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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Ten Years in Washington, by Mary
-Clemmer
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Ten Years in Washington
- or, Inside Life and Scenes in Our National Capital as a Woman
- Sees Them
-
-Author: Mary Clemmer
-
-Release Date: September 16, 2021 [eBook #66318]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: KD Weeks, Andrew Sly, MFR and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TEN YEARS IN WASHINGTON ***
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
-see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
-the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
-
- TEN YEARS IN WASHINGTON:
-
- OR,
-
- INSIDE LIFE AND SCENES
-
- IN
-
- OUR NATIONAL CAPITAL
-
- =As a Woman Sees Them.=
-
- EMBRACING
-
- A FULL ACCOUNT OF THE MANY MARVELS AND INTERESTING
- SIGHTS OF WASHINGTON; OF THE DAILY LIFE AT THE WHITE HOUSE, BOTH PAST
- AND PRESENT; OF THE WONDERS AND INSIDE WORKINGS OF ALL OUR
- GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS; AND DESCRIPTIONS AND REVELATIONS
- OF EVERY PHASE OF POLITICAL, PUBLIC, AND
- SOCIAL LIFE AT THE NATION’S CAPITAL.
-
- BY MARY CLEMMER,
-
- AUTHOR OF “MEMORIALS OF ALICE AND PHŒBE CARY,” “A WOMAN’S LETTERS FROM
- WASHINGTON,” ETC., ETC.
-
- --------------
-
- TO WHICH IS ADDED A FULL ACCOUNT OF
-
- THE LIFE AND DEATH OF PRESIDENT JAMES A. GARFIELD,
-
- BY J. L. SHIPLEY, A. M.
-
- --------------
-
- FULLY ILLUSTRATED
- =With a Portrait of the Author on Steel, and Forty-Eight fine
- Engravings on Wood.=
-
- --------------
-
- [SOLD BY SUBSCRIPTION ONLY.]
-
- --------------
-
- HARTFORD, CONN.:
- THE HARTFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY.
- EXCELSIOR PUBLISHING CO., CHICAGO, ILL.
- OHIO PUBLISHING CO., CLEVELAND, OHIO.
-
- 1882.
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by
-
- THE HARTFORD PUBLISHING CO.,
-
- In the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: List of Illustrations.]
-
- 1. FINE STEEL-PLATE PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR, [Frontispiece.]
- 2. COLUMBIA SLAVE PEN, To face page 48
- 3. THE FREEDMAN’S SAVINGS BANK, 48
- 4. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE, 48
- 5. MAJOR L’ENFANT’S RESTING PLACE, 48
- 6. THE NATIONAL CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 72
- It covers more than three and a half acres. Over thirteen million
- dollars have thus far been expended in its erection.
- 7. THE MARBLE ROOM—INSIDE THE CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 95
- 8. THE SENATE CHAMBER—INSIDE THE CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 98
- 9. THE HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES—INSIDE THE CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 100
- 10. THE LADIES’ RECEPTION ROOM—INSIDE THE CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 120
- 11. THE CENTRAL ROOM, CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY—INSIDE THE 130
- CAPITOL—WASHINGTON,
- 12. THE RED ROOM—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—WASHINGTON, 169
- 13. THE CONSERVATORY—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—WASHINGTON, 174
- 14. THE CABINET ROOM—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—WASHINGTON, 238
- 15. THE BLUE ROOM—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—WASHINGTON, 246
- 16. THE GREAT EAST ROOM—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON, 258
- 17. THE GREEN ROOM—INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—WASHINGTON, 258
- 18. UNITED STATES TREASURY—WASHINGTON, 284
- 19. MAKING MONEY—THE ROOM IN THE TREASURY BUILDING WHERE THE 319
- GREENBACKS ARE PRINTED,
- 20. AMONG THE GREENBACKS—THE CUTTING AND SEPARATING ROOM IN THE 322
- TREASURY BUILDING,
- 21. BURNT TO ASHES—THE END OF UNCLE SAM’S GREENBACKS, 337
- The above is a graphic sketch of the destruction of the worn and
- defaced currency constantly being redeemed by the Government,
- which is here burned every day at 12 o’clock. On one occasion
- considerably more than one hundred million dollars’ worth of
- bonds and greenbacks were destroyed in this furnace, and the
- burning of from fifty to seventy-five millions at a time is a
- matter of ordinary occurrence.
- 22. THE NEW MARBLE CASH-ROOM, UNITED STATES TREASURY, 340
- The most costly and magnificent room of its kind in the world.
- 23. COUNTING WORN AND DEFACED GREENBACKS AND DETECTING 354
- COUNTERFEITS,
- This room is in the Redemption Bureau, Treasury-Building. Over One
- Hundred Thousand Dollars’ worth of Fractional Currency alone is
- here daily received for redemption: out of which about Three
- Hundred and Fifty Dollars’ worth of counterfeit money is
- detected, stamped, and returned.
- 24. THE LOBBY OF THE SENATE—INSIDE THE CAPITOL—WASHINGTON, 382
- 25. DEAD-LETTER OFFICE, U. S. GENERAL POST-OFFICE—WASHINGTON, 398
- 26. THE MODEL-ROOM—PATENT OFFICE—WASHINGTON, 438
- This room contains the fruits of the inventive genius of the whole
- nation. More than 160,000 models are here deposited.
- 27. BLOOD-STAINED CONFEDERATE BATTLE-FLAGS, CAPTURED DURING THE 462
- WAR,
- Sketched by permission of the Government from the large collection
- in possession of the War Department, at Washington.
-
- 1. Black Flag. 4. State and Regiment unknown. [Captured
- at the Battle of Gettysburg, by the 60th
- Regiment of New York Volunteers.]
- 2. Alabama Flag.
- 3. Palmetto Flag. 5. State Colors of North Carolina.
-
- 28. THE NEW BUILDING NOW BEING CONSTRUCTED FOR DEPARTMENTS OF 466
- STATE, ARMY, AND NAVY—WASHINGTON,
- 29. THE MAIN HALL OF THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM—WASHINGTON, 476
- This Museum occupies the scene of the assassination of President
- Lincoln, in Ford’s Theatre, which after that date became the
- property of the Government. It contains a collection of upwards
- of twenty thousand rare, curious and interesting objects,
- surpassing any similar collection in the world. It is visited
- annually by upwards of twenty-five thousand persons.
- 30. CURIOSITIES FROM THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM, 482
- 31. A WITHERED ARM, 482
- Skin, flesh, and bones complete. Amputated by a cannon-shot on the
- battle-field of Gettysburg. The shot carried the severed limb up
- into the high branches of a tree, where it was subsequently
- found, completely air and sun-dried.
- 32. SKULL OF A MAN, 482
- Who received an arrow-wound in the head, three gun-shot
- flesh-wounds, one in the arm, another in the breast, and a third
- in the leg. Seven days afterwards he was admitted to the
- hospital at Fort Concha, Texas, (where he subsequently died,)
- after having travelled above 160 miles on the barren plains,
- mostly on foot.
- 33. APACHE INDIAN ARROW-HEAD, 482
- Of soft hoop-iron. These arrows will perforate a bone without
- causing the slightest fracture, where a rifle or musket-ball
- will flatten; and will make a cut as clean as the finest
- surgical instrument.
- 34. SKULL OF LITTLE BEAR’S SQUAW, 482
- Perforated by seven bullet-holes. Killed in Wyoming Territory.
- 35. ALL THAT REMAINS ABOVE GROUND OF JOHN WILKES BOOTH, 482
- Being part of the Vertebræ penetrated [A] by the bullet of Boston
- Corbett. Strange freak of fate that the remains of Booth should
- find a resting-place under the same roof, and but a few feet
- from the spot where the fatal shot was fired.
- 36. SKULL OF A SOLDIER, 482
- Wounded at Spottsylvania; showing the splitting of a
- rifle-ball—one portion being buried deep in the brain, and the
- other between the scalp and the skull. He lived twenty-three
- days.
- 37. A SIOUX PAPPOOSE, 482
- Or Indian infant, found in a tree near Fort Laramie, where it had
- been buried (?) according to the custom of this tribe.
- 38. SKULL OF AN INDIAN, 482
- Showing nine distinct sabre wounds.
- 39. “OLD PROBABILITIES’” INSTRUMENT ROOM, 504
- Storm and Weather Signal Service Bureau—Washington.
- 40. TROPICAL FRUITS—INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT 545
- CONSERVATORY—WASHINGTON,
- 41. THE DOME AND SPIRAL STAIRCASE; RARE PLANTS AND FLOWERS—INSIDE 546
- THE GOVERNMENT CONSERVATORY—WASHINGTON,
- 42. TROPICAL PLANTS AND FLOWERS—INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT 548
- CONSERVATORY—WASHINGTON,
- 43. THE VAN NESS MANSION, AND DAVY BURNS’ COTTAGE, 550
- 44. THE CAPITOL AS SEEN FROM PENNSYLVANIA AVE.—WASHINGTON, 550
- 45. VIEW OF THE “CITY OF THE SLAIN”—ARLINGTON, 582
- The remains of over 8,000 soldiers, killed during the war, lie
- buried in this Cemetery—the name, regiment, and date of death of
- each is painted on a wooden head-board.
- 46. THE TOMB OF “THE UNKNOWN”—ARLINGTON, 586
- Erected by the Government to the memory of Unknown Soldiers killed
- during the War. It bears the following inscription:
- “Beneath this stone
- repose the bones of Two Thousand One Hundred and Eleven unknown
- soldiers, gathered after the war,
- from the fields of Bull Run and the _route_ to the Rappahannock.
- Their remains could not be identified; but their names and deaths are
- recorded in the archives of their country, and its grateful citizens
- honor them as of their noble army of Martyrs. May they rest in peace!
- September, A. D. 1866.”
- 47. PORTRAIT OF JAMES A. GARFIELD, THE MARTYR PRESIDENT, 588
- Engraved from a recent photograph.
- 48. PORTRAIT OF MRS. JAMES A. GARFIELD, WIFE OF THE MARTYR 600
- PRESIDENT,
- Engraved from a recent photograph.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- FROM THE VERY BEGINNING. PAGE.
-
- The Young Surveyor’s Dream—A Vision of the Future Capital—The
- United States Government on Wheels—Ambitious Offers—The Rival
- Rivers—Temporary Lodgings for Eleven Years—Old-Fashioned
- Simplicity—A Great Man’s Modesty—Conflicting Claims—A
- Convincing Fact—The Dreadful Quakers—A Condescending Party—A
- Slight Amendment—An Old Bill Brought to Light Again—The Future
- Strangely Foreshadowed—A Dinner of Some Consequence—How it was
- Done—Really a Stranger—A Nice Proposal—Sweetening the Pill—A
- “Revulsion of Stomach,” 21
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- CROSS PURPOSES AND QUEER SPECULATIONS.
-
- Born of Much Bother—Undefined Apprehensions—Debates on the Coming
- City—Old World Examples—Sir James Expresses an Opinion—A Dream
- of the Distant West—An Old-time Want—A Curious Statement of
- Fact—Where is the Center of Population—An Important
- Proclamation—Original Land Owners—Well-worn Patents—Getting on
- with Pugnacious Planters—Obstinate David Burns—A “Widow’s Mite”
- of Some Magnitude—How the Scotchman was Subjugated—A Rather
- “Forcible Argument,” 31
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE WORK BEGUN IN EARNEST.
-
- Washington’s Faith in the Future—Mr. Sparks is “Inclined to
- Think”—A Slight Miscalculation—Theoretical Spartans—Clinging to
- Old World Glories—Jefferson Acts the Critic—He Communicates
- Some Ideas—Models of Antiquity—Babylon Revived—Difficulty in
- Satisfying a Frenchman’s Soul—The Man Who Planned the
- Capital—Who Was L’Enfant?—His Troubles—His Dismissal—His
- Personal Appearance, Old Age, Death, and Burial Place—His
- Successor—A Magnificent Plan—A Record Which Can Never Perish—An
- Overpaid Quaker—Jefferson Expresses His Sentiments—A Sable
- Franklin—The Negro Engineer, Benjamin Bancker—A Chance for a
- Monument, 38
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- OLD WASHINGTON.
-
- How the City Was Built—“A Matter of Moonshine”—Calls for
- Paper—Besieging Congressmen—How They Raised the Money—The
- Government Requires Sponsors—Birth of the Nation’s
- Capital—Seventy Years Ago in Washington—Graphic Picture of
- Early Times—A Much-Marrying City—Unwashed Virginian
- Belles—Stuck in the Mud—Extraordinary Religious Services, 51
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE CAPITAL OF THE NATION.
-
- Expectations Disappointed—Funds Low and People Few—Slow Progress
- of the City—A Question of Importance Discussed—Generous
- Proposition of George Washington—Faith Under
- Difficulties—Transplanting an Entire College—An Old Proposition
- in a New Shape—What Washington “Society” Lacks—Perils of the
- Way—A Long Plain of Mud—Egyptian Dreariness—The End of an
- Expensive Canal—The Water of Tiber Creek—Divided Allegiance of
- Old—The Stirring of a Nation’s Heart—A Personal Interest, 62
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE WASHINGTON OF THE PRESENT DAY.
-
- Hopes Realized—Washington in 1873—Major L’Enfant’s Dream—Old and
- New—“Modern Improvements”—A City of Palaces—The Capital in all
- its Glory—Traces of the War—Flowers on the Ramparts—Under the
- Oaks of Arlington—Ten Years Ago—The Birth of a Century—The
- Reign of Peace, 72
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- WHAT MADE NEW WASHINGTON.
-
- Municipal Changes—Necessity of Reform—The “Organic Act”
- Passed—Contest for the Governorship of Columbia District—Mr.
- Henry D. Cooke Appointed—Board of Public Works
- Constituted—Great Improvements Made—Opposition—The Board and
- Its Work, 76
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- BUILDING THE CAPITOL.
-
- Various Plans for the Building—Jefferson Writes to the
- Commissioners—“Poor Hallet” and His Plan—Wanton Destruction by
- the British, A. D. 1814—The Site Chosen by Washington
- Himself—Imposing Ceremonies at the Foundation—Dedicatory
- Inscription on the Silver Plate—Interesting
- Festivities—Extension of the Building—Daniel Webster’s
- Inscription—His Eloquent and Patriotic Speech—Mistaken
- Calculations—First Session of Representatives Sitting in “the
- Oven”—Old Capitol Prison—Immense Outlay upon the Wings and
- Dome—Compared with St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s—The Goddess of
- Liberty—The Congressional Library—What Ought to be Done, 83
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.
-
- A Visit to the Capitol—The Lower Hall—Its Cool
- Tranquility—Artistic Treasures—The President’s and
- Vice-President’s Rooms—The Marble Room—The Senate Chamber—“Men
- I Have Known”—Hamlin—Foote—Foster—Wade—Colfax—Wilson—The
- Rotunda—Great Historical Paintings—The Old Hall of
- Representatives—The New Hall—The Speaker’s Room—Native Art—“The
- Star of Empire”—A National Picture, 93
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- OUTSIDE THE CAPITOL.
-
- The Famous Bronze Doors—The Capitol Grounds—Statue of Washington
- Criticised—Horace Greenough’s Defence of the Statue—Picturesque
- Scenery Around the Capitol—The City and Suburbs—The Public
- Reservation—The Smithsonian Institution—The Potomac and the
- Hights of Arlington, 104
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- ART TREASURES OF THE CAPITOL.
-
- Arrival of a Solitary Lady—“The Pantheon of America”—Il
- Penserosa—Milton’s Ideal—Dirty Condition of the House of
- Representatives—The Goddess of Melancholy—Vinnie Ream’s Statue
- of Lincoln—Its Grand Defects—Necessary Qualifications for a
- Sculptor—The Bust of Lincoln by Mrs. Ames—General Greene and
- Roger Williams—Barbarous Garments of Modern Times—Statues of
- Jonathan Trumbull and Roger Sherman—Bust of Kosciusko—Pulling
- his Nose—Alexander Hamilton—Fate of Senator Burr—Statue of
- Baker—His Last Speech Prophetic—The Glory of a Patriotic
- Example—The Lesson which Posterity Learns—Horatio Stone, the
- Sculptor—Neglected Condition of the Capitol Statuary—Curious
- Clock—Grotesque Plaster Image of Liberty—Webster—Clay—Adams—The
- Pantheon at Rome—The French Pantheon, 109
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- WOMEN WITH CLAIMS.
-
- The Senate Reception-Room—The People who Haunt it—Republican
- “Ladies in Waiting”—“Women with Claims”—Their Heroic
- Persistency—A Widow and Children in Distress—Claim Agents—The
- Committee of Claims—A Kind-Hearted Senator’s
- Troubles—Buttonholing a Senator—A Lady of Energy—Resolved to
- Win—An “Office Brokeress”—A Dragon of a Woman—A Lady who is
- Feared if not Respected—Her Unfortunate Victims—Carrying “Her
- Measure”—The Beautiful Petitioner—The Cloudy Side of Her
- Character—Her Subtle Dealings—Her Successes, 120
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- THE CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY.
-
- Inside the Library—The Librarian—Sketch of Mr. Spofford—How
- Congressional Speeches are Manufactured—“Spofford” in
- Congress—The Library Building—Diagram—Dimensions of the
- Hall—The Iron Book Cases—The Law Library—Five Miles of Book
- Shelves—Silent Study—“Abstracting” Books—Amusing Adventure—A
- Senator in a Quandary—Making Love Under Difficulties—Library
- Regulations—Privileged Persons—Novels and their Readers—Books
- of Reference—Compared with the British Museum—Curious Old
- Newspapers—Files of Domestic and Foreign Papers—One Hundred
- Defunct Journals—An Incident of the War of 1814—Putting it to
- the Vote—“Carried Unanimously”—35,000 Volumes
- Destroyed—Treasurers of Art Consumed—The New Library—The Next
- Appropriation, 127
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- A VISIT TO THE NEW LAW LIBRARY.
-
- How a Library was Offered to Congress—Mr. King’s Proposal—An Eye
- to Theology—The Smithsonian Library Transferred—The Good Deeds
- of Peter Force—National Documents—Eliot’s Indian Bible—Literary
- Treasures—The Lawyers Want a Library for Themselves—The Finest
- Law Library in the World—First Edition of Blackstone—Report of
- the Trial of Cagliostro, Rohan and La Motte—Marie Antoinette’s
- Diamond Necklace—A Long Life-Service—An Architect Buried
- Beneath his own Design—“Underdone Pie-crust”—Reminiscences of
- Daniel Webster and the Girard Will, 138
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- THE HEAVEN OF LEGAL AMBITION—THE SUPREME COURT ROOM.
-
- Memories of Clay, Webster, and Calhoun—Legal Giants of the
- Past—Stately Serenity of the Modern Court—“Wise Judgment and
- Wine Dinners”—The Supreme Court in Session—Soporific
- Influences—A Glimpse of the Veritable “Bench”—The Ladies’
- Gallery—The Chief Justices of the Past—His
- Apotheosis—Chief-Justice Chase—Black-Robed Dignitaries—An
- Undignified Procession—The “Crier” in Court—Antique
- Proclamation—The Consultation-Room—Gowns of Office—Reminiscence
- of Judge McLean—“Uncle Henry and his Charge”—Fifty Years in
- Office, 144
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- THE “MECCA” OF THE AMERICAN.
-
- The Center of a Nation’s Hopes—Stirring Reminiscences of the
- Capitol—History Written in Stone—Patriotic Expression of
- Charles Sumner—Building “for all Time”—“This our Fathers Did
- for Us”—The Interest of Humanity—A Secret Charm for a
- Thoughtful Mind—An Idea of Equality—The Destiny of the Stars
- and Stripes—A Mother’s Ambition—The Dying Soldier, 148
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- THE CAPITOL—MORNING SIGHTS AND SCENES.
-
- The Capitol in Spring—A Magic Change—Arrival of Visitors—A New
- Race—“Billing and Cooing”—Lovers at the Capitol—A Dream of
- Perpetual Spring—Spending the Honeymoon in Washington—New
- Edition of David Copperfield and Dora—“Very Young”—Divided
- Affections: The New Bride—Jonathan and Jane—Memories of a
- Wedding Dress—An Interview with a Bride—“Two Happy Idiots”—A
- Walk in the City—President Grant—The Foreign Ambassadors—“Beau”
- Hickman—An Erratic Genius—Walt Whitman the Poet—A “Loafer” of
- Renown—Poets at Home—Piatt—Burroughs—Harriet Prescott
- Spofford—Sumner and Chase—Tiresome Men—How to Love a Tree, 153
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- FAIR WASHINGTON—A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING.
-
- Washington Weather—Sky Scenery—Professor Tyndall Expresses an
- Opinion—A Picture of Beauty—Prejudiced Views—Birds of Rock
- Creek—The Parsonage—A Scene of Tranquil Beauty—A Washington
- May—Charms of the Season—Mowers at Work—The Public
- Parks—Frolics of the Little Ones—Strawberry Festivals—“Flower
- Gathering,” 162
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—SHADOWS OF THE PAST.
-
- Haunted Houses—Shadows of the Past—Touching Memories—The Little
- Angels Born There—A State of Perpetual Dampness—Dingy Aspect of
- a Monarch’s Palace—Outside the White House—A Peep Inside the
- Mansion—The Emperor of Japan Supersedes the Punch-Bowl—The
- Unfinished “Banqueting-Hall”—Glories of a _Levée_—Magnificent
- Hospitalities—A Comfortable Dining-Room—A Lady of Taste—An
- American “Baronial Hall”—The Furniture of Another Generation—A
- Valuable Steward—A Professor of Gastronomy—Paying the Professor
- and Providing the Dinner—Feeding the Celebrities—Mrs. Lincoln’s
- Unpopular Innovations—Fifteen Hundred Dollars for a Dinner—How
- Prince Arthur, of England, was Entertained—Domestic
- Economy—“Not Enough Silver”—A Tasty Soup—The Recipe for an
- Aristocratic Stew—Having a “Nice Time”—Hatred of Flummery—An
- Admirer of Pork and Beans and Slap-jacks—A Presidential
- Reception—Ready for the Festival—Splendor, Weariness and
- Indigestion—Paying the Penalty—In the Conservatory—Domestic
- Arrangements—Reminiscence of Abraham Lincoln, 167
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- LADIES OF THE WHITE HOUSE.
-
- A Morning Dream—Wives and Daughters of the Presidents—An Average
- Matron of the 18th Century—Educational Disadvantages—A
- Well-Regulated Lady—Useful Wife—Advantages of Having a
- Distinguished Husband—A Modern Lucretia—Washington’s
- Inauguration Suit—An Awkward Position for a Lady—Festivities in
- Franklin Square!—Transporting the Household Gods—Keeping Early
- Hours—Primitive Customs—Much-Shaken Hands—Remembrances of a
- Past Age—Very Questionable Humility—The Room in which
- Washington Died—Days of Widowhood—A Wife’s Congratulations—A
- True Woman—Domestic Affairs at the White House—An Unfinished
- Mansion—Interesting Details—A Woman’s Influence—A Monument
- Wanted—Devotion of a Husband—The “Single Life”—Disappointed
- Belles—An Extraordinary Reception—Blacked His Own Boots—A
- Daughter’s Affection, 177
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- WIVES OF THE PRESIDENTS—LIFE AT THE WHITE HOUSE.
-
- A Social Queen—“The Most Popular Person in the United States”—The
- Slow Days of Old—Traveling Under Difficulties—Political
- Pugnacity—Formality _versus_ Hospitality—Big Dishes Laughed
- at—A Foreign Minister Criticises—Advantages of a Good
- Memory—Funny Adventure of a Rustic Youth—A Strange
- Pocketful—Putting Him at His Ease—Doleful Visage of a New
- President—Getting Rid of a Burden—A Brave Lady—Waiting in
- Suspense—Taking Care of Cabinet Papers—Watching and
- Waiting—Flight—Unscrewing the Picture—After the War—Brilliant
- Receptions—Mrs. Madison’s Snuff-Box—Clay Takes a Pinch—“This is
- my Polisher!”—Two Plain Old Ladies from the West—They Depart in
- Peace—Days of Trouble and Care—Manuscripts Purchased by
- Congress—Last Days of a Good Woman—Mrs. Monroe—A Severe and
- Aristocratic Woman—Madame Lafayette in Prison, 192
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- NOTED WOMEN OF WASHINGTON—A CHAPTER OF GOSSIP.
-
- A Traveling Lady—Life in Russia—A Modern American Minister—A long
- and Lonely Journey—The Court of St James—Peculiar
- Waists—Costume of an Ancient _Belle_—Fearful and Wonderful
- Attire of a _Beau_—“A suit of Steel”—An Ascendant Star—A Man
- Who Hid his Feelings—The Candidate at a Cattle Show—Charles’s
- Opinion of His Mother—How a Lady “Amused” Her Declining Days—A
- Woman’s Influence—Politics and Piety Disagree—Why the General
- Didn’t Join the Church—A Head “Full of Politics”—Swearing
- Some—The President Becomes a Good Boy—Domestic Tendencies, 204
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- SCENES AT THE WHITE HOUSE—MEN AND WOMEN OF NOTE.
-
- Widows “at par”—Four Sonless Presidents—Supported by Flattery—A
- Delicate Constitution—Living to a Respectable Age—Teaching Her
- Grandson How to Fight—A Pathetic Reminiscence—A Perfect
- Gentlewoman—Obeying St. Paul—A Woman Who “Kept Silence”—“Sarah
- Knows Where It Is”—Three Queens in the Background—A Very
- Handsome Woman—A Lady’s Heroism—A Man Who Kept to His Post—A
- Life in the Savage Wilderness—A Life’s Devotion—The Colonel’s
- Brave Wife—Objecting to the Presidency—An Inclination for
- Retirement—The Penalty of Greatness—Death in the White House—A
- Wife’s Prayers—A New _Regime_—The Clothier’s Apprentice and the
- School Teacher—The Future President Builds His Own
- House—Domestic Happiness—Twenty-seven Years of Married
- Life—Home “Comforts” at the White House—The Memory of a Loving
- Wife, 218
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- THE WHITE HOUSE DURING THE WAR.
-
- Under a Cloud—“A Woman Among a Thousand”—Revival of By-gone
- Days—Another Lady of the White House—A “Golden Blonde”—Instinct
- Alike with Power and Grace—A Fun-Loving Romp—Harriet with her
- Wheelbarrow of Wood—A Deed of Kindness—The Wheel Turns
- Round—Gay Doings at the Capital—Rival Claims for a Lady’s
- Hand—Reigning at the White House—Doing Double Duty—Marriage of
- Harriet Lane—As Wife and Mother—Mrs. Abraham Lincoln—Standing
- Alone—A Time of Trouble and Perplexity—Rumors of War—Whispers
- of Treason—Awaiting the Event—A Life-long Ambition
- Fulfilled—The Nation Called to Arms—What the President’s Wife
- Did—The Dying and the Dead—Arrival of Troops—The Lonely Man at
- the White House—An Example of Selfishness—Petty Economies—The
- Back Door of the White House—An Injured Individual—Death of
- Willie Lincoln—Injustice which Mrs. Lincoln Suffered—The Rabble
- in the White House—Valuables Carried Away—Big Boxes and Much
- Goods—Mrs. Lincoln Disconsolate—Missing Treasures—Faults of a
- President’s Wife, 231
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- THE WHITE HOUSE NOW.
-
- After the War—A Contrast—Secretly Burying the Dead—A Wife of
- Seventeen Years—Midnight Studies—Broken Down—A party of
- Grandchildren—“God’s Best Gift to Man”—The Woman Who Taught the
- President—Doing the Honors at the White House—Traces of the
- Soldiers—A State of Dirt and Ruin—Mrs. Patterson’s Calico
- Dress—In the Diary—A Nineteenth Century Wonder—How the Old
- Carpets were Patched—How $30,000 were Spent—Buying the
- Furniture—Working in Hot Weather—Very Good Dinners—Doors Open
- to the Mob—Sketching a Banquet—The Portraits of the
- Presidents—The Impeachment Trial—Peace in the Family—The Grant
- Dynasty—Looking Home-like—Mrs. Grant at Home—What Might Be
- Done, if—How a Certain Young Lady was Spoilt—Brushing Away “the
- Dew of Innocence,” 243
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- RECEPTION DAY AT THE WHITE HOUSE—GLIMPSES OF LIFE.
-
- Feeling Good-Natured—Looking After One’s Friends—Ready to
- Forgive—Mr. Grant’s “Likeable Side”—Rags and Tatters
- Departed—The Work of Relic-Hunters—Eight Presidents, All in a
- Row—Shadows of the Departed—A Present from the Sultan of
- Turkey—A List of Finery—A Scene Not Easily Forgotten—How They
- Wept for Their Martyr—Tales which a Room Might Tell—Underneath
- the Gold and Lace—The Census of Spittoons—“A Horror in Our
- Land”—The Shadow of Human Nature—Two “Quizzing” Ladies—An
- Illogical Dame—Her “Precarious Organ”—A Lady of Many Colors—“A
- New Woman”—A Vegetable Comparison—The Lady of the Manor—Women
- Who are Not Ashamed of Womanhood—Observed and Admired of
- All—Sketch of a Perfect Woman—After the Lapse of
- Generations—The “German”—The “Withering” of Many American
- Women—Full Dress and No Dress—What the Princess Ghika Thinks—A
- Young Girl’s Dress—“That Dreadful Woman”—The Resolution of a
- Young Man, 256
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- INAUGURATION DAY AT WASHINGTON.
-
- My Own Private Opinion—The Little “Sons of War” Feeling
- Bad—Brutal Mothers—Our Heroes—Later Festivities—A Lively
- Time—The Mighty Drum-Major—“Taken for a Nigger”—Magnificent
- Display—The Oldest Regiment in the States—Sketches of
- Well-known Men—Blacque Bey—Full Turkish Costume—The Japanese
- Minister—The Supreme Court—Congress Alive Again—The
- Valedictory—Taking the Oath—“The Little Gentleman in the Big
- Chair”—His Little Speech—His Wife and Family Behind—The New
- President—Memories of Another Scene—The Curtain Falls, 269
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
- A PEEP AT AN INAUGURATION BALL.
-
- How Sixty Thousand Dollars were Spent—Something Wrong: “Twas Ever
- Thus”—A Fine Opportunity for a Few Naughty Words—Lost
- Jewels—The Colored Folks in a Fix—Six Thousand People Clamoring
- for Their Clothes!—A Magnificent “Grab”—Weeping on
- Window-ledges—Left Desolate—Walking under Difficulties—The
- Exploit of Two Old Gentlemen—Horace Greeley Loses his Old White
- Hat—He says Naughty Words of Washington—A Little Too Cold—Gay
- Decorations—Modesty in Scanty Garments—The President
- Frozen—Ladies of Distinction—Half-frozen Beauties—Why and
- Wherefore?—A Stolid Tanner Who Fought his Way, 278
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
-
- THE UNITED STATES TREASURY—ITS HISTORY.
-
- The Responsibilities and Duties of the Secretary of the
- Treasury—Three Extraordinary Men—Hamilton Makes an Honest
- Proposal—The Mint at Philadelphia—A Little Personal Abuse—The
- Secretary Borrows Twenty Dollars—Modern Greediness—The Genius
- Becomes a Lawyer—Burning of Records—Hunting for Blunders and
- Frauds—The Treasury Building—A Little Variety—A Vision of Much
- Money—Old Debts Raked Up—Signs of the Times—The National
- Currency Act—Enormous Increase of the National Debt—Facts and
- Figures—The Credit of the Government Sustained—President
- Grant’s Rule—George S. Boutwell Made Secretary—Great
- Expectations, 284
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
-
- INSIDE THE TREASURY—THE HISTORY OF A DOLLAR.
-
- “Old Hickory” Erects his Cane—“Put the Building Right Here”—A
- Very Costly Building—The Workers Within—The Business of Three
- Thousand People—The Mysteries of the Treasury—Inside the
- Rooms—Mary Harris’s Revenge—The “Drones” in the Hive—Making
- Love in Office Hours—Flirtations in Public—A List of Miserable
- Sinners—A Pitiful Ancient Dame—Women’s Work in the Treasury—The
- Bureau of Printing and Engraving—Dealing in Big Figures—The
- Story of a Paper Dollar—In the Upper Floor—The Busy
- Workers—Night Work—Where the Paper is Made—The “Localized Blue
- Fibre”—_The_ Obstacle to the Counterfeiter—The Automatic
- Register—Keeping Watch—The Counters and Examiners—An Armed
- Escort—Varieties of Printing—The Contract with Adams’
- Express—Printing the Notes and Currency—Internal Revenue
- Stamps—Manufacturing the Plates—The Engraving Division—“Men of
- Many Minds”—Delicate Operations—A Pressure of Five or Six
- Tons—The Plate Complete—“Re-entering” a Plate—An
- “Impression”—How Old Plates are Used Up—A Close
- Inspection—Defying Imitation—The Geometric Lathe, 303
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
-
- THE WORKERS IN THE TREASURY—HOW THE MONEY IS MADE.
-
- The Dollar with the Counters—In the Tubs—Getting a
- Wetting—Servants of Necessity—That Scorching Roof—Brown Paper
- Bonnets—A State of Dampness—Squaring Accounts—Superintending
- the Work—The Face-printing Division—The United States
- “Sealer”—Printing Cigar-Stamps and Gold-Notes of Many
- Colors—With a Begrimed Face—The Fiery Little Brazier—What the
- Man Does—The Woman’s Work—The Automatic Register—An Observer
- Without a Soul—Our Damp Little Dollar—The Drying Room—The First
- Wrinkles—Looking Wizened and Old—Rejuvenating a
- Dollar—Underneath Two Hundred and Forty Tons—Smooth and
- Polished—Precious to the Touch—A Virgin Dollar—The “Sealer” at
- Work—Mutilated Paper—What the Women are paid—The
- Surface-Sealing Division—Seal Printing—The Aristocratic Green
- Seal—The Numbering Division—Dividing the Dollars—Snowy Aprons
- and Delicate Ribbons—Needling the Sheet—A Blade that Does not
- Fail—Sorting the Notes—The Manipulation of the Ladies—The
- Dollar “In its Little Bed”—Dollar on Dollar—“Awaiting the Final
- Call,” 317
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
-
- THE LAST DAYS OF A DOLLAR.
-
- Ready for the World—Starting Right—Forty Busy Maids and
- Matrons—Counting Out the Money—Human Machines—A Lady Counting
- for a Dozen Years Fifty Thousand Notes in a Day—Counting Four
- Thousand Notes in Twenty Minutes—What has Passed Through _Some_
- Fingers—Big Figures—Packing Away the Dollars—The Cash
- Division—The Marble Cash-Room—The Great Iron Vault—Where Uncle
- Sam Keeps His Money—Some Nice Little Packages—Taking it
- Coolly—One Hundred Millions of Dollars in Hand—Some Little
- White Bags—The Gold Taken from the Banks of Richmond—A
- Distinction Without a Difference—The Secret of the Locks—The
- Hydraulic Elevator—Sending the Money off—Begrimed, Demoralized,
- and Despoiled—Where is Our Pretty Dollar?—The Redemption
- Division—Counting Mutilated Currency—Women at Work—Sorting Old
- Greenbacks—Three Hundred Counterfeit Dollars Daily—Detecting
- Bad Notes—“Short,” “Over,” and “Counterfeit”—Difficulty of
- Counterfeiting Fresh Notes—Vast Amounts Sent for
- Redemption—Thirty-one Million Dollars in One Year—The Assistant
- Treasurer at New York—The Cancelling Room—The Counter’s
- Report—The Bundle in a Box—Awkward Responsibility—“Punching”
- Old Dollars—The Funeral of the Dollar—The Burning, Fiery
- Furnace—The End of the Dollar, 326
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
- THE GREAT CASH-ROOM—THE WATCH-DOG OF THE TREASURY.
-
- No Need for Dirty Money—The Flowers of July—Money Affairs—The
- Great Cash-Room—Its Marble Glories—A Glance Inside—The
- Beautiful Walls—A Good Deal of Very Bad Taste—Only Made of
- Plaster—“The Watch Dog” of the Treasury—The Custodian of the
- Cash—A Broken-nosed Pitcher—Ink for the Autographs—His Ancient
- Chair—“The General”—“Crooked, Crotchety, and
- Great-hearted”—“Principles” and Pantaloons—Below the Surface—An
- Unpaintable Face—An Object of Personal Curiosity—Dick and Dolly
- pay the General a Visit—How the Thing is Done—Getting his
- Autograph—A Specimen for the Folks at Home—Where the Treasurer
- Sleeps—Going the Round at Night—Making Assurance Sure—Awakened
- by a Strong Impression—Sleepless—In the “Small Hours”—Finding
- the Door Open—A Careless Clerk—The Care of Eight Hundred
- Millions—On the Alert—The Auditors—The Solicitor’s Office—The
- Light-House Board—The Coast Survey—Internal Revenue Department, 339
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
- WOMAN’S WORK IN THE DEPARTMENTS—WHAT THEY DO AND HOW THEY DO IT.
-
- Women Experts in the Treasury—Their Superiority to Men—Money
- Burnt in the Chicago Fire—Cases of Valuable Rubbish—Identifying
- Burnt Greenbacks—The Ashes of the Boston Fire—From the Bottom
- of the Mississippi—Mrs. Patterson Saves a “Pile” of Money—Money
- in the Toes of Stockings—In the Stomachs of Men and Beasts—From
- the Bodies of the Murdered and Drowned—One Hundred and Eighty
- Women at Work—“The Broom Brigade”—Scrubbing the Floors—Stories
- which Might be Told—Meditating Suicide—The Struggle of Life—How
- a Thousand Women are Employed—Speaking of Their Characters—Miss
- Grundy of New York—Women of Business Capacity—A Lady as Big as
- Two Books!—A Disgrace to the Nation—Working for Two, Paid for
- One—Beaten by a Woman—The Post-Office Department—Folding “Dead
- Letters”—A Woman Who has Worked Well—“Sorrow Does Not Kill”—The
- Patent Office—Changes Which Should be Made, 350
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
-
- WOMEN’S WORK IN THE TREASURY—HOW APPOINTMENTS ARE MADE.
-
- The Difference Between Men and Women—A Shameful and Disgraceful
- Fraud—What Two Women Did—Cutting Down the Salaries of Women—The
- First Woman-Clerk in the Treasury—Taking Her Husband’s
- Place—The Feminine Tea-Pot—“A Woman can Use Scissors Better
- than a Man”—Profound Discovery!—“She’ll do it
- _Cheaper”_—Besieged by Women—Scenes of Distress and
- Trouble—Infamous Intrigues—The Baseness of Certain
- Senators—Virtue Spattered with Mud—Secret Doings in High
- Places—Sounding Magnanimous—Passing the Examination—The
- Irrepressible Masculine Tyrants—Up to the Mark, but not
- Winning—An Alarming Suggestion—Men _Versus_ Women—Tampering
- with the Scales, 369
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
- GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL LIFE—HOW PLACE AND POWER ARE WON.
-
- Keeping his Eye Open—The Sweet and Winning Ways of Mr.
