From todays writers almanac. Interesting details I didnt - TopicsExpress



          

From todays writers almanac. Interesting details I didnt know. It was on this day in 1792 that builders laid the cornerstone for the Presidents House, now known as the White House. When George Washington was elected as the first president of the United States three years earlier, Philadelphia served as the nations temporary capital. The choice of where to put the permanent capital caused a bitter argument in the new Congress. The Northern and Southern states each wanted the capital on their side, and debated whether agrarian or commercial economic strength was more important to the new country. Sixteen potential sites for the capital were suggested, most of them in the North. At the same time, Congress was gridlocked over what to do about Americas huge war debt. Alexander Hamilton wanted the federal government to simplify things by assuming all the states debts; but some states had already paid off their debt, so if they were taxed in order to help other states, they would in effect be paying twice. Many of these states were in the South, and also distrusted putting power in the hands of the federal government. One of the states that was fighting Hamilton hardest on his debt program was Virginia, home to influential politicians Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Madison spoke out against Hamiltons plan, and it was voted down. The new nation seemed in danger of falling apart. So in July of 1790, Jefferson invited Hamilton and Madison to dinner at his Manhattan residence, and the three Founding Fathers struck a political deal. Madison agreed to support Hamiltons plan in return for two things: lowering Virginias tax obligations and moving the capital to the South, along the Potomac River, on the border between the Southern states of Maryland and Virginia. This agreement became known as the Dinner Table Bargain. President Washington chose the precise location of the capital, where the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers came together. To design the capital, Washington chose city planner Pierre LEnfant, a French man who had fought in the Revolutionary War. LEnfant selected a site for the Presidents House in a scrubby area known as the Barrens, which had beautiful southern views of the Potomac. Washington announced a competition to design the future presidential mansion, with a prize of $500. The winner was James Hoban, an Irish immigrant from South Carolina. He modeled it on a Dublin mansion. One of the losing entries in the contest had come from Thomas Jefferson, who submitted his plans anonymously. Eight years after the cornerstone was laid, the house was finished enough to be inhabited. In 1800, President John Adams and his wife, Abigail, moved into the White House. John Adams arrived a month before his wife, and in the days before he moved in, the movers brought in the Adams furniture and hung up a portrait of George Washington. John wrote in a letter to Abigail: I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this House and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise Men ever rule under this roof. I shall not attempt a description of it. You will form the best idea of it from inspection. Once they settled in, they found that the unfinished house was cold, wet, and drafty. The main stairs werent finished, there was no guest room, no yard or fence, and carpenters worked on the interior while the couple was living there. Abigail hung the familys laundry in the unfinished East Room to dry. A few days after arriving, she wrote to her daughter: Woods are all you can see from Baltimore until you reach the city, which is only so in name. Here and there is a small cot, without a glass window, interspersed amongst the forests, through which you travel miles without seeing any human being. After explaining all the downfalls of her new house, she added: You must keep all this to yourself, and, when asked how I like it, say that I write you the situation is beautiful, which is true. The house is made habitable.
Posted on: Mon, 13 Oct 2014 09:46:04 +0000

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