagrin’s apprentice Louis-Robert Goust took over the project. Eventually, more architects had say in the design of the Arc de Triomphe. Jean-Nicholas Huyot worked on it during the 1823 continuation and Guillaume-Abel Blouet oversaw its