- Parasite—In Office—The Fault of the “People” and “my
- Friends”—Pulling the Wool over the Eyes of the Innocent—Writing
- Letters in a Big Way—The “Dark Ways” of Wicked Mr. P—— —A
- Suspicious Yearning for Private Life—The Sweets of Office—John
- Jones is not Encouraged—Post-offices as Plentiful as
- Blackberries—Receiving Office seekers—Dismissing
- John—Over-crowded Pastures—John’s Own Private Opinion—Peculiar
- Impartiality of the Man in Office—What the Successful Man
- Said—A Certain Kind of Man, and Where He can be Found, 382
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
- THE DEAD-LETTER OFFICE—ITS MARVELS AND MYSTERIES.
-
- The Post-Office—The Postal Service In Early Times—The First
- Postmaster General—The Present Chief—A Cabinet Minister—The
- Subordinate Officers—Their Positions and Duties—The Ocean Mail
- Postal Service—The Contract Office—The Finance Office—The
- Inspection Office—Complaints and Misdoings—One Hundred and
- Twenty Years Ago—Franklin Performs Wonderful Works—His Ideas of
- Speed—Between Boston and Philadelphia in Six Weeks—Dismissed
- from Office—A New Post-Office System—The Inspector of Dead
- Letters—Only Seventy-five Offices in the States—Only One
- Clerk—Government Stages—The Office at Washington—Franklin’s Old
- Ledger—The Present Number of Post-Offices—The Dead Letter
- Office—The Ladies Too Much Squeezed—Opening the Dead
- Letters—Why Certain Persons are Trusted—Three Thousand
- Thoughtless People—Valuable Letters—Ensuring Correctness—The
- Property Branch—The Touching Story of the Photographs—The
- Return Branch—What the Postmaster Says, 388
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
- THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR—UNCLE SAM’S DOMESTIC ARRANGEMENTS.
-
- Inadequate Accommodation in Heaven—Valuable Documents—In
- Jeopardy—Talk of Moving the Capital—Concerning Certain Idiots—A
- Day in the Patent Office—The Inventive Genius of the
- Country—Division of Indian Affairs—Lands and Railroads—Pensions
- and Patents—The Superintendent of the Building—The Secretary of
- the Interior and his Subordinates—Pensions and Their
- Recipients—Indian Affairs—How the Savages are Treated—Over
- Twenty—One Million of Dollars Credited to their Little
- Account—The Census Bureau—A Rather Big Work—The Bureau of
- Patents—What is a Patent?—A Few Dollars Over—The Use Made of a
- Certain Brick Building—Cutting Down the Ladies’ Salaries—Making
- Places for Useful Voters—A Sweet Prayer for Delano’s Welfare, 407
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
- THE PENSION BUREAU—HOW GOVERNMENT PAYS ITS SERVANTS.
-
- Sneering at Red Tape—The Division of Labor—Scrutinizing
- Petitions—A Heavy Paper Jacket—Invalids, Widows, and Minors—The
- Examiner of Pensions—How Claims are Entertained and Tested—What
- is Recorded in the Thirty Enormous Volumes—How Many Genuine
- Cases are Refused—One of the Inconveniences of Ignorance—The
- Claim Agent Gobbles up the Lion’s Share—An Extensive
- Correspondence—How Claims are Mystified, and Money is
- Wasted—Seventy-five Thousand Claims Pending—The Reward of
- Fourteen Days’ Service—The Sum Total of What the Government has
- Paid in Pensions—The Largest and the Smallest Pension
- Office—The Miscellaneous Branch—Investigating Frauds—A Poor
- “Dependent” Woman with Forty Thousand Dollars—How “Honest and
- Respectable” People Defraud the Government—The Medical
- Division—Examining Invalids—The Restoration-Desk—The
- Appeal-Desk—The Final-Desk—The Work that Has Been Done—One
- Hundred and Fifty Thousand People Grumbling—The Wrath of a
- Pugnacious Captain, 418
-
- CHAPTER XL.
-
- TREASURES AND CURIOSITIES OF THE PATENT OFFICE—THE MODEL ROOM—ITS
- RELICS AND INVENTIONS.
-
- The Patent Office Building—The Model Room—“The Exhibition of the
- Nation”—A Room Two Hundred and Seventy Feet in Length—The
- Models—Wonders and Treasures of the Room—Benjamin Franklin’s
- Press—Model Fire-Escapes—Wonderful Fire-Extinguishers—The
- Efforts of Genius—Sheep-Stalls, Rat-Traps, and Gutta Percha—An
- Ancient Mariner’s Compass—Captain Cook’s Razor—The Atlantic
- Cable—The Signatures of Emperors—An Extraordinary Turkish
- Treaty—Treasures of the Orient—Rare Medals—The Reward of Major
- Andre’s Captors—The Washington Relics—His Old Tent—His Blankets
- and Bed-Curtains—His Chairs and Looking-Glass—His Primitive
- Mess-Chest and old Tin Plates—Model of an Extraordinary
- Boat—Abraham Lincoln as an Inventor—The Hat Worn on the Fatal
- Night—The Gift of the Tycoon—The Efforts of Genius—A Machine to
- Force Hens to Lay Eggs—A Hook for Fishing Worms out of the
- Human Stomach, 436
-
- CHAPTER XLI.
-
- THE BUREAU OF PATENTS—CRAZY INVENTORS AND WONDERFUL INVENTIONS
-
- Patent-Rights in Steamboats—The Corps of Examiners—Twenty
- Thousand Applications _per annum_—Fourteen Thousand Patents
- Granted in One Year—Wonderful Expansion of Inventive
- Genius—“The Universal Yankee”—Second-hand Inventions—Where the
- Inventions Come From—Taking Out a Patent for the Lord’s
- Prayer—A Patent for a Cow’s Tail—A Lady’s Patent—Hesitating to
- Accept a Million Dollars—How Patentees are Protected—The
- American System—Exploits of General Leggett—His Efficiency in
- Office—The Inventor Always a Dreamer—Perpetual Motion—The
- Invention of a D. D.—Silencing the Doctor—A New Process of
- Embalming—A Dead Body Sent to the Office—Utilizing Niagara—An
- Englishman’s Invention—Inventors in Paris—How to Kill Lions and
- Tigers in the United States with Catmint—A Fearful Bomb
- Shell—Eccentric Letters—Amusing Specimens of Correspondence, 446
-
- CHAPTER XLII.
-
- THE WAR DEPARTMENT.
-
- The Secretary-of-War—His Duties—The Department of the Navy—The
- Custody of the Flags—Patriotic Trophies—The War of the
- Rebellion—Captured Flags—An Ugly Flag and a Strange Motto—The
- Stars and Stripes—The Black Flag—No Quarter—The Washington
- Aqueduct—Topographical Engineers—The Ordnance Bureau—The War
- Department Building—During the War—Lincoln’s Solitary
- Walk—Secretary Stanton—The Exigencies of War—The Medical
- History of the War—Dr. Hammond—Dr. J. H. Baxter—The Inspection
- of over Half a Million Persons—Who is Unfit for Military
- Service—Curious Calculations Respecting Height, Health, and
- Color, 460
-
- CHAPTER XLIII.
-
- THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM—ITS CURIOSITIES AND WONDERS.
-
- Ford’s Theatre—Its Interesting Memories—The Last
- Festivities—Assassination of President Lincoln—Two Years
- Later—Effects of “War, Disease, and Human Skill”—Collection of
- Pathological Specimens—The Army Medical Museum opened—Purchase
- of Ford’s Theatre—Ghastly Specimens—A Book Four Centuries
- Old—Rare Old Volumes—The Most Interesting of the National
- Institutions—Various Opinions—Effects on Visitors—An
- Extraordinary Withered Arm—A Dried Sioux Baby!—Its Poor Little
- Nose—A Well-dressed Child—Its Buttons and Beads—Casts of
- Soldier-Martyrs—Making a New Nose—Vassear’s Mounted
- Craniums—Model Skeletons—A Giant, Seven Feet High—Skeleton of a
- Child—All that remains of Wilkes Booth, the Assassin—Fractures
- by Shot and Shell—General Sickles Contributes His Quota—A Case
- of Skulls—Arrow-head Wounds—Nine Savage Sabre-Cuts—Seven
- Bullets in One Head—Phenomenal Skulls—A Powerful Nose—An
- Attempted Suicide—A Proverb Corrected—Specimen from the Paris
- Catacombs—Typical Heads of the Human Race—Remarkable Indian
- Relics—“Flatheads”—The Work of Indian Arrows—An Extraordinary
- Story—A “Pet” Curiosity—A Japanese Manikin—Tattooed
- Heads—Adventure of Captain John Smith—A “Stingaree”—The
- Microscopical Division—Preparing Specimens, 475
-
- CHAPTER XLIV.
-
- “OLD PROBABILITIES’” WORKSHOP—HOW WEATHER CALCULATIONS ARE MADE.
-
- “Old Probabilities”—An Interesting Subject—The Weather Bureau—The
- Experience Of Fifty Centuries—Foreseeing the Approach of
- Storms—The Fate of the _Metis_—Quicker than the Storm—The First
- Warning by Telegraph—Exchanging Reports with Canada—The
- “Observing Stations”—Protecting the River Commerce—The Signal
- Corps—The Examinations—The Sergeant’s Duties—The
- Signal-Stations—The Work of the Observers—Preparing Bulletins
- at Washington—Professor Maury’s Account—Safeguards Against
- Mistakes—Deducing Probabilities—Despatching Bulletins—Watching
- the Storm—The Storm at San Francisco—Prophetic
- Preparations—Perfect Arrangements—Training the
- Sergeants—General Meyer’s Work—An Extraordinary Mansion—The
- “Kites and Windmills”—Inside the Mansion—The Apparatus—“The
- Unerring Weather-Man”—“Old Probabilities” Himself—How
- Calculations are Made—“Young Probabilities”—Interesting Facts, 491
-
- CHAPTER XLV.
-
- THE NAVY DEPARTMENT—THE UNITED STATES OBSERVATORY—THE STATE
- DEPARTMENT.
-
- The Navy-Yards and Docks—Equipment of Vessels—Bureau of Ordnance
- and Hydrography—The Naval Observatory—The Bureau of
- Medicine—Interesting Statistics—The Navy Seventy Years
- Ago—Instructions of the Great Napoleon—Keeping Pace with
- England—Scene from the Observatory—Peeping through the
- Telescope—The Mountains in the Moon—The Largest Telescope in
- the World—The Chronometers of the Government—The Test of
- Time—Chronometers on Trial—The Wind and Current Charts—The Good
- Deeds of Lieutenant Maury—“The Habits of the Whale”—The
- Equatorial—A Self-acting Telescope—The Transit Instrument—The
- Great Astronomical Clock—Telling Time by Telegraph—Hearing the
- Clock Tick Miles Away—The Transit of Venus—Great Preparations—A
- Trifle of Half-a-Million of Miles—A Little Secret
- Suggestion—Pardons and Passports, 507
-
- CHAPTER XLVI.
-
- INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE—THE STORY OF A “PUB.
- DOC.”—WOMEN WORKERS.
-
- The Largest Printing Establishment in the World—The Celebrated
- “Pub. Doc.”—A Personal Experience—What the Nation’s Printing
- Costs—A Melancholy Fact—Two Sides of the Question—Printing a
- Million Money-Orders—The Stereotype Foundry—A Few Figures—The
- Government Printing-Office—A Model Office—Aiding Human
- Labor—Working by Machinery—The Ink-Room—The Private Offices—Mr.
- Clapp’s Comfortable Office—The Proof-Reading Room—The Workers
- There—The Compositor’s Room—The Women-Workers—Setting Up Her
- Daily Task—The Tricks and Stratagems of Correspondents—A
- Private Press in the White House—Acres of Paper—Specimens of
- Binding—Specimen Copies—Binding the Surgical History of the
- War—The Ladies Require a Little More Air—Delicate Gold-Leaf
- Work—The Folding-Room—An Army of Maidens—The Stitching-Room—The
- Needles of Women—A Busy Girl at Work—“Thirty Cents
- Apiece”—Getting Used to It—The Girl Over Yonder—The Manual
- Labor System—Preparing “Copy”—“Setting Up”—Making-Up
- “Forms”—Reading “Proof”—The Press-Room—Going to Press—Folding,
- Stitching, and Binding—Sent Out to “The Wide, Wide World.” 520
-
- CHAPTER XLVII.
-
- INSIDE THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—ITS TREASURES OF ART AND
- SCIENCE—THE LARGEST COLLECTION IN THE WORLD.
-
- Strange Story of James Smithson—A Good Use of Money—Seeking the
- Diffusion of Knowledge—Catching a Tear from a Lady’s
- Cheek—Analysis of the Same Tear—A Brief Tract on
- Coffee-Making—James Smithson’s Will—Praiseworthy Efforts of
- Robert Dale Owen—The Bequest Accepted—The Plan of the
- Institution—Its Intent and Object—The Smithsonian
- Reservation—The Smithsonian Building—The Museum—Treasures of
- Art and Science—The Results of Thirty Government
- Expeditions—The Largest Collection in the World—Valuable
- Mineral Specimens—All the Vertebrated Animals of North
- America—Classified Curiosities—The Smithsonian
- Contributions—Its Advantages and Operations—Results—The
- Agricultural Bureau—Its Plan and Object—Collecting Valuable
- Agricultural Facts—Helping the Purchaser of a Farm—The Expenses
- of the Bureau—The Library—Nature-Printing—In the Museum—The
- Great California Plank—Vegetable Specimens, 533
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII.
-
- OLD HOMES AND HAUNTS OF WASHINGTON—MEMORIES OF OTHER DAYS.
-
- The Oldest Home in Washington—The Cottage of David Burns—David
- Burns’s Daughter—The Attractions of a Cottage—The Favored
- Suitor—How The Lady was Wooed and Won—Mother and Daughter—The
- Offering to God—A Costly Mausoleum—The Assassination
- Conspiracy—Persecuting the Innocent—The Octagon House—A
- Comfortable Income—The Pleasures of Property—A Haunted
- House—Apple-Stealing—“Departed Joys and Stomach-Aches”—The
- Tragedy of the Decatur House—A Fatal Duel—The Stockton-Sickles
- House—A Spot of Frightful Interest—The Club-House—Assassination
- of Mr. Seward—Scenes of Festivity—The House of Charles
- Sumner—Corcoran Castle—The Finest Picture Gallery in
- America—Powers’ Greek Slave—“Maggie Beck”—During the War—The
- Romantic Story of Mr. Barlow’s Niece—Forgetting His Own
- Name—Locking Up a Wife—The “Ten Buildings”—Old Capitol
- Prison—The Deeds of Ann Royal and Sally Brass—“Paul
- Pry”—Blackmailing—Feared By All Mankind—An Unpleasant Sort of
- Woman—Arrested on Suspicion—Where Wirz was Hung, 549
-
- CHAPTER XLIX.
-
- MOUNT VERNON—MEMORIAL DAY—ARLINGTON.
-
- The Tomb of Washington—The Pilgrims who Visit it—Where George and
- Martha Washington Rest—The Thought of Other Graves—The
- Defenders of the Republic—Eating Boiled Eggs—A Butterfly
- Visit—Patriarchal Dogs—Remembering a Feast—The Room in which
- Washington Died—The Great Key of the Bastile—The Gift of
- Lafayette—Moralizing—Inside the Mansion—Uncle Tom’s
- _Bouquets_—Beautiful Scenery—Memorial Day at Arlington—The
- Soldiers’ Orphans—The Grave of Forty Soldiers—The Sacrifice of
- a Widow’s Son—The Record of the Brave—A National Prayer for the
- Dead, 581
-
- CHAPTER L.
-
- THE LIFE AND CAREER OF JAMES A. GARFIELD, THE MARTYRED PRESIDENT.
-
- The National Republican Convention of 1880—Nomination of James A.
- Garfield as President Hayes’s successor—The History of His
- Life—His Humble Home—Death of His Father—Hardship and
- Privations of Pioneer Life—Struggles of His Mother to Support
- the Family—Splitting Fence Rails with her own Hands—The Future
- President’s Early School Days—Working as a Carpenter—Chopping
- Wood for a Living—Leaving Home—Life as a Canal Boat Boy—Narrow
- Escapes—Beginning His Education in Earnest—School Life at
- Chester—How He Paid His Own Way—First Meeting with His Future
- Wife—Early Religious Experience—Enters Williams
- College—Professor and President—His First Appearance in
- Politics—His Brilliant Military Record—His Services at Shiloh,
- Corinth, and Chickamauga—His Congressional Career—Republican
- Leader of the House of Representatives—He is Elected to the
- United States Senate—His Appearance as the Leader of the
- Sherman Forces at the Chicago Convention—He is Himself
- Nominated amid the Wildest Enthusiasm—An Exciting Campaign—His
- Triumphant Election, 588
-
- CHAPTER LI.
-
- THE HISTORY OF THE ASSASSINATION AND DEATH OF PRESIDENT JAMES A.
- GARFIELD—THE GREAT TRAGEDY OF THE AGE.
-
- Inauguration of President Garfield—Kissing His Venerable
- Mother—Chief Magistrate of Fifty Million People—Illness of Mrs.
- President Garfield—Tender Solicitude of the President for the
- Welfare of His Wife—She Goes to Long Branch—The President’s
- Plans to Meet Her—His Arrival at the Depot of the Baltimore and
- Potomac R. R. at Washington—His Buoyant Spirits—Joyous
- Anticipation of Meeting His Wife—The Assassin Lying in Wait—The
- Fatal Shot—Tremendous Excitement—The Wounded President—His
- Assassin, Charles J. Guiteau—Who He is—His Infamous Appearance
- and Character—His Cool Deliberation—His Capture and
- Imprisonment—A Thrill of Horror Throughout the Country—Removal
- of the President to the White House—Arrival of Mrs.
- Garfield—Her Courage and Devotion—The Fight for Life—Anxious
- Days—Removal of the Wounded President to Long Branch—A
- Remarkable Ride—Great Anxiety Throughout the Country—Fighting
- Death—Slowly Sinking—After Eighty Days of Unparalleled
- Suffering the President Breathes His Last—Grief and Gloom
- throughout the Land—The Whole Civilized World in
- Tears—Unprecedented Funeral and Memorial Honors—His Burial at
- Cleveland—Attendance of Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand
- People—His Life and Character Reviewed, 606
-
- Ten Years in Washington.
-
- ----------
-
- CHAPTER I.
- FROM THE VERY BEGINNING.
-
-The Young Surveyor’s Dream—Humboldt’s View of Washington—A Vision
- of the Future Capital—The United States Government on
- Wheels—Ambitious Offers—The Rival Rivers—Potomac Wins—Battles in
- Congress—Patriotic Offers of Territory—Temporary Lodgings for Eleven
- Years—Old-Fashioned Simplicity—He Couldn’t Afford Furniture—A Great
- Man’s Modesty—Conflicting Claims—Smith Backs Baltimore—A Convincing
- Fact—The Dreadful Quakers—A Condescending Party—A Slight
- Amendment—An Old Bill Brought to Light Again—The Indian Place with
- the Long Name—Secession Threatened—The Future Strangely
- Foreshadowed—A Dinner of Some Consequence—How it was Done—Really a
- Stranger—A Nice Proposal—Sweetening the Pill—A “Revulsion of
- Stomach”—Fixed on the Banks of the Potomac.
-
-
-More than a century ago a young surveyor, Captain of the Virginia
-troops, camped with Braddock’s forces upon the hill now occupied by the
-Washington Observatory, looked down as Moses looked from Nebo upon the
-promised land, until he saw growing before his prophetic sight the city
-of the future, the Capital of a vast and free people then unborn. This
-youth was George Washington. The land upon which he gazed was the
-undreamed of site of the undreamed of city of the Republic, then to be.
-This youth, ordained of God to be the Father of the Republic, was the
-prophet of its Capital. He foresaw it, he chose it, he served it, he
-loved it; but as a Capital he never entered it.
-
-Gazing from the green promontory of Camp Hill, what was the sight of
-land and water upon which the youthful surveyor looked down? It was fair
-to see, so fair that Humboldt declared after traveling around the earth,
-that for the site of a city the entire globe does not hold its equal. On
-his left rose the wooded hights of Georgetown. On his right, the hills
-of Virginia stretched outward toward the ocean. From the luxurious
-meadows which zoned these hills, the Potomac River—named by the Indians
-Cohonguroton, River of Swans—from its source in the Alleghany Mountains,
-flowing from north-west to south-west, here expanded more than the width
-of a mile, and then in concentrated majesty rolled on to meet Chesapeake
-Bay, the river James, and the ocean. South and east, flowing to meet it,
-came the beautiful Anacostin, now called Eastern Branch, and on the
-west, winding through its picturesque bluffs, ran the lovely Rock Creek,
-pouring its bright waters into the Potomac, under the Hights of
-Georgetown. At the confluence of these two rivers, girdled by this
-bright stream, and encompassed by hills, the young surveyor looked
-across a broad amphitheatre of rolling plain, still covered with native
-oaks and undergrowth. It was not these he saw. His prescient sight
-forecast the future. He saw the two majestic rivers bearing upon their
-waters ships bringing to these green shores the commerce of many
-nations. He saw the gently climbing hills crowned with villas, and in
-the stead of oaks and undergrowth, broad streets, a populous city,
-magnificent buildings, outrivaling the temples of antiquity—the Federal
-City, the Capital of the vast Republic yet to be! The dreary camp, the
-weary march, privation, cold, hunger, bloodshed, revolution, patient
-victory at last, all these were to be endured, outlived, before the
-beautiful Capital of his future was reached. Did the youth foresee
-these, also? Many toiling, struggling, suffering years bridged the dream
-of the young surveyor and the first faint dawn of its fulfillment.
-
-After the Declaration of Independence, before the adoption of the
-Constitution of the United States, its government moved slowly and
-painfully about on wheels. As the exigencies of war demanded, Congress
-met at Philadelphia, Baltimore, Lancaster, York, Princeton, Annapolis,
-Trenton, and New York. During these troubled years it was the ambition
-of every infant State to claim the seat of government. For this purpose
-New York offered Kingston; Rhode Island, Newport; Maryland, Annapolis;
-Virginia, Williamsburg.
-
-June 21, 1783, Congress was insulted at Philadelphia by a band of
-mutineers, which the State authorities could not subdue. The body
-adjourned to Princeton; and the troubles and trials of its itinerancy
-caused the subject of a permanent national seat of government to be
-taken up and discussed with great vehemence from that time till the
-formation of the Constitution. The resolutions offered, and the votes
-taken in these debates, indicate that the favored site for the future
-Capital lay somewhere between the banks of the Delaware and the
-Potomac—“near Georgetown,” says the most oft-repeated sentence. October
-30, 1784, the subject was discussed by Congress, at Trenton. A long
-debate resulted in the appointment of three commissioners, with full
-power to lay out a district not exceeding three, nor less than two miles
-square, on the banks of either side of the Delaware, for a Federal town,
-with power to buy soil and to enter into contracts for the building of a
-Federal House, President’s house, house for Secretaries, etc.
-
-Notwithstanding the adoption of this resolution, these Commissioners
-never entered upon their duties. Probably the lack of necessary
-appropriations did not hinder them more than the incessant attempts made
-to repeal the act appointing the Commissioners, and to substitute the
-Potomac for the Delaware, as the site of the anticipated Capital.
-Although the name of President Washington does not appear in these
-controversies, even then the dream of the young surveyor was taking on
-in the President’s mind the tangible shape of reality. First, after the
-war for human freedom and the declaration of national independence, was
-the desire in the heart of George Washington that the Capital of the new
-Nation whose armies he had led to triumph, should rise above the soil of
-his native Dominion, upon the banks of the great river where he had
-foreseen it in his early dream. That he used undue influence with the
-successive Congresses which debated and voted on many sites, not the
-slightest evidence remains, and the nobility of his character forbids
-the supposition. But the final decision attests to the prevailing
-potency of his preferences and wishes, and the immense pile of
-correspondence which he has left behind on the subject, proves that next
-to the establishment of its independence, was the Capital of the
-Republic dear to the heart of George Washington. May 10, 1787,
-Massachusetts, New York, Virginia and Georgia voted for, and New Jersey,
-Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland against the proposition of Mr. Lee
-of Virginia, that the Board of Treasury should take measures for
-erecting the necessary public buildings for the accommodation of
-Congress, at Georgetown, on the Potomac River, as soon as the soil and
-jurisdiction of said town could be obtained.
-
-Many and futile were the battles fought by the old Congress, for the
-site of the future Capital. These battles doubtless had much to do with
-Section 8, Article 1, of the Constitution of the United States, which
-declares that Congress shall have power to exercise exclusive
-legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such district (not exceeding
-ten miles square,) as may, by cession of particular States and the
-acceptance of Congress, become the seat of government of the United
-States. This article was assented to by the convention which framed the
-Constitution, without debate. The adoption of the Constitution was
-followed spontaneously by most munificent acts on the part of several
-States. New York appropriated its public buildings to the use of the new
-government, and Congress met in that city April 6, 1789. On May 15,
-following, Mr. White from Virginia, presented to the House of
-Representatives a resolve of the Legislature of that State, offering to
-the Federal government ten miles square of its territory, in any part of
-that State, which Congress might choose as the seat of the Federal
-government. The day following, Mr. Seney presented a similar act from
-the State of Maryland. Memorials and petitions followed in quick
-succession from Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland. The resolution of
-the Virginia Legislature begged for the co-operation of Maryland,
-offering to advance the sum of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars
-to the use of the general government toward erecting public buildings,
-if the Assembly of Maryland would advance two-fifths of a like sum.
-Whereupon the Assembly of Virginia immediately voted to cede the
-necessary soil, and to provide seventy-two thousand dollars toward the
-erection of public buildings. “New York and Pennsylvania gratuitously
-furnished elegant and convenient accommodations for the government”
-during the eleven years which Congress passed in their midst, and
-offered to continue to do the same. The Legislature of Pennsylvania went
-further in lavish generosity, and voted a sum of money to build a house
-for the President. The house which it built was lately the University of
-Pennsylvania. The present White House is considered much too
-old-fashioned and shabby to be the suitable abode of the President of
-the United States. A love of ornate display has taken the place of early
-Republican simplicity. When George Washington saw the dimensions of the
-house which the Pennsylvanians were building for the President’s
-Mansion, he informed them at once that he would never occupy it, much
-less incur the expense of buying suitable furniture for it. In those
-Spartan days it never entered into the head of the State to buy
-furniture for the “Executive Mansion.” Thus the Chief Citizen, instead
-of going into a palace like a satrap, rented and furnished a modest
-house belonging to Mr. Robert Morris, in Market street. Meanwhile the
-great battle for the permanent seat of government went on unceasingly
-among the representatives of conflicting States. No modern debate, in
-length and bitterness, has equalled this of the first Congress under the
-Constitution. Nearly all agreed that New York was not sufficiently
-central. There was an intense conflict concerning the relative merits of
-Philadelphia and Germantown; Havre de Grace and a place called Wright’s
-Ferry, on the Susquehanna; Baltimore on the Patapsco, and Connogocheague
-on the Potomac. Mr. Smith proclaimed Baltimore, and the fact that its
-citizens had subscribed forty thousand dollars for public buildings. The
-South Carolinians cried out against Philadelphia because of its majority
-of Quakers who, they said, were eternally dogging the Southern members
-with their schemes of emancipation. Many others ridiculed the project of
-building palaces in the woods. Mr. Gerry of Massachusetts declared that
-it was the hight of unreasonableness to establish the seat of government
-so far south that it would place nine States out of the thirteen so far
-north of the National Capital; while Mr. Page protested that New York
-was superior to any place that he knew for the orderly and decent
-behavior of its inhabitants, an assertion, sad to say, no longer
-applicable to the city of New York.
-
-September 5, 1789, a resolution passed the House of Representatives
-“that the permanent seat of the government of the United States ought to
-be at some convenient place on the banks of the Susquehanna, in the
-State of Pennsylvania.” The passage of this bill awoke the deepest ire
-in the members from the South. Mr. Madison declared that if the
-proceedings of that day could have been foreseen by Virginia, that State
-would never have _condescended to become a party to the Constitution_.
-Mr. Scott remarked truly: “The future tranquillity and well being of the
-United States depended as much on this as on any question that ever had
-or ever could come before Congress;” while Fisher Ames declared that
-every principle of pride and honor, and even of patriotism, was engaged
-in the debate.
-
-The bill passed the House by a vote of thirty-one to nineteen. The
-Senate amended it by striking out “Susquehanna,” and inserting a clause
-making the permanent seat of government Germantown, Pennsylvania,
-provided the State of Pennsylvania should give security to pay one
-hundred thousand dollars for the erection of public buildings. The House
-agreed to these amendments. Both Houses of Congress agreed upon
-Germantown as the Capital of the Republic, and yet the final passage of
-the bill was hindered by a slight amendment.
-
-June 28, another old bill was dragged forth and amended by inserting “on
-the River Potomac, at some place between the mouths of the Eastern
-Branch and the Connogocheague.” This was finally passed, July 16, 1790,
-entitled “An Act establishing the temporary and permanent seat of the
-government of the United States.” The word temporary applied to
-Philadelphia, whose disappointment in not becoming the final Capital was
-to be appeased by Congress holding their sessions there till 1800, when,
-as a member expressed it, “they were to go to the Indian place with the
-long name, on the Potomac.”
-
-Human bitterness and dissension were even then rife in both Houses of
-Congress. The bond which bound the new Union of States together was
-scarcely welded, and yet secession already was an openly uttered threat.
-An amendment had been offered to the funding act, providing for the
-assumption of the State debts to the amount of twenty-one millions,
-which was rejected by the House. The North favored assumption and the
-South opposed it. Just then reconciliation and amity were brought about
-between the combatants precisely as they often are in our own time, over
-a well-laid dinner table, and a bottle of rare old wine. Jefferson was
-then Secretary of State, and Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of the
-Treasury. Hamilton thought that the North would yield and consent to the
-establishment of the Capital on the Potomac, if the South would agree to
-the amendment to assume the State debts. Jefferson and Hamilton met
-accidentally in the street, and the result of their half an hour’s walk
-“backward and forward before the President’s door” was the next day’s
-dinner party, and the final, irrevocable fixing of the National Capital
-on the banks of the Potomac. How it was done, as an illustration of
-early legislation, which has its perfect parallel in the legislation of
-the present day, can best be told in Jefferson’s own words, quoted from
-one of his letters. He says: “Hamilton was in despair. As I was going to
-the President’s one day I met him in the street. He walked me backward
-and forward before the President’s door for half an hour. He painted
-pathetically the temper into which the legislature had been wrought; the
-disgust of those who were called the creditor States; the danger of the
-secession of their members, and the separation of the States. He
-observed that the members of the administration ought to act in concert
-... that the President was the centre on which all administrative
-questions finally rested; that all of us should rally around him and
-support by joint efforts measures approved by him, ... that an appeal
-from me to the judgment and discretion of some of my friends might
-effect a change in the vote, and the machine of government now
-suspended, might be again set in motion. I told him that I was really a
-stranger to the whole subject, not having yet informed myself of the
-system of finance adopted ... that if its rejection endangered a
-dissolution of our Union at this incipient stage, I should deem that the
-most unfortunate of all consequences, to avert which all partial and
-temporary evils should be yielded.
-
-“I proposed to him, however, to dine with me the next day, and I would
-invite another friend or two, bring them into conference together and I
-thought it impossible that reasonable men, consulting together coolly,
-could fail by _some mutual sacrifices of opinion to form a compromise
-which was to save the Union_. The discussion took place.... It was
-finally agreed to, that whatever importance had been attached to the
-rejection of this proposition, the preservation of the Union and of
-concord among the States was more important, and that therefore it would
-be better that the vote of rejection should be rescinded to effect which
-some members should change their votes. But it was observed that this
-pill would be _peculiarly bitter to Southern States, and that some
-concomitant measure should be adopted to sweeten it a little to them_.
-There had before been a proposition to fix the seat of government either
-at Philadelphia or Georgetown on the Potomac, and it was thought that by
-giving it to Philadelphia for ten years, and to Georgetown permanently
-afterward, this might, as an anodyne, calm in some degree the ferment
-which might be excited by the other measure alone. So two of the Potomac
-members, [White and Lee,] but White with a revulsion of stomach almost
-convulsive, agreed to change their votes, and Hamilton agreed to carry
-the other point ... and so the assumption was passed,” and the permanent
-Capital fixed on the banks of the Potomac.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- CROSS PURPOSES AND QUEER SPECULATIONS.
-
-Born of Much Bother—Long Debates and Pamphlets—Undefined
- Apprehensions—Debates on the Coming City—Old World Examples—Sir
- James Expresses an Opinion—A Dream of the Distant West—An Old-time
- Want—A Curious Statement of Fact—“Going West”—Where is the Centre of
- Population—An Important Proclamation—Original Land Owners—Well-worn
- Patents—Getting on with Pugnacious Planters—Obstinate David Burns—A
- “Widow’s Mite” of Some Magnitude—How the Scotchman was
- Subjugated—“If You Hadn’t Married the Widow Custis”—A Rather
- “Forcible Argument”—His Excellency “Chooses”—The First Record in
- Washington—Old Homes and Haunts—Purchase of Land—Extent of the City.
-
-
-As we have seen, the Federal City was the object of George Washington’s
-devoted love long before its birth. It was born through much
-tribulation. First came the long debates and pamphlets of 1790, as to
-whether the seat of the American government should be a commercial
-capital. Madison and his party argued that the only way to insure the
-power of exclusive legislation to Congress as accorded by the
-Constitution, was to remove the Capital as far from commercial interests
-as possible. They declared that the exercise of this authority over a
-large mixed commercial community would be impossible. Conflicting
-mercantile interests would cause constant political disturbances, and
-when party feelings ran high, or business was stagnant, the commercial
-capital would swarm with an irritable mob brim full of wrongs and
-grievances. This would involve the necessity of an army standing in
-perpetual defense of the capital. London and Westminster were cited as
-examples where the commercial importance of a single city had more
-influence on the measures of government than the whole empire outside.
-Sir James Macintosh was quoted, wherein he said “that a great metropolis
-was to be considered as the heart of a political body—as the focus of
-its powers and talents—as the direction of public opinion, and,
-therefore, as a strong bulwark in the cause of freedom, or as a powerful
-engine in the hands of an oppressor.” To prevent the Capital of the
-Republic becoming the latter the Constitution deprived it of the
-elective franchise. The majority in Congress opposed the idea of a great
-commercial city as the future Capital of the country. Nevertheless when
-a plan for the city was adopted it was one of exceptional magnificence.
-It was a dream of the founders of the Capital to build a city expressly
-for its purpose and to build it for centuries to come. In view of the
-vast territory now comprehended in the United States their provision for
-the future may seem meagre and limited. But when we remember that there
-were then but thirteen States, that railroads and telegraphs were
-undreamed of as human possibilities—that nearly all the empire west of
-the Potomac was an unpenetrated wilderness, we may wonder at their
-prescience and wisdom, rather than smile at their lack of foresight.
-Even in that early and clouded morning there were statesmen who foresaw
-the later glory of the West fore-ordained to shine on far off
-generations. Says Mr. Madison: “If the calculation be just that we
-double in fifty years we shall speedily behold an astonishing mass of
-people on the western waters.... The swarm does not come from the
-southern but from the northern and eastern hives. I take it that the
-centre of population will rapidly advance in a south-westerly direction.
-It must then travel from the Susquehanna if it is now found there—_it
-may even extend beyond the Potomac_!”
-
-Said Mr. Vining to the House, “I confess I am in favor of the Potomac. I
-wish the seat of government to be fixed there because I think the
-interest, the honor, and the greatness of the country require it. From
-thence, it appears to me, that the rays of government will naturally
-diverge to the extremities of the Union. I declare that I look upon the
-western territories from an awful and striking point of view. To that
-region the unpolished sons of the earth are flowing from all
-quarters—men to whom the protection of the laws and the controlling
-force of the government are equally necessary.”
-
-In the course of the debate Mr. Calhoun called attention to the fact
-that very few seats of government in the world occupied central
-positions in their respective countries. London was on a frontier, Paris
-far from central, the capital of Russia near its border. Even at that
-early date comparatively small importance was attached to a geographical
-centre of territory as indispensable to the location of its capital. The
-only possible objection to a capital near the sea-board was then noted
-by Mr. Madison who said, “If it were possible to promulgate our laws by
-some instantaneous operation, it would be of less consequence where the
-government might be placed,” a possibility now fulfilled by the daily
-news from the Capital which speeds to the remotest corner of the great
-land not only with the swiftness of lightning but by lightning itself.
-
-Although the States have more than doubled since the days of this first
-discussion on where the Capital of the United States should be, it is a
-curious fact that the centre of population has not traveled westward in
-any proportionate ratio. According to a table calculated by Dr.
-Patterson of the United States mint, in 1840 the centre of population
-was then in Harrison County, Virginia, one hundred and seventy-five
-miles west of the city of Washington. At that time the average progress
-westward since 1790 had been, each ten years, thirty-four miles. “This
-average has since increased, but if it be set down at fifty miles, it
-will require a century to carry this centre five hundred miles west of
-Washington, or as far as the city of Nashville, Tennessee.” I state this
-fact for the benefit of crazy capital-movers who are in such haste to
-set the Capital of the Nation in the centre of the Continent.
-
-I have given but a few of the questions which were discussed in the
-great debates which preceded the final locating of the Capital on the
-banks of the Potomac. They are a portion of its history, and deeply
-interesting in their bearing on the present and future of the Capital
-city.
-
-The long strife ended in the amendatory proclamation of President
-Washington, done at Georgetown the 30th day of March, in the year of our
-Lord 1791, and of the independence of the United States the fifteenth,
-which concluded with these words: “I do accordingly direct the
-Commissioners named under the authority of the said first mentioned act
-of Congress to proceed forthwith to have the said four lines run, and by
-proper metes and bounds defined and limited, and thereof to make due
-report under their hands and seals; and the territory so to be located,
-defined and limited shall be the whole territory accepted by the said
-act of Congress as the district for the permanent seat of the government
-of the United States.” Maryland had ceded of her land ten miles square
-for the future Capital. Nothing seemed easier than for these three
-august commissioners, backed by the powerful Congress, to go and take
-it. But it was not so easy to be done. In addition to the State of
-Maryland the land belonged to land-holders, each one of whom was a lord
-on his own domain. Some of these held land patents still extant, dating
-back to 1663, and 1681. These lords of the manor were not willing to be
-disturbed even for the sake of a future Capital, and displayed all the
-irascibility and tenacity regarding price which characterize
-land-holders of the present day. If we may judge from results and the
-voluminous correspondence concerning it, left by George Washington, the
-three commissioners who were to act for the government did not “get on”
-very well with the pugnacious planters who were ready to fight for their
-acres—and that the greater part of the negotiating for the new city
-finally fell to the lot of the great Executive. One of the richest and
-most famous of these land-owners was David Burns. He owned an immense
-tract of land south of where the president’s house now stands, extending
-as far as the Patent Office called in the land patent of 1681 which
-granted it, “the Widow’s Mite, lyeing on the east side of the Anacostin
-River, on the north side of a branch or inlett in the said river, called
-Tyber.” This “Widow’s Mite” contained six hundred acres or more, and
-David Burns was in no wise willing to part with any portion of it.
-Although it laid within the territory of Columbia, ceded by the act of
-Maryland for the future Capital, no less a personage than the President
-of the United States could move one whit David Burns, and even the
-President found it to be no easy matter to bring the Scotchman to terms.
-More than once in his letters he alludes to him as “the obstinate Mr.
-Burns,” and it is told that upon one occasion when the President was
-dwelling upon the advantage that the sale of his lands would bring, the
-planter, testy Davy, exclaimed: “I suppose you think people here are
-going to take every grist that comes from you as pure grain, _but_ what
-would _you_ have _been if you hadn’t married the widow Custis_.”
-
-After many interviews and arguments even the patience of Washington
-finally gave out and he said: “Mr. Burns, I have been authorized to
-select the location of the National Capital. I have selected your farm
-as a part of it, and the government will take it at all events. I trust
-you will, under these circumstances, enter into an amicable
-arrangement.”
-
-Seeing that further resistance was useless, the shrewd Scotchman thought
-that by a final graceful surrender he might secure more favorable terms,
-thus, when the President once more asked: “On what terms will you
-surrender your plantation?” Said humble Davy: “_Any_ that your
-Excellency may choose to name.” The deed conveying the land of David
-Burns to the commissioners in trust, is the first on record in the city
-of Washington. This sale secured to David Burns and his descendants an
-immense fortune. The deed provided that the streets of the new city
-should be so laid out as not to interfere with the cottage of David
-Burns. That cottage still stands in famous “Mansion Square,” and the
-reader will find its story further on in the chapter devoted to the Old
-Homes and Haunts of Washington. The other original owners of the soil on
-which the city of Washington was built were Notley Young, who owned a
-fine old brick mansion near the present steamboat landing, and Daniel
-Carroll, whose spacious abode known as the Duddington House, still
-stands on New Jersey Avenue, a little south-east of the Capitol. On the
-31st of May, Washington wrote to Jefferson from Mount Vernon, announcing
-the conclusion of his negotiations in this wise—the owners conveyed all
-their interest to the United States on consideration that when the whole
-should be surveyed and laid off as a city the original proprietors
-should retain every other lot. The remaining lots to be sold by the
-government from time to time and the proceeds to be applied toward the
-improvement of the place. The land comprised within this agreement
-contains over seventy-one hundred acres. The city extends from
-north-west to south-east about four miles and a half, and from east to
-south-west about two miles and a half. Its circumference is fourteen
-miles, the aggregate length of the streets is one hundred and
-ninety-nine miles, and of the avenues sixty-five miles. The avenues,
-streets and open spaces contain three thousand six hundred and four
-acres, and the public reservations exclusive of reservations since
-disposed of for private purposes, five hundred and thirteen acres. The
-whole area of the squares of the city amounts to one hundred and
-thirty-one million, six hundred and eighty-four thousand, one hundred
-and seventy-six square feet, or three thousand and sixteen acres.
-Fifteen hundred and eight acres were reserved for the use of the United
-States.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- THE WORK BEGUN IN EARNEST.
-
-Washington’s Faith in the Future—Mr. Sparks is “inclined to think”—A
- Slight Miscalculation—Theoretical Spartans—Clinging to Old World
- Glories—Jefferson Acts the Critic—He Communicates Some Ideas—Models
- of Antiquity—Babylon Revived—Difficulty in Satisfying a Frenchman’s
- Soul—The Man who Planned the Capital—Who was L’Enfant?—His
- Troubles—His Dismissal—His Personal Appearance, Old Age, Death and
- Burial-Place—His Successor—The French Genius “Proceeded”—The New
- City of Washington—A Magnificent Plan—All About the City—The Major
- not Appreciated—“Getting on Badly”—L’Enfant Worries Washington—A
- Record which Can Never Perish—An Overpaid Quaker—Jefferson Expresses
- his Sentiments—A Sable Franklin—The Negro Engineer, Benjamin
- Bancker—A Chance for a Monument.
-
-
-The majority of Congress were opposed to a commercial Capital, yet there
-are many proofs extant that to the hour of his death George Washington
-cherished the hope that the new city of his love would be not only the
-capital of the nation, but a great commercial metropolis of the world.
-Mr. Jared Sparks, the historian, in a private letter says: “I am
-inclined to think that Washington’s anticipations were more sanguine
-than events have justified. He early entertained very large and just
-ideas of the vast resources of the West, and of the commercial
-intercourse that must spring up between that region and the Atlantic
-coast, and he was wont to regard the central position of the Potomac as
-affording the most direct and easy channel of communication. Steamboats
-and railroads have since changed the face of the world, and have set at
-defiance all the calculations founded on the old order of things; and
-especially have they operated on the destiny of the West and our entire
-system of internal commerce, in a manner that could not possibly have
-been foreseen in the life-time of Washington.” Throughout the
-correspondence of Washington are scattered constant allusions to the
-future magnificence of the Federal City, the name by which he loved to
-call the city of his heart, allusions which show that his faith in its
-great destiny never faltered. In a letter to his neighbor, Mrs. Fairfax,
-then in England, he said: “A century hence, if this country keeps
-united, it will produce a city, though not as large as London, yet of a
-magnitude inferior to few others in Europe.” At that time, after a
-growth of centuries, London contained eight hundred thousand
-inhabitants. Three-fourths of Washington’s predicted century have
-expired, and the city of Washington now numbers one hundred and fifty
-thousand people.
-
-The founders of the Capital were all very republican in theory, and all
-very aristocratic in practice. In speech they proposed to build a sort
-of Spartan capital, fit for a Spartan republic; in fact, they proceeded
-to build one modeled after the most magnificent cities of Europe.
-European by descent and education, many of them allied to the oldest and
-proudest families of the Old World, every idea of culture, of art, and
-magnificence had come to them as part of their European inheritance, and
-we see its result in every thing that they did or proposed to do for the
-new Capital which they so zealously began to build in the woods. The
-art-connoisseur of the day was Jefferson. He knew Europe, not only by
-family tradition but by sight. Next to Washington he took the deepest
-personal interest in the projected Capital. Of this interest we find
-continual proof in his letters, also of the fact that his taste had much
-to do with the plan and architecture of the coming city. In a letter to
-Major L’Enfant, the first engineer of the Capital, dated Philadelphia,
-April 10, 1791, he wrote: “In compliance with your request, I have
-examined my papers and found the plans of Frankfort-on-the-Main,
-Carlsruhe, Amsterdam, Strasburg, Paris, Orleans, Bordeaux, Lyons,
-Montpelier, Marseilles, Turin, and Milan, which I send in a roll by
-post. They are on large and accurate scales, having been procured by me
-while in those respective cities myself.... Having communicated to the
-President before he went away, such general ideas on the subject of the
-town as occurred to me, I have no doubt in explaining himself to you on
-the subject, he has interwoven with his own ideas such of mine as he
-approved.... Whenever it is proposed to present plans for the Capital, I
-should prefer the adoption of some one of the models of antiquity, which
-have had the approbation of thousands of years; and for the president’s
-house I should prefer the celebrated fronts of modern buildings, which
-have already received the approbation of good judges. Such are Galerie
-du Louise, the Gardes Meubles, and two fronts of the Hotel de Salm.” On
-the same day he writes to Washington: “I received last night from Major
-L’Enfant a request to furnish any plans of towns I could for
-examination. I accordingly send him by this post, plans of
-Frankfort-on-the-Main, etc., which I procured while in those towns
-respectively. They are none of them, however, comparable to the old
-Babylon revived in Philadelphia and exemplified.” But these two fathers
-of their country, as time proved, “did not know their man.” Had they
-done so, they would have known in advance that a mercurial Frenchman
-would never attempt to satisfy his soul with acute angles of old Babylon
-revived through the arid and level lengths of Philadelphia.
-
-The man who planned the Capital of the United States not for the present
-but for all time, was Peter Charles L’Enfant, born in France in 1755. He
-was a lieutenant in the French provincial forces, and with others of his
-countrymen was early drawn to these shores by the magnetism of a new
-people, and the promise of a new land. He offered his services to the
-revolutionary army as an engineer, in 1777, and was appointed captain of
-engineers February 18, 1778. After being wounded at the siege of
-Savannah, he was promoted to major of engineers, and served near the
-person of Washington. Probably at that time there was no man in America
-who possessed so much genius and art-culture in the same directions as
-Major L’Enfant. In a crude land, where nearly every artisan had to be
-imported from foreign shores, the chief designer and architect surely
-would have to be. Thus we may conclude at the beginning, it seemed a
-lucky circumstance to find an engineer for the new city on the spot.
-
-The first public communication extant concerning the laying out of the
-city of Washington is from the pen of General Washington, dated March
-11, 1791. In a letter dated April 30, 1791, he first called it the
-Federal City. Four months later, without his knowledge, it received its
-present name in a letter from the first commissioners, Messrs. Johnson,
-Stuart, and Carroll, which bears the date of Georgetown, September 9,
-1791, to Major L’Enfant, which informs that gentleman that they have
-agreed that the federal district shall be called The Territory of
-Columbia, (its present title,) and the federal city the city of
-Washington, directing him to entitle his map accordingly.
-
-In March, 1791, we find Jefferson addressing Major L’Enfant in these
-words: “You are desired to proceed to Georgetown, where you will find
-Mr. Ellicott employed in making a survey and map of the federal
-territory. The special object of asking your aid is to have the drawings
-of the particular grounds most likely to be approved for the site of the
-federal grounds and buildings.”
-
-The French genius “proceeded,” and behold the result, the city of
-“magnificent distances,” and from the beginning of magnificent
-intentions,—intentions which almost to the present hour, have called
-forth only ridicule—because in the slow mills of time their fulfillment
-has been so long delayed. As Thomas Jefferson wanted the chessboard
-squares and angles of Philadelphia, L’Enfant used them for the base of
-the new city, but his genius avenged itself for this outrage on its
-taste by transversing them with sixteen magnificent avenues, which from
-that day to this have proved the confusion and the glory of the city.
-French instinct diamonded the squares of Philadelphia with the broad
-corsos of Versailles, as Major L’Enfant’s map said, “to preserve through
-the whole a reciprocity of sight at the same time.”
-
-A copy of the Gazette of the United States, published in Philadelphia,
-January 4, 1792, gives us the original magnificent intentions of the
-first draughtsman of the new city of Washington.
-
-
- The following description is annexed to the plan of the city of
- Washington, in the District of Columbia, as sent to Congress by the
- President some days ago:
-
- PLAN OF THE CITY INTENDED AS THE PERMANENT SEAT OF THE GOVERNMENT
- OF THE UNITED STATES, PROJECTED AGREEABLY TO THE DIRECTION OF THE
- PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES IN PURSUANCE OF AN ACT OF CONGRESS,
- PASSED ON THE 16TH OF JULY, 1790, “ESTABLISHING A PERMANENT SEAT
- ON THE BANKS OF THE POTOMACK.”
-
- BY PETER CHARLES L’ENFANT.
-
- OBSERVATIONS EXPLANATORY OF THE PLAN.
-
- I. The positions of the different grand edifices, and for the several
- grand squares or areas of different shapes as they are laid down, were
- first determined on the most advantageous ground, commanding the most
- extensive prospects, and the better susceptible of such improvements
- as the various interests of the several objects may require.
-
- II. Lines or avenues of direct communication have been devised to
- connect the separate and most distant objects with the principals, and
- to preserve throughout the whole a reciprocity of sight at the same
- time. Attention has been paid to the passing of those leading avenues
- over the most favorable ground for prospect and convenience.
-
- III. North and south lines, intersected by others running due east and
- west, make the distribution of the city into streets, squares, &c.,
- and those lines have been so combined as to meet at certain points
- with those diverging avenues so as to form on the spaces “first
- determined,” the different squares or areas which are all proportioned
- in magnitude to the number of avenues leading to them.
-
-
- MR. ELLICOTT “DOES BUSINESS.”
-
- Every grand transverse avenue, and every principal divergent one, such
- as the communication from the President’s house to the Congress house,
- &c., are 160 feet in breadth and thus divided:
-
- Ten feet for pavement on each side, is 20 feet
-
- Thirty feet of gravel walk, planted with trees on each 60 feet
- side,
-
- ——
-
- 160 feet
-
- The other streets are of the following dimensions, viz.:
-
- Those leading to the public buildings or markets, 130
- Others, 110-90
-
- In order to execute the above plan, Mr. Ellicott drew a true meridian
- line by celestial observation, which passes through area intended for
- the Congress house. This line he crossed by another due east and west,
- and which passes through the same area. The lines were accurately
- measured, and made the basis on which the whole plan was executed. He
- ran all the lines by a transit instrument, and determined the acute
- angles by actual measurement, and left nothing to the uncertainty of
- the compass.
-
- REFERENCES.
-
- A. The equestrian figure of George Washington, a monument voted in
- 1783 by the late Continental Congress.
-
- B. An historic column—also intended for a mile or itinerary column,
- from whose station, (at a mile from the Federal House,) all distances
- and places through the Continent are to be calculated.
-
- C. A Naval itinerary column proposed to be erected to celebrate the
- first rise of a navy, and to stand a ready monument to perpetuate its
- progress and achievements.
-
- D. A church intended for national purposes, such as public prayers,
- thanksgivings, funeral orations, &c., and assigned to the special use
- of no particular sect or denomination, but equally open to all. It
- will likewise be a proper shelter for such monuments as were voted by
- the late Continental Congress for those heroes who fell in the cause
- of liberty, and for such others as may hereafter be decreed by the
- voice of a grateful nation.
-
- E. E. E. E. E. Five grand fountains intended with a constant spout of
- water.
-
- N. B. There are within the limits of the springs twenty-five good
- springs of excellent water abundantly supplied in the driest seasons
- of the year.
-
- F. A grand cascade formed of the waters of the sources of the Tiber.
-
- G. G. Public walk, being a square of 1,200 feet, through which
- carriages may ascend to the upper square of the Federal House.
-
- H. A grand avenue, 400 feet in breadth and about a mile in length,
- bordered with gardens ending in a slope from the house on each side;
- this avenue leads to the monument A, and connects the Congress garden
- with the
-
- I. President’s park and the
-
- K. Well improved field, being a part of the walk from the President’s
- House of about 1,800 feet in breadth and three-fourths of a mile in
- length. Every lot deep colored red, with green plats, designating some
- of the situations which command the most agreeable prospects, and
- which are best calculated for spacious houses and gardens, such as may
- accommodate foreign ministers, &c.
-
- L. Around this square and along the
-
- M. Avenue from the two bridges to the Federal House, the pavements on
- each side will pass under an arched way, under whose cover shops will
- be most conveniently and agreeably situated. This street is 106 feet
- in breadth, and a mile long.
-
- The fifteen squares colored yellow are proposed to be divided among
- the several States of the Union, for each of them to improve, or
- subscribe a sum additional to the value of the land for that purpose,
- and the improvements around the squares to be completed in a limited
- time. The centre of each square will admit of statues, columns,
- obelisks, or any other ornaments, such as the different States may
- choose to erect, to perpetuate not only the memory of such individuals
- whose councils or military achievements were conspicuous in giving
- liberty and independence to this country, but those whose usefulness
- hath rendered them worthy of imitation, to invite the youth of
- succeeding generations to tread in the paths of those sages or heroes
- whom their country have thought proper to celebrate.
-
- The situation of those squares is such that they are most
- advantageously seen from each other, and as equally distributed over
- the whole city district, and connected by spacious avenues round the
- grand federal improvements and as contiguous to them, and at the same
- time as equally distant from each other as circumstances would admit.
- The settlements round these squares must soon become connected. The
- mode of taking possession of and improving the whole district at first
- must leave to posterity a grand idea of the patriotic interest which
- promoted it.
-
-Two months after the publication of those magnificent designs for
-posterity, Major L’Enfant was dismissed from his exalted place. He was a
-Frenchman and a genius. The patrons of the new Capital were _not_
-geniuses, and not Frenchmen, reasons sufficient why they should not and
-did not “get on” long in peace together. Without doubt the Commissioners
-were provincial, and limited in their ideas of art and of expenditure;
-with their colonial experience they could scarcely be otherwise; while
-L’Enfant was metropolitan, splendid, and willful, in his ways as well as
-in his designs. Hampered, held back, he yet “builded better than he
-knew,” builded for posterity. The executor and the designer seldom
-counterpart each other. L’Enfant worried Washington, as a letter from
-the latter, written in the autumn of 1791, plainly shows. He says: “It
-is much to be regretted that men who possess talents which fit them for
-peculiar purposes should almost invariably be under the influence of an
-untoward disposition.... I have thought that for such employment as he
-is now engaged in for prosecuting public works and carrying them into
-effect, Major L’Enfant was better qualified than any one who has come
-within my knowledge in this country, or indeed in any other. I had no
-doubt at the same time that this was the light in which he considered
-himself.” At least, L’Enfant was so fond of his new “plan” that he would
-not give it up to the Commissioners to be used as an inducement for
-buying city lots, even at the command of the President, giving as a
-reason that if it was open to buyers, speculators would build up his
-beloved avenues (which he intended, in time, should outrival Versailles)
-with squatter’s huts—just as they afterwards did. Then Duddington House,
-the abode of Daniel Carroll, was in the way of one of his triumphal
-avenues, and he ordered it torn down without leave or license, to the
-rage of its owner and the indignation of the Commissioners. Duddington
-House was rebuilt by order of the government in another place, and
-stands to-day a relic of the past amid its old forest trees on Capitol
-Hill. Nevertheless its first demolition was held as one of the sins of
-the uncontrollable L’Enfant, who was summarily discharged March 6, 1792.
-His dismissal was thus announced by Jefferson in a letter to one of the
-Commissioners: “It having been found impracticable to employ Major
-L’Enfant about the Federal City in that degree of subordination which
-was lawful and proper, he has been notified that his services are at an
-end. It is now proper that he should receive the reward of his past
-services, and the wish that he should have no just cause of discontent
-suggests that it should be liberal. The President thinks of $2,500, or
-$3,000, but leaves the determination to you.” Jefferson wrote in the
-same letter: “The enemies of the enterprise will take the advantage of
-the retirement of L’Enfant to trumpet the whole as an abortion.” But
-L’Enfant lived and died within sight of the dawning city of his love
-which he had himself created—and never wrought it, or its projectors any
-harm through all the days of his life. He was loyal to his adopted
-government, but to his last breath clung to every atom of his personal
-claim upon it, as pugnaciously as he did to his maps, when commanded to
-give them up. He lived without honor, and died without fame. Time will
-vindicate one and perpetuate the other in one of the most magnificent
-capitals of earth. His living picture lingers still with more than one
-old inhabitant. One tells of him in an unchangeable “green surtout,
-walking across the commons and fields, followed by half-a-dozen hunting
-dogs.” Also, of reporting to him at Port Washington in 1814 to do duty,
-and of first receiving a glass of wine from the old soldier-architect
-and engineer before he told him what to do. Mr. Corcoran, the banker,
-tells how L’Enfant looked in his latter days: “a rather seedy, stylish
-old man, with a long blue or green coat buttoned up to his throat, and a
-bell-crowned hat; a little moody and lonely, like one wronged.”
-
-[Illustration: COLUMBIA SLAVE PEN. FREEDMAN’S SAVINGS BANK.]
-
-[Illustration: SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE.]
-
-[Illustration: MAJOR L’ENFANT’S RESTING PLACE.]
-
-He lived for many years on the Digges’ farm, the estate now owned by
-George Riggs, the banker, situated about eight miles from Washington. He
-was buried in the family burial-ground, in the Digges’ garden. When the
-Digges family were disinterred, his dust was left nearly alone. There it
-lies to-day, and the perpetually growing splendor of the ruling city
-which he planned, is his only monument.
-
-He was succeeded by Andrew Ellicott, a practical engineer, born in
-Buck’s County, Pennsylvania. He was called a man of “uncommon talent”
-and “placid temper.” Neither saved him from conflicts, (though of a
-milder type than L’Enfant’s,) with the Commissioners. A Quaker, he yet
-commanded a battalion of militia in the Revolution, and “was
-thirty-seven years of age when he rode out with Washington to survey the
-embryo city.” He finished, (with certain modifications,) the work which
-L’Enfant began. For this he received the stupendous sum of $5.00 per day
-which, with “expenses,” Jefferson thought to be altogether too much. In
-his letter to the Commissioners dismissing L’Enfant, he says: “Ellicott
-is to go on to finish laying off the plan on the ground, and surveying
-and plotting the district. I have remonstrated with him on the excess of
-five dollars a day and his expenses, and he has proposed striking off
-the latter.”
-
-After Ellicott concluded laying out the Capital, he became
-Surveyor-General of the United States; laid out the towns of Erie,
-Warren and Franklin, in Pennsylvania, and built Fort Erie. He defined
-the boundary dividing the Republic from the Spanish Possessions; became
-Secretary of the Pennsylvania Land Office, and in 1812 Professor of
-Mathematics at West Point, where he died August, 1820, aged 66.
-
-Ellicott’s most remarkable assistant was Benjamin Bancker, a negro. He
-was, I believe, the first of his race to distinguish himself in the new
-Republic. He was born with a genius for mathematics and the exact
-sciences, and at an early age was the author of an Almanac, which
-attracted the attention and commanded the praise of Thomas Jefferson.
-When he came to “run the lines” of the future Capital, he was sixty
-years of age. The caste of color could not have grown to its hight at
-that day, for the Commissioners invited him to an official seat with
-themselves, an honor which he declined. The picture given us of him is
-that of a sable Franklin, large, noble, and venerable, with a dusky
-face, white hair, a drab coat of superfine broadcloth, and a Quaker hat.
-He was born and buried at Ellicott’s Mills, where his grave is now
-unmarked. Here is a chance for the rising race to erect a monument to
-one of their own sons, who in the face of ignorance and bondage proved
-himself “every inch a man,” in intellectual gifts equal to the best.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- OLD WASHINGTON.
-
-How the City was Built—“A Matter of Moonshine”—Calls for Paper—Besieging
- Congressmen—How they Raised the Money—The Government Requires
- Sponsors—Birth of the Nation’s Capital—Seventy Years Ago in
- Washington—Graphic Picture of Early Times—A Much-Marrying
- City—Unwashed Virginian Belles—Stuck in the Mud—Extraordinary
- Religious Services.
-
-
-Nothing in the architecture of the city of Washington calls forth more
-comment from strangers than the distance between the Capitol and the
-Executive Departments. John Randolph early called it “the city of
-magnificent distances,” and it is still a chronic and fashionable
-complaint to decry the time and distance it takes to get any where. In
-the days of a single stage line on Pennsylvania Avenue, these were
-somewhat lamentable. But five-minute cars abridge distances, and make
-them less in reality than even in the city of New York. It is a mile and
-a half from the northern end of the Navy-yard bridge to the Capitol, a
-mile and a half from the Capitol to the Executive Mansion, and a mile
-and a half from the Executive Mansion to the corner of Bridge and High
-Streets, Georgetown. We are constantly hearing exclamations of what a
-beautiful city Washington would be with the Capitol for the centre of a
-square formed by a chain of magnificent public buildings. John Adams
-wanted the Departments around the Capitol. George Washington but a short
-time before his death, gave in a letter the reasons for their present
-position. In going through his correspondence one finds that there is
-nothing, scarcely, in the past, present or future of its Capital, for
-which the Father of his Country has not left on record a wise,
-far-reaching reason. In this letter, he says: “Where or how the houses
-for the President, and the public offices may be fixed is to me, as an
-individual, a matter of moonshine. But the reverse of the President’s
-motive for placing the latter near the Capitol was my motive for fixing
-them by the former. The daily intercourse which the secretaries of
-departments must have with the President would render a distant
-situation extremely inconvenient to them, and not much less so would one
-be close to the Capitol; for it was the universal complaint of them all,
-_that while the Legislature was in session, they could do little or no
-business, so much were they interrupted by the individual visits of
-members in office hours, and by calls for paper_. Many of them have
-disclosed to me that they have been obliged often to go home and deny
-themselves in order to transact the current business.” The denizen of
-the present time, who knows the Secretaries’ dread of the average
-besieging Congressman, will smile to find that the dread was as potent
-in the era of George Washington as it is to-day. A more conclusive
-reason could not be given why Capitol and Departments should be a mile
-apart. The newspapers of that day were filled with long articles on the
-laying out of the Capital city. We find in a copy of _The Philadelphia
-Herald_ of January 4, 1795, after a discussion of the Mall—the yet-to-be
-garden extending from the Capitol to the President’s house—the following
-far-sighted remarks on the creation of the Capital. It says: “To found a
-city, for the purpose of making it the depository of the acts of the
-Union, and the sanctuary of the laws which must one day rule all North
-America, is a grand and comprehensive idea, which, has already become,
-with propriety, the object of public respect. The city of Washington,
-considered under such important points of view, could not be calculated
-on a small scale; its extent, the disposition of its avenues and public
-squares should all correspond with the magnitude of the objects for
-which it was intended. And we need only cast our eyes upon the situation
-and plan of the city to recognize in them the comprehensive genius of
-the President, to whom the direction of the business has been committed
-by Congress.”
-
-The letters of Washington are full of allusions to the annoyance and
-difficulty attending the raising of sufficient money to make the Capitol
-and other public buildings tenantable by the time specified, 1800. He
-seemed to regard the prompt completion of the Capitol as an event
-identical with the perpetual establishment of the government at
-Washington. Virginia had made a donation of $120,000, and Maryland one
-of $72,000; these were now exhausted. After various efforts to raise
-money by the forced sales of public lots, and after abortive attempts to
-borrow money, at home and abroad, on the credit of these lots, amidst
-general embarrassments, while Congress withheld any aid whatever, the
-urgency appeared to the President so great as to induce him to make a
-personal application to the State of Maryland for a loan, which was
-successful, and the deplorable credit of the government at that time is
-exhibited in the fact that the State called upon the credit of the
-Commissioners as an additional guarantee for the re-payment of the
-amount, $100,000, to which Washington alludes as follows: “The necessity
-of the case justified the obtaining it on almost any terms; and the zeal
-of the Commissioners in making themselves liable for the amount, as it
-could not be had without, cannot fail of approbation. At the same time I
-must confess the application has a very singular appearance, and will
-not, I should suppose, be very grateful to the feelings of Congress.”
-
-I have cited but a few of the tribulations through which the Capital of
-the nation was born. Not only was the growth of the public buildings
-hindered through lack of money, but also through the “jealousies and
-bickerings” of those who should have helped to build them. Human nature,
-in the aggregate, was just as inharmonious and hard to manage then as
-now. The Commissioners did not always agree. Artisans, imported from
-foreign lands, made alone an element of discord, one which Washington
-dreaded and deprecated. He went down with his beloved Capital into the
-Egypt of its building. He led with a patience and wisdom undreamed of
-and unappreciated in this generation, the straggling and discordant
-forces of the Republic from oppression to freedom, from chaos to
-achievement—he came in sight of the promised land of fruition and
-prosperity, but he did not enter it, this father and prophet of the
-people! George Washington died in December, 1799.
-
-The city of Washington was officially occupied in June, 1800.
-
-The only adequate impression of what the Capital was at the time of its
-first occupancy, we must receive from those who beheld it with living
-eyes. Fortunately several have left graphic pictures of the appearance
-which the city presented at that time. President John Adams took
-possession of the unfinished Executive Mansion in November, 1800. During
-the month Mrs. Adams wrote to her daughter, Mrs. Smith, as follows: “I
-arrived here on Sunday last, and without meeting with any accident worth
-noticing, except losing ourselves when we left Baltimore, and going
-eight or nine miles on the Frederic road, by which means we were obliged
-to go the other eight through the woods, where we wandered for two hours
-without finding guide or path.... But woods are all you see from
-Baltimore till 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.
-In the city there are buildings enough, if they were compact and
-finished, to accommodate Congress and those attached to it; but as they
-are, and scattered as they are, I see no great comfort for them.... If
-the twelve years in which this place has been considered as the future
-seat of government had been improved as they would have been in New
-England, very many of the present inconveniences would have been
-removed. It is a beautiful spot, capable of any improvement, and the
-more I view it the more I am delighted with it.”
-
-Hon. John Cotton Smith, of Connecticut, a distinguished member of
-Congress, of the Federal school of politics, also gives his picture of
-Washington in 1800: “Our approach to the city was accompanied with
-sensations not easily described. One wing of the Capitol only had been
-erected, which, with the President’s house, a mile distant from it, both
-constructed with white sandstone, were shining objects in dismal
-contrast with the scene around them. Instead of recognizing the avenues
-and streets portrayed on the plan of the city, not one was visible,
-unless we except a road, with two buildings on each side of it, called
-the New Jersey Avenue. The Pennsylvania, leading, as laid down on paper,
-from the Capitol to the presidential mansion, was then nearly the whole
-distance a deep morass, covered with alder bushes which were cut through
-the width of the intended avenue during the then ensuing winter. Between
-the President’s house and Georgetown a block of houses had been erected,
-which then bore and may still bear, the name of the _six buildings_.
-There were also other blocks, consisting of two or three
-dwelling-houses, in different directions, and now and then an insulated
-wooden habitation, the intervening spaces, and indeed the surface of the
-city generally, being covered with shrub-oak bushes on the higher
-grounds, and on the marshy soil either trees or some sort of shrubbery.
-Nor was the desolate aspect of the place a little augmented by a number
-of unfinished edifices at Greenleaf’s Point, and on an eminence a short
-distance from it, commenced by an individual whose name they bore, but
-the state of whose funds compelled him to abandon them, not only
-unfinished, but in a ruinous condition. There appeared to be but two
-really comfortable habitations in all respects, within the bounds of the
-city, one of which belonged to Dudley Carroll, Esq., and the other to
-Notley Young, who were the former proprietors of a large proportion of
-the land appropriated to the city, but who reserved for their own
-accommodation ground sufficient for gardens and other useful
-appurtenances. The roads in every direction were muddy and unimproved. A
-sidewalk was attempted in one instance by a covering formed of the chips
-of the stones which had been hewn for the Capitol. It extended but a
-little way and was of little value, for in dry weather the sharp
-fragments cut our shoes, and in wet weather covered them with white
-mortar, in short, it was a “new settlement.” The houses, with one or two
-exceptions, had been very recently erected, and the operation greatly
-hurried in view of the approaching transfer of the national government.
-A laudable desire was manifested by what few citizens and residents
-there were, to render our condition as pleasant as circumstances would
-permit. One of the blocks of buildings already mentioned was situated on
-the east side of what was intended for the Capitol square, and being
-chiefly occupied by an extensive and well-kept hotel, accommodated a
-goodly number of the members. Our little party took lodgings with a Mr.
-Peacock, in one of the houses on New Jersey Avenue, with the addition of
-Senators Tracy of Connecticut, and Chipman and Paine of Vermont, and
-Representatives Thomas of Maryland, and Dana, Edmond and Griswold of
-Connecticut. Speaker Sedgwick was allowed a room to himself—the rest of
-us in pairs. To my excellent friend Davenport, and myself, was allotted
-a spacious and decently furnished apartment with separate beds, on the
-lower floor. Our diet was varied, but always substantial, and we were
-attended by active and faithful servants. A large proportion of the
-Southern members took lodgings at Georgetown, which, though of a
-superior order, were three miles distant from the Capitol, and of course
-rendered the daily employment of hackney coaches indispensable.
-
-Notwithstanding the unfavorable aspect which Washington presented on our
-arrival, I can not sufficiently express my admiration of its local
-position. From the Capitol you have a distinct view of its fine
-undulating surface, situated at the confluence of the Potomac and its
-Eastern Branch, the wide expanse of that majestic river to the bend at
-Mount Vernon, the cities of Alexandria and Georgetown, and the
-cultivated fields and blue hills of Maryland and Virginia on either side
-of the river, the whole constituting a prospect of surpassing beauty and
-grandeur. The city has also the inestimable advantage of delightful
-water, in many instances flowing from copious springs, and always
-attainable by digging to a moderate depth, to which may be added the
-singular fact that such is the due admixture of loam and clay in the
-soil of a great portion of the city that a house may be built of brick
-made of the earth dug from the cellar, hence it was not unusual to see
-the remains of a brick-kiln near the newly-erected dwelling-house or
-other edifice. In short, when we consider not only these advantages, but
-what, in a national point of view is of superior importance, the
-location on a fine navigable river, accessible to the whole maritime
-frontier of the United States, and yet easily rendered defensible
-against foreign invasion,—and that by the facilities of inter-population
-of the Western States, and indeed of the whole nation, with less
-inconvenience than any other conceivable situation,—we must acknowledge
-that its selection by Washington as the permanent seat of the federal
-government, affords a striking exhibition of the discernment, wisdom and
-forecast which characterized that illustrious man. Under this
-impression, whenever, during the six years of my connection with
-Congress, the question of removing the seat of government to some other
-place was agitated—and the proposition was frequently made—I stood
-almost alone, as a northern man, in giving my vote in the negative.”
-
-Sir Augustus Foster, secretary of legation to the British minister at
-Washington, during the years 1804-6, has left an amusing account on
-record both of the appearance of the Capital and the state of its
-society during the administration of President Jefferson: “The Spanish
-envoy, De Caso Yrujo, told Sir Augustus it was difficult to procure a
-decent dinner in the new Capital without sending the distance of sixty
-miles for its materials. Things had mended somewhat before the arrival
-of Sir Augustus, but he still found enough to surprise and bewilder him
-in the desolate vastness and mean accommodations of the unshaped
-metropolis.”
-
-Of private citizens Sir Augustus says: “Very few private gentlemen have
-their houses in Washington. I only recollect three, Mr. Brent, Mr.
-Tayloe, and Mr. Carroll.”... Most of the members of Congress, it is
-true, keep to their lodgings, but still there are a sufficient number of
-them who are sociable, or whose families come to the city for a season,
-and there is no want of handsome ladies for the balls, especially at
-Georgetown; indeed, I never saw prettier girls anywhere. As there are
-but few of them, however, in proportion to the great number of men who
-frequent the places of amusement in the federal city, it is one of the
-most marrying places on the whole continent.... Meagre the march of
-intellect so much vaunted in the present century; the literary education
-of these ladies is far from being worthy of the age of knowledge, and
-conversation is apt to flag, though a seat by the ladies is always much
-coveted. Dancing and music serve to eke out the time, but one got tired
-of hearing the same song everywhere, even when it was:
-
- “Just like love is yonder rose.”
-
-“No matter how this was sung, the words alone were the man-traps; the
-belle of the evening was declared to be just like both, and the people
-looked around as if the listener was expected to become on the instant
-very tender, and to propose.... Between the young ladies, who generally
-not only good looking, but good tempered, and if not well informed,
-capable of becoming so, and the ladies of a certain time of life, there
-is usually a wide gap in society, young married women being but seldom
-seen in the world; as they approach, however, to middle age, they are
-apt to become romantic, those in particular who live in the country and
-have read novels fancying all manner of romantic things, and returning
-to the Capital determined to have an adventure before they again retire;
-or on doing some wondrous act which shall make them be talked about in
-all after time. Others I have known to contract an aversion to water,
-and as a substitute, cover their faces and bosoms with hair powder, in
-order to render the skin pure and delicate. This was peculiarly the case
-with some Virginia damsels, who came to the halls at Washington, and who
-in consequence were hardly less tolerable than negroes. There were but
-few cases of this I must confess, though as regards the use of the
-powder, they were not so uncommon, and at my balls I thought it
-advisable to put on the tables of the toilette room not only rouge, but
-hair powder, as well as blue powder, which had some customers....
-
-“In going to assemblies one had sometimes to drive three or four miles
-within the city bounds, and very often at the great risk of an
-overthrow, or of being what is termed ‘stalled,’ or stuck in the mud....
-Cards were a great resource during the evening, and gaming was all the
-fashion, at brag especially, for the men who frequented society were
-chiefly from Virginia or the Western States, and were very fond of this
-the worst gambling of all games, as being one of countenance as well as
-of cards. Loo was the innocent diversion of the ladies, who when they
-looed pronounced the word in a very mincing manner....
-
-“Church service can certainly never be called an amusement; but from the
-variety of persons who are allowed to preach in the House of
-Representatives, there was doubtless some alloy of curiosity in the
-motives which led one to go there. Though the regular Chaplain was a
-Presbyterian, sometimes a Methodist, a minister of the Church of
-England, or a Quaker, or sometimes even a woman took the speaker’s
-chair; and I don’t think that there was much devotion among the
-majority. The New Englanders, generally speaking, are very religious;
-though there are many exceptions, I cannot say so much for the
-Marylanders, and still less for the Virginians.”
-
-Notwithstanding the incongruous and somewhat disgraceful picture which
-Sir Augustus paints of the Capital City of the new Republic, he goes on
-to say: “In spite of its inconveniences and desolate aspect, it was I
-think the most agreeable town to reside in for any length of time,”
-which if true insures our pity for what the remainder of our native land
-must have been.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- THE CAPITAL OF THE NATION.
-
-A Ward of Congress—Expectations Disappointed—Funds Low and People
- Few—Slow Progress of the City—First Idea of a National University—A
- Question of Importance Discussed—Generous Proposition of George
- Washington—Faith Under Difficulties—Transplanting an Entire
- College—An Old Proposition in a New Shape—What Washington “Society”
- Lacks—The Lombardy Poplars Refuse to Grow—Perils of the Way—A Long
- Plain of Mud—“The Forlornest City in Christendom”—Egyptian
- Dreariness—Incomplete and Desolate State of Affairs—The End of an
- Expensive Canal—The Water of Tiber Creek—American “Boys” on the
- March—Divided Allegiance of Old—The Stirring of a Nation’s
- Heart—Ready to March to her Defense—A Personal Interest—Patriotism
- Aroused—The First-born City of the Republic—Truly the Capital of the
- Nation.
-
-
-Washington was incorporated as a city by act of Congress, passed May 3,
-1802. The city, planned solely as the National Capital, was laid out on
-a scale so grand and extensive that scanty municipal funds alone would
-never have been sufficient for its proper improvement. From the
-beginning it was the ward of Congress. Its magnificent avenues, squares
-and public buildings, could receive due decoration from no fund more
-scanty than a national appropriation. At first Congress appropriated
-funds with much spirit and some liberality, but there were many reasons
-why its zeal and munificence waned together. At this day it has not
-fulfilled the most sanguine expectations of its founders. In Jefferson’s
-time its population numbered but five thousand persons, and for forty
-years its increase of population only averaged about five hundred and
-fifty per annum. Many stately vessels sail down the Potomac to the
-Chesapeake and the James and out to the ocean; but the Potomac is far
-from being the highway of commerce. The wharves of Washington and
-Georgetown are empty compared with those of New York, or even of
-Baltimore. For generations there was neither commerce nor manufacture to
-induce men of capital to remove from large cities of active business to
-the new city in the wilderness, whose very life depended on the will of
-a majority of Congress. Washington’s idea of the National Capital far
-outleaped his century. His vision of its future greatness comprehended
-all that the capital of a great nation should be. He foresaw it, not
-only as the seat of national commerce, but the seat of national
-learning. One of the dearest projects of his last days was the founding
-of a National University at the city of Washington. The following
-references to this subject in a letter from him to the commissioners of
-the Federal districts, with an extract from his last will, but faintly
-express the intense interest which he manifested in the National
-University, both in his daily life, and familiar correspondence:—
-
-
- WASHINGTON TO COMMISSIONERS OF FEDERAL DISTRICTS.
-
- “The Federal city, from its centrality and the advantages which in
- other respects it must have over any other place in the United States,
- ought to be preferred as a proper site for such a University. And if a
- plan can be adopted upon a scale as extensive as I have described, and
- the execution of it should commence under favorable auspices in a
- reasonable time, with a fair prospect of success, I will grant in
- perpetuity fifty shares in the navigation of the Potomac River toward
- the endowment of it.”
-
-
- FROM WASHINGTON’S WILL.
-
- “I give and bequeath in perpetuity the fifty shares which I hold in
- the Potomac Company (under the aforesaid acts of the legislature of
- Virginia) toward the endowment of a University to be established
- within the limits of the District of Columbia, under the auspices of
- the general government, if that government should incline to extend a
- fostering hand toward it. And until such Seminary is established and
- the funds arising from these shares shall be needed for its support,
- my further will and desire is, that the profits arising therefrom
- whenever the dividends are made be laid out in purchasing stock in the
- Bank of Columbia, or some other bank at the discretion of my
- executors, or by the Treasurer of the United States for the time
- being, under the direction of Congress, providing that honorable body
- should patronize the measure; and the dividends proceeding from the
- purchase of such stock are to be vested in more stock, and so on, till
- a sum adequate to the accomplishment of the object be obtained, _of
- which I have not the smallest doubt before many years pass away_, even
- if no aid and encouragement is given by legislative authority, or from
- any other source.”
-
-The correspondence of Washington and Jefferson abound with consultations
-concerning this great National University. During his stay in Europe,
-Jefferson had become personally conversant with its ancient seats of
-learning, and longed to see somewhat of the splendor of their culture
-transferred to his own native land. So great was his zeal on this
-subject, both he and John Adams favored the plan at one time of
-transferring to this city the entire college of Geneva, professors,
-students, all. But George Washington opposed the transplanting of an
-entire body of foreign scholars to the new Republic, almost as earnestly
-as he did that of a horde of foreign laborers to build the Capitol, he
-believing both to be inimical to the growth of republican principles and
-feelings in a newly created republic.
-
-Three-fourths of a century have passed since Washington, Jefferson and
-Adams consulted together concerning the National University of the
-future. Alas! it is still of the future. The dream of its fulfillment
-was dearer to the father of his country, probably, than to any other
-mortal. The explicit provision made for it in his will proves this. That
-bequest went finally, I believe, to a college in Virginia. Columbia
-College, feeble, small and old, is the nearest approach to the National
-University of which the National Capital can boast to-day. Strange after
-the lapse of nearly a century, the other evening the friends of this
-feeble and stunted college, including the President of the United
-Stales, high officials, learned professors, foreign ministers, and
-gentlemen of the press, assembled in Wormley’s comfortable dining-room,
-and over an “epicurean banquet” discussed what Jefferson and Washington
-did in their letters—a National University for the National Capital. The
-desire of Washington although not yet fulfilled, must in time become a
-reality. The National Capital, already the centre of fashion, and
-rapidly becoming the seat of National Science as well as of National
-Politics and Government, is the natural seat of National Learning. The
-educational element, the high-toned culture which always marks the
-mental and moral atmosphere surrounding a university is to-day the
-marked lack of what is termed “society in Washington.” The United States
-Government is doing much for science. There is a greater number of
-persons actively devoted to scientific pursuits in the National Capital
-than in any other city of the Union. Washington is already the seat of
-more purely intellectual activity than any other American city. The
-scientific library of the Smithsonian Institute is one of the best in
-the world. New departments of the Government devoted to Science are
-continually being established on sure and ever-spreading foundations.
-All these facts point to the final and crowning one—the University of
-the Nation at the National Capital.
-
-For a time, after the incorporation of the city, its founders and
-patrons zealously pursued plans for its improvement. But failing funds,
-a weak municipality, and indifferent Congresses, did their work, and for
-many years “the city of magnificent distances” had little but those
-distances of which to boast. Jefferson had Pennsylvania avenue planted
-with double rows of Lombardy poplars from Executive Mansion to Capitol,
-in imitation of the walk and drive in Berlin known as _Unter den
-Linden_. But the tops of the poplars did not flourish, and the roots
-were troublesome, and in 1832 the hoped for arcade came to naught. In
-truth Pennsylvania avenue was one long plain of mud, punched with
-dangerous holes and seamed with deep ravines. The interlacing roots of
-the poplars made these holes and ravines the more dangerous, till an
-appropriation, during the administration of Jackson, caused them to be
-dug up and the entire avenue to be macadamized, notwithstanding a large
-minority in Congress could find no authority in the Constitution for
-such an unprecedented provision for the public safety. Every Congress
-was packed with strict constructionists and economists, who opposed
-every effort to improve the National Capital. Many, narrow, sectional
-and provincial, had no comprehension of the plan of a city founded to
-meet the wants of a great nation, rather than to suit the convenience of
-a meagre population. A city planned to become the magnificent Capital of
-a vast people could not fail through its very dimensions to be
-oppressive to its citizens, if the chief weight of its improvement was
-laid upon their scanty resources. A National Capital could only be fitly
-built by the Nation. For many years the Congress of the United States
-refused to do this to any fit degree, and the result for more than one
-generation was the most forlorn city in Christendom. At a recent meeting
-of the friends of Columbia College Attorney General Williams stated that
-when he first visited Washington, in 1853, the “Egypt” of Indiana could
-not compare in dreariness and discomfort with the Capital of the Nation.
-
-In 1862 Washington was a third rate Southern city. Even its mansions
-were without modern improvements or conveniences, while the mass of its
-buildings were low, small and shabby in the extreme. The avenues, superb
-in length and breadth, in their proportions afforded a painful contrast
-to the hovels and sheds which often lined them on either side for miles.
-Scarcely a public building was finished. No goddess of liberty held
-tablary guard over the dome of the Capitol. Scaffolds, engines and
-pulleys everywhere defaced its vast surfaces of gleaming marble. The
-northern wing of the Treasury building was not even begun. Where it now
-stands then stood the State departments, crowded, dingy and old. Even
-the southern wing of the Treasury was not completed as it was begun.
-Iron spikes and saucers on its western side had been used to conclude
-the beautiful Greek ornamentation begun with the building. All public
-offices, magnificent in conception, seemed to be in a state of crude
-incompleteness. Everything worth looking at seemed unfinished.
-Everything finished looked as if it should have been destroyed
-generations before. Even Pennsylvania avenue, the grand thoroughfare of
-the Capital, was lined with little two and three story shops, which in
-architectural comeliness have no comparison with their ilk of the
-Bowery, New York. Not a street car ran in the city. A few straggling
-omnibuses and helter-skelter hacks were the only public conveyances to
-bear members of Congress to and fro between the Capitol and their remote
-lodgings. In spring and autumn the entire west end of the city was one
-vast slough of impassible mud. One would have to walk many blocks before
-he found it possible to cross a single street, and that often one of the
-most fashionable of the city. “The water of Tiber Creek,” which in the
-magnificent intentions of the founders of the city were “to be carried
-to the top of Congress House, to fall in a cascade of twenty feet in
-height and fifty in breadth, and thence to run in three falls through
-the gardens into the grand canal,” instead stretched in ignominious
-stagnation across the city, oozing at last through green scum and slime
-into the still more ignominious canal, which stood an open sewer and
-cess-pool, the receptacle of all abominations, the pest-breeder and
-disgrace of the city. Toward the construction of this canal the city of
-Washington gave $1,000,000 and Georgetown and Alexandria $250,000 each.
-Its entire cost was $12,000,000. It was intended to be another artery to
-bring the commerce of the world to Washington, and yet the Washington
-end of it had come to this!
-
-Capitol Hill, dreary, desolate and dirty, stretched away into an
-uninhabited desert, high above the mud of the West End. Arid hill, and
-sodden plain showed alike the horrid trail of war. Forts bristled above
-every hill-top. Soldiers were entrenched at every gate-way. Shed
-hospitals covered acres on acres in every suburb. Churches, art-halls
-and private mansions were filled with the wounded and dying of the
-American armies. The endless roll of the army wagon seemed never still.
-The rattle of the anguish-laden ambulance, the piercing cries of the
-sufferers whom it carried, made morning, noon and night too dreadful to
-be borne. The streets were filled with marching troops, with new
-regiments, their hearts strong and eager, their virgin banners all
-untarnished as they marched up Pennsylvania avenue, playing “The girl I
-left behind me,” as if they had come to holiday glory—to easy victory.
-But the streets were filled no less with soldiers foot-sore, sun-burned,
-and weary, their clothes begrimed, their banners torn, their hearts sick
-with hope deferred, ready to die with the anguish of long defeat. Every
-moment had its drum-beat, every hour was alive with the tramp of troops
-going, coming. How many an American “boy,” marching to its defence,
-beholding for the first time the great dome of the Capitol rising before
-his eyes, comprehended in one deep gaze, as he never had in his whole
-life before, _all_ that that Capitol meant to him, and to every free
-man. Never, till the Capital had cost the life of the beautiful and
-brave of our land, did it become to the heart of the American citizen of
-the nineteenth century the object of personal love that it was to George
-Washington. To that hour the intense loyalty to country, the pride in
-the National Capital which amounts to a passion in the European, in the
-American had been diffused, weakened and broken. In ten thousand
-instances State allegiance had taken the place of love of country.
-Washington was nothing but a place in which Congress could meet and
-politicians carry on their games at high stakes for power and place. New
-York was the Capital to the New Yorker, Boston to the New Englander, New
-Orleans to the Southerner, Chicago to the man of the West. There was no
-one central rallying point of patriots to the universal nation. The
-unfinished Washington monument stood the monument of the nation’s
-neglect and shame. What Westminster Abbey and Hall were to the
-Englishman, what Notre Dame and the Tuileries were to the Frenchman, the
-unfinished and desecrated Capitol had never been to the average
-American. Anarchy threatened it. In an hour the heart of the nation was
-centered in the Capital. The nation was ready to march to its defence.
-Every public building, every warehouse was full of troops. Washington
-city was no longer only a name to the mother waiting and praying in the
-distant hamlet; _her boy_ was camped on the floor of the Rotunda. No
-longer a far off myth to the lonely wife; _her_ husband held guard upon
-the heights which defended the Capital. No longer a place good for
-nothing but political schemes to the village sage; _his boy_, wrapped in
-his blanket, slept on the stone steps under the shadow of the great
-Treasury. The Capital, it was sacred at last to tens of thousands, whose
-beloved languished in the wards of its hospitals or slept the sleep of
-the brave in the dust of its cemeteries. Thus from the holocaust of war,
-from the ashes of our sires and sons arose new-born the holy love of
-country, and veneration for its Capital. The zeal of nationality, the
-passion of patriotism awoke above the bodies of our slain. National
-songs, the inspiration of patriots, soared toward heaven. National
-monuments began to rise consecrated forever to the martyrs of Liberty.
-Never, till that hour, did the Federal city—the city of George
-Washington, the first-born child of the Union, born to live or to perish
-with it,—become to the heart of the American people that which it had so
-long been in the eyes of the world—truly the CAPITAL OF THE NATION.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- THE WASHINGTON OF THE PRESENT DAY.
-
-Hopes Realized—A Truly National City—Washington in 1873—Major L’Enfant’s
- Dream—Old and New—“Modern Improvements”—A City of Palaces—The
- Capital in All Its Glory—Traces of the War—Flowers on the
- Ramparts—Under the Oaks of Arlington—Ten Years Ago—The Birth of a
- Century—The Reign of Peace—The Capital of the Future.
-
-
-And now! The citizen of the year of our Lord 1881 sees the dawn of that
-perfect day of which the founders of the Capital so fondly and
-fruitlessly dreamed. The old provincial Southern city is no more. From
-its foundations has risen another city, neither Southern nor Northern,
-but national, cosmopolitan.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
- It covers more than three and a half acres. Over thirteen million
- dollars have thus far been expended in its erection.
-]
-
-Where the “Slough of Despond” spread its waxen mud across the acres of
-the West End, where pedestrians were “slumped,” and horses “stalled,”
-and discomfort and disgust prevailed, we now see broad carriage drives,
-level as floors, over which grand equipages and pony phaetons glide with
-a smoothness that is a luxury, and an ease of motion which is rest.
-Where ravines and holes made the highway dangerous, now the concrete and
-Nicholson pavements stretch over miles on miles of inviting road. Where
-streets and avenues crossed and re-crossed their long vistas of
-shadeless dust, now plat on plat of restful grass “park” the city from
-end to end. Double rows of young trees line these parks far as the sight
-can reach. In these June days they fill the air with tender bloom.
-Gazing far on through their green arcades the sight rests at last where
-poor Major L’Enfant dreamed and planned that it one day would,—on the
-restful river, with its white flecks of sails, upon distant meadows and
-the Virginia hills. Old Washington was full of small Saharas. Where the
-great avenues intersected acres of white sand were caught up and carried
-through the air by counter winds. It blistered at white heat beneath
-your feet, it flickered like a fiery veil before your eyes, it
-penetrated your lungs and begrimed your clothes. Now where streets and
-avenues cross, emerald “circles” with central fountains, pervading the
-air with cooling spray, with belts of flowers and troops of children,
-and restful seats for the old or the weary take the place of the old
-Saharas. In every direction tiny parks are blooming with verdurous life.
-Concrete walks have taken the place of their old gravel-stone paths.
-Seats—thanks to General Babcock—everywhere invite to sit down and rest
-beneath trees which every summer cast a deeper and more protecting
-shadow. The green pools which used to distill malaria beneath your
-windows are now all sucked into the great sewers, planted at last in the
-foundations of the city. The entire city has been drained. Every street
-has been newly graded. The Tiber, inglorious stream, arched and covered
-forever from sight, creeps in darkness to its final gulf in the river.
-The canal, drained and filled up, no longer breeds pestilence.
-Pennsylvania avenue has outlived its mud and its poplars, to be all and
-more than Jefferson dreamed it would be,—the most magnificent street on
-the continent. Its lining palaces are not yet built, but more than one
-superb building like that of the Daily National Republican soars high
-above the lowly shops of the past, a forerunner of the architectural
-splendor of the buildings of the future. Cars running every five minutes
-have taken the place of the solitary stage, plodding its slow way
-between Georgetown and the Capital. Capitol Hill, which had been
-retrograding for more than forty years, has taken on the look of a
-suddenly growing city. Its dusty ways and empty spaces are beginning to
-fill with handsome blocks of metropolitan houses. Even the old Capital
-prison is transformed into a handsome and fashionable block of private
-dwellings. The improvements at the West End are more striking. Solid
-blocks of city houses are rising in every direction, taking the place of
-the little, old, isolated house of the past, with its stiff porch, high
-steps, and open basement doorway. Vermont, Massachusetts and Connecticut
-avenues are already lined with splendid mansions, the permanent winter
-homes of Senators and other high official and military officers. The
-French, Spanish, English and other foreign governments have bought on
-and near these avenues for the purpose of building on them handsome
-houses for their separate legations. The grounds of the Executive
-Mansion are being enlarged, extending to the Potomac with a carriage
-drive encircling, running along the shore of the river, extending
-through the Agricultural Smithsonian and Botanical garden grounds, thus
-fulfilling the original intent of connecting the White House with the
-Capitol by a splendid drive. The same transformation is going on in the
-Capitol grounds. Blocks of old houses have been torn down and
-demolished, to make room for a park fit to encircle the Capitol, which
-can never be complete till it takes in all the rolling slopes which lie
-between it and the Potomac. No scaffolding and pulleys now deface the
-snowy surfaces of the Capitol. Unimpeded the dome soars into mid-air,
-till the goddess of liberty on its top seems caught into the embrace of
-the clouds. The beautiful Treasury building is completed, and a block
-further on, the click of ceaseless hammers and the rising buttresses of
-solid stone tell of the new war and navy departments which are swiftly
-growing beside the historic walls of the old. Even the Washington
-monument has been taken into hand by General Babcock, to whom personally
-the Capital owes so much, and by a fresh appeal to the States he hopes
-to re-arouse their patriotism and insure its grand completion. Flowers
-blossom on the ramparts of the old forts, so alert with warlike life ten
-years ago. The army roads, so deeply grooved then, are grass-grown now.
-The long shed-hospitals have vanished, and stately dwellings stand on
-their already forgotten sites. The “boys” who languished in their wards,
-the boys who marched these streets, who guarded this city, how many of
-them lie on yonder hill-top under the oaks of Arlington, and amid the
-roses of the Soldier’s Home. Peace, prosperity and luxury have taken the
-place of war, of knightly days and of heroic men.
-
-The mills of time grind slowly. What a tiny stroke in its cycles is a
-single century. One hundred years! The year nineteen hundred! Then if
-the father of his country can look down from any star upon the city of
-his love he will behold in the new Washington that which even he did not
-foresee in his earthly life—one of the most magnificent cities of the
-whole earth.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- WHAT MADE NEW WASHINGTON.
-
-Municipal Changes—Necessity of Reform—Committee of One Hundred
- Constituted—Mr. M. G. Emery Appointed Mayor—The “Organic Act”
- Passed—Contest for the Governorship of Columbia District—Mr. Henry
- D. Cooke Appointed—Board of Public Works Constituted—Great
- Improvements Made—Opposition—The Board and its Work—Sketch of
- Alexander R. Shepherd—His Efforts During the War—Patriotic Example.
-
-
-A sketch of the territorial government which now rules the District of
-Columbia, will account for new Washington and the many beneficent
-changes which have renovated the city.
-
-As early as the winter of 1868, efforts were made to secure a united
-government for the entire District, instead of the triple affair then in
-operation, viz.: municipal corporations for Washington and Georgetown,
-and the Levy court for the County. Under that _regime_ no system of
-general improvements could be established. The District was under the
-exclusive jurisdiction of Congress and was obliged to beg and plead with
-that body for permission to begin and for appropriations to pay for each
-improvement, as its increasing business and population imperatively
-demanded. Again, the extension of the right of suffrage and the
-consequent increase of the number of ignorant voters, made it apparent
-that something must be done to prevent the control of the cities falling
-into the power of a class of petty ward politicians of the very worst
-order, who had sprung up just after the war, and who had already caused
-considerable uneasiness in the minds of the solid and thinking portion
-of the community, by the rapid manner in which they had managed to
-increase the public debt without showing any corresponding public
-benefits.
-
-It was at first proposed to have the District governed by commissioners
-to be appointed by the President, and I believe bills to that effect
-were introduced into Congress by Senator Hamlin, and Mr. Morrill, of
-Maine, but were defeated. Of course the proposed change was very
-unpopular, and the Washington Common Council passed a series of
-resolutions protesting against any interference with the government then
-existing. The extravagance and venality of the administration of 1868-9,
-however, awakened the sober and thoughtful minded citizens to the
-absolute necessity of a radical and vigorous reform, and during the
-winter of 1869-70 a committee of one hundred was constituted, to whom
-was given the task of perfecting a bill granting a territorial
-government to the District, and of the urging of its passage by
-Congress. This bill failed to pass that Session, and there next came a
-bitter political contest, resulting in the election of Hon. M. G. Emery
-as Mayor of Washington.
-
-The evils which it was supposed Mr. Emery would correct, did not seem to
-lessen during his administration, and in the following winter the
-project of a new government was revived and urged with so much vigor
-that Congress, on the 21st of January, 1871, passed what is now known as
-the “Organic Act,” establishing and defining the powers of the
-territorial government of the District of Columbia. Immediately
-following the passage of this act there appeared four prominent
-candidates for the governorship of the young territory, viz: Messrs. M.
-G. Emery, Sayles J. Bowen, Jas. A. Magruder, and Alex. R. Shepherd.
-Messrs. Emery and Bowen soon subsided, and the contest narrowed to
-between Messrs. Shepherd and Magruder.
-
-It was unmistakably the popular desire that the appointment should be
-given to Mr. Shepherd. He had been more prominent than any other
-individual named in securing the change effected; the nucleus of the
-Organic Act is said to have been drafted by him, and the energy and
-sagacity he had shown in his public life pointed him out as peculiarly
-fit for the position. Besides, he had gained the popular confidence by
-his unvarying integrity and fearless independence, and by a quality too
-rarely observed in a public man—positive manliness. Colonel Magruder,
-the Georgetown candidate, was quite popular in that city, where he had
-for a number of years been the collector of customs. Though at that time
-he was not extensively known in Washington, those who were his friends
-were ardent and untiring in their support. It soon became evident that
-the appointment of either of these gentlemen would cause extreme
-dissatisfaction to the supporters of his competitors, and as it was
-especially desirable that the new government should commence its
-operations with perfect good feeling pervading all the different
-parties, a governor was sought who should harmonize all differences, and
-Henry D. Cooke, of the firm of Jay Cooke & Co., a gentleman of
-unimpeachable integrity, who had kept aloof from all factions and who,
-in fact, was one of Mr. Shepherd’s warmest supporters, was at length
-selected.
-
-Then came the appointment of that body of men, against whom so much
-abuse has been hurled, but to whose energies the existence of the new
-Washington I have portrayed is wholly attributable, viz: the Board of
-Public Works. This Board was at first composed of Messrs. A. R.
-Shepherd, A. B. Mullett, S. P. Brown, and James A. Magruder, with the
-Governor as president _ex-officio_. Since then Messrs. Mullett and Brown
-have resigned, and their places have been filled by Messrs. Adolf Cluss,
-and Henry A. Willard.
-
-I may state also that the first Secretary of the District was N. P.
-Chipman, and that when he was elected as the delegate to Congress, the
-position was given to E. L. Stanton, the son of the late Secretary
-Stanton, by whom it is now filled.
-
-All the gentlemen I have named are men of clear intelligence, excellent
-business capacity, and positive energy.
-
-The amount of labor performed by the Board of Public Works can scarcely
-be imagined by one who has not lived right here in the District, and
-observed the complete and almost magical changes that have taken place.
-Embarrassed at the very commencement of their career by the slipshod
-manner in which improvements had been carried on under the old
-corporations, they soon encountered a violent opposition from many
-citizens who should have heartily supported their efforts. This
-opposition was organized and persistent, leaving no artifice untried to
-hinder and check the efforts of the Board, seeking injunction after
-injunction in the courts, and finally appealing to Congress and
-effecting an investigation which lasted for four months, and was as
-searching and minute as any ever attempted by that body, but which ended
-not only in the absolute acquittal of the Board of every charge alleged,
-but in a cordial commendation of their acts by the committee which
-conducted the inquiry.
-
-I wish to give this Board of Public Works the credit to which they are
-justly entitled. When I read the slanders that are cast upon them, I
-want to ask the authors if they would prefer the dingy, straggling,
-muddy, dusty Washington of two years ago to the bright, compact, clean
-and beautiful city of to-day?
-
-The “head and front” of this Board, the man who has infused a portion of
-his own enthusiasm into his fellow members, the man to whose
-comprehensive mind and untiring energy the success of the Board is
-almost entirely due, who was made vice-president and executive officer
-by his colleagues because they recognized his great abilities, and were
-content to follow where he should lead, is Alexander R. Shepherd of
-Washington.
-
-He is a native of Washington, was born in 1885, and is consequently now
-but thirty-eight years old. His father died when he was quite a boy, and
-at the early age of ten years he began the rough struggle of life. He at
-first started to learn the carpenter’s trade, but finding that
-unsuitable to his tastes he entered a store, as errand boy. At seventeen
-he was taken into the plumbing establishment of Mr. J. W. Thompson, as
-clerk. By industry, fidelity and ability, he at length attained a
-partnership in that house, and upon Mr. Thompson’s retirement, succeeded
-to the full control of the business, which under his skillful management
-has so rapidly grown that it now defies competition with any similar
-establishment south of New York.
-
-When the war of the Rebellion broke out, Mr. Shepherd was mainly
-instrumental in forming the Union party in Washington, proving loyal
-amidst the bitter hostility of many of his best friends. As early as the
-15th of April, 1861, he enlisted as a private soldier, and for three
-months shouldered his musket in defense of the National Capital. In the
-same year he was elected a member of the Common Council, and again in
-1862, when he was made president of that body. In 1867 he was appointed
-a member of the Levy court, and in that capacity first developed his
-ability and energy as a public man. He was president of the Citizens’
-Reform Association during the Emery campaign, and was, I believe, the
-prime mover of Mr. Emery’s nomination, and contributed by his efforts
-largely to that gentleman’s success. At that election Mr. Shepherd was
-chosen to the Board of Aldermen, which position he held when appointed
-to the Board of Public Works.
-
-In person Mr. Shepherd is a tall, noble looking man, with a large,
-well-formed head, sharply-defined features, massive under jaw and square
-chin, indicative of the indomitable perseverance and firmness which are
-the most prominent traits in his character. Although a self-made man, he
-has acquired a fund of information which many a collegian might envy.
-His mind is thoroughly disciplined, his perceptions keen, his decisions
-rapid, and his language vigorous and terse. In private life he is
-universally respected and esteemed. His benevolence is unbounded, and
-beside subscribing liberally to every public appeal, he performs
-innumerable acts of private charity, which few know save the grateful
-recipients.
-
-It was believed by the majority of people that Governor Cooke would
-retain his position only until the fusion of the irritated factions was
-effected, and that in the event of his resignation Mr. Shepherd would be
-appointed his successor. Whether Governor Cooke retires before the end
-of his term or not, it is the universal belief that Mr. Shepherd will be
-the second governor of the District of Columbia.
-
-He is a representative man, embodying in his history and character more
-emphatically, perhaps, than any other man, the new life of the new city
-of Washington.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- BUILDING THE CAPITOL.
-
-George Washington’s Anxiety about it—His View of it Politically—Various
- Plans for the Building—Jefferson Writes to the Commissioners—His
- Letter to Mr. Carroll—“Poor Hallet” and His Plan—Wanton Destruction
- by the British, A. D. 1814—Foundation of the Main Building Laid—The
- Site Chosen by Washington Himself—Imposing Ceremonies at the
- Foundation—Dedicatory Inscription on the Silver Plate—Interesting
- Festivities—The Birth of a Nation’s Capital—Extension of the
- Building—Daniel Webster’s Inscription—His Eloquent and Patriotic
- Speech—Mistaken Calculations—First Session of Representatives
- Sitting in “the Oven”—Old Capital Prison—Immense Outlay upon the
- Wings and Dome—Compared with St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s—The Goddess
- of Liberty—The Congressional Library—Proposed Alterations—What Ought
- to be Done.
-
-
-George Washington believed the building of the Capitol to be identical
-with the establishment of a permanent seat of government. To the
-consummation of this crowning building, the deepest anxiety and devotion
-of his later years were dedicated. Next to determining a final site for
-the city was the difficulty of deciding on a plan for its Capitol.
-
-Poor human nature had to contend awhile over this as it seems to have to
-about almost everything else. A Mr. S. Hallet had a plan: Dr. Thornton
-had one, also. Jefferson wrote “to Dr. Stewart, or to all the gentlemen”
-Commissioners, January 31, 1793:
-
- “I have, under consideration, Mr. Hallet’s plans for the Capitol,
- which undoubtedly have a great deal of merit. Doctor Thornton has also
- given me a view of his. The grandeur, simplicity and beauty of the
- exterior, the propriety with which the departments are distributed,
- and economy in the mass of the whole structure, will, I doubt not give
- it a preference in your eyes as it has done in mine and those of
- several others whom I have consulted. I have, therefore, thought it
- better to give the Doctor time to finish his plan, and for this
- purpose to delay until your meeting a final decision. Some difficulty
- arises with respect to Mr. Hallet, who, you know, was in some degree
- led into his plan by ideas which we all expressed to him. This ought
- not to induce us to prefer it to a better; but while he is liberally
- rewarded for the time and labor he has expended on it, his feelings
- should be saved and soothed as much as possible. I leave it to
- yourselves how best to prepare him for the possibility that the
- Doctor’s plans may be preferred to his.”
-
-February 1, 1793, Jefferson writes from Philadelphia to Mr. Carroll—
-
- “DEAR SIR:—Doctor Thornton’s plan for a Capitol has been produced and
- has so captivated the eyes and judgments of all as to leave no doubt
- you will prefer it when it shall be exhibited to you; as no doubt
- exists here of its preference over all which have been produced, and
- among its admirers no one is more decided than him, whose decision is
- most important. It is simple, noble, beautiful, excellently
- distributed and moderate in size. A just respect for the right of
- approbation in the Commissioners will prevent any formal decision in
- the President, till the plan shall be laid before you and approved by
- you. In the meantime the interval of _apparent_ doubt may be improved
- for settling the mind of poor Hallet whose merits and distresses
- interests every one for his tranquillity and pecuniary relief.”
-
-These quotations are chiefly interesting in connection with the fact
-that poor, pushed-to-the-wall Hallet rebounded afterwards,
-notwithstanding Jefferson’s enthusiasm over Thornton’s plan, and
-Washington’s declaration that it combined “grandeur, simplicity and
-convenience.” The architects preferred the design of Hallet and in
-building retained but two or three of the features of Doctor Thornton’s
-plan.
-
-After the burning of the Capitol wings by the British, August, 1814, Mr.
-B. H. Latrobe, of Maryland, began to rebuild the Capitol on Stephen
-Hallet’s plan. The foundations of the main building were laid March 24,
-1818, under the superintendence of Charles Bulfinch, and the original
-design was completed in 1825. The site of the Capitol was chosen by
-George Washington, on a hill ninety feet above tide-water, commanding a
-view of the great plateau below, the circling rivers, and girdling
-hills—a hill in 1663 named “Room,” later Rome, and owned by a gentleman
-named “Pope.”
-
-September 18, 1793, the south-east corner of the Capitol was laid by
-Washington with imposing ceremonies. A copy of _The Maryland Gazette_,
-published in Annapolis, September 26, 1793, gives a minute account of
-the grand Masonic ceremonial, which attended the laying of that august
-stone. It tells us that “there appeared on the southern bank of the
-river Potomac one of the finest companies of artillery that hath been
-lately seen parading to receive the President of the U. S.” Also, that
-the Commissioners delivered to the President, who deposited in the stone
-a silver plate with the following inscription:
-
- “This south-east corner of the Capitol of the United States of
- America, in the city of Washington, was laid on the 18th day of
- September, 1792, in the thirteenth year of American Independence; in
- the first year, second term of the Presidency of George Washington,
- whose virtues in the civil administration of his country have been as
- conspicuous and beneficial, as his military valor and prudence have
- been useful, in establishing her liberties, and in the year of
- Masonry, 5793, by the President of the United States, in concert with
- the Grand Lodge of Maryland, several lodges under its jurisdiction and
- Lodge No. 22 from Alexandria, Virginia.
-
- [Signed] THOMAS JOHNSON, }
- DAVID STEWART, } _Commissioners, etc._”
- DANIEL CARROLL, }
-
-The _Gazette_ continues:—
-
- “The whole company retired to an extensive booth, where an ox of 500
- lbs. weight was barbecued, of which the company generally partook with
- every abundance of other recreation. The festival concluded with
- fifteen successive volleys from the artillery, whose military
- discipline and manœuvres merit every commendation.”
-
- “Before dark the whole company departed with joyful hopes of the
- production of their labors.”
-
-Fifty-eight years later, near this spot another corner-stone was
-deposited bearing the following inscription in the writing of Daniel
-Webster:—
-
- “On the morning of the first day of the seventy-sixth year of the
- Independence of the United States of America, in the city of
- Washington, being the fourth day of July, eighteen hundred and
- fifty-one, this stone designed as the corner-stone of the extension of
- the Capitol, according to a plan approved by the President in
- pursuance of an act of Congress was laid by
-
- MILLARD FILMORE,
-
- PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES,
-
- Assisted by the Grand Master of the Masonic Lodges, in the presence of
- many Members of Congress, of officers of the Executive and Judiciary
- departments, National, State and Districts, of officers of the Army
- and Navy, the Corporate authorities of this and neighboring cities,
- many associations, civil and military and Masonic, officers of the
- Smithsonian Institution, and National Institute, professors of
- colleges and teachers of schools of the Districts, with their students
- and pupils, and a vast concourse of people from places near and remote
- including a few surviving gentlemen who witnessed the laying of the
- corner-stone of the Capitol by President Washington, on the 18th day
- of September, 1793. If, therefore, it shall hereafter be the will of
- God that this structure shall fall from its base, that its foundation
- be upturned, and this deposit brought to the eyes of men; be it then
- known that on this day the Union of the United States of America
- stands firm, that their constitution still exists unimpaired, and with
- all its original usefulness and glory growing every day stronger and
- stronger in the affections of the great body of the American people,
- and attracting more and more the admiration of the world. And all here
- assembled, whether belonging to public life or to private life, with
- hearts devoutly thankful to Almighty God for the preservation of the
- liberty and happiness of the country, unite in sincere and fervent
- prayer, that this deposit, and the walls and arches, the domes and
- towers, the columns and entablatures, now to be erected over it may
- endure forever.
-
- “God Save the United States of America.
-
- DANIEL WEBSTER,
- _Secretary of State of the United States_.”
-
-In the speech made by Mr. Webster on this occasion he uttered the
-following words:—
-
- “Fellow citizens, what contemplations are awakened in our minds as we
- assemble to re-enact a scene like that performed by Washington!
- Methinks I see his venerable form now before me as presented in the
- glorious statue by Houdon, now in the Capitol of Virginia.... We
- perceive that mighty thoughts mingled with fears as well as with
- hopes, are struggling with him. He heads a short procession over these
- then naked fields; he crosses yonder stream on a fallen tree; he
- ascends on the top of this eminence, whose original oaks of the forest
- stand as thick around him as if the spot had been devoted to Druidical
- worship and here he performs the appointed duty of the day.”
-
-Fifty-eight years stretched between this scene and the last and already
-the mutterings of civil revolution stirred in the air. Could Webster
-have foreseen that the marble walls of the Capitol whose corner-stone he
-then laid would rise amid the thunder of cannon aimed to destroy it and
-the great Union of States which it crowned, to what anguish of eloquence
-would his words have risen!
-
-The Capitol fronting the east was set by an astronomical observation of
-Andrew Ellicott. Its founders were as much mistaken in the direction
-which the future city would take as they were in the future commerce of
-the Potomac. They expected that a metropolis would spring up on Capitol
-Hill, spreading on to the Navy Yard and Potomac. Land-owners made this
-impossible by the price they set upon their city lots. The metropolis
-defied them—went down into the valley and grew up behind the Capitol.
-
-The north wing of the central Capitol was made ready for the first
-sitting of Congress in Washington, November 17, 1800. By that time the
-walls of the south wing had risen twenty feet and were covered over for
-the temporary use of the House of Representatives. It sat in this room
-named “the oven” from 1802, until 1804. At that time the transient roof
-was removed and the wing completed under the superintendence of B. H.
-Latrobe until its completion. The House occupied the room of the Library
-of Congress. The south wing was finished in 1811.
-
-The original Capitol was built of sandstone taken from an island in
-Acquia Creek, Virginia. The island was purchased by the government in
-1791 for $6,000 for the use of the quarry. The interior of both wings
-was destroyed by fire when the British took the city in 1814, the outer
-walls remaining uninjured. Latrobe, who had resigned in 1813, was
-re-appointed after the fire to reconstruct the Capitol. The following
-December, Congress passed an act leasing a building on the east side of
-the Capitol, the building afterwards so famous as “Old Capitol Prison,”
-and which was crowded with prisoners during the war of the Rebellion.
-Congress held its sessions in this building till the rebuilt Capitol was
-ready for occupation.
-
-By act of Congress, September 30, 1850, provision was made for the grand
-extension wings of the Capitol, to be built on such a plan as might be
-approved by the President. The plan of Thomas C. Walter was accepted by
-President Fillmore, June 10, 1851, and he was appointed architect of the
-Capitol to carry his plan into execution. Walter was the architect of
-Girard College, Philadelphia, and to him we owe the magnificent marble
-wings and iron dome of the Capitol. The dome cost one million one
-hundred thousand dollars. The wings cost six millions five hundred
-thousand dollars. The height of the interior of the dome of the Capitol
-from the floor of the rotunda is 180 feet and 3 inches. The height of
-the exterior from the floor of the basement story to the top of the
-crowning statue is 287 feet and 5 inches. The interior diameter is 97
-feet. The exterior diameter of the drum is 108 feet. The greatest
-exterior diameter is 135 feet, 5 inches. The Capitol is 751 feet, 4
-inches long, 31 feet longer than St. Peter’s in Rome, and 175 feet
-longer than St. Paul’s in London. The height of the interior of the dome
-of St. Peter’s is 330 feet. The height of the interior of the dome of
-St. Paul’s is 215 feet. The height of the exterior of St. Peter’s to the
-top of lantern is 432 feet. The height of the exterior of the dome of
-St. Paul’s is 215 feet.
-
-The ground actually covered by the Capitol is 153,112 square feet or 652
-square feet more than 3 ½ acres. Of these the old building covered
-61,201 square feet and the new wings with connecting corridors, 91,311
-square feet.
-
-The dome of the Capitol is the highest structure in America. It is one
-hundred and eight feet higher than Washington Monument in Baltimore;
-sixty-eight feet higher than Bunker Hill Monument and twenty-three feet
-higher than the steeple of Trinity Church, New York. Mr. Walter was
-succeeded by Mr. Edward Clarke, the present architect of the Capitol.
-Thus far Mr. Clarke’s work has consisted chiefly in finishing and
-harmonizing the work of his varied and sometimes conflicting
-predecessors. Under his supervision the dome has been completed, and
-Thomas Crawford’s grand goddess of liberty, sixteen and one-half feet
-high, has ascended to its summit while he has wrought out in the
-interior the most harmonious room of the Capitol—the Congressional
-Library.
-
-The greatest work which he still desires to do is to put the present
-front on the rear of the Capitol facing the city, and to draw forth the
-old freestone fronts and rebuild it with marble, making a grand central
-portico parallel with the magnificent marble wings of the Senate and
-House extension. To rebuild the central front will cost two millions of
-dollars. The face of the Capitol will never be worthy of itself till
-this is accomplished. The grand outward defect of the Capitol is the
-slightness and insignificance of the central portico compared with the
-superlative Corinthian fronts of the wings. Between their outreaching
-marble steps, beside their majestic monoliths the central columns shrink
-to feebleness and give the impression that the great dome is sinking
-down upon them to crush them out of sight. There is something soaring in
-the proportions of the dome. Its summit seems to spring into the
-empyrean. Its proud goddess poised in mid-air, caught in their swift
-embrace, seems to sail with the fleeting clouds. Nevertheless its
-tremendous base set upon that squatting roof threatens it with perpetual
-annihilation.
-
-From the very beginning the Capitol has suffered as a National Building
-from the conflicting and foreign tastes of its decorators. Literally
-begun in the woods by a nation in its infancy, it not only borrowed its
-face from the buildings of antiquity, but it was built by men, strangers
-in thought and spirit to the genius of a new Republic, and the unwrought
-and unimbodied poetry of its virgin soil. Its earlier decorators, all
-Italians, overlaid its walls with their florid colors and foreign
-symbols; within the American Capitol, they have set the Loggia of
-Raphael, the voluptuous ante-rooms of Pompeii, and the Baths of Titus.
-The American plants, birds and animals, representing prodigal nature at
-home, though exquisitely painted are buried in twilight passages, while
-mythological bar-maids, misnamed goddesses, dance in the most
-conspicuous and preposterous places. The Capitol has already survived
-this era of false decorative art.
-
-Congress in 1859 authorized a Commission of distinguished American
-artists, comprising Messrs. Brown, Lumsden and Kensett, to study, the
-decorations of the Capitol and report upon their abuses. Their
-suggestions are beginning to be followed, and yet so carelessly, that
-after the lapse of fourteen years they need reiteration. The Artist
-Committee recommended an Art Commission, composed of those designated by
-the united voice of America. Artists as competent to the office who
-shall be the channels for the distribution of all appropriations to be
-made by Congress for art purposes, and who shall secure to artists an
-intelligent and unbiased adjudication upon the designs they may present
-for the embellishment of the national buildings. When one remembers some
-of the Congressional Committees who have decided on decorations for the
-Capitol even within the last ten years, it is enough to make one cry
-aloud for a Commission designated by artists, whose art-culture shall at
-least be sufficient to tell a decent picture from a daub, a noble statue
-from a pretense and a sham.
-
-In conclusion the Commission of Artists said:—
-
- “The erection of a great National Capitol seldom occurs but once in
- the life of a nation. The opportunity such an event affords is an
- important one for the expression of patriotic elevation, and the
- perpetuation, through the arts of painting and sculpture, of that
- which is high and noble and held in reverence by the people; and it
- becomes them as patriots to see to it that no taint of falsity is
- suffered to be transmitted to the future upon the escutcheon of our
- national honor in its artistic record. A theme so noble and worthy
- should interest the heart of the whole country, and whether patriot,
- statesman or artist, one impulse should govern the whole in dedicating
- these buildings and grounds to the national honor.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.
-
-A Visit to the Capitol—The Lower Hall—Its Cool
- Tranquillity—Artistic Treasures—The President’s and
- Vice-President’s Rooms—The Marble Room—The Senate Chamber—“Men
- I have Known”—Hamlin—Foote—Foster—Wade—Colfax—Wilson—The
- Rotunda—Great Historical Paintings—The Old Hall of
- Representatives—The New Hall—The Speaker’s Room—Native
- Art—“The Star of Empire”—A National Picture.
-
-
-Come with me. This is your Capitol. It is like passing from one world
-into another, to leave behind the bright June day for the cool, dim
-halls of the lower Capitol. No matter how fiercely the sun burns in the
-heavens, his fire never penetrates the twilight of this grand hall,
-whose eight hundred feet measure the length of the Capitol from end to
-end.
-
-Here, in Egyptian Colonnades, rise the mighty shafts of stone which bear
-upon their tops the mightier mass of marble, and which seem strong
-enough to support the world. In the summer solstice they cast long, cool
-shadows, full of repose and silence. The gas-lights flickering on the
-walls, send long golden rays through the dimness to light us on. We have
-struck below the jar and tumult of life. The struggles of a nation may
-be going on above our heads, yet so vast and visionary are these vistas
-opening before us, so deep the calm which surrounds us, we seem far away
-from the world that we have left, in this new world which we have found.
-Every time I descend into these lower regions I get lost. In wandering
-on to find our way out, we are sure to make numerous discoveries of
-unimagined beauty. Here are doors after doors in almost innumerable
-succession, opening into departments of commerce, agriculture, etc.,
-whose every panel holds exquisite gems of illustrative painting. Birds,
-flowers, fruits, landscapes, in rarest fresco and color, here reveal
-themselves to us through the dim light.
-
-It would take months to study and to learn these pictures which artists
-have taken years to paint. They make a department of art in themselves,
-yet thousands who think that they know the Capitol well are not aware of
-their existence. At the East Senate entrance, look at these polished
-pillars of Tennessee marble, their chocolate surface all flecked with
-white, surrounding a staircase meet for kings. They are my delight. Look
-at these foliated capitals, flowering in leaves of acanthus and tobacco.
-Look up to this ceiling of stained glass, its royal roses opening wide
-their crimson hearts above you; these too are my delight. I am not one
-of those who can sneer at the Capitol. Its faults, like the faults of a
-friend are sacred. I know them, but wish to name them not, save to the
-one who only can remedy. It bears blots upon its fair face, but these
-can be washed away. It wears ornaments vulgar and vain, these can be
-stripped off and thrown out. Below them, beyond them all, abides the
-Capitol. The surface blemish vexes, the pretentious splendor offends.
-These are not the Capitol. We look deeper, we look higher, to find
-beauty, to see sublimity, to see the Capitol, august and imperishable!
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE MARBLE ROOM.
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The four marble staircases leading to the Senate Chamber and Hall of
-Representatives, in themselves alone embody enough of grace and
-magnificence to save the Capitol from cynical criticism. We slip through
-the Senate corridor, you and I, to the President’s and Vice-President’s
-rooms. Their furniture is sumptuous, their decoration oppressive.
-Gilding, frescoes, arabesques, glitter and glow above and around. There
-is not one quiet hue on which the tired sight may rest. Gazing, I feel
-an indescribable desire to pluck a few of Signor Brumidi’s red legged
-babies and pug-nosed cupids from their precarious perches on the lofty
-ceilings, to commit them to nurses or to anybody who will smooth out
-their rumpled little legs and make them look comfortable.
-
-We are Americans, and need repose; let us, therefore, pass to the Marble
-Room, which alone, of all the rooms of the Capitol, suggests it—
-
- “The end of all, the poppied sleep.”
-
-Its atmosphere is soft, serene, and silent. Its ceiling is of white
-marble, deeply paneled, supported by fluted pillars of polished Italian
-marble. Its walls are of the exquisite marble of Tennessee—a soft brown,
-veined with white—set with mirrors. One whose æsthetic eyes have studied
-the finest apartments of the world says that to him the most chaste and
-purely beautiful of all is the Marble Room of the American Capitol.
-Americans though we are, we have no time to rest, albeit we sorely need
-it.
-
-It is not for you or me to linger in marble rooms, maundering of art.
-Molly, rocking her baby out on the Western prairie, wants to know all
-about the Senate; baby is going to be a senator some day. Moses, on that
-little rock-sown farm in New England, has his “chores all done.” He
-rests in the Yankee paradise of kerosene, butternuts, apples, and cider.
-Yet to make his satisfaction complete, he must know a little more about
-the Capitol. Molly and Moses both expect us to see for them what they
-can not come to see for themselves. So let us peep into the Senate. It
-can not boast of the ampler proportions of the Hall of Representatives.
-Its golden walls and emerald doors can not rescue it from
-insignificance.
-
-The ceiling of this chamber is of cast-iron, paneled with stained
-glass—each pane bearing the arms of the different States, bound by most
-ornate mouldings, bronzed and gilded. The gallery, which entirely
-surrounds the hall, will seat one thousand persons. Over the
-Vice-President’s chair, the section you see separated from the rest by a
-net-work of wire, is the reporters’ gallery. The one opposite, lined
-with green, is the gallery of the diplomatic corps; next are the seats
-reserved for the Senators’ families. The Senators sit in three
-semi-circular rows, behind small desks of polished wood, facing the
-Secretary of the Senate, his assistants, the special reporters of
-debates, and the Vice-President.
-
-On a dais, raised above all, sits the Vice-President. I have seen six
-men preside over the Senate. Hamlin, slow, solid, immobile, and
-good-natured. Foote, silver-haired, silver-toned, the king of
-parliamentarians. Foster of Connecticut, that most gentle gentleman, who
-went from the Senate bearing the good will of every Senator whatever his
-politics. Wade, the most positive power of all, with his high, steep
-head, shaggy eyebrows, beetling perceptive brow, half roofing the
-melancholy eyes, the rough-hewn nose, the dogged mouth, and broad
-immovable chin. Life lines our faces according to its will and gazing on
-the furrows of this one, one reads the story of the whole battle.
-Looking, there was no need that its owner should tell what a warfare
-life had been since the poor farmer-boy, more than half a century ago,
-turned his face from the Connecticut Valley and striving with the earth
-beneath his feet dug his way (on the Erie Canal) toward the West to
-fortune, and to an honorable fame. Then came Schuyler Colfax, who
-brought into the silent and stately Senate the habits of the bustling
-noisy house. It was a hard seat for “Schuyler,” that Vice-President’s
-chair, and he came at last to vacate it regularly by two o’clock that he
-might write in the seclusion of the Vice-President’s room a few of those
-ten thousand popular personal letters which made his chief lever of
-influence with the people and which he always used to write in the
-Speaker’s chair. As President of the Senate he was usually just, always
-urbane, never impressive. He had not the presence which filled the seat
-to the sight, nor the dignity which commanded attention, and silence.
-Under his ruling the Senate changed its character perceptibly from a
-grave august body to a buzzing and inattentive one. As the President of
-the Senate seldom listened to a speaker, the Senators as rarely took the
-trouble to listen to each other. The question discussed might be of the
-gravest import to the whole nation, the speaker’s words, to himself,
-might be of the most tremendous importance to the national weal, just
-the same he had to empty them upon vacancy, speaking to nothing in
-particular, while the Vice-President looked another way, and his
-colleagues went on scribbling letters, whispering political secrets to
-each other, munching apples in the aisles or smoking in the open
-cloak-rooms, with feet aloft.
-
-Vice-President Wilson, without an atom of parliamentary experience, has
-already won the hearts and improved the manners of the Senate by simply
-giving attention to its debates. No matter how tiresome, he steadfastly
-looks and listens. The humblest speaker—seeing that he has one pair of
-eyes fixed upon him, one direct immovable point toward which he may
-direct his remarks—takes heart, and in spite of himself makes a better
-speech than would be possible were he beating a vacuum, and speaking to
-nobody in particular. Even his listening constituency and the next day’s
-_Globe_ is not such an incentive to present inspiration as two steadfast
-eyes and one pair of good listening ears.
-
-We leave the Senate Chamber by the western gallery. Here in the niche at
-the foot of the staircase, corresponding to Franklin’s on the opposite
-side, stands the noble figure of John Hancock. The stairs are of
-polished white marble and the painting above them leading to the
-gentlemen’s gallery of the Senate, in its setting of maroon cloth
-represents the battle of Chapultapec in all the ardor of its fiery
-action. We saunter on along the breezy corridors through whose open
-windows we catch delicious glimpses of the garden city, the gliding
-river and the distant hills, past the Supreme Court room into the great
-rotunda.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE SENATE CHAMBER.
-
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The rotunda is ninety-five feet in diameter, three hundred feet in
-circumference and over one hundred and eighty feet in height. Its dome
-contains over eight millions eight hundred thousand pounds of iron,
-presenting the most finished specimen of iron architecture in the world.
-The panels of the rotunda are set with paintings of life-size, painted
-by Vanderlyn, Trumbull and others. The Declaration of Independence; the
-surrender of Burgoyne; surrender of the British Army, commanded by Lord
-Cornwallis, at Yorktown, Virginia, October 19, 1781; resignation of
-General Washington at Annapolis, December 23, 1783, all by Colonel
-Trumbull; the baptism of Pocahontas by Chapman; landing of Columbus by
-Vanderlyn; De Soto’s discovery of the Mississippi, by Powell. Like most
-works of genius these paintings have many merits and many defects.
-Perhaps the favorite of all is the Embarcation of the Pilgrims in the
-Speedwell at Delft Haven, by Robert W. Weir. Its figures and the fabrics
-of its costumes are wonderfully painted; so, too, is the face of the
-hoary Pilgrim who is giving thanks to God for their safe passage across
-stormy seas to the land of deliverance; but the enchantment of the
-picture is the face of Rose Standish. If I were a man, I would marry
-such a face out of all the faces on the earth, for the being which it
-represents. These eyes, blue as heaven and as true, would never fail
-you. No matter how low _you_ might fall, you could see only in them
-purity, faith, devotion, tenderness, and unutterable love—and all for
-you.
-
-The group in bas-relief over the western entrance of the rotunda was
-executed by Cappelano, a pupil of Canova. It represents the preservation
-of Captain Smith by Pocahontas. The design was taken from a rude
-engraving of the event in the first edition of Smith’s History of
-Virginia. The idea is national, but you see the execution is
-preposterous. Powhatan looks like an Englishman, and Pocahontas has a
-Greek face and a Grecian head-dress. The alto-relievo over the eastern
-entrance of the rotunda represents the Landing of the Pilgrims. The
-pilgrim, his wife and child are stepping from the prow of a boat to
-receive from the hand of an Indian, kneeling on the rock before them, an
-ear of corn. Good Indian. He was no relation to the Modoc! Still the
-little boy evidently has no faith in him for he is tugging at his
-father’s arm as if to hold him back from that ear of corn or the hand
-that holds it.
-
-Over the south door of the rotunda we have Daniel Boone and two Indians
-in a forest. Boone has dispatched one Indian and is in close battle with
-the other. The latter is doing his best to strike Boone with his
-tomahawk, but Boone averts the blow, by his rifle in one hand, while the
-other drawn back holds a long knife which he is about to run through his
-foe. The action is exciting enough for the _New York Ledger_, although
-rendered tangled and cramped by a too narrow space. It commemorates an
-occurrence which took place in the year 1773. This, as well as the
-landing of the Pilgrims, was executed by Causici, another pupil of
-Canova. Over the northern door of the rotunda we have William Penn
-standing under an elm, in the act of presenting a treaty to the Indians.
-Penn is dressed as a Quaker, and looks as benevolent as the crude stone
-out of which he is made will let him. This panel was executed by a
-Frenchman named Genelot.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES.
-
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-We pass through the noblest room of the Capitol, the old Hall of
-Representatives and through the open corridor directly into the new Hall
-of Representatives. It occupies the precise place in the south wing
-which the Senate Chamber does in the northern wing. Like the Senate
-room, the light of day comes to it but dimly through the stained glass
-roof overhead. Like that, also, it is entire, encircled by a corridor
-opening into smoking apartments, committee rooms, the Speaker’s room,
-etc., which monopolize all the out of door air, and every out of door
-view. The air of the central chamber is pumped into it by a tremendous
-engine at work in the depths of the Capitol and admitted through
-ventilators one under each desk. You see these are covered with shining
-brass plates which by a touch of the foot can be adjusted to admit a
-current of fresh air, or shut it off, according to the wish of the
-occupant of the chair above it. In former times these ventilators were
-uncovered, and then were used to such an extent as spittoons by the
-honorable gentlemen above them, and filled to such a depth with tobacco
-quids and the stumps of cigars that the odor from them became unbearable
-and they had to be covered up.
-
-The Hall of Representatives is 139 feet long, 93 feet wide and 30 feet
-high with a gallery running entirely around the Hall, holding seats for
-1200 persons. Like the Senate, the ceiling is of iron work bronzed,
-gilded and paneled with glass, each pane decorated with the arms of a
-State. At the corners of these panels in gilt and bronze are rosettes of
-the cotton plant in its various stages of bud and blossom. The Speaker’s
-desk, splendid in proportion, is of pure white marble, while crossed
-above his head are two brilliant silk flags of the United States. One of
-the panels under the gallery at his left is filled with a painting in
-fresco, by Brumidi.
-
-The Speaker’s room, in the rear of his chair across the inner lobby, is
-one of the most beautiful rooms in the Capitol. Its ornaments are not as
-glaring as those of the President’s and Vice-President’s rooms, while
-its mirrors, carved book-cases, velvet carpets and chairs, give it a
-look of home comfort as well as of luxury. It has a bright outlook upon
-the eastern grounds of the Capitol, and its walls are hung with
-portraits of every speaker from the First Congress to the present one.
-
-We pass through the private corridor looking from the Speaker’s room out
-into the grand colonnaded vestibule opening upon the great portico of
-the south extension. These twenty-four columns and forty pilasters have
-blossomed from native soil. Athens, Pompeii, Rome, are left out at last,
-and looking up to these flowering capitals we see corn-leaves, tobacco,
-and magnolias budding and blooming from their marble crowns. Every
-column, every pilaster bears a magnolia, each of a different form, all
-from casts of the natural flower. And far below, beneath the
-Representatives’ Hall, there is a row of monolithic columns formed of
-the tobacco and thistle. It is above the marble staircase opposite,
-leading to the ladies’ gallery, that we see painted on the wall covering
-the entire landing, the great painting of Leutze, representing the
-“Advance of Civilization;” “Westward the Star of Empire takes its
-way”—is its motto. At the first glance it presents a scene of
-inextricable confusion. It is an emigrant train caught and tangled in
-one of the highest passes of the Rocky Mountains. Far backward spread
-the Eastern Plains; far onward stretches the Beulah of promise, fading
-at last in the far horizon. The great wagons struggling upward, tumbling
-downward from mountain precipice into mountain gorge, hold under their
-shaking covers every type of westward moving human life. Here is the
-mother sitting in the wagon-front, her blue eyes gazing outward,
-wistfully and far, the baby lying on her lap; one wants to touch the
-baby’s head, it looks so alive and tender and shelterless in all that
-dust and turmoil of travel. A man on horseback carries his wife, her
-head upon his shoulder. Who that has ever seen it will forget her sick
-look and the mute appeal in the suffering eyes. Here is the bold hunter
-with his racoon cap, the pioneer boy on horseback, a coffee-pot and cup
-dangling at his saddle, and oxen—such oxen! it seems as if their
-friendly noses must touch us; they seem to be feeling out for our hand
-as we pass up to the gallery. Here is the young man, the old man, and
-far aloft stands the advance guard fastening on the highest and farthest
-pinnacle the flag of the United States.
-
-Confusing, disappointing perhaps, at first glance, this painting asserts
-itself more and more in the soul the oftener and the longer you gaze.
-Already the swift, smooth wheels of the railway, the shriek of the
-whistle, and the rush of the engine have made its story history. But it
-is the history of our past—the story of the heroic West. It is one of a
-thousand which should line the walls of the Capitol, feeding the hearts
-of the American people to the latest generation with the memory of our
-forefathers, showing by what toilsome ways they followed the Star of
-Empire and made the paths of civilization smooth for their children’s
-feet.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- OUTSIDE THE CAPITOL.
-
-The Famous Bronze Doors—The Capitol Grounds—Statue of Washington
- Criticised—Peculiar Position for “the Father of his Country”—Horace
- Greenough’s Defence of the Statue—Picturesque Scenery Around the
- Capitol—The City and Suburbs—The Public Reservation—The Smithsonian
- Institution—The Potomac and the Hights of Arlington.
-
-
-We come back to the grand vestibule of the southern wing, to the
-flowering magnolias, tobacco and corn-leaves of the marble capitals, and
-pass out to the great portico. This is one of the famous bronze doors
-designed by Rogers, and cast in Munich. How heavy, slow, and still, its
-swing! The other opens and closes upon the central door of the north
-wing, leading to the vestibule of the Senate.
-
-Here, from the portico we look out upon the eastern grounds of the
-Capitol in the unsullied panoply of a June morning, across the closely
-shorn grass, the borders of roses and beds of flowers, through the vista
-of maples with their green arcade of light and shadow, to the august
-form of George Washington sitting in the centre of the grounds in a
-lofty cerule chair mounted on a pedestal of granite twelve feet high.
-
-This is the grandest and most criticised work of art about the Capitol.
-The form being nude to the waist and the right arm outstretched, it is a
-current vulgar joke that he is reaching out his hand for his clothes
-which are on exhibition in a case at the Patent Office. It is true that
-a sense of personal discomfort seems to emanate from the drapery—or lack
-of it—and the _posé_ of this colossal figure. George Washington with his
-right arm outstretched, his left forever holding up a Roman sword, half
-naked, yet sitting in a chair, beneath bland summer skies, within a
-veiling screen of tender leaves is a much more comfortable looking
-object than when the winds and rains and snows of winter beat upon his
-unsheltered head and uncovered form. This statue was designed in
-imitation of the antique statue of Jupiter Tonans. The ancients made
-their statues of Jupiter naked above and draped below as being visible
-to the gods but invisible to men. But the average American citizen,
-being accustomed to seeing the Father of his country decently attired in
-small clothes, naturally receives a shock at first beholding him in next
-to no clothes at all. It is impossible for him to reconcile a Jupiter in
-sandals with the stately George Washington in knee-breeches and buckled
-shoes. The spirit of the statue, which is ideal, militates against the
-spirit of the land which is utilitarian if not commonplace.
-
-Nevertheless, in poetry of feeling, in grandeur of conception, in
-exquisite fineness of detail and in execution, Horatio Greenough’s
-statue of George Washington is transcendently the greatest work in
-marble yet wrought at the command of the government for the Capitol. It
-is scarcely human, certainly not American, but it is godlike. The face
-is a perfect portrait of Washington. The veining of a single hand, the
-muscles of a single arm are triumphs of art.
-
-Washington’s chair is twined with acanthus leaves and garlands of
-flowers. The figure of Columbus leans against the back of the seat to
-the left, connecting the history of America with that of Europe; an
-Indian chief on the right represents the condition of the country at the
-time of its discovery. The back of the seat is ornamented in
-_basso-relievo_ with the rising sun, the crest of the American arms,
-under which is this motto: “_Magnus ab integro sæculorum nascitur
-ordo._” On the left is sculptured in _bas-relief_ the genii of North and
-South America under the forms of the infant Hercules strangling the
-serpent, and Iphiclus stretched on the ground shrinking in fear from the
-contest. The motto is “_Incipe posse puer cui non risere parentes._” On
-the back of the seat is the following motto: “_Simulacrum istud ad
-magnum Libertatis exemplum. Nec sine ipsa duraturum._”
-
-One of the greatest works of contemporary art, the masterpiece of a
-master, it has been the subject of more rude and vulgar jests than any
-other piece of American sculpture. The painful disparity which so often
-exists between the judgment of the multitude and the inspiration of the
-creator has never been more touchingly illustrated than in the following
-words of Horatio Greenough, concerning this monument to his own genius
-and to the Father of his country. He says: “It is the birth of my
-thoughts, I have sacrificed to it the flower of my days, and the
-freshness of my strength; its every lineament has been moistened with
-the sweat of my toil and the tears of my exile. I would not barter away
-its association with my name for the proudest fortune that avarice ever
-dreamed of. In giving it up to the nation that has done me the honor to
-order it at my hands, I respectfully claim for it that protection which
-is the boast of civilization to afford art, and which a generous enemy
-has more than once been seen to extend even to the monuments of its own
-defeat.”
-
-Retracing our steps to the rotunda, we turn westward through the main
-hall of the Congressional Library to the lofty colonnade outside, from
-whose balcony we look down upon the view which Humbolt declared to be
-the most beautiful of its type in the whole world. Directly below us,
-past the western terrace of the Capitol, with its open basin full of
-gold fishes flashing in the sun, stretch the Capitol grounds. Many
-varieties of trees already grown to forest hight spread their
-interlacing roof of cool, green shadow over the malachite sward below.
-Beds of flowers set in the grass, from the early March crocuses to the
-November blooming roses, make the grounds fragrant and precious with
-their presence. Here the dandelion spreads its cloth of gold in early
-May. Here the chrysanthemums fringe the snow with pallid gold in white
-December. Now the fountains are lapsing in dreamy tune through the long
-June hours, and the seats under the trees are filled with visitors.
-Nurses with children in their arms, old men and women leaning on their
-staffs, lovers “billing and cooing” through the long twilight and
-starlight seasons. Beyond spreads the city, every ugly outline hidden
-and lost in a waving sea of greenery rippling and tossing above it. The
-great avenues run and radiate in all directions. Pennsylvania Avenue
-stretches straight on between its border of shade trees to its acropolis
-one mile distant, the great Treasury gleaming in the sun, and the white
-chimneys of the Executive Mansion peering above the trees; and still on,
-till it joins the primitive streets of Georgetown. Massachusetts Avenue,
-broad, straight, magnificent, spans the city from end to end unbroken.
-Virginia Avenue to the left, goes on to meet Long Bridge, leading far
-into the Old Dominion. Directly in front stretches the public
-reservation yet to be made splendid as the Nation’s Boulevards, but
-already holding the Congressional gardens and conservatories, the unique
-towers, and picturesque grounds of the Smithsonian Institution, the
-broad flower-banded terraces of the Agricultural Department, and the
-incomplete Washington Monument. Beyond we see the wide Potomac, flecked
-all over with snowy sails, far down old Alexandria, dingy on its farther
-shore; opposite the Heights of Arlington, and amid its immemorial oaks;
-Arlington House with the stars and stripes floating free from its
-crowning summit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- ART TREASURES OF THE CAPITOL.
-
-Arrival of a Solitary Lady—“The Pantheon of America”—Il
- Penserosa—Milton’s Ideal—Dirty Condition of the House of
- Representatives—The Goddess of Melancholy—Vinnie Ream’s Statue
- of Lincoln—Its Grand Defects—Necessary Qualifications for a
- Sculptor—The Bust of Lincoln by Mrs. Ames—General Greene and
- Roger Williams—Barbarous Garments of Modern Times—Statues of
- Jonathan Trumbull and Roger Sherman—Bust of Kosciusko—Pulling
- His Nose—Alexander Hamilton—Fate of Senator Burr—Statue of
- Baker—His Last Speech Prophetic—The Glory of a Patriotic
- Example—The Lesson which Posterity Learns—Horatio Stone, the
- Sculptor—Washington’s Statue at Richmond—Neglected Condition of
- the Capitol Statuary—Curious Clock—Grotesque Plaster Image of
- Liberty—Webster—Clay—Adams—The Pantheon at Rome—The French
- Pantheon—Bar-Maid Goddess—Dirty Customs of M. C’s—Future Glory
- of America.
-
-
-A solitary lady has arrived in the old Hall of the House of
-Representatives; or, as Senator Anthony eloquently calls it, “the
-Pantheon of America.” “Considering her age,” (as women sweetly say of
-each other,) “she looks quite young.” What her precise age may be, I am
-as unable to tell you as that of any other of my friends. The daughter
-of Saturn and Vesta, we may, at least, conclude that she has lived long
-enough to look older than she does. Her name is “Il Penserosa,” and, “to
-judge by appearances,” she seems to have flourished about twenty-five of
-our mortal years. Yet Milton sung of her in his youth, before an unruly
-wife and three disobedient daughters, (who perversely wished to
-understand the alphabet which they read to their blind father,) had made
-him crabbed and loftily sour towards women—Milton sung of this maid who
-has but lately arrived in Washington:
-
- “Come, pensive nun, devout and pure,
- Sober, steadfast, and demure,
- All in a robe of darkest grain
- Flowing with majestic train,
- And sable stole of cypress lawn,
- Over thy decent shoulders drawn;
- Come, but keep thy wonted state
- With even step and musing gait,
- And looks commercing with the skies,
- Thy rapt soul sitting in thine eyes.”
-
-Now, if this maiden can keep on holding her head up, with looks
-perpetually “commercing with the skies” so that it will be impossible
-for her to see all the tobacco-juice and apple-cores beneath and round
-about her, it will conduce greatly to her peace of mind. I am sorry that
-“the Pantheon of America” is not a cleaner looking place. It’s a pity,
-as we have a Pantheon, that its shabbiness and dirt should flourish to a
-degree that is absolutely melancholy. I am sure it was in obedience to
-the law of fitness that the committee of the Congressional Library or
-some other committee, brought the Goddess of Melancholy in here, to hold
-her eyes and nose aloft, and to stand supreme queen, regnant of dust and
-gloom and American “expectoration.” “Hail! divinest Melancholy.” I am
-glad, judging by your face, that you are of the lymphatic temperament,
-and that consequently, all this dirt will afflict you less than it does
-me. But the more I look at your impassive and soulless countenance the
-more I fear that, after all, you are but a feeble counterfeit of
-Milton’s goddess or of the divine maiden conceived and born in,
-
- “Woody, Ida’s inmost grove.”
-
-In speaking of this marble, my heart will not let me forget that it was
-wrought by a hand self-taught; yet no less, standing where it does, it
-must be measured—somewhat, at least—by the standards of art. The figure,
-diminutive even in its femininity, suffers to insignificance by being
-set almost directly behind the gaunt and elongated form of Miss Ream’s
-“Lincoln;” yet it is in the figure, in its _posé_ and gentle curves, its
-chaste and graceful drapery, “the stole of cypress lawn, over the decent
-shoulders drawn” in the firm yet delicate hand which holds it in its
-place—in these only it is that the artist has caught and fastened in
-stone the aspect of the “goddess, sage and holy.” The face is
-meaningless. Not a line, not a curve, not an expression indicates a
-capacity for melancholy, contemplation or anything else emotional or
-intellectual. No mortal woman ever really meditated for a minute who did
-not get her hair pushed back further from her eyes than this, but these
-regulation locks run straight down the little, senseless Greek face in a
-mathematical angle, indissolubly banded by a little perked up helmet,
-embossed with seven stars. Why these stars? “Il Penserosa” was not
-nearly enough related to “that starred Ethiop queen” Cassiope, to have
-borrowed the helmet to wear even in the old Hall of the old House of
-Representatives “in the United States of America.”
-
-As for the Ream statue of Lincoln, (like many people,) the first glance
-at it is the most satisfactory that you will ever have. It will never
-look as well again. Some declare this very palpable lack to be in the
-subject—Mr. Lincoln’s own face and form—but many others note it to be in
-this representation of them. Mr. Lincoln’s living face was one of the
-most interesting ever given to man. There was more than fascination in
-its rugged homeliness; there was in it the deeper attraction of
-suffering and sympathy. It outrayed from every line engraven there by
-human pain and love and longing. But no soul can put into a statue or
-painting more than it has in itself. In this statue of Mr. Lincoln we
-have his rude outward image, unilluminated by one mental or spiritual
-characteristic. It is mechanical, material, opaque. Mrs. Sarah Ames, in
-her bust of Lincoln, which stands just behind our friend, “Il
-Penserosa,” has transfixed more of the soul of Lincoln in the brow and
-eyes of his face than Miss Ream has in all the weary outline of her many
-feet of marble. In the bust the lower part of the face is idealized into
-weakness. Without his gauntness and ruggedness Lincoln is not Lincoln.
-But any one who ever saw and felt the deep, tender, sad outlook of his
-living humanity must thank Mrs. Ames for having reflected and transfixed
-it in the brows and eyes of this marble.
-
-Just outside of its alcove, at the right hand of the door which enters
-the New House of Representatives, stand side by side, the two statues
-from Rhode Island—one of General Green, the other of Roger Williams.
-That of General Green is spirited and exquisitely fine in detail; while
-that of Roger Williams is the one ideal statue in our Pantheon. Both
-were executed in Rome—the first by Henry R. Brown, the second by
-Franklin Simmons, of Providence, Rhode Island. No portrait of Roger
-Williams being in existence, Mr. Simmons has evolved from imagination
-and his inner consciousness a quaint, poetic figure and a dreamlike
-face, above whose lifted eyelids seems to hover a seraphic smile. Then
-it is refreshing to turn from the stove-pipe hats, shingled heads and
-angular garments in which the men of our generation do penance, to the
-flowing locks, puckered knee-breeches, with their dainty tassels, and
-the ample ruffs in which the holy apostle of liberty represents his name
-and time. He holds a book in his hand, on whose cover is inscribed the
-words, “Soul Liberty,” and, with open, uplifted glance and free _posé_
-seems about to step forward into air, with lips just ready to open with
-words of inspiration.
-
-Opposite, on the other side of the Hall, stand together Connecticut’s
-contribution—the statues of Jonathan Trumbull and Roger Sherman. They
-are of heroic size and at first glance are most imposing. When you walk
-nearer, and soberly survey them, you see that Roger Sherman looks solid
-and stolid, and you see also (at least, I do,) that old Jonathan
-Trumbull, with his down-perked head and narrow-lidded eyes, looks like a
-meditative rooster—an immense human chanticleer, who had paused in his
-lording career for a minute’s meditation. Mind, I don’t say but this may
-be a grand statue, in its way, I only observe that it is a very
-repelling one to me.
-
-Just round the angle of the alcove on a box set on end, covered with
-tattered black cambric, stands a bust of Kosciusko, by H. D. Saunders.
-Poor Kosciusko! His nose always needs wiping; and what a pedestal for a
-Pantheon! A candle or a soap box, probably, half covered with black
-tags; then on his nose celestial, the dust alights and lodges always. It
-is so provocative—the tip of it; every bumpkin who approaches it taps or
-pulls it. Thus, literally, Kosciusko’s nose is seldom clean. One day it
-was. Some pitying hand had washed the entire face. If you could have
-seen the difference between Kosciusko clean and Kosciusko exiled, dirty
-and forlorn! A few steps from this bust stands the statue of Alexander
-Hamilton, by Horatio Stone—a noble figure, spirited in posture and
-beautiful in countenance. No painted portrait can give so grand an idea
-of the great Federalist to posterity. It is eight feet high and
-represents Hamilton in the attitude of impassioned speech. It is
-persuasive rather than declamatory, for the lifted hands droop, the face
-presses slightly forward, the eyes look out from under their royal
-arches deep and steadfast, while the sunshine pouring down the dome
-lights up every lineament with the intensity of life. The execution of
-the statue is exquisite, while in _posé_ and expression it is the
-embodiment of majesty and power. Burr—who presided over the Senate, who
-with the pride, subtlety and ambition of Lucifer, planned and executed
-to live in the future amid the most exalted names of his time—sleeps
-dishonored and accursed; while the great rival that he hated, whose
-success he could not bear, whose life he destroyed, comes back in this
-majestic semblance to abide in the Capitol. Thus we behold in this
-statue not only a “triumph of art” but also a triumph of that final
-retributive compensation of justice which sooner or later crushes every
-wrong. This image of Hamilton looks forth from an era which, across the
-gulf of our later revolution, seems already remote. It recalls
-Washington the friend, Jefferson the foe, the war of Colonist and Tory,
-the war of ideas between Federalist and Republican, the struggles and
-successes of a splendid career; yet how far removed seem all across the
-graves of the men of our own generation whom patriotism and death have
-made illustrious and immortal. Thus nearer and dearer to the hearts of
-to-day must be the image of “the noblest Roman of them all.” It is a
-statue of Baker, also executed by Horatio Stone, in Rome, in 1863.
-Hamilton stands forth in heroic size, while the statue of Baker is under
-that of life, and barely suggests the grand proportions of the man. Yet
-the dignity and grandeur of his mien are here, as he stands wrapped in
-his cloak, his arms folded, his head thrown back, his noble face lifted
-as if he saw the future—_his future_—and awaited it undaunted and with a
-joyful heart. At his side is the plumed hat of a soldier, and on the
-pedestal on which he stands are graven words from his last speech in the
-United States Senate, when he replied to Breckenridge, “There will be
-some graves reeking with blood, watered by the tears of affection. There
-will be some privation. There will be some loss of luxury; there will be
-somewhat more need of labor to procure the necessaries of life. When
-that is said, all is said. If we have the country, the whole country,
-the Union, the constitution, free government—with these will return all
-the blessings of a well ordered civilization. The path of the country
-will be a course of grandeur and glory such as our fathers in the olden
-time foresaw in the dim visions of years to come—such as would have been
-ours to-day, had it not been for the treason for which the senator too
-often seeks to apologize.”
-
-Thus to the land he loved he gave his life—a life so rich in every
-quality that rounds and completes the highest manhood.
-
-At sight of this mute marble, what memories are stirred! Again, in and
-around Union Square throbs the vast human mass. Banners wave, cannons
-boom, drums beat, men march. Every pulse of the air thrills with the
-cry, “To Arms!” Amid all the orators of that hour, whose voice uttered
-such burning words as Baker—he who left the seat of a senator for the
-grave of a soldier. Thank God for our dead who yet live. No land has a
-more priceless legacy. No soil was ever planted with richer blood. No
-freedom ever bought with a costlier victory. Let me tell you, public
-men, amid all your lavish expenditures of money wrung from the people,
-never begrudge the price you pay for the fit statue of a great
-character. Line the corridors of the Capitol with the images of the
-noble and the good, that, by suggestion and semblance, they may arouse
-to a purer purpose the emulation of the living. In these halls where
-lobbyists congregate, where money-changers stand with shameless faces
-offering their venal price for truth and honor, buying and selling the
-integrity of manhood, give to our eyes at least the memories of high
-example. If men in the rush of affairs and the absorption of their
-ambitions take no time to study them, thoughtful women will pause and
-ponder, and then teach the children who are to rule after us to love and
-remember.
-
-I look on these statues and think of the man who wrought them—think of
-him as I saw him every day six years ago, a pale, dissatisfied, restless
-man, whose hands were busy with uncongenial tasks, but whose brain was
-haunted with noble ideals, to which he was powerless to give form or
-substance. Opportunity, the ultimate test of all power, came to him and
-at last Congress voted ten thousand dollars to Horatio Stone to execute
-the statue of Alexander Hamilton in Rome. And, lo! the intangible vision
-of the weary man is embodied in imperishable marble—the most majestic
-statue beneath the dome of the Capitol. A little way before it is a
-plaster cast, mounted high on a wooden block, of Houdin’s bronze figure
-of Washington, the original of which is in the State Capitol at
-Richmond, Virginia. Such a peaked-headed, idiotic-looking Washington I
-never saw elsewhere. If he looked like this, it is perfectly plain why
-he passed through life without ever once having done anything naughty.
-But if he did look like this he was a stupid mortal to live with. Most
-of the marbles of our Pantheon are poorly set. Even the seraphic apostle
-of “soul liberty” stands on a box covered with cinnamon-colored cambric,
-and his martial brother does likewise. Abraham Lincoln is ensconced
-within an unpainted wooden fence, and the great lawgivers of Connecticut
-stand in their big cloaks upon cotton covered boxes. Mrs. Ames’ bust of
-“Lincoln” is poised on a handsome pedestal of Scotch granite; but, with
-few exceptions, though not utterly barren of fine marbles, the present
-aspect of the American Pantheon is chiefly suggestive of crudeness,
-shabbiness, and—the exorbitant necessity of spittoons. Over the entrance
-is a clock, having for its dial the wheels of a winged car, resting on a
-globe. In this car sits a lady called History, with a scroll and pen in
-hand. Oh! the story she could tell if she could tell the truth.
-Opposite, twenty-four Corinthian columns of variegated Potomac marble
-shoot to the roof, and shadow what was once the gallery of the Old Hall
-of Representatives. In the centre stands a horrid-looking plaster image
-of Liberty, modeled by Cansici; and under it the American bird, modeled
-from life and cut in sandstone by Volaperti. Besides, scattered about
-are portraits of Henry Clay, a mosaic portrait of Lincoln, by Signor
-Salviato of Venice, of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, and of Joshua
-Giddings.
-
-I have meant to pass nothing over that graces or disgraces our American
-Pantheon, that you, afar, may see it as it is. In itself it is the most
-majestic room in the Capitol. Set apart to enshrine the sculptured forms
-of illustrious dead, already its arches and alcoves are fraught with
-their living memoirs. Here Webster spoke, here Clay presided, here Adams
-died.
-
-It is modeled from the Roman Pantheon, and its roof, at least, is like
-it. We have no proof that the Roman Pantheon was set apart for such a
-purpose as that to which our own is dedicated; indeed, in the beginning
-it was supposed to be connected with the Roman baths. To-day it is
-chiefly sacred to art as the burial-place of Raphael. The French
-Pantheon, also, was comparatively poor in statues, though boasting of
-immense compositions in painting, by David and Gros. Herein the great
-men who have illustrated France appear in the forms of Fenelon,
-Malesherbes, Mirabeau, Voltaire, Rousseau, Lafayette, and others; while
-at their feet, as befits their sex, sit History and Liberty, properly
-employed making wreaths for the heads of these masculine heroes. From
-the dome look down Clovis, Charlemagne, St. Louis, Louis XIV., XVI.,
-XVII., Marie Antoinette, Madame Elizabeth, with a central glory to
-represent Deity. The dome of our own rotunda is a florid imitation of
-this. We have Franklin, Washington, and troops of goddesses, who look
-like bar-maids; but from the focal apex we have omitted God, whose eye
-is needed for such an assembly.
-
-The magnificent facade which leads to the Houses of Parliament in
-Westminster Palace is nine hundred feet long, paneled with tracery and
-decorated with rows of majestic statues of the kings and queens of
-England, from the conquest to the present time. Let us hope that it will
-never be defiled from beginning to end, as our own magnificent
-legislative halls, with tobacco-juice from the mouths of demoralized
-men. The earth has never had but one absolutely perfect building, in
-itself the final consummate flower of art—the Parthenon—consecrated
-first to woman, the Virgin House, sacred to Athena. Beneath its pure and
-perfect dome there was nothing to divert the gazer’s contemplation from
-the simplicity and majesty of mass and outline. The whole building,
-without and within, was filled with the most exquisite pieces of
-sculpture, executed under the guidance of Phidias. The grand central
-figure was the colossal statue of the Virgin Goddess, wrought by the
-hand of Phidias himself. The weight of gold which she carried, says
-Thucydides, was forty talents. Could a wooden fence guard so much gold
-in our Christian Pantheon to-day? It was a happy thought which dedicated
-this old hall of the nation to national art, but it far outleaped its
-century. That which shall truly be the Pantheon of America is not for
-us. The children of later generations, a far-off procession, may come up
-hither to worship the diviner forms of the future, the majestic statues
-of the nation’s best—its sons grand in manhood, its daughters divine in
-womanhood; but, with here and there a rare exception, our eyes who live
-to-day will see them not.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- WOMEN WITH CLAIMS.
-
-The Senate Reception Room—The People Who Haunt It—Republican “Ladies in
- Waiting”—“Women with Claims”—Their Heroic Persistency—A Widow and
- Children in Distress—Claim Agents—The Committee of Claims—A
- Kind-hearted Senator’s Troubles—Buttonholing a Senator—A Lady of
- Energy—Resolved to Win—An “Office Brokeress”—A Dragon of a Woman—A
- Lady who is Feared if not Respected—Her Unfortunate Victims—Carrying
- “Her Measure”—The Beautiful Petitioner—The Cloudy Side of her
- Character—Her Subtle Dealings—Her Successes—How Government Prizes
- are Won.
-
-
-The room itself means only grace, beauty and silence. The moment had not
-come for dis-illusion, thus I went forth without a word regarding its
-human aspect.
-
-To-day, dear friends, we will go in and face that. We sit down in the
-shadow of this Corinthian pillar, and, looking out see the most
-noticeable fact is that this lofty apartment is thronged with women. A
-number are conversing with senators; others are gazing toward the doors
-which lead into the Senate. Some seem to be waiting with eager eyes and
-anxious faces; others are leaning back upon the sofas in attitudes of
-luxurious listlessness. Do you ask why they are here? Are they studying
-the stately proportions and exquisite _finesse_ of the ante-room? Not at
-all. It is not devotion to the aesthetic arts nor the inspiration of
-patriotism, which brings these women thither. They are a few, only a
-very few, of the women—with “claims,” who, through the sessions of
-Congress haunt the departments, the White House and the Capitol.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE LADIES’ RECEPTION ROOM.
-
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The dejected looking woman on the sofa opposite is a widow, with
-numerous small children. You may be certain by the unhopeful expression
-of her face that it is her own claim which, almost unaided and alone,
-she is trying to “work through” Congress. Her home is far distant. She
-borrowed money to come here, she borrows money to support her children,
-money to pay her own board; borrows money to pay the exorbitant fees of
-the claim-agent, who, constantly fanning the flame of “great
-expectations,” assures her every day that Congress will pay her the
-thousands which she demands for her losses—will pay her this very
-session. Meantime the session is almost ended, and the widow’s claim, on
-which hangs such a heavy load of debt and fear, lies hidden and
-forgotten in the pigeon-hole of the Committee of Claims. While it lies
-there, gathering dust, she a cheaply clad, care-faced woman, no longer
-young, and never pretty, has grown to be most burdensome to Senator ——,
-especially to the chairman of that committee. Irksome, not to be
-desired, is the importunate presence of this forlorn woman. No less
-irksome to these functionaries is the sight of her hundred sisters in
-distress—more or less; poor widows, with small children, with personal
-claims upon the Government. The chairman dreads the sight of this woman
-and of her like. He dreads it the more that he is perfectly certain that
-her case is not reached, and will not be this session. A kind-hearted
-man, he is unwilling to set the seal of despair on her face by telling
-her the truth. She finds it out at last, and then remembering all his
-evasions, in her disappointment and hopeless poverty, she denounces him
-as “deceitful and heartless,” whereas the honorable gentleman was only
-trying to be kind. Meanwhile the Senate is too much interested in
-immense claims involving millions, to be paid out of the National
-Treasury, too much absorbed in the discussion of the universal, to be
-able to come down to the small particular of a poor widow, with hungry
-children, whose only heritage was lost in the war. In time, whose cycles
-may be as long as those of the Circumlocution Office and the Court of
-Chancery—but _some_ time, when the widow has borrowed and spent more
-money than the whole claim is worth, it may be investigated, and full or
-partial justice done. In either case, it will take more than she
-receives to pay the many expenses which she has incurred during her long
-years of waiting. Do you wonder that her face looks doleful while she
-waits for Senator —— to come in to answer her card, sent into the Senate
-Chamber. Here he is and we can hear what he says, “I am very sorry,
-Madame; but it has grown to be too late. I fear that your case can not
-be reached this session.” Poor woman. It would have been better for you
-to have staid at home, kept out of debt, worked with your hands to have
-supported your children. That would have been a hard life, but not so
-hard as the mortification, suspense, and defeat of this, and the long
-years of labor after all.
-
-See that sharp-faced woman, with darting, prying eyes. She rushes in one
-door and out of another. She hurries back. She meets a senator, and
-“button-holes him,” after the fashion of men, and begins conversing in
-the most importunate manner. He makes a retreat. Lo! in a moment she
-attacks another, leading him triumphantly to a sofa, where we witness a
-_teté-a-teté_, on the feminine side, carried on with marked emphasis and
-much gesticulation. This woman not only has one claim in Congress, she
-has many, and not one her own. She is a claim-agent, an
-office-brokeress. She buys claims, and speculates in them as so much
-stock. She takes claims on commission, deluding many a poor victim into
-the belief that “my influence” and “my friends,” Senator So-and-So and
-Secretary P. Policy, will insure it a triumphant passage and a
-remunerative end, “without _fail_.” It is not strange, through sheer
-pertinacity and by dint of endless worrying, she often succeeds. She is
-purely feline in her tactics—ever alert, watchful, wary, cunning, and so
-she worries her victims and wins. She is one of the world’s
-disappointed, dissatisfied ones; so, more than all else, we will be
-sorry for her. What God meant to be a fair life has been striven away in
-one weary struggle for the worldly honor and conventional _prestige_
-lying just above her reach. And to her the most pleasurable excitement
-in all the claim profession is the delusion that it affords her of
-personal power and of association with the great!
-
-Pardon me, good friends, for calling a name. I _must_ call it, for it is
-true. Here comes a very dragon of a woman. I am as afraid of her as if
-she had horns. I was going to say that she was a man-woman, which is the
-greatest monstrosity of the genus feminine. But I honor my brethren too
-much for such a comparison, and so will simply say-in manners, she is a
-dragon. The men whom she seizes must think so; they give her her way,
-because they are afraid of her. Too well they know that, if they do not
-yield her point—if they do not at least promise her their influence—if
-they do not assure her that they will do all in their power to carry
-“_her measure_”—that she will attack them in the street, in the
-legislative lobbies, in the quiet of their lodgings, everywhere,
-anywhere, till they do. She is no covert power. She proclaims aloud that
-she has come to Washington to carry a measure through Congress to
-establish some man in power. And she does it because her tongue is a
-scourge and her presence a fear.
-
-Leaning back in a chair, no one near her, you see a fair woman, whose
-beautiful presence seems at variance with the many anxious and angular
-and the few coarse women around her. The calmness of assured position,
-the serene satisfaction of conscious beauty, envelop her and float from
-her like an atmosphere. We feel it even here. Plumes droop above her
-forehead, velvet draperies fall about her form. We catch a glimpse of
-laces, the gleam of jewels. Look long into her face; its splendor of
-tint and perfection of outline can bear the closest scrutiny. Look long,
-and then say if a soul saintly as well as serene looks out from under
-those penciled arches, through the dilating irises of those beguiling
-eyes. Look, and the unveiled gaze which meets yours will tell you, as
-plainly as a gaze can tell, that adulation is the life of its life, and
-seduction the secret of its spell. This beauty would not blanch before
-the profanest sight; it is the beauty of one who tunes her tongue to
-honeyed accents, and lifts up her eyelids to lead men down to death. She
-comes and goes in a showy carriage. She glides through the corridors,
-haunts the galleries and the ante-rooms of the Capitol—everywhere
-conspicuous in her beauty. All who behold her inquire, Who is that
-beautiful woman? Nobody seems quite sure. Doubt and mystery envelop her
-like a cloud. “She is a rich and beautiful widow,” “She is unmarried,”
-“She is visiting the city with her husband.” Every gazer has a different
-answer. There are a few, deep in the secrets of diplomacy, of
-legislative venality, of governmental prostitution, who can tell you she
-is one of the most subtle and most dangerous of lobbyists. She is but
-one of a class always beautiful and always successful. She plays for
-large stakes, but she always wins. The man who says to her, “Secure my
-appointment, make sure my promotion, and I will pay you so many
-thousands,” usually gets his appointment, and she her thousands. Does
-she wait like a suppliant? Not at all. She sits like an empress waiting
-to give audience. Will she receive her subjects in promiscuous
-assemblage? No; if you wait long enough you will see her glide over
-these tessellated floors, but not alone. Far from the ears of the crowd,
-in rooms sumptuous enough for the Sybarites, this woman will dazzle the
-sight of a half-demented and wholly bewildered magnate, and then tell
-him what prize she wants. With alluring eyes and beguiling voice she
-will besiege his will through the outworks of his senses, and so charm
-him on to do her bidding. He promises her his influence; he promises her
-his power; her favorite shall have the boon he demands, whether it be of
-emolument or power.
-
-Thus some of the highest prizes in the Government are won. Unscrupulous
-men pay wily women to touch the subtlest and surest springs of
-influence, and thus open a secret way to their public success. No longer
-the question is: Shall women participate in politics? shall they form a
-controlling element in the Government? But, as there are women who will
-and do exert this power, shall it remain abject, covert, equivocal,
-demoralizing, base? Or shall it be brave and pure and open as the sun?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
- THE CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY.
-
-Inside the Library—The Librarian—Sketch of Mr. Spofford—How
- Congressional Speeches are Manufactured—“Spofford” in Congress—The
- Library Building—Diagram—Dimensions of the Hall—The Iron Book
- Cases—The Law Library—Five Miles of Book Shelves—Silent
- Study—“Abstracting” Books—Amusing Adventure—A Senator
- in a Quandary—Making Love under Difficulties—Library
- Regulations—Privileged Persons—Novels and their Readers—Books of
- Reference—Cataloguing the Library—The New Classification—Compared
- with the British Museum—Curious Old Newspapers—Files of Domestic and
- Foreign Papers—One Hundred Defunct Journals—Destruction of the
- Library by English Troops—An Incident of the War of 1814—Putting it
- to the Vote—“Carried Unanimously”—Wanton Destruction—Washington in
- Flames—A Fearful Tempest—The Second Conflagration—35,000 Volumes
- Destroyed—Treasures of Art Consumed—Congressional Grants—The New
- Library—Extensive Additions—The Next Appropriation—The Grand Library
- of the Nation.
-
-
-The most remarkable fact of the present connected with the Congressional
-Library, is its Librarian, Mr. Ainsworth R. Spofford.
-
-Mr. Spofford was appointed Assistant Librarian by President Lincoln,
-December 31, 1864, and upon the resignation of Mr. Stephenson the same
-month succeeded him as Librarian. Mr. Spofford was formerly connected
-with the secular press of Cincinnati, Ohio, and was also engaged in the
-book trade in the same city. But neither fact accounts for his almost
-unlimited practical knowledge of books of every age and in every
-language. He is himself a vast library in epitome. If you wish to inform
-yourself upon any subject under the sun, if you have any right or
-privilege to inform Mr. Spofford of that fact, in five minutes you will
-have placed before you a list, written down rapidly from memory, of the
-best works extant upon the subject named, and in as few moments as it
-will take to find them, and draw them forth from their dusty nests, you
-will have them all heaped on a table before you, ready for your search
-and research, and all the headaches they will be sure to give you.
-
-Mr. Spofford has the credit among experts of writing many Congressional
-speeches for honorable gentlemen whose verbs and nominatives by chronic
-habit disagree, and whose spelling-books were left very far behind them,
-but who nevertheless are under the imperative necessity of writing
-learned speeches of which their dear constituents may boast and be
-proud. By the way, a lady in private life in Washington,—a scholar and
-caustic writer,—used to earn all her pin money, before her ship of
-fortune came in, by writing, in the solitude of her room, the learned,
-witty and sarcastic speeches which were thundered in Congress the next
-day, by some Congressional Jupiter, who could not have launched such a
-thunder-bolt to have saved his soul had it not been first forged and
-electrified by a woman. The Librarian of Congress is too much absorbed
-by his routine labors to have much time or strength to spare for the
-writing out of Congressional speeches. But daily and almost hourly he
-suggests and supplies the materials for such speeches. When a member
-whose erudition is not remarkable, stands up in his seat, backing every
-sentence he utters on finance, law or politics, by great authority, more
-than one mentally exclaims, “Spofford!” We know where he has been. Mr.
-Spofford is a slight gentleman in the prime of life, of nervous
-temperament with very straight, smooth hair, classic features and a
-placid countenance. Always a gentleman, his patience and urbanity are
-inexhaustible, if you have the slightest claim upon his care. If you
-have not, and he has no intention of being “bothered,” his “shoo fly”
-capabilities are equally effectual. Like most book-people, Mr.
-Spofford’s nervous life far outruns his material forces. He needs more
-sunshine, air and out-of-door existence, as most Americans do. Therefore
-I here cast him a crumb of sisterly counsel, born of gratitude and
-selfishness. Spend more time on the Rock Creek and Piney Branch roads,
-on the hills and by the sea, Mr. Spofford. Then may you live long,
-prosper, and grow wiser, for the sake of my books, and everybody’s!
-
-The halls of the Library of Congress are among the most chaste, unique
-and indestructible of all the halls of the Capitol. The Library occupies
-the entire central portion of the western front of the original Capitol.
-The west hall extends the entire length of the western front flanked by
-two other halls, one on the north the other on the south side of the
-projection.
-
- DIAGRAM OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
-
- ┌────────┐ ┌────────┐
- │ │ Vestibule. │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ ├─────────── Door. ────────────┤ │
- │ North │ │ South │
- │ Hall. │ │ Hall. │
- │ │
- │ West Hall of Liberty. │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- └────────┴──────────────────────────────┴────────┘
-
-The west hall which a few years since made the whole Library, is 91 feet
-6 inches in length, 34 feet wide and 38 feet high, the other two halls
-of the same hight are 29 feet 6 inches wide and 95 feet long. The halls
-are lighted by windows looking out upon the grounds of the Capitol and
-by roof lights of stained glass. The ceiling is iron and glass, and
-rests on foliated iron brackets each weighing a ton. The pilasters and
-panels are of iron painted a neutral hue tinged with pale green and
-burnished with gold leaf. The floors are of tessellated black and white
-marble. The iron book-cases on either side rise story on story, floored
-with cast-iron plates, protected by railings, and traversed by light
-galleries. Including the Law Library, these halls contain 26,148 feet,
-or nearly five miles of book-shelving, and contain over 210,000 volumes.
-The iron floors are covered with _kamptulicon_ floor cloth, a compound
-of India-rubber and cork, which possesses the triple advantage of being
-clean, light and cheap. The leg of every chair has a pad of solid
-India-rubber under it. Nobody is allowed to speak above a whisper; thus
-the stolid turning, or the light flutter of leaves make the only sound
-which stirs the silence. Alcove after alcove line the halls, but with
-the exception of two devoted to novels and other light reading, left
-open for the ladies of members’ families, they are all securely locked
-and protected by a net-work of wire, and thus the chance of pilfering
-and of flirting are both shut in behind that securely fastened little
-padlock.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE CENTRAL ROOM, CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY.
-
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-Before the era of locking up, many books were “abstracted” from the
-Library and never returned. And it is said that the alcoves were used
-during the sessions of Congress by the belles of the Capitol for
-reception rooms in which they received homage and listened to marriage
-proposals. The story is told of “a wealthy Southern representative
-gleaning materials for a speech in an upper section,” who was suddenly
-stopped in his pursuit after knowledge above by the knowledge ascending
-from below that “a penniless adventurer” was that moment persuading his
-pretty daughter to elope in the alcove under him. It did not take the
-parent long to descend into that alcove. The daughter did not elope.
-
-The halls are lined with wide tables and arm-chairs provided for all who
-wish to make use of the treasures of the Library. Tickets with blanks
-can be filled with the name of any book desired, over the signature of
-the applicant, who retains the book while remaining in the Library. On
-the back of those tickets are printed the following regulations of the
-Library:
-
- 1. Visitors are requested to remove their hats.
-
- 2. No loud talking is permitted.
-
- 3. No readers under sixteen years of age are permitted.
-
- 4. No book can be taken from the Library.
-
- 5. Readers are required to present tickets for all books wanted, and
- to return their books and take back their tickets before leaving the
- Library.
-
- 6. No reader is allowed to enter the alcoves.
-
-No books can be taken out of the Library except on the responsibility of
-a member of Congress. Till within a very few years, books were allowed
-to be taken by strangers who presented a written permit to do so from a
-Congressional official. This courtesy resulted in the destruction and
-loss of so many valuable works, it had to be abolished and the stringent
-rules of the present time established and strictly enforced. An act of
-Congress provided that books can be taken out of the Library only by the
-President of the United States, Members of the Cabinet, Judges of the
-United States Supreme Court, Members of the Senate and House of
-Representatives, Secretary of the Senate, Clerk of the House and members
-of the Diplomatic Corps. This privilege of course includes the families
-of these official gentlemen.
-
-Forgetting this fact, the long list of story-books and new novels often
-“charged” to these State names would be something ridiculous. Dealers in
-light literature suffer somewhat from this privilege. The copyright law
-and the Congressional Library together provide society and State with
-all the surface literature that they want during their sojourn in
-Washington. For reference the books are most extensively and thoroughly
-used by all seekers after knowledge. American and foreign authors line
-the tables in these quiet halls daily, and the results of their research
-are usually given to the world. Legal, political, and historical works
-are the ones most constantly called for and searched.
-
-From 1815 to 1864 the Library was catalogued on the system adopted by
-Mr. Jefferson according to Bacon’s Division of Science. This
-classification adapted to a small library was inadequate to the
-necessities of thousands of consulting readers. Mr. Spofford, on his
-advent as Librarian, went to work to simplify the system. The result was
-a complete catalogue of all the books in the great Library arranged
-alphabetically under the heads of authors. A proof of the perfection of
-this arrangement is, that any book hidden in the farthest corner of the
-most distant alcove is handed to a reader at the tables within five
-minutes after his application, while in the British Museum he would do
-well if he got it in the space of half an hour.
-
-Till the reign of Mr. Spofford, newspapers, as valuable documentary
-history, had almost been ignored by the guardians of the Library. This
-great defect Mr. Spofford has done much to eradicate and remedy. Files
-of all the leading New York dailies are now regularly kept. Some
-unbroken files have been secured, including those of the _New York
-Evening Post_, from its beginning in 1801, the _London Gazette_ from
-1665, the French _Moniteur_ (Royal, Imperial, and Republican,) from
-1789, the _Illustrated London News_, the _Almanac de Gotha_ from 1776,
-and a complete set of every newspaper ever published in the District of
-Columbia, including over one hundred now no more. Before the last
-progressive regime, even after Congress had appropriated $75,000 for the
-replenishing of the Library, the entire national collection did not
-contain a modern encyclopedia, or a file of a New York daily newspaper,
-or of any newspaper except the venerable _Washington National
-Intelligencer_. _De Bow’s Review_ was the only American magazine taken,
-“but the _London Court Journal_ was regularly received, and bound at the
-close of each successive year!”
-
-The Congressional Library is the only one in the world utterly
-fire-proof, without an atom of wood or of any combustible material in
-its miles of shelving. Before it attained to this indestructible state
-it suffered much. First from the British. On the evening of August 24,
-1814, after the battle of Bladensburg, General Ross led his victorious
-troops into the Federal City. As they approached the Capitol a shot was
-fired by a man concealed in a house on Capitol Hill. The shot was aimed
-at the British general, but only killed his horse. The enraged Britons
-immediately set fire to the house which contained the sharp-shooter,
-who, it is said, was a club-footed gardener-barber Irishman. The
-unmanageable troops were drawn up in front of the unfinished Capitol, a
-wooden scaffolding, occupying the place of the Rotunda, joining the two
-wings. They first fired a volley into the windows and then entered the
-building to prepare it for destruction. Admiral Cockburn ascended to the
-Speaker’s chair, and derisively exclaimed:
-
-“Shall this harbor of Yankee Democracy be burned? All for it say ‘Aye!’”
-
-It was carried unanimously, and the torch of the Englishman applied to
-the hard-earned treasures of the young Republic. The Library of
-Congress, used as lighting paper, was entirely destroyed. With it, two
-pictures of national value were burned; portraits of Louis XVI. and
-Marie Antoinette, which, richly framed, had been sent to the United
-States Government in Philadelphia, by the unfortunate French King.
-
-While the Capitol was burning, clouds and columns of fire and smoke were
-ascending from the President’s house and all the other public buildings
-of the young city. The conflagration below was dulled by the
-conflagration above; one of the most dreadful storms of thunder and
-lightning ever known in Washington, met and lighted on the British
-invaders, dimming and quenching their malicious fires.
-
-In 1851 the magnificent new library-room of the Central Capitol, which
-now held 55,000 volumes and many works of art, was discovered to be on
-fire. The destruction was immense. Thirty-five thousand volumes were
-destroyed. Among the valuable pictures burned at the same time were
-Stuart’s paintings of the first five Presidents; an original portrait of
-Columbus; a second portrait of Columbus; an original portrait of Peyton
-Randolph; a portrait of Boliver; a portrait of Baron Steuben; one of
-Baron de Kalb; one of Cortez, and one of Judge Hanson, of Maryland,
-presented by his family. Between eleven and twelve hundred bronze medals
-of the Vattemare Exchange, some of them more than two centuries old,
-were destroyed; also, an Apollo in bronze, by Mills; a very superior
-bronze likeness of Washington; a bust of General Taylor, by an Italian
-artist; and a bust of Lafayette, by David.
-
-The divisions of Natural History, Geography, and Travels, English and
-European History, Poetry, Fiction, and the Mechanic Arts and Fine Arts
-were all burned. The whole of the Law Library escaped the fire.
-
-It indicates the intellectual vitality of the nation that an
-appropriation of $10,000 was immediately made for the restoration of the
-Library, and by the close of the year $75,000 more for the same purpose.
-
-Like most beginnings, that of the Congressional Library was humble in
-the extreme. The first provision for this great National collection was
-made at Philadelphia by an act of the Sixth Congress, April 24, 1800,
-appropriating $5,000 for a suitable apartment and the purchase of books
-for the use of both Houses of Congress. The first books received were
-forwarded to the new seat of Government in the trunks in which they had
-been imported. President Jefferson, from its inception, an ardent friend
-of the Library, called upon the Secretary of the Senate, Samuel Allyne
-Otis, to make a statement on the first day of the session, December 7,
-1801, respecting the books, the act of Congress having provided that the
-Secretary of the Senate, with the Clerk of House of Representatives,
-should be the purchasers of the books. The Congressional provision for
-the Library in 1806 was $450.00.
-
-In a report made by Doctor Samuel Latham Mitchell from New York to the
-House, January 20, 1806, he says:
-
- “Every week of the session causes additional regret that the volumes
- of literature and science within the reach of the National Legislature
- are not more rich and ample. The want of geographical illustration is
- truly distressing, and the deficiency of historical and political
- works is scarcely less severely felt.”
-
-President Madison always exercised a fostering care over the Library and
-an act approved by him, December 6, 1811, appropriates, for five
-additional years, the sum of one thousand dollars annually for its use.
-
-The whole number of books accumulated in fourteen years, from 1800 to
-1814, amounted only to about three thousand volumes. The growth of the
-Library may be traced in the relative sums appropriated to its benefit
-by successive Congresses. In 1818, $2,000 were appropriated for the
-purchase of books. From 1820 to 1823, $6,000 were voted to buy books.
-
-In 1824, $5,000 were appropriated for the purchase of books under the
-Joint Committee; also $1,546 for the purchase of furniture for the new
-Library in the centre building of the Capitol.
-
-The yearly appropriation for the increase of the Library, for many
-successive years after the accession of General Jackson, was $5,000;
-these were exclusive of the appropriations made for the Law Department
-of the Library. In 1832 an additional appropriation of $3,000 was made
-for Library furniture and repairs. In 1850 the annual appropriation of
-$1,000 to purchase books for the Law Library was increased to $2,000.
-Within a year of the burning of the Library in 1851, $85,000 had been
-voted by Congress for the restoration of the Library and the purchase of
-books.
-
-The west hall of the New Library was completed and occupied July 1,
-1853. It was designed by Thomas A. Walter, the architect of the Capitol.
-The appropriation for miscellaneous books alone in the years 1865 and
-1866 amounted to $16,000. In 1866, $1,500 were set apart for procuring
-files of leading American newspapers, and the sum of $4,000 was voted
-June 25, 1864, to purchase a complete file of selections from European
-periodicals from 1861 to 1864 relating to the Rebellion in the United
-States. July 23, 1866, the amount of $10,000 was voted by Congress for
-furniture for the two wings of the extension. The present magnificent
-halls of the Library of Congress were built at an expense of $280,500.
-The main hall cost $93,500, and the other two halls $187,000. The last
-two have been built under the superintendence of Mr. Edward Clark.
-Beautiful and ample as these three halls are in themselves, they are
-already too small to hold the rapidly accumulating treasures of the
-Library.
-
-The next appropriation will take the Congressional Library out of the
-Capitol altogether into a magnificent building, built expressly for and
-devoted exclusively to the uses of the Grand Library of the Nation.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
- A VISIT TO THE NEW LAW LIBRARY.
-
-How a Library was Offered to Congress—Mr. King’s Proposal—An Eye to
- Theology—The Smithsonian Library Transferred—The Good Deeds of Peter
- Force—National Documents—“American Archives”—Congress Makes a Wise
- Purchase—Eliot’s Indian Bible—Literary Treasures—The Lawyers Want a
- Library for Themselves—Their “Little Bill” Fails to Pass—They are
- Finally Successful—The Finest Law Library in the World—First Edition
- of Blackstone—Report of the Trial of Cagliostro, Rohan and La
- Motte—Marie Antoinette’s Diamond Necklace—A Long Life-Service—The
- Law Library Building—An Architect Buried Beneath his own
- Design—“Underdone Pie-crust”—“Justice” Among the Books—Reminiscence
- of Daniel Webster and the Girard Will.
-
-
-A little more than a month after the burning of the Library by the
-British in 1814, a letter was read in the Senate, from Thomas Jefferson
-at Monticello, tendering to Congress the purchase of his library of nine
-thousand volumes.
-
-The collection of this library had been the delight of Mr. Jefferson’s
-life, and, long before, he had written of it as “the best chosen
-collection of its size probably in America.” Pecuniary embarrassments
-had already begun to cloud his closing years, and the double hope of
-relieving these, and of adding to the treasures of his beloved Republic,
-impelled him to this personal sacrifice. In his letter to the Committee
-he said:
-
- “I should be willing indeed to retain a few of the books to amuse the
- time I have yet to pass, which might be valued with the rest, but not
- included in the sum of valuation until they should be restored at my
- death, which I would cheerfully provide for.”
-
-The sum of $23,950 in Treasury notes, of the issue ordered by the law of
-March 4, 1814, was paid him. The actual number of volumes thus acquired
-was 6,700. Although a Mr. King, of Massachusetts, more burdened with
-zeal than knowledge, made a motion which called out a loud and long
-debate, that all books of an atheistical, irreligious, and immoral
-tendency should be extirpated from the Library and sent back to Mr.
-Jefferson, the department of Theology in his library was found to be
-large, sound, and valuable.
-
-In 1866 the custody of the Library of the Smithsonian Institution, with
-the agreement of the Regents, was transferred to the Library of
-Congress. It brought forty thousand additional volumes to the
-Congressional Library.
-
-When you come to Washington, you will see in the gallery of the
-Smithsonian Institution the bust of a noble man standing on a simple
-plaster column, bearing the name PETER FORCE. He, during his life, did
-more than any one American to rescue from oblivion the early documentary
-history of the United States. He came from his native city, New York, to
-Washington, as a printer, in 1815. In 1820 he began the publication of
-the _National Calendar_, an annual volume of national statistics, and
-also published the _National Journal_, the Administration organ during
-the Presidency of John Quincy Adams. In 1833 the Government entered into
-a contract with Mr. Force to prepare and publish a “Documentary History
-of the American Colonies.” Nine volumes subsequently appeared under the
-title of the “American Archives.” In preparing this work, Mr. Force
-gathered a collection of books, manuscripts, and papers relating to
-American History, unequalled by any private collection in the world. At
-the request of the Joint Library Committee of the Thirty-ninth Congress,
-Mr. Spofford, the Librarian, entered into a thorough examination of the
-Force Library. After spending from two to three hours per day on it for
-two months, he presented to Congress an exhaustive classified report of
-its treasures, which resulted in the purchase of the entire Force
-Library by the Joint Library Committee for the sum of one hundred
-thousand dollars, the sum offered by the New York Historical Society for
-the same collection. It occupies the South Hall of the Congressional
-Library.
-
-Before this purchase, the largest and most complete collection of books
-relating to America was tucked away on the shelves of the British
-Museum. Among the treasures of the Force Library is a perfect copy of
-Eliot’s Indian Bible, the last copy of which sold brought $1,000;
-forty-one different works of Cotton and Increase Mather, printed at
-Boston and Cambridge, from 1671 to 1735; complete files of the leading
-journals of Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and other
-States, from 1735 to 1800, with 245 bound volumes of American newspapers
-printed prior to 1800; and these make but a small proportion of its
-priceless historical wealth.
-
-February 18, 1816, a bill was introduced in the Senate to establish a
-Law Library at the Seat of Government, for the use of the Supreme Court
-of the United States. It passed that body, but never went into effect,
-from the non-action of the House of Representatives on the bill. July
-14, 1832, [Andrew Jackson, President,] a bill was approved, entitled,
-“An Act to increase and improve the Law Department of the Library of
-Congress,” which, in its four sections, contained the following
-provisions:
-
- “For the present year a sum not exceeding five thousand dollars, and a
- farther annual sum of one thousand dollars for the period of five
- years, to be expended in the purchase of law books.”
-
-The number of law books owned by the Library at that time was 2,011; 639
-of these belonged to the Jefferson collection. From this beginning,
-within forty years has grown the finest law library in the world. It
-contains every volume of English, Irish and Scotch reports, besides the
-American; an immense collection of case law, a complete collection of
-the Statutes of all civilized countries since 1649, filling one hundred
-quarto volumes. It includes the first edition of Blackstone’s
-Commentaries, an original edition of the report of the trial of
-Cagliostro, Rohan and La Motte, for the theft of Marie Antoinette’s
-diamond necklace—that luckless bauble which fanned to such fury the
-fatal flames of the Revolution. When Andrew Jackson became President, in
-1829, he appointed John S. Meehan, a printer of Washington, the first
-editor and publisher of the _Columbia Star_ and _United States
-Telegraph_, Librarian of Congress. He continued in that office till the
-accession of Mr. Lincoln—a period of thirty-two years. His son, Mr. C.
-H. W. Meehan, relinquished his boy pageship under his father, in 1832,
-to be transferred to the new Law Library. The lapse of forty years finds
-this gentleman still the special custodian of the Law Library. In 1835
-he was entrusted with the choice of all books purchased for the Library,
-which trust he continues to hold. He adds another to the many faithful
-and learned lives whose entire span is measured by devoted service to
-the State, under the shadow of the Capitol. In December, 1860, the Law
-Library was removed into the basement room of the Capitol, just vacated
-by the Supreme Court. This room is unique and beautiful. Its vestibule
-is supported by pillars in clusters of stalks of maize, with capitals of
-bursting ears of corn, the design of Mr. Latrobe. The chamber itself is
-of semi-circular form seventy-five feet in length. The arches of the
-ceiling rest upon immense Doric columns. The spandrels of the arches are
-filled in with solid masonry—blocks of sandstone, strong enough to
-support the whole Capitol. Their tragic strength springs from the fact
-that the arch above fell once, burying and killing beneath it its
-designer, Mr. Lenthal. The plan of his arch in proportion to its height
-was pronounced unsafe by all who examined the drawing, except himself.
-To prove his own faith in his theory he tore away the scaffolding before
-the ceiling was dry. It fell, and he was taken out hours after, dead and
-mangled, from its fallen ruins. It will never fall again. The tremendous
-masonry which now supports a very light burden makes it impossible. The
-Doric columns diverge from the centre to the circumference like the
-radii of a circle. From this centre diverge the alcoves lined with books
-in the regulation binding, likened by Dickens to “underdone pie-crust.”
-On the western wall near the ceiling is a group in plaster, representing
-Justice holding the scales, and Fame crowned with the rising sun,
-pointing to the Constitution of the United States, the work of Franzoni,
-the sculptor of the History-winged clock, in the old Hall of
-Representatives. In this room, Daniel Webster made his great speech in
-the Dartmouth College case, and Horace Binney his argument in the case
-of the Girard Will. The Librarian’s semi-circular mahogany desk, with
-its faded green brocade draperies, once stood in the old Senate Chamber
-and re-echoed to the gavel of every Vice-President who reigned in the
-Senate from 1825 to 1860.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
- THE HEAVEN OF LEGAL AMBITION—THE SUPREME
- COURT ROOM.
-
-Memories of Clay, Webster and Calhoun—Legal Giants of the Past—Stately
- Serenity of the Modern Court—“Wise Judgment and Wine-Dinners”—The
- Supreme Court in Session—Soporific Influences—A Glimpse of the
- Veritable “Bench”—The Ladies’ Gallery—The Chief Justices of the
- Past—Taney Left Out in the Cold—His Apotheosis—Chief Justice
- Chase—Black Robed Dignitaries—An Undignified Procession—The “Crier”
- in Court—Antique Proclamation—The Consultation Room—Every Man in his
- Proper Place—Gowns of Office—Reminiscence of Judge McClean—“Uncle
- Henry and his Charge”—Fifty Years in Office.
-
-
-One of the few rooms in the Capitol wherein harmony and beauty meet and
-mingle, is the Old Senate Chamber, now the Supreme Court Room of the
-United States.
-
-Here Clay, and Webster, and Calhoun,—those giants of the past, whom
-octogenarians still deplore with all their remembered and forgotten
-peers,—once held high conclave. Defiance and defeat, battle and triumph,
-argument and oratory, wisdom and folly once held here their court. It is
-now the chamber of peace. Tangled questions concerning life, liberty and
-the pursuit of personal happiness are still argued within these walls,
-but never in tones which would drown the sound of a dropping pin. Every
-thought is weighed, every word measured that is uttered here. The judges
-who sit in silence to listen and decide, have outlived the tumult of
-youth and the summer of manhood’s fiercer battles. They have earned
-fruition; they have won their gowns—which, while life lasts, can never
-be worn by others. Theirs is the mellow afternoon of wise judgment and
-wine-dinners.
-
-In the Court room itself we seem to have reached an atmosphere where it
-is always afternoon. The door swings to and fro noiselessly, at the pull
-of the usher’s string. The spectators move over a velvet carpet, which
-sends back no echo, to their velvet cushioned seats ranged against the
-outer-walls. A single lawyer arguing some constitutional question,
-drones on within the railed inclosure of the Court; or a single judge in
-measured tones mumbles over the pages of his learned decision in some
-case long drawn out. Unless you are deeply interested in it you will not
-stay long. The atmosphere is too soporific, you soon weary of absolute
-silence and decorum, and depart. The chamber itself is semi-circular,
-with snow white walls and windows crimson-curtained. It has a domed
-ceiling studded with stuccoed mouldings and sky-lights. The technical
-“bench” is a row of leather backed arm-chairs ranged in a row on a low
-dais. Over the central chair of the Chief Justice a gilt eagle looks
-down from a golden rod. Over this eagle, and parallel with the bench
-below, runs a shallow gallery, from which many fine ladies of successive
-administrations have looked down on the gods below. At intervals around
-the white walls are set brackets on which are perched the first four
-Chief Justices—John Jay, John Rutledge, Oliver Ellsworth and John
-Marshall. There have been but six Chief Justices of the Supreme Court
-since its beginning. Chief Justice Taney’s bust for years was left out
-in the cold on a pedestal within a recess of one of the windows of the
-Senate wing. It was voted in the Senate that it should there wait a
-certain number of expiatory years until in the fulness of time it should
-be sufficiently absolved to enter the historic heaven of its brethren.
-
-One more is yet to be added—the grand head and face of Chief Justice
-Chase. The May flowers have scarcely faded since he held high court here
-alone. As ever his was the place of honor. A crown of white rose-buds
-shed incense upon his head—placed there by the beautiful daughter who
-crowned him in death, as in life, the first of men. Crosses, anchors and
-columns of stainless blossoms were heaped high above his head. Here in
-the silence of death, for one day and night, the great Chief Justice
-held Supreme Court alone.
-
-During the session of the Supreme Court, the hour of meeting is 11 A. M.
-Precisely at that hour a procession of black-robed dignitaries, kicking
-up their long gowns very high with their heavy boots, may be seen
-wending their way from the robing-room to the Supreme Court room. They
-are preceded by the Marshal, who, entering by a side-door, leads
-directly to the Judges’ stand, and, pausing before the desk, exclaims:
-
-“The Honorable the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Supreme
-Court of the United States.”
-
-With these words all present rise, and stand to receive the Justices
-filing in. Each Justice passes to his chair. The Judges bow to the
-lawyers; the lawyers bow to the Judges; then all sit down. The Crier
-then opens the Court with these words:
-
- “O, yea! O, yea! O, yea! All persons having business with the
- honorable the Supreme Court of the United States are admonished to
- draw near and give their attendance, as the Court is now sitting. God
- save the United States and this honorable Court.”
-
-At the close of this antique little speech, the Chief Justice motions to
-the lawyer whose case is to be argued, and that gentleman rises,
-advances to the front, and begins his argument.
-
-The chairs of the Judges are all placed in the order of their date of
-appointment. On either side of the Chief Justice sit the senior Judges,
-while the last appointed sit at the farther ends of each row. In the
-robing-room, their robes, and coats and hats, hang in the same order. In
-the consultation-room, where the Judges meet on Saturday to consult
-together over important cases presented, their chairs around the table
-are arranged in the same order, the Chief Justice presiding at the head.
-Both the robing and consultation-rooms command beautiful views from
-their windows of the city, the Potomac, and the hills of Virginia. In
-the former, the Judges exchange their civic dress for the high robes of
-office. These are made of black silk or satin, and are almost identical
-with the silk robe of an Episcopal clergyman. The gown worn by Judge
-McClean still hangs upon its hook as when he hung it there for the last
-time—years and years ago. The consultation-room is across the hall from
-the Law Library, whose books are in constant demand by the lawyers and
-Judges of the Supreme Court. This room is in charge of “Uncle Henry,” a
-colored man, who has held this office for fifty years, and, at the age
-of eighty, still fulfils his duties with all the alacrity and twice the
-devotion of a much younger man.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
- THE “MECCA OF THE AMERICAN.”
-
-The Caaba of Liberty—The Centre of a Nation’s Hopes—Stirring
- Reminiscences of the Capitol—History Written in Stone—Patriotic
- Expression of Charles Sumner—Ruskin’s Views of Ornament—Building
- “for all Time”—“This our Fathers Did for Us”—The Parthenon and the
- Capitol Compared—The Interest of Humanity—A Secret Charm for a
- Thoughtful Mind—An Idea of Equality—The Destiny of the Stars and
- Stripes—A Mother’s Ambition—Recollections of the War—The Dying
- Soldier—“The Republic will not Perish.”
-
-
-The Capitol of his country should be the Mecca of the American. It is
-_his_ Capitol, and his country’s, through such extreme cost, that he
-should make pilgrimages hither to behold with his own eyes the Caaba of
-Liberty. This august building should gather and concentrate within its
-walls the holy love of country.
-
-In our vast land the passion of nationality has become too much
-diffused. It has been broken into the narrower love bestowed upon a
-single State. It has been bruised by faction. It has been broken by
-anarchy. But within the walls of the Capitol, every State in the Union
-holds its memories, and garners its hopes. Every hall and corridor,
-every arch and alcove, every painting and marble is eloquent with the
-history of its past, and the prophecy of its future. The torch of
-revolution flamed in sight, yet never reached this beloved Capitol. Its
-unscathed walls are the trophies of victorious war; its dome is the
-crown of triumphant freemen; its unfilled niches and perpetually growing
-splendor foretell the grandeur of its final consummation. Remembering
-this, with what serious thought and care should this great national work
-progress:
-
- “The hand that rounded Peter’s dome,
- And groined the aisles of ancient Rome,
- Wrought with a sad sincerity.”
-
-Let no poor artist, no insincere spirit, assume to decorate a building
-in whose walls and ornaments a great nation will embody and perpetuate
-its most precious history. The brain that designs, the hand that
-executes for the CAPITOL, works not for to-day, but for all time. It was
-with a profound consciousness, not only of what this building is, but of
-all that it must yet be to the American people, that Charles Sumner,
-that profound lover of beauty, said, with so much feeling: “Surely this
-edifice, so beautiful and interesting, should not be opened to the rude
-experiment of untried talent. It ought not to receive, in the way of
-ornamentation, anything which is not a work of art.” In every future
-work added to the Capitol, let the significant words of Ruskin, the
-great art critic, be remembered:
-
- “There should not be a single ornament put upon a great civic
- building, without an intellectual intention. Every human action gains
- in honor, in grace, in all true magnificence, by its regard to things
- to come. There is no action nor art whose majesty we may not measure
- by this test. Therefore, when we build a public building, let us think
- that we build it for ever. Let us remember that a time is to come when
- men will say: ‘See, this our fathers did for us.’ ”
-
-Phidias created the Parthenon. Beneath his eyes it slowly blossomed, the
-consummated flower of Hellenic art. It has never been granted to another
-one man to create a perfect building which should be at once the marvel
-and the model of all time. Many architects have wrought upon the
-American Capitol, and there are discrepancies in its proportions wherein
-we trace the conflict of their opposing idiosyncrasies. We see places
-where their contending tastes met and did not mingle, where the harmony
-and sublimity which each sought was lost. We see frescoed fancies and
-gilded traceries which tell no story; we see paintings which mean
-nothing but glare. But a human interest attaches itself to every form of
-noble building. Its very defects the more endear it to us, for, above
-all else, these are human. We love our Capitol, not that it is perfect,
-but because, being faulty, it still is great, and worthy of our
-reverence. Its wondrous possibilities, its inadequate fulfilment, its
-very incompleteness, but make it nearer kin to ourselves. Like the
-friend tantalizingly and delightfully faulty, its many shaded humanity
-is full of varied charm. It has all the secret ways of a profound
-nature. We fancy that we know it altogether, that we could never be lost
-in its labyrinths; yet we are constantly finding passages that we
-dreamed not of, and confronting shut and silent doors which we may not
-enter. But the deeper we penetrate into its recesses, the more
-positively we are pervaded by its nobleness, and the more conscious we
-become of its magnitude and its magnificence.
-
-No matter how we condemn certain proportions of the Capitol, it grows
-upon the soul and imagination more and more, as does every great object
-in art or nature. Beside, the Capitol is vastly more than an object of
-mere personal attachment to be measured by a narrow individual standard.
-To every American citizen it is the majestic symbol of the majesty of
-his land. You may be lowly and poor. You may not own the cottage which
-shelters you, nor the scanty acres which you till. Your power may not
-cross your own door-step; yet these historic statues and paintings,
-these marble corridors, these soaring walls, this mighty dome, are
-yours. The highest man in the nation owns nothing here which does not
-belong equally to you. The Goddess of Liberty, gazing down from her
-shield, bestows no right upon the lofty which she does not extend
-equally to the lowliest of her sons.
-
-The temple of Pallas Athena, the stones of Venice, the mighty mementos
-of a mightier Mexico do not tell to any human gazer one-half so grand a
-story as the Capitol of America will yet proclaim to the pilgrim of
-later ages. In far-off time I see it stand forth the conqueror of the
-forgetfulness and the indifference of men. A solemn teacher, with stern,
-watchful, yet silent sympathy, it will impart to a proud people the
-profound lesson of their past. A loving mother, it will hold before her
-living children the sacred faces of her dead for the emulation, the
-reverence, the love, of all who came after. In its halls will stand the
-sculptured forms of famed men, and of women great in goodness, great in
-devotion, great in true motherhood. Through sight and sympathy, through
-the inspiration of grand example, the living woman as she lays her
-moulding hand upon the budding heart and tender brain of the boy-man,
-will rise to the true dignity of the wife and mother of the Republic.
-
-With psychical sight we see what the Capitol will one day be, to later
-generations; by our own heart-throbs, we know what it is to ourselves.
-Strength and depth are in its foundations, power and sublimity in its
-dome, and these are ours. Its mighty masses of gleaming marble, all
-veined with azure; its Corinthian capitals, flowering at the top like a
-palm in nature; its tutelary statue of freedom, are joys to our eyes
-forever. Serene Mother of our liberties, she watches always and never
-wearies. When the whole land lay in shadow, when the blood of her sons
-ran in rivers, when her heart was pierced nigh unto death, in moveless
-calm she held her steadfast shield; and gazing into her eyes, through
-the dimness of tears, we read the promise of peace. No matter where
-darkness fell, she bore the sunlight upon her crest. The dying statesman
-asked to be lifted up that his eyes might behold her last. The soldier,
-who gave his all, to perish in her name, watched for the sight of her
-from afar, and beheld her first with the shout of joy. When the slow
-river bore him back wounded from battle, he strained his eyes to catch a
-glimpse of Freedom on the dome, and looking up, was content to know that
-he was dying for her sake.
-
-Factions will fight and fall. Political parties will struggle and
-destroy each other. The passions of men are but the waves which beat and
-break on her feet. Above, beyond them all Freedom lives for evermore.
-Because she lives, Truth and Justice must survive, and the Republic will
-not perish.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
- THE CAPITOL—MORNING SIGHTS AND SCENES.
-
-The Capitol in Spring—A Magic Change—“More Beautiful than Ancient
- Rome”—Arrival of Visitors—A New Race—“Billing and Cooing”—Lovers at
- the Capitol—A Dream of Perpetual Spring—Spending the Honeymoon in
- Washington—Charmingly “Vernal” People—New Edition of David
- Copperfield and Dora—“Very Young”—Divided Affections: the New
- Bride—Jonathan and Jane—Memories of a Wedding Dress—An Interview
- With a Bride—“Two Happy Idiots”—A Walk in the City—Utilitarian
- Projects—President Grant—The Foreign Ambassadors—“Beau” Hickman—An
- Erratic Genius—Walt Whitman, the Poet—A “Loafer” of Renown—Poets at
- Home—Piatt—Burroughs—Harriet Prescott Spofford—Sumner and
- Chase—Foreign _Attachés_ “on the Flirt”—Tiresome Men—Lafayette
- Square in the Morning—How to Love a Tree—“He Never Saw Washington.”
-
-
-We rarely have spring in this latitude. Full panoplied, summer springs
-from under the mail of long lingering winter. We had a fine yesterday.
-From my window this morning lo! the miracle! my dear long-timed friend,
-the maple across the street, amazes me once more, though I declared to
-it last year I never would be amazed again. It beckons me, its myriad
-little wands all aquiver with the tenderest green, and says: “There now,
-you can’t help it! Again I am a beauty and a wonder!” No long waiting
-and watching for slow budding blossoms here. Some night when we are all
-asleep there is a silent burst of bloom; and we wake to find the trees
-that we left here, when we shut our blinds on them the night before, all
-tremulous with new life, and the whole city set in glowing emerald.
-
-I invite you to the western front of the Capitol, to stand with me in
-the balcony of the Congressional Library, to survey the city lying at
-our feet within the amphitheatre of hills soaring beyond, the river
-running its shining thread between. I am quite ready to believe what
-Charles Sumner said when pleading against the mooted depot site on its
-Central Avenue, that this city is more beautiful than ancient Rome. In
-itself it is absolutely beautiful, and that is enough; and it grows more
-and more so as the sea of greenery, which now waves and tosses about its
-housetops, rises each year higher and higher. The Capitol in early
-spring and summer is in no wise the Capitol of the winter. Every door
-swings wide; from the doors in the under-ground corridors to the
-wondrous doors, designed in Rome and cast in Munich, which open into the
-rotunda. What long, cool, green vistas run out from every angle. You
-stand beneath the dome; but your eyes find rest in the far shadow of the
-Virginia hills.
-
-And so many people seem to have come under the great dome to rest. You
-wonder where they could all have appeared from. They are not at all the
-people who crowd and hurry through the corridors in winter—the
-claimants, the lobbyists, the pleasure-seekers from great cities who
-come to spend the “season” in Washington. Nearly all are people from the
-country, the greater proportion brides and grooms, to whom the only
-“season” on earth is spring—the marriage season. Pretty pairs! They seem
-to be gazing out upon life through its portal with the same mingling of
-delight and wonder with which they gaze through the great doors of the
-Capitol upon the unknown world beyond. Early summer always brings a
-great influx of bridal pairs to Washington. Whence they all come no
-mortal can tell; but they do come, and can never be mistaken. Their
-clothes are as new as the spring’s, and they look charmingly vernal. The
-groom often seems half to deprecate your sudden glance, as if, like
-David Copperfield, he was afraid you thought him “very young.” And yet
-he invites you to glance again, by his conscious air of proud
-possession, which says: “Behold! I may be young—very. But I have gotten
-me a wife; she is the loveliest creature upon earth.” The affections of
-the lovely creature seem to be divided between her new lord and her new
-clothes. She loves him, she is proud of him; but this new suit, who but
-she can tell its cost. What longing, what privation, what patient toil
-has gone into its mouse or fawn-like folds; for this little bride, who
-regretfully drags her demi-train through the dust of the rotunda in
-summer, is seldom a rich man’s daughter. You see them everywhere
-repeated, these two neophytes—in the hotel-parlor, in the street-cars,
-in the Congressional galleries.
-
-When Jonathan read to Jane, in distant Mudville, the record of
-Congressional proceedings in Washington, in the _Weekly Tribune_, both
-imagined themselves deeply interested in the affairs of their country;
-but here, on the spot, how small seem Tariff, Amnesty, Civil Rights, and
-Ku-Klux bills beside the ridiculous bliss of these two egotists. They do
-not even pretend to listen. But they have some photograph cards, and
-seek out their prototypes below. On the whole, Jane is disappointed. She
-was not prepared for so many bald heads, or for so much of bad manners.
-After all, not one of these men, in her mind, can compare with the small
-law-giver, the newly-found Lycurgus by her side. Before she became calm
-enough to reach this judicial decision, she visited the ladies’
-dressing-room and shook out her damaged plumes.
-
-“Is Washington _always_ so dusty?” she asked, with a sigh, looking down
-on her pretty mouse-colored dress, with its piping decidedly grimed.
-
-“Nearly always,” I answered.
-
-“Then how _can_ people live here?” she exclaimed.
-
-When she goes home, she will tell that the dome of the Capitol is very
-high; that Conkling looks thus, and Sumner so. But what she will tell
-oftenest and longest—perhaps to her children’s children—will be that it
-was in Washington she ruined her wedding dress.
-
-“I was married yesterday, and see how I look!” said Jane, ruefully.
-
-“You look very pretty,” I said. “It will all shake off.” Wherewith Jane
-proceeded to shake, to wash her face, and brush her curls over her
-fingers. I helped her re-drape her lace shawl, and was repaid a moment
-later by her graceful _posé_ in the front seat of the Senate Gallery,
-her hand in Jonathan’s. It was refreshing, in the face of such a
-conglomeration of doubtful wisdom, to see two happy idiots, if they did
-not know it. The city is full of Janes and Jonathans.
-
-The Capitol grounds are lovely as the gardens of the blessed, these
-hours.
-
-The armies of violets which swarmed its green slopes a month ago are
-gone, and the dandelions have gone up higher, and are now sailing all
-around us through the deep, still air. There is a ripple in the grass
-that invites the early mower. The fountains toss their spray into the
-very hearts of the old trees that bend above them, and on the easy seats
-beneath their shadow, sit black and white, old and young, taking rest.
-
-These grounds, perfect in themselves, utter but one reproach to the men
-legislating within yonder walls, and that, because they are not larger
-and meet in proportion to the august Capitol which they encircle. We
-pass through them out into Pennsylvania avenue—this great and yet to be
-fulfilled expectation. Broadway cannot compare with it in magnificent
-proportions. It is as wide as two Broadways, and at this hour of the
-afternoon its turn-outs are metropolitan. Nevertheless, judged by its
-trees and houses, it has a rural, second-rate look. Though here and
-there a lonesome building shoots up above its fellows, its average shops
-are shabby and small, and do not compare favorably with those of Third
-avenue in New York. The idealistic Statesmen of Washington and
-Jefferson’s time modelled it to repeat the _Unter den Lindens_ of
-Berlin. As a result, the ample rows of Lombardy poplars are defunct, and
-the Gradgrind politicians of to-day have voted to dump down a railroad
-“depot” in its very centre, because Mr. Thomas Scott wants it, and
-because they have free railroad-passes, and a few other little
-perquisites in their pockets. This, of course, is very shocking to say;
-but then it is much more shocking to be true. Excepting Mr. Sumner, Mr.
-Morrill, Mr. Thurman and a few others, who really care for the future of
-Washington and who love this Capital, the remainder would, for a
-sufficient price, sell out the entire city, Capitol and all, to
-monopolies and corporations. But this broad thoroughfare, stretching
-straight for a mile between Treasury and Capitol, with its double drive,
-smooth as a floor, its borders of bloom, its gay promenades and flashing
-turn-outs has a certain splendor of its own, of which no monopoly can
-wholly rob it.
-
-Here is the Grant carriage, with its plain brown linings, and in it Mrs.
-Grant and her father. A light buggy flies past, drawn by superb horses,
-driven by a single occupant. He is the President—small, slight, erect,
-smoking a cigar. The courtly equipages of the Peruvian, Argentine,
-Turkish and English Ministers, with liveried outriders and beautiful
-women occupants, with the no less elegant establishments of American
-Senators, Members and citizens, swell the gay cavalcade on this truly
-splendid Corso.
-
-Standing on the curb-stone, gazing on it with an expression which would
-have made Dickens wild till he had reproduced it, stands Beau Hickman,
-long a character of Washington. He is an old man, long and lean, with a
-face corrugated like a wizened apple and a complexion like parchment or
-an Egyptian mummy. His aspect is a strange compound of gentility and
-meanness. His stove-pipe hat, which evidently has survived many a
-battering, is carefully brushed; his standing collar is very stiff and
-very high. His vest is greyish white, his coat is dingy and shiny. His
-faded pantaloons have been darned, and need darning again. His toes are
-peering through his shoes, and they are down at the heels; yet he
-carries a foppish cane and wears his hat in a rakish manner. Beau
-Hickman was born a Virginia gentleman, insomuch as he still manages to
-live without labor, it being the pride of his heart that he never did
-anything useful in his life. He ekes out a wretched existence by
-filching small sums from friends and strangers for telling stories and
-relating experiences, for which he invariably demands a drink or a
-supper. One of the most miserable objects I ever beheld is Beau Hickman
-hungry, hobbling through the Senate restaurant, gazing at one table and
-then at another, at the comfortable people sitting by them, filling
-their stomachs, not one alas! asking him to partake.
-
-Here with a sweep and swing, with head thrown back, and arms at rest,
-comes a man as supremely indifferent to all this show as the other is
-abjectly enthralled by it. This man, slowly swinging down the Avenue, is
-a “cosmos” in himself. Locks profuse and white, eyes big and blue,
-cheeks ruddy, throat bare, wide collar turned back, slouched felt hat
-punched in, a perfect lion apparently in muscle and vitality—this is
-Walt Whitman. Every sunshiny day he “loafs” and invites his soul on the
-Avenue, and there are other poets who do likewise. Here sometimes may be
-seen John James Piatt, now Librarian of the House of Representatives,
-with his blonde hair and brown-eyed wife, who is quite as much a poet as
-he is; and John Burrough the Thoreau of the Treasury Department, gentle
-as one of his own birds; and William O’Connor whose poetical fires burn
-undimmed within the same dim old walls; and, clad in mourning, Harriet
-Prescott Spofford, sweet poet and sweeter woman. Here of old were seen
-the gigantic forms of Charles Sumner and of Chief Justice Chase. When
-the Supreme Court is in session, at a certain hour, a company of immense
-gentlemen doff their long black silk gowns, and slowly and ponderously
-wend their way along the Avenue, in mild, dignified pursuit of exercise
-and dinner. Here, before the sun grows too hot, may be seen the
-moustached, gesticulating, voluble young _attachés_ of the foreign
-embassies with the pretty girls of the West End, who they like to flirt
-with but rarely marry—which is fortunate for the girls.
-
-I cannot divorce myself long enough from this divine day to write about
-men. There is not a man on the face of the earth that would not be
-tiresome if one had to think of him, to the exclusion of this weather.
-To think that there are any to be written about when I want to sit in
-the sun and do nothing, stirs up a perfect rumpus between desire and
-duty. I am not so fond of my duty that I always spell it with a big “D,”
-or in every emergency put it foremost. I would like to put it out of
-sight some times. Wouldn’t you? But then I cannot. “It’s too many for
-me,” as poor Tulliver said of his enemy. It won’t go out of sight, much
-less stay there. Something clever might have come to me about tedious
-men if I had not reached Lafayette Square this morning. There is that in
-this new bloom so tender, so unsullied, which makes politicians seem
-paltry, and all their outcry a mockery and an impertinence. To be sure,
-these green arcades in their outer bound touch another world. Beyond,
-and above them, floats the flag on the Arlington House. Below, the
-windows of Charles Sumner’s home hint of art and beauty within. The
-abodes of famous men and of beautiful women encircle all the square. On
-one side the white cornices of the Executive Mansion peer above the
-trees.
-
-Almost within call are men and women whose names suggest histories and
-prophecies, all the tangled phenomena of individual life. Yet how easy
-to forget them all on these seats, which Gen. Babcock has made so
-restful—thank him. The long summer wave in the May grass; the low,
-swaying boughs, with their deep, mysterious murmur, that seems instinct
-with human pleading; the tender plaint of infant leaves; the music of
-birds; the depth of sky; the balm, the bloom, the virginity, the peace,
-the consciousness of life, new yet illimitable, are all here, just as
-perfectly as they are yonder in God’s solitude, untouched of man. If you
-need help to love a tree read the diary of Maurice de Guerin. No one
-else, not even Thoreau, (whose nature lacked in depth and breadth of
-tenderness perhaps in the deepest spiritual insight,) ever came so near
-or drew forth with such deep feeling the very soul of inanimate Nature.
-He felt the soul of the tree, heard it in the moaning of its voice as it
-stood with its roots bound in the earth and its arms outstretched with a
-never-ceasing sigh towards infinity. But why do I speak of him? He lived
-and died and never saw Washington.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- FAIR WASHINGTON—A RAMBLE IN EARLY SPRING.
-
-Washington Weather—Sky Scenery—Professor Tyndall Expresses an
- Opinion—A Picture of Beauty—“A City of Enchantment”—“My Own
- Washington”—Prejudiced Views—Birds of Rock Creek—The Parsonage—A
- Scene of Tranquil Beauty—A Washington May—Charms of the
- Season—Mowers at Work—The Public Parks—Frolics of the Little
- Ones—Strawberry Festivals—“Flower Gathering.”
-
-
-The climate of Washington has a villainous reputation, and at certain
-times and seasons it deserves it Yet it tantalizes us with days which
-prelude Paradise. Under their azure arch, through their beguiling air,
-with reluctant steps we enter winter—the oozy, clammy, coughing winter,
-which waits us just the other side of the gate of January. But they
-linger long—the preluding days. They seem reluctant to yield us to our
-impending foes—society and wet weather.
-
-These are the days of days, swathed in masses of lights and color
-unfathomable. It is one of the wonders of Washington too rarely
-noted—its sky-scenery. So few people take the trouble to look at the sky
-save to see if “it looks like rain.” All that New York can afford to
-give to tired mortals is a scanty slice of light through which to let a
-glimpse of glory down upon its palaces and catacombs of humanity. But
-across these banding hills, this broad amphitheatre of space, mass and
-sweep on, in the empyrean, wave on wave of polarized light, with a
-delicacy of tint, a depth of hue, an immensity of volume, which no words
-can portray. This vast sea of color (in its deeps of orange, purple and
-gold, which now transfigure the twilight sky, till the Virginia hills
-look like open gates to the city of gold) Professor Tyndall, in one of
-his lectures on light, in this city, said that he had never seen
-approached on the other side of the Atlantic, save by the intense
-refractions of light on the Alpine glaciers.
-
-In the autumnal days, and in the advancing spring, through the blue
-spaces steals a tremulous, ever hovering purple, like opaline doves’
-necks’ lustre, penetrating all the atmosphere like the purple haze above
-the hills of Rome, till the yellow walls of Arlington House, and the
-snowy masses of the Capitol seem actually to shimmer through waves of
-amethystine mist. Under such a light, some morning, spring suddenly
-spreads forth its whole panoply, with a vividness of green, a
-prodigality of foliage never seen in a more northern latitude. One wide
-wilderness of unbroken bloom sends up its fragrance through waves of
-purple yellow and azure light, and then, till the day when, without
-warning, summer suddenly transmutes all into molten brass, Washington in
-light and color, in bloom and fragrance, is a city of enchantment.
-
-Thus I have a Washington of my own, dear friends. I never find it till
-some March day, when in walking down the Capitol grounds I discover that
-the shining runlets on either side of the Avenue have broken loose and
-are racing free through their sluices of stone, and that all the
-crocuses in the broad beds under the trees are pushing their little
-yellow noses out of the ground. To be sure, they almost always draw them
-back again to get them out of the snow which falls after; nevertheless
-on that day I find my Washington. Then it is, that just as the grey
-lenten veil has covered and extinguished the gay season of the “German,”
-we come unaware upon another Washington, which I vainly essay to portray
-for you. My season is not fashionable. No portrayer of costumes is
-“liberally paid” by “the most enterprising of publishers” to describe
-the transcendent suit which decks this season of mine. _My_ Washington
-has no chronicler. The scribes are all so busy abusing the Capitol,
-depicting its follies and its crimes, that, though they have eyes, they
-see not, and ears, they hear not, the sights and sounds of this other
-Washington—fair Washington, outlying, above and beyond all.
-
-If I could only paint for you the fathomless purples in which the hills
-enfold themselves, the wide glimmering rosy spaces, reaching on and on;
-or tell you of the nations of birds in the Rock Creek woods, which have
-made there a supreme haunt for naturalists; of its nations of flowers,
-which beckon and nod from the Rock Creek and Piney Branch roads; the
-anemones, the arbutus, the honeysuckle, the laurel, the violets, the
-innocents, covering wide acres with color and perfume; of the shy Rock
-Creek parsonage, built of brick brought from England more than a century
-ago, above whose trees the Capitol gleams, yet within whose porch you
-seem shut in peace away from this loud world, with the bees droning in
-the still warm air, and humming-birds drinking from the lilac cups; with
-the gentle Christian hearts which abide beneath its roof and minister
-beneath the shadow of its venerable church; if I could paint all these
-as they are, you would care for my Washington, but as I cannot, I fear
-that you never will.
-
-A Washington May is the June of the north, with a pomp of color, an
-exuberance of foliage, an allurement of atmosphere which a northern June
-has not.
-
-It is May now. All the ugly outlines and shabby old houses are softened
-and covered with beneficent foliage. Already the mowers are at work in
-the Capitol grounds and in the little public parks, and the sweetness of
-the slain grass pervades the atmosphere. The children are everywhere
-pretty things. Washington is full of them, tumbling amid the flowers and
-in the dirt. It is May, yet June, impatient, has reached across her
-sister, dropping her roses everywhere. Washington is one vast garden of
-roses. It is the hour of strawberry festivals and of
-
- FLOWER GATHERING.
-
- Miles away from the dusty town,
- Out in the beautiful June-time weather,
- The wind of the south is rippling down,
- And over the purple hills of heather.
-
- Dim, in the distance, the city walls
- Rise, like the walls of a dreary prison;
- On the healing sward where the sunshine falls,
- We stand ’mid the flowery folk arisen.
-
- We watch their innocent eyelids ope,
- And below we hear the river flowing;
- While wilting sweet on the upland slope
- Lies the grass of the early mowing.
-
- On through the bees and butterflies,
- The grass and the flowers, the hours are walking;
- And we seem to catch their low replies
- To the flowing waters forever talking.
-
- We listen and question the fathomless space,
- In the deeps of its emerald silence lying,
- While we watch the leaves turning face to face,
- And their lovers—the winds—wooing and sighing.
-
- And still, like a dream, fades the dusty town,
- And dumb on our ear dies its distant murmur;
- But the speech, in the stilly air steals down,
- And the fainting heart grows calmer and firmer.
-
- Hearts that ache with a wounding smart,
- Wander out from the heedless city;
- The human yearning on Nature’s heart
- Is a thing that God in his love must pity.
-
- Sorrow and sin are in the mart,
- And greed and gain killing tender feeling;
- Here we draw close to the god Pan’s heart,
- And feel on _our_ hearts his touch of healing.
-
- Often we ask, is there room to grow
- ’Neath the bands of the earth, so hard and binding?
- The wisdom of life we are fain to know;
- Does it ever pay for the pain of finding?
-
- So, far away from the dissonant town,
- Out in the marvellous June-time weather,
- We climb the hills to their blossoming crown,
- And rest and gather our flowers together.
-
- Lo! we gather our flowers to-day,
- We are like thee, O restless river—
- We loiter for play on our endless way—
- While life, our life, rolls on forever.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE—SHADOWS OF THE PAST.
-
-Haunted Houses—Shadows of the Past—Touching Memories—The Little Angels
- Born There—Building of the Presidential Mansion—A State of
- Perpetual Dampness—Dingy Aspect of a Monarch’s Palace—Outside the
- White House—A Peep Inside the Mansion—The Emperor of Japan
- Supersedes the Punch-Bowl—The Unfinished “Banqueting Hall”—Glories
- of a _Levée_—Magnificent Hospitalities—A Comfortable
- Dining-Room—Interesting Labors of Martha Patterson—A Lady of
- Taste—An American “Baronial Hall”—The Furniture of Another
- Generation—A Valuable Steward—A Professor of Gastronomy—Paying the
- Professor and Providing the Dinner—Feeding the Celebrities—Mrs.
- Lincoln’s Unpopular Innovations—Fifteen Hundred Dollars for a
- Dinner—How Prince Arthur, of England, was Entertained—Domestic
- Economy—“Not Enough Silver”—A Tasty Soup—The Recipe for an
- Aristocratic Stew—Having a “Nice Time”—Mrs. Franklin Pierce
- Horrified—“Going a Fishing on Sundays”—Hatred of Flummery—An
- Admirer of Pork and Beans and Slap-jacks—A Presidential
- Reception—Ready for the Festival—“Such a Bore!”—Splendor,
- Weariness, and Indigestion—Paying the Penalty—In the
- Conservatory—Domestic Arrangements—The Library—Statue of
- Jefferson—Pleasant Views—Reminiscence of Abraham Lincoln.
-
-
- “All houses wherein men have lived and died
- Are haunted houses. Through the open doors
- The harmless phantoms on their errands glide,
- With feet that make no sound upon the floors.”
-
- “There are more guests at table, than the hosts
- Invited; the illuminated hall
- Is thronged with quiet, inoffensive ghosts,
- As silent as the pictures on the wall.”
-
-These lines were never truer of any human habitation than of the White
-House at Washington.
-
-The Nation’s House! The procession of families which the people have
-sent to inhabit it, in moving on to make place for others, have left
-memories behind which haunt these great rooms and fill staircase,
-alcove, and pictorial space with historic recollections. Here human life
-has been lived, enjoyed, suffered and resigned, just as it is lived
-every day in any house wherein human beings are born, wherein they live
-and die. Within its walls children have first opened their eyes upon
-this tantalizing life, and here children have died, leaving father and
-mother desolate amid all the pomp of place and state. In this room the
-hero Taylor laid his earthly burdens and honors down; here, by this
-eastern window, stood a girl-bride crowned with beautiful youth and
-marriage flowers. In this east room the supreme martyr of freedom,
-white, still and cold, received the nation who wept at his feet; in this
-dim chamber a woman-saint read her Bible and communed with God, while
-pardon crokers crept into secret door-ways, and passion and treason ran
-riot in the great rooms which she never entered.
-
-The first child born in the White House was the grandson of
-Jefferson—James Madison Randolph; and the last child who died here was
-“Willie” Lincoln. Here, also, President Harrison, President Taylor, and
-Mrs. Tyler passed through death unto life.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE RED ROOM.
-
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The corner stone of the President’s house was laid October 13, 1792. We
-have seen how anxious Jefferson was that it should be modelled after
-some famous modern palace of Europe. The one, at last selected, was the
-country house of the Duke of Leinster. It was designed by James Hoban,
-and open, though not ready for occupancy, in the summer of 1800. The
-house is built of porous Virginia freestone, which accounts for the fact
-of its perpetual dampness, and the more expensive fact that no amount of
-money and white-lead can make it a dry and desirable abode. And yet it
-is always pleasant and restful to the sight when the eyes fall upon its
-Ionic columns, peering pure and softened through the sea of greenery
-which sways and dips around it. One front alone of Buckingham Palace,
-cost more than the entire White House. Yet, to behold it, the palace is
-a black and ugly pile, and in simplicity and purity of outline bears no
-comparison with the Nation’s White House. This is 170 feet broad and 86
-feet deep. Its north front has a lofty portico with four Ionic columns
-and a projecting screen of three columns. Between these columns pass the
-carriages which form a perpetual line moving on and round forever
-through the gay season. The house is three high stories, with the
-rusticated basement which reaches below the Ionic ordonnance.
-
-The portico opens upon a spacious hall forty by fifty feet. It is
-divided by a row of Ionic columns, through which we pass to the
-reception-room opposite. This is the Red Room. Its light is dim and
-rosy. Its form is elliptical, and its bow window in the rear looks out
-on the park and away to the Potomac, as do the windows of all the corner
-parlors. In this room the President receives foreign ministers and the
-officers of the republic. The space over the marble mantel is entirely
-occupied with a life size painting of President Grant and his family. We
-pass through the Red Room into the Blue Room. All is cool azure here.
-The chairs, the sofas, the carpet, the paper on the wall, all are tinged
-with the celestial hue, flushed here and there with a tint of rose. In
-the Blue Room the President’s wife holds her morning receptions. Here,
-with the daylight excluded, soft rays falling from the chandelier above,
-flowers in mounds and vases everywhere pouring out fragrance, surrounded
-by a group of ladies, chosen and invited to “assist,” decked in jewels
-and costly raiment. One day of each week of the season, from three to
-five P. M., the President’s wife receives her critic—the public.
-
-The Blue Room opens into the Green Room, the most cosy and home-like of
-all the public parlors. It is vividly emerald, softly malachite, all
-touched and gleaming with gold. A large mirror covers the space above
-the mantel. Beside vases in the centre of the marble mantel-piece stands
-an exquisite clock of ebony and malachite; tall vases filled with fresh
-flowers rise from the carpet. On the centre table used to stand the
-immense punch-bowl, presented to the White House by the Emperor of
-Japan. It is now supplanted by a statue in bronze. The furniture is of
-rose-wood, cushioned with brocatelle of green and gold, while the same
-in heavy hangings are looped back from the lace curtains on the windows.
-
-From the Green Room we enter the famous East Room, extending the entire
-eastern side of the house. It is eighty-six feet long, forty feet wide,
-and twenty-eight feet high. Three immense chandeliers hang from the
-ceiling. It has already taken on the mellowness, not of age but of use,
-and in aspect bears no kin to the unfinished “Banqueting Hall” in which
-Mrs. Adams dried the family linen, and Mrs. Monroe’s little daughters
-played. Now, on a _levée_ night, the East Room presents a sight never to
-be forgotten. The enormous chandeliers seem to pour the splendor of noon
-upon the glittering and moving host below. Satins, velvets, diamonds,
-plumes and laces rise and fall, and sway beside the gleaming gold lace
-of American officers, and the jewelled decorations of Foreign ministers.
-Eight mirrors repeat the glory of the sights. Eight Presidents, from
-their golden frames on the wall, seem to gaze out of the past upon the
-feverish splendor of a new generation. The most exquisite carpet ever on
-the East Room was a velvet one, chosen by Mrs. Lincoln. Its ground was
-of pale sea green, and in effect looked as if ocean, in gleaming and
-transparent waves, were tossing roses at your feet.
-
-Coming back to the Red Room, we pass into a narrow corridor, at the
-opposite end from which, on either side, open the family and state
-dining-room. The state dining-room is a staid and stately apartment,
-touched equally with new grace and old time grandeur. Martha Patterson,
-the daughter of President Johnson, redeemed it from wreck, and instead
-of ruin, adorned it with the harmony of her own artistic nature. The
-neutral-tinted walls and carpet, the green satin damask hangings on the
-windows, and covering of the quaint furniture, are all her choice. An
-antique clock and grim candlesticks, from the Madison reign, stand
-stiffly on the marble mantels. With the exception of a pair of modern
-sideboards, the furniture of this “baronial hall,” solid and sombre, has
-descended from the eras of Washington and Jefferson.
-
-The state dining-room, and its state dinners, are controlled entirely by
-“Steward Melah, the silver-voiced Italian,” who was graduated from the
-Everett House, the Astor House, and the St. Charles, New Orleans, to the
-higher estate of superintending “goodies” for the palates of
-Diplomatists, Princes, and Members of Congress in the White House at
-Washington. The government pays Professor Melah for his services, but
-the President pays for the dinners, and he is expected to continue
-giving them till every foreign dignitary and home functionary, from the
-highest Diplomat to the most obscure Member of Congress, is invited.
-Mrs. Lincoln’s presuming to abolish the time-honored but costly
-state-dinner of the White House, increased her personal unpopularity to
-an intense degree.
-
-The average state-dinner costs about seven hundred dollars, the special
-state dinner may cost fifteen hundred dollars. The one given to Prince
-Arthur, of England, cost that sum, without including the wines and other
-beverages. The dinner proper consisted of twenty-nine courses. The
-President puts a sum of money into the hands of the steward, and his
-expenditure is supposed to be in proportion to the official rank and
-grandeur of the invited guests. It is said that Professor Melah wrings
-his hands in distress when he is about to set the State table for a
-supreme occasion, and exclaims to the lady of the White House, who may
-be looking on: “Why Madam, there is not silver enough in the White House
-to set a respectable free-lunch table.”
-
-At a state dinner the table is always profusely decorated with flowers,
-and the “first course” is invariably a soup of French vegetables, which
-Miss Grundy says has “never been equalled by any other soup, foreign or
-domestic.” “It is said to be a little smoother than peacock’s brains,
-but not quite so exquisitely flavored as a dish of nightingales’
-tongues; and Professor Melah is the only man in the nation who holds in
-his hands the receipt for this aristocratic stew.” No general
-conversation prevails at the state dinner. If the lady and gentleman
-elected to go in together happen to be agreeable to each other, they
-have a “nice time.” If not, they have a stiff and tiresome one.
-Exquisite _finesse_ is needed to fitly pair these mentally incongruous
-diners. Mike Walsh once horrified the shrinking and saintly Mrs.
-Franklin Pierce at a state-dinner by the story of his going “a fishing
-on Sunday;” while Hon. Mr. Mudsill, of Mudtown, has been known to regale
-dainty Madame Mimosa, of Mignonnette Manor, between the courses, with
-his hatred of flummeries and French dishes, and his devotion to pork and
-beans and slapjacks.
-
-The President and his wife receive the guests in the Red Room at seven
-o’clock. Mrs. President is always attired in full evening dress, with
-laces and jewels, and her lady guests likewise, while each gentleman
-rejoices in a swallow-tail, white or tinted gloves, and white necktie.
-The President leads the way to the state-table with the wife of the
-senator the oldest in office, while Mrs. President brings up the rear of
-the small procession with the senatorial husband of the President’s lady
-companion. Six wine glasses and a _bouquet_ of flowers garnish each
-plate. From twelve to thirty courses are served, and the middle of the
-feast is marked by the serving of frozen punch. After hours of sitting,
-serving and eating, the procession returns to the Red Room in the order
-that it left it. Then, after a few moments of conversation, it
-disperses,—its honored individuals more than once heard to say in
-private, “Such a bore.” Yet what an ado they would make if not invited
-to discover for themselves the tiresome splendor and fit of indigestion
-attendant upon a state-dinner.
-
-Leaving the state dining-room behind, we pass through the western wing
-into the conservatory, one of the largest in the country. It is a
-favorite resort for lady and gentlemen promenaders on reception days,
-lined, as it is, on either side with the bloom and fragrance of rare
-exotics. A large aquarium stands at one end, and a short passage and
-flights of steps lead down to a greenhouse and grapery filled with
-flowers and luscious fruit. Three other greenhouses flourish in the
-gardens west of the mansion.
-
-The White House contains thirty-one rooms. Excepting the family
-dining-room, every one on the first floor is devoted to state purposes.
-The basement contains eleven rooms, used as kitchens, pantries and
-butler’s rooms. These are open, spacious, comfortable and cheerful to
-the sight. On the second floor, the six rooms of the north front are
-used as chambers by the Presidential family. The south front has seven
-rooms—the ante-chamber, audience room, cabinet room, private office of
-the president, and the ladies’ parlors. The ladies’ or private parlor is
-furnished with ebony, covered with blue satin, with hangings of blue
-satin and lace. The daughter of the house has a blue boudoir lined with
-mirrors—its pale blue carpet strewn with rose-buds. The state bedroom of
-this floor is a grand apartment, furnished with rose-wood and crimson
-satin; its walls hang with purple and gold. The bedstead is high,
-massive, carved and canopied, its damask curtains hanging from a gilded
-hoop near the ceiling. Before the bed lie cushions for the feet; against
-the walls stand two stately wardrobes, with full length mirrors lining
-their doors, while arm-chairs and couches, deeply cushioned, are
-scattered over the velvet carpet. Its articles of furniture are stained
-with purple devices—national, historical scenes, and have for their arms
-the American Eagle. The ceiling is profusely frescoed, and hung with a
-central chandelier, while in the winter a coal fire, under the marble
-mantle, suffuses the sumptuous room with a genial glow. One of the
-curiosities of the chamber is a cigar-case, inlaid with pearls and
-mosaics of wood from China, presented to President Grant by Captain
-Ammon, of the United States Navy.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE CONSERVATORY.
-
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The Secretaries’ room, on this floor, is a large airy apartment, with
-mahogany furniture, set there in Martin Van Buren’s time, with green
-curtains, twenty-five years old, on the windows. The President’s
-business and reception-room is a large apartment, looking out on the
-southern grounds, and carpeted with crimson and white. A large black
-walnut table, surrounded with chairs, stands in the centre of the room.
-It is furnished with black walnut desks and sofas. On the mantel stands
-a clock which tells the time of day and the day of the month, and which
-is a thermometer and barometer besides. The walls are high, and frescoed
-on a yellow ground tint. Tapestry and lace curtains are looped back from
-the windows, which look down upon the lovely southern grounds, and to
-the river, gleaming at intervals through the foliage beyond.
-
-The stateliest room on this floor is the library, used in Mrs. John
-Adams’ time as a reception-room, furnished then in crimson. It was
-almost bookless till Mr. Filmore’s administration, when it was fitted up
-as a library, and many books were added during the administration of
-President Buchanan. It is now lined with heavy mahogany book-cases,
-finished with solid oak, covered with maroon. It is sometimes used by
-the President as an official reception-room, and sometimes as an evening
-lounging-place for the Presidential family and their guests.
-
-On the north lawn of the President’s house, which in Jefferson’s time
-was a barren, stony, unfenced waste, under the green arcade made by
-glorious trees, now stands a bronze statue of Jefferson. It was
-presented to the government by Captain Levy, of the United States’ army,
-who in 1840 owned Monticello.
-
-From the great portico, we look beyond this statue, across Pennsylvania
-avenue, to an equestrian image of Jackson, rearing frantically and
-preposterously in the centre of Lafayette square. Lovely Lafayette
-square, laid out by Downing—perfect in blending tint and outline, flower
-of mimic parks! Beyond its trees we catch a glimpse of its encircling
-historic houses, and of the brown ivy-hung walls of St. John’s venerable
-church, its tiny and old time tower showing so picturesquely against the
-evening sky.
-
-The avenue of lofty trees on the west side of the President’s
-house—beneath whose shade, in the dimness of the night, Lincoln used to
-take his solitary walk, and carry his heavy heart to the War
-Department—were planted by John Quincy Adams. No swelling tree-crowned
-knolls, no grassy glades could be more restful to the sight than the
-southern grounds of the President’s house. From its height it looks down
-upon this rolling park, reaching now to the Potomac, bounded by its
-gleaming waters, on which so many white sails drift, and doze, and dream
-in the languid summer weather.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
- LADIES OF THE WHITE HOUSE.
-
-A Morning Dream—Wives and Daughters of the Presidents—Memories of Martha
- Washington—An Average Matron of the 18th Century—Educational
- Disadvantages—Comparisons—A Well-Regulated Lady—A Useful Wife—Warm
- Words of Abigail Adams—Advantages of Having a Distinguished
- Husband—A Modern Lucretia—Washington’s Inauguration Suit—An Awkward
- Position for a Lady—A Primitive _Levée_-Festivities in Franklin
- Square!—Decorous Ideas of the Father of His Country—The Government
- on Its Travels—Transporting the Household Gods—Keeping Early
- Hours—Primitive Customs—A Dignified _Congé_—Much-Shaken
- Hands—Remembrances of a Past Age—An English Manufacturer “Struck
- with Awe”—Very Questionable Humility—The Room in which Washington
- Died—Days of Widowhood—A Wife’s Congratulations—A True
- Woman—Domestic Affairs at the White House—An Unfinished
- Mansion—Interesting Details—A Woman’s Influence—A Monument
- Wanted—Devotion of a Husband—The “Single Life”—Theodocia Burr and
- Katherine Chase—“_Levées_” Summarily Abolished—Disappointed
- Belles—An Extraordinary Reception—Blacked His Own Boots—A Dignified
- Foreigner Shocked—Governmental Enquiries—Womanly Indignation—The
- Poet Pardoned—“The Sweetest Creature in Virginia”—A Daughter’s
- Affection.
-
-
-Sitting in the lovely Blue Room this June morning, the breezes from the
-Potomac floating through the closed blinds and lace curtains, drifting
-over the mounds of flowers which, rising high above the great vases,
-fill all the air with fragrance, I evoke from the past a company of fair
-and stately women who have dwelt under this roof, or influenced the life
-and happiness of men who have ruled the nation.
-
-First, Martha Washington. To be sure, she never reigned in the Blue
-Room; but who can recall the wives of the Presidents and not see the
-very first, the serenely beautiful old lady whose face is so familiar to
-us all.
-
-In herself, Martha Washington was in no wise a remarkable woman.
-Personally, she was a fair representative of the average American matron
-of the eighteenth century. I say American, for whatever may be her right
-to boast of superior educational advantages to-day, in the time of
-Martha Washington and Abigail Adams, New England ignored utterly the
-education of her women. They were shut out even from the Boston
-High-School, because they had flocked to it in such numbers in pursuit
-of knowledge. While her brother went to Harvard, the girl of
-Massachusetts, if taught at all, was self-taught. Massachusetts had no
-right to boast over Virginia in that day. The daughters of the cavalier
-probably were oftener taught to dance and to play the spinnet than the
-daughters of the Puritans; but neither could spell, nor many more than
-barely read. But had Martha Washington enjoyed the highest mental
-privileges, she would never have been known to the world as an
-intellectual woman, or as a woman who, by any impulse of her unassisted
-nature, would ever have risen above the commonplace. She could spin, but
-she could not spell. She could bask in the warmth of the bountiful home
-whose heavy cares were all carried by her illustrious husband. She could
-pack the family coach with delicacies, and go through storm and mud once
-a year to his camp, when the perils of his country had made him its
-deliverer; but it is doubtful if any impulse of her soul would ever have
-roused her to the majestic eloquence of Abigail Adams, who, when she
-read the English King’s proclamation to his rebellious colonies, with
-her little children about her in the depth of the night, wrote to her
-absent husband: “This intelligence will make a plain path for you,
-though a dangerous one. I could not join to-day in the petition of our
-worthy pastor for a reconciliation between our no longer parent state,
-but tyrant state, and these colonies. Let us separate; they are unworthy
-to be our brethren. Let us renounce them, and instead of supplications
-as formerly for their prosperity and happiness; let us beseech the
-Almighty to blast their counsels and bring to naught all their devices.”
-
-Abigail Adams comes down to posterity, independently of all relations to
-others, as one of the grandest women of her time. Martha Washington’s
-only claim to veneration is because she was the wife of Washington. As
-his wife, her homely virtues and moral rectitude show to unclouded
-advantage. Personally, her most marked characteristics were her strong
-natural sense of propriety and fitness and high moral qualities. In
-these, if she never added lustre to it, she always honored the name of
-Washington. We see the former characteristic in the fact, that during
-the Revolution she never wore foreign or costly attire. While all the
-outer affairs of the estate, to their minutest detail, were
-superintended by General Washington, in addition to the mighty burdens
-of state which he bore, Mrs. Washington superintended her handmaidens
-and spinning-wheels. Looms were constantly plying in her house, and
-General Washington wore, at his first inauguration, a full suit of fine
-cloth woven in his own house. At a ball given in New Jersey, in honor of
-herself, Martha Washington appeared in “simple russet gown,” with a
-white handkerchief about her neck. To the state _levées_ of New York and
-Philadelphia she carried the same stately simplicity. A lady of the
-olden time, a daughter of Virginia, her ideas of court forms and
-etiquette had all been received from the mother country. Hers was the
-difficult task to harmonize aristocratic exclusiveness with republican
-plainness. She was never to forget that she was the wife of the
-President of a Republic,—and also never to forget that she was to
-command the respect of the old monarchies who were ready to despise
-everything poor and crude in the efforts of the new government to
-maintain itself in poverty, difficulty and inexperience. Thus the social
-_levées_ of the first President of the United States, at No. 3, Franklin
-square, New York, were held under the most rigorous and exclusive rules.
-They were only open to persons of privileged rank and degree, and they
-could not enter unless attired in full dress. The receptions of Mrs.
-Washington merely reproduced, on a smaller plan, the customs and
-ceremonies of foreign courts.
-
-The first President and his wife never forgot their personal dignity,
-and never forgot that they represented a republic which was already an
-object of interested scrutiny to the whole civilized world. President
-Washington wrote to his friend Mrs. Macaulay: “Mrs. Washington’s ideas
-coincide with my own as to simplicity of dress and everything which can
-tend to support propriety of character without partaking of the follies
-of luxury and ostentation.”
-
-In the second year of Washington’s administration, the government was
-removed to Philadelphia, there to remain for the next ten years. The
-household furniture of the Washingtons was moved thither by slow and
-weary processes of land and water, the President, in addition to his
-public cares, superintending personally the preparation and embarkation
-of every article himself. Mrs. Washington was sick at the time, but the
-following year, the house of Robert Morris having been taken by the
-corporation, as the President’s house, Mrs. Washington again opened her
-drawing-rooms from seven to ten P. M. Sensible woman! No haggard and
-faded beauties dancing all night, faded and old before their time, owed
-their wasted lives and powers to _her_. In Philadelphia and New York,
-when the clock’s hand pointed to ten, she arose with affable dignity,
-and, bowing to all, retired, leaving her guests to do likewise. With
-this action, it was unnecessary to repeat the announcement which she
-made at the first _levée_ held by her in New York, viz.: “General
-Washington retires at ten o’clock, and I usually precede him.
-Good-night.”
-
-At these _levées_ Mrs. Washington sat. The guests were grouped in a
-circle, round which the President passed, speaking politely to each one,
-but _never shaking hands_. It was reserved to a later generation to
-shake that poor member till it has to be poulticed after official
-greetings. It was the habit of Mrs. Washington to return the calls of
-those who were privileged to pay her visits. A Philadelphia lady who, as
-a child, remembered her, wrote: “It was Mrs. Washington’s custom to
-return visits on the third day. In calling on my mother she would send a
-footman over, who would knock loudly and announce Mrs. Washington, who
-would then come over with Mr. Lear. Her manners were very easy, pleasant
-and unceremonious, with the characteristics of other Virginia ladies.”
-
-An English manufacturer, who breakfasted with the President’s family in
-1794, says:
-
- “I was struck with awe and veneration when I recollected that I was
- now in the presence of the great Washington, the noble and wise
- benefactor of the world.... Mrs. Washington herself, made tea and
- coffee for us. On the table were two small plates of sliced tongue and
- dry toast, bread and butter; but no broiled fish, as is the custom
- here. She struck me as being somewhat older than the President, though
- I understand both were born the same year. She was extremely simple in
- her dress, and wore a very plain cap, with her gray hair turned up
- under it.”
-
-It is as the wife of Washington, through sentiments called out by the
-greatness of his character and the love which she bore him, that the
-moral capacity of Martha Washington’s nature ever approaches greatness.
-In her reply to Congress, who asked that the body of George Washington
-might be placed beneath a monument in the capitol which his patriotism
-had done so much to rear, her words rise to the patriotic grandeur of
-Abigail Adams, they could not rise higher. She says:
-
- “Taught by that great example, which I have so long had before me,
- never to oppose my private wishes to the public will, I must consent
- to the request made by Congress, which you have had the goodness to
- transmit to me, and in doing this, I need not, I cannot say what a
- sacrifice of individual feeling I make to a sense of public duty.”
-
-But it is in the little room at Mount Vernon, in which she died, that
-Martha Washington, as a woman, comes nearest to us. Here one can realize
-how utterly done with earth, its pangs and glory, was the soul who shut
-herself within its narrow walls, there to take on immortality. The rooms
-of Washington below, a thrifty mechanic of the present day would think
-too small and shabby for him. Here he died. And when the great soul went
-forth to the unknown, as a human presence to inhabit it never more, the
-wife also went forth, and never again crossed its threshold. Here, in
-this little room, scarcely more than a closet, surrounded only by the
-simplest necessaries of existence, Martha Washington lived out the
-lonely days of her desolate widowhood—and here she died.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Abigail Adams was the first wife of a President who ever presided at the
-White House—the President’s house, as it was so fitly called in those
-days. Only in this latter time of degenerate English has it swelled into
-the “Executive Mansion.”
-
-In February, 1797, John Adams was elected President of the United
-States, to succeed President Washington. From her country home in
-Massachusetts, Mrs. Adams sent to her husband the following recognition
-of his exaltation to be chief ruler of the United States:
-
- “You have this day to declare yourself head of a nation. ‘And now, O
- Lord, my God, thou hast made thy servant ruler over the people, give
- unto him an understanding heart, that he may know how to go out and to
- come in before this great people; that he may discern between good and
- bad. For who is able to judge this, thy so great a people?’ were the
- words of a royal sovereign, and not less applicable to him who is
- invested with the chief magistracy of a nation, though he wear not a
- crown nor the robes of royalty. My thoughts and meditations are with
- you, though personally absent; and my petitions to heaven are, that
- the things which make for your peace may not be hidden from your eyes.
- My feelings are not those of pride or ostentation upon the occasion.
- They are solemnized by a sense of the obligations, the important
- trusts, and numerous duties connected with it. That you may be enabled
- to discharge them with honor to yourself, with justice and
- impartiality to your country, and with satisfaction to this great
- people, shall be the daily prayer of yours—”
-
-In such exaltation of spirit, and with such grandeur of speech, did the
-wife of the second President receive the fact of her husband’s
-elevation. As devout as Deborah, her utterance is equally marked by its
-comprehensiveness of view, its devotion and self-forgetfulness. No
-visions of personal finery, of fashionable entertainments and show,
-gleam through the grand utterances of this majestic woman. And yet no
-pictures of the White House, no sketches of the social life of her time
-begin to be as graphic, frequent and “telling,” as those of Abigail
-Adams. Nothing has been more quoted than her sketch of the White House
-as she found it.
-
- “The house is upon a grand and superb scale, requiring about thirty
- servants to attend and keep the apartments in proper order, and
- perform the ordinary business of the house and stables—an
- establishment very well proportioned to the President’s salary. The
- lighting the apartments from the kitchen to parlors and chambers, is a
- tax indeed, and the fires we are obliged to keep to secure us from
- daily agues is another very cheering comfort. To assist us in this
- castle, and render less attendance necessary, bells are wholly
- wanting, not one single one being hung through the whole house, and
- promises are all you can obtain. This is so great an inconvenience
- that I know not what to do or how to do. The ladies from Georgetown
- and in the city have many of them visited me. Yesterday I returned
- fifteen visits. But such a place as Georgetown appears! Why, our
- Milton is beautiful. But no comparisons; if they put me up bells, and
- let me have wood enough to keep fires, I design _to be pleased_. But
- surrounded with forests, can you believe that wood is not to be had,
- because people cannot be found to cut and cart it.... We have indeed
- come into a new country.
-
- “The house is made habitable, but there is not a single apartment
- finished, and all within side, except the plastering, has been done
- since B. came.... If the twelve years in which this place has been
- considered as the future seat of government, had been improved as they
- would have been in New England, very many of the present
- inconveniences would have been removed. It is a beautiful spot,
- capable of any improvement, and the more I view it the more I am
- delighted with it.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “The ladies are impatient for a drawing-room: I have no
- looking-glasses but dwarfs, for this house; and a twentieth part lamps
- enough to light it. My tea-china is more than half missing.... You can
- scarcely believe that here in this wilderness city I should find my
- time so occupied as it is. My visitors, some of them, came three or
- four miles. The return of one of them is the work of one day.... We
- have not the _least fence, yard, or other conveniences without_, and
- the great unfinished audience-room—(the East room) I make a
- drying-room of to hang my clothes in. Six chambers are made
- comfortable; two lower rooms, one for a common parlor and one for a
- ball-room.”
-
-Abigail Adams is an illustrious example of the grandeur of human
-character. She proved in herself how potent an individual may be, and
-that individual a woman, in spite of caste, of sex, or the restrictions
-of human law or condition. She never went to school in her life, yet her
-thoughtful utterances will live where the labored utterances of her
-scholarly husband are forgotten. She was less than a year the mistress
-of the President’s house, yet she has lived ever since in memory a grand
-model to all who succeed her. The daughter of a country clergyman, the
-wife of a patriotic and ambitious man, whether she gathered her children
-about her or sent them forth across stormy seas, while she left herself
-desolate; whether she stood the wife of the Republican Minister before
-the haughty Charlotte in the stateliest and proudest court of Europe;
-whether she presided in the President’s house in the new Capital or in
-the wilderness, or wrote to statesmen and grandchildren in her own lowly
-house in Quincy, in prosperity or sorrow, in youth and in age, in life
-and in death, always she was the regnant woman, devout, wise, patriotic,
-proud, humble and loving.
-
-Her pictures of the social life of her time are among the most acute,
-lively and graphic on record. While in her letters to her son, to her
-husband, to Jefferson and other statesmen, we find some of the grandest
-utterances of the Revolutionary period. Cut off by her sex from active
-participation in the struggles and triumphs of the men of her time, not
-one of them would have died more gladly or grandly than she, for
-liberty; denied the power of manhood, she made the most of the
-privileges of womanhood. She instilled into the souls of her children
-great ideas; she inspired her husband by the hourly sight of a grand
-example; she gave, through them, her life-long service to the State, and
-she gave to her country and to posterity her spotless and heroic memory.
-Tardy Massachusetts! You build monuments to your sons, and ignore the
-fame of your illustrious daughters. When in the Pantheon of the States
-you shall place the sculptured forms of two of your patriots, honor your
-ancient fame by giving to posterity the majestic lineaments of the great
-woman of the Revolution—Abigail Adams.
-
-In her portrait, Stuart gives us Minerva in a lace cap. Dainty and
-delicate, it softens without veiling her august features. The exquisite
-lace ruff about the throat, the lace shawl upon the shoulders, all
-indicate the finest of feminine tastes, while the broad brow, wide eyes,
-keenly cut nose, firm chin and slightly imperious mouth, proclaim the
-proud and powerful intellect, and the high head the commanding moral
-nature of the woman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The wife of Jefferson died in her youth. His love for her was the
-passion of his life. In his love, and in his existence, she was never
-supplanted. Ever after, he lived in his children, his grand-children,
-his books and the affairs of State.
-
-Jefferson had two daughters, the only two of his children who survived
-to mature life. One of these, Maria, who in childhood went to Paris in
-the care of Mrs. Adams, and who was remarkable for her beauty and the
-loveliness of her nature, died in early womanhood. She was indifferent
-to her own beauty, and almost resented the admiration which it called
-forth, exclaiming, “You praise me for _that_ because you can not praise
-me for better things.” She set an extraordinary value upon talent,
-believing that the possession of it alone could make her the worthy
-companion of her father. She was most tenderly beloved by him, and, at
-the time of her early death, he wrote to his friend, Governor Page:
-“Others may lose of their abundance; but I, of my want, have lost even
-the half of that I had. My evening prospects now hang on the slender
-thread of a single life.” This “single” life was that of Martha
-Jefferson Randolph. She lived to be not only the domestic comforter, but
-the intellectual companion of her father. She was one of that type of
-daughters, of which, in our own country, Theodocia Burr and Katherine
-Chase have been such illustrious examples. These women, equally
-beautiful, intellectual, and charming, identified themselves not only
-with the private interests, but with the public life and political
-ambitions of their fathers.
-
-Had Martha Jefferson been less womanly and domestic, she might have made
-herself famous as a _belle_, a wit, or a scholar. Married at seventeen,
-the mother of twelve children, seven of whom were daughters, the fine
-quality of her intellect, and the nobility of her soul were all merged
-into a life spent in their guidance, and in devotion and service to her
-husband and father. The mother of five children at the time of her
-father’s inauguration as President of the United States, separated from
-Washington by a long and fatiguing journey, which could only be
-performed by coach and horse-travel, Mrs. Randolph never made but two
-visits to the President’s house, during his two terms of office. Her
-son, James Madison Randolph was born in the “White House.”
-
-Jefferson began his Presidency with a certain ostentation of democracy.
-One of the first declarations of his administration was, “_Levées_ are
-done away.” Remembering what importance was attached to these assemblies
-by Washington and Adams, and what grand court occasions they were made,
-we can imagine the disapprobation with which this mandate was received
-by the “_belles_ of society.” A party of these gathered in force, and,
-all gaily attired, proceeded to the President’s house. On his return
-from a horseback ride he was informed that a large number of ladies were
-in the “_Levée_ room” waiting for him. Covered with dust, spurs on, and
-whip in hand, he proceeded to the drawing-room. Shade of Washington! He
-told them he was glad to see them, and asked them to remain. These
-_belles_ and beauties received his polite salutations with how much
-delight we may fancy. They never came again.
-
-A Virginian accustomed to the service of slaves, as the President of the
-United States, Jefferson blacked his own boots. A foreign functionary, a
-stickler for etiquette, paid him a visit of ceremony one morning, and
-found him engaged in this pleasing employment. Jefferson apologized,
-saying, that being a plain man, he did not like to trouble his servants.
-The foreign grandee departed, declaring that no government could long
-survive, whose head was his own shoe-black. Jefferson gave great offense
-to the English Minister, Mr. Merry, because he took Mrs. Madison, to
-whom he happened to be talking, into dinner instead of Mrs. Merry. Mr.
-Merry made it an official offense which was reported to his government.
-Mr. Madison wrote to Mr. Monroe, who was then Minister to England, that
-he might be ready to answer the call of the British government for
-explanations. Mr. Monroe wrote back that he was glad of it, for the wife
-of a British under-secretary had recently been given precedence to Mrs.
-Monroe, in being escorted to the dinner table. Nevertheless, Mrs.
-Merry’s nose never came down from the air, and she never again crossed
-the threshold of the President’s house.
-
-The same year Jefferson aroused the ire of Thomas Moore, then
-twenty-four years of age, and without fame, save in his own country. The
-President, from his altitude of six feet two-and-a-half inches, looked
-down on the curled and perfumed little poet, and spoke a word and passed
-on. This was an indignity that London’s and Dublin’s darling never
-pardoned, and he went back to lampoon, not only America, but the
-President. One of his attacks came into the hands of Martha Randolph,
-who, deeply indignant, placed it before her father in his library. He
-broke into an amused laugh. Years afterwards, when Moore’s Irish
-melodies appeared, Jefferson, looking them over, exclaimed: “Why, this
-is the little man who satirized me so! Why, he is a poet after all.” And
-from that moment Moore had a place beside Burns’ in Jefferson’s library.
-
-John Randolph, her father’s political foe, said of Martha Jefferson:
-“She is the sweetest creature in Virginia,” and we all know that John
-Randolph believed that nothing “sweet” or even endurable existed outside
-of Virginia. In adversity and sorrow, in poverty and trial, in age as in
-youth, the steadfast sweetness of character, and elevation of nature,
-which made Martha Jefferson remarkable in prosperity, shone forth with
-transcendent lustre when all external accessories had fled. The daughter
-of a man called a free-thinker, she all her life was sweetly, simply,
-devoutly religious. In her letters to her daughter, “Septimia,” she
-draws us nearer to her tender soul in its heavenly love and charity.
-This daughter, to his latest breath, was to Jefferson, the soul of his
-soul. After his retirement she not only entertained his guests, and
-ministered to his personal comforts, but shared intellectually all his
-thoughts and studies. Six months before her death, Sully painted her
-portrait. Her daughter says:
-
- “I accompanied her to Mr. Sully’s studio, and, as she took her seat
- before him, she said playfully: ‘Mr. Sully, I shall never forgive you
- if you paint me with wrinkles.’
-
- “I quickly interrupted, ‘Paint her just as she is, Mr. Sully, the
- picture is for me.’
-
- “He said, ‘I shall paint you, Mrs. Randolph, as I remember you twenty
- years ago.’
-
- “The picture does represent her younger—but failed to restore the
- expression of health and cheerful, ever-joyous vivacity which her
- countenance then habitually wore. My mother’s face owed its greatest
- charm to its expressiveness, beaming, as it ever was, with kindness,
- good humor, gayety and wit. She was tall and very graceful; her
- complexion naturally fair, her hair of a dark chestnut color, very
- long and very abundant. Her manners were uncommonly attractive from
- their vivacity, amiability and high breeding, and her conversation was
- charming.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
- WIVES OF THE PRESIDENTS—LIFE AT THE WHITE HOUSE.
-
-A Social Queen—“The Most Popular Person in the United States”—“Dolly
- Madison’s” Reign—The Slow Days of Old—A Young Lady Rides Five
- Hundred Miles on Horseback—Travelling Under Difficulties—Political
- Pugnacity—A Peaceful Policy—Formality _versus_ Hospitality—Big
- Dishes Laughed at—A Foreign Minister Criticises—Advantages of a Good
- Memory—Funny Adventure of a Rustic Youth—A Strange Pocketful—Putting
- Him at his Ease—Doleful Visage of a New President—Getting Rid of a
- Burden—A Brave Lady—She Writes to Her Sister—Waiting in
- Suspense—Taking Care of Cabinet Papers—“Disaffection Stalks Around
- Us”—“Col. C.” very Prudently “Skedaddles”—One Hundred “Braves”
- Skedaddle with Him—“French John” Makes a Proposition—He Desires to
- “Blow up the British”—John “Doesn’t See It”—Watching and
- Waiting—Flight—Unscrewing the Picture—After the War—Brilliant
- Receptions—Mrs. Madison’s Snuff Box—Clay Takes a Pinch—“This is My
- Polisher!”—“_Tempora Mutantur_”—Two Plain Old Ladies from the
- West—“If I Jest Kissed you”—They Depart in Peace—Days of Trouble and
- Care—Manuscripts Purchased by Congress—The “Franking Privilege”
- Conferred upon Mrs. Madison—Honored by Congress—Last Days of a Good
- Woman—Mrs. Monroe—A Serene and Aristocratic Woman—“_La Belle
- Americaine_”—Madame Lafayette in Prison—Fennimore Cooper Expresses
- an Opinion—Grotesque Anomalies at a Reception—The Crown and the
- Eagle.
-
-
-President Jefferson showed his personal appreciation as well as his
-official recognition of Mrs. Madison, both in his letters to his
-daughters and in the fact that Mrs. Madison, when the wife of the
-Secretary of State, presided at Jefferson’s table during the absence of
-his own family. But it was as the wife of the fourth President of the
-United States that she inaugurated the golden reign of the President’s
-house.
-
-She was the only woman of absolute social genius, who ever presided in
-this house. Thus the beneficence and brilliancy of her reign was never
-approached before her time, and has never been equalled since.
-
-It is a rare combination of gifts and graces which produces the
-pre-eminent social queen, in any era or in any sphere. Mrs. Madison
-seemed to possess them all. During the administration of her husband she
-was openly declared to be “the most popular person in the United
-States;” and now, after the lapse of generations, after hosts of women,
-bright, beautiful and admired, have lived, reigned, died, and are
-forgotten, “Dolly Madison” seems to abide to-day in Washington, a living
-and beloved presence. The house in which her old age was spent, and from
-which she passed to heaven, is every day pointed out to the stranger as
-her abode. Her face abides with us as the face of a friend, while her
-words and deeds are constantly recalled as authority, unquestioned and
-benign.
-
-When she began her reign in Washington, steamboats were the wonder of
-the world; railroads undreamed of; turnpike roads scarcely begun; the
-stagecoach slow, inconvenient, and cumbersome. The daughter of one
-senator, who wished to enjoy the delights of the new capital, came five
-hundred miles on horseback by her father’s side. The wife of a member
-rode fifteen hundred miles on horseback, passed through several Indian
-settlements, and spent nights without seeing a house in which she could
-lodge. Under such difficulties did lovely women come to Washington, and
-out of such material were blended the society of that conspicuous era.
-
-When Mrs. Madison entered the President’s house, the strife between the
-democratic and republican parties was at its highest. Washington, above
-all party, had yet declared himself the advocate of the unity and force
-of the central power. Jefferson had been the President of the
-opposition, who wished the supremacy of the masses to overrule that of
-the higher classes. On these contending factions Mrs. Madison shed
-equally the balm of her benign nature. Not because she was without
-opinions, but because she was without malignity or rancor of spirit.
-Born and reared a “Friend,” she brought the troubled elements of
-political society together in the bonds of peace. She possessed, in
-pre-eminent degree, the power of intuitive adaptation to individuals,
-however diversified in character, and the exquisite tact in dealing with
-them, which always characterizes the true social queen. She loved human
-beings and delighted in their fellowship. She never forgot an old
-friend, and never neglected the opportunity of making a new one. She
-banished from her drawing-room the stately forms and ceremonials which
-had made the receptions of Mrs. Washington and Mrs. Adams very elegant
-and rather dreadful affairs. She was very hospitable, and a table
-bountifully loaded was her delight and pride. The abundance and size of
-her dishes were objects of ridicule to a Foreign Minister, even when she
-entertained as the wife of the Secretary of State, he declaring that her
-entertainments were more like “a harvest home supper than the
-entertainment of a Cabinet Minister.”
-
-Mrs. Madison never forgot the name of any person to whom she had been
-introduced, nor any incident connected with any person whom she knew.
-Able to summon these at an instant’s notice, she instinctively made each
-individual, who entered her presence, feel that he or she was an object
-of especial interest. Nor was this mere society-manners. Genial and
-warm-hearted, it was her happiness to make everybody feel as much at
-ease as possible. This gentle kindness, the unknown and lowly shared
-equally with the highest in worldly station. At one of her receptions
-her attention was called to a rustic youth whose back was set against
-the wall. Here he stood as if nailed to it, till he ventured to stretch
-forth his hand and take a proffered cup of coffee. Mrs. Madison,
-according to her wont, wishing to relieve his embarrassment, and put him
-at his ease, walked up and spoke to him. The youth, astonished and
-overpowered, dropped the saucer, and unconsciously thrust the cup into
-his breeches pocket. “The crowd is so great, no one can avoid being
-jostled,” said the gentle woman. “The servant will bring you another cup
-of coffee. Pray, how did you leave your excellent mother? I had once the
-honor of knowing her, but I have not seen her for some years.” Thus she
-talked, till she made him feel that she was his friend, as well as his
-mother’s. In time, he found it possible to dislodge the coffee cup from
-his pocket, and to converse with the Juno-like lady in a crimson turban,
-as if she were an old acquaintance.
-
-Like Amelia Opie, and other beautiful “Friends,” who have shone amid
-“the world’s people,” Mrs. Madison delighted in deep warm colors, the
-very opposite of the silver grays of a demure Quakeress. At the
-inauguration ball, when Jefferson, the outgoing President, came to
-receive Madison, his successor, Mrs. Madison wore a robe of buff-colored
-velvet, a Paris turban with a bird of paradise plume, with pearls on her
-neck and arms. A chronicler of the event says that she “looked and moved
-a queen.” Jefferson was all life and animation, while the new President
-looked care-worn and pale. “Can you wonder at it?” said Jefferson. “My
-shoulders have just been freed from a heavy burden—his just laden with
-it.”
-
-When a manager brought Mrs. Madison the first number in the dance, she
-said, smiling: “I never dance; what shall I do with it?”
-
-“Give it to the lady next to you,” was the answer.
-
-“No, that would look like partiality.”
-
-“Then I will,” said the manager, and presented it to her sister.
-
-This lady, who filled every hour of prosperity with the rare sunshine of
-her nature, in the hour of trial was not found wanting, and in the face
-of danger rose to the dignity of heroism. Her gallant stay in the White
-House, while her husband had gone to hold a council of war, and in spite
-of every entreaty to leave it, is a proud fact of our history. In vain
-friends brought a carriage to the door. She refused to enter it. The
-following well-known letter to her sister, proves how bravely, womanly
-was this heroine of the President’s house.
-
- TUESDAY, August 23, 1814.
-
- DEAR SISTER:—My husband left me yesterday to join General Winder. He
- enquired anxiously whether I had the courage or firmness to remain in
- the President’s house until his return, on the morrow, or succeeding
- day, and on my assurance that I had no fear but for him and the
- success of our army, he left me, beseeching me to take care of myself
- and of the Cabinet papers, public and private.
-
- I have since received two dispatches from him, written with a pencil;
- the last is alarming, because he desires that I should be ready at a
- moment’s warning, to enter my carriage and leave the city; that the
- enemy seemed stronger than had been reported, and that it might happen
- that they would reach the city with intention to destroy it.... I am
- accordingly ready; I have pressed as many Cabinet papers into trunks
- as to fill one carriage; our private property must be sacrificed, as
- it is impossible to procure wagons for its transportation. I am
- determined not to go myself, until I see Mr. Madison safe, and he can
- accompany me—as I hear of much hostility toward him.... Disaffection
- stalks around us. My friends and acquaintances are all gone, even
- Colonel C. with his hundred men, who were stationed as a guard in this
- enclosure.... French John (a faithful domestic) with his usual
- activity and resolution offers to spike the cannon at the gate, and
- lay a train of powder which would blow up the British, should they
- enter the house. To the last proposition, I positively object, without
- being able, however, to make him understand why all advantages in war
- may not be taken.
-
- _Wednesday morning, twelve o’clock._—Since sunrise, I have been
- turning my spy-glass in every direction and watching with unwearied
- anxiety, hoping to discover the approach of my dear husband and his
- friends; but, alas, I can descry only groups of military wandering in
- all directions, as if there was a lack of arms, or of spirits, to
- fight for their own firesides.
-
- _Three o’clock._—Will you believe it, my sister? we have had a battle,
- or a skirmish, near Bladensburg, and I am still here within sound of
- the cannon! Mr. Madison comes not; may God protect him! Two
- messengers, covered with dust, came to bid me fly; but I wait for
- him.... At this late hour a wagon has been procured; I have filled it
- with the plate and most valuable portable articles belonging to the
- house; whether it will reach its destination, the Bank of Maryland, or
- fall into the hands of British soldiery, events must determine. Our
- kind friend, Mr. Carroll, has come to hasten my departure, and is in a
- very bad humor with me because I insist on waiting until the large
- picture of General Washington is secured; and it requires to be
- unscrewed from the wall. This process was found too tedious for these
- perilous moments; I have ordered the frame to be broken and the canvas
- taken out; it is done, and the precious portrait placed in the hands
- of two gentlemen of New York for safe-keeping. And now, dear sister, I
- must leave this house or the retreating army will make me a prisoner
- in it, by filling up the road I am directed to take. When I shall
- again write to you, or where I shall be to-morrow, I cannot tell!
-
-On their return, the President and Mrs. Madison occupied a private house
-on Pennsylvania avenue till the White House was repaired. After it was
-rebuilt and the treaty of peace signed, the _levées_ given in the East
-Room, in the winter of 1816, are said to have been the most resplendent
-ever witnessed in Washington. At these, congregated the Justices of the
-Supreme Court in their gowns, the Diplomatic Corps in glittering
-regalia, the Peace Commissioners and the officers of the late war in
-full dress, and the queen of the occasion in gorgeous robes and turban
-and bird of paradise plumes.
-
-At one of these Presidential banquets Mrs. Madison offered Mr. Clay a
-pinch of snuff from her beautiful box, taking one herself. She then put
-her hand in her pocket, took out a bandanna handkerchief, applied it to
-her nose and said: “Mr. Clay, this is for rough work,” and this,
-touching the few remaining grains of snuff with a fine lace
-handkerchief, “is my polisher.” This anecdote is an emphatic comment on
-the change of customs, even in the most polished society. If Mrs. Grant,
-to-day, were to perpetrate such an act at one of her _levées_, the fact
-that it stands recorded against the graceful, gracious and glorious
-Dolly Madison would not save her from the taunt of being “underbred” and
-suggestive of the land of “snuff dippers.”
-
-Another story of Mrs. Madison illustrates the real kindness of her
-heart. Two plain old ladies from the West, halting in Washington for a
-single night, yet most anxious to behold the President’s famous and
-popular wife before their departure, meeting an old gentleman on the
-street, timidly asked him to show them the way to the President’s house.
-Happening to be an acquaintance of Mrs. Madison, he conducted them to
-the White House. The President’s family were at breakfast, but Mrs.
-Madison good-naturedly came out to them wearing a dark gray dress with a
-white apron, and a linen handkerchief pinned around her neck. Not
-overcome by her plumage, and set at ease by her welcome, when they rose
-to depart one said: “P’rhaps you wouldn’t mind if I jest kissed you, to
-tell my gals about.”
-
-Mrs. Madison, not to be outdone, kissed each of her guests, who planted
-their spectacles on their noses with delight, and then departed.
-
-Poverty compelled Martha Jefferson to part with Monticello after her
-father’s death, and the same cruel foe forced Mrs. Madison to sell
-Montpelier in her widowhood.
-
-A special message of President Jackson to Congress, concerning the
-contents of a letter from Mrs. Madison, offering to the government her
-husband’s manuscript record of the debates in Congress of the convention
-during the years 1782-1787, caused Congress to purchase it of her, as a
-national work, for the sum of thirty thousand dollars. In a subsequent
-act Congress gave to Mrs. Madison the honorary privilege of copyright in
-foreign countries. The degree of veneration in which she was held may be
-judged by the fact that Congress conferred upon Mrs. Madison the
-franking privilege and unanimously voted her a seat upon the Senate
-floor whenever she honored it with her presence; two privileges never
-conferred upon any other American woman.
-
-The last twelve years of her life were spent in Washington, in a house
-still standing on Lafayette square. Here, on New Year’s day and Fourth
-of July, she held public receptions, the dignitaries of the nation,
-after paying their respects at the White House, passing directly to the
-abode of the venerable widow of the fourth President of the United
-States—a woman who had honored her high station by her high qualities
-more than it could possibly honor her.
-
-She died at her home, Lafayette square, Washington, July, 1849, holding
-her mental faculties unimpaired to the last. In her later days, while
-suffering from great debility, she took extreme delight in having old
-letters read to her, whose associations were so remote that they were
-unknown to all about, but yet which brought back to her her own beloved
-past. She delighted, also, in listening to the reading of the Bible—and
-it was while hearing a portion of the gospel of St. John that she passed
-in peace into her last sleep.
-
-Mrs. Madison was not the last President’s wife whom the dangers of war
-exalted to heroism. Yet, with a few exceptions, she has been followed by
-a line of ladies of average gifts and graces, whose domestic virtues and
-negative characters are seen but dimly through the reflected glory of
-their President husbands’ administrations. The faint outline which we
-catch of Mrs. Monroe is that of a serene and aristocratic woman, too
-well bred ever to be visibly moved by anything—at least in public. She
-was Elizabeth Kortright, of New York—an ex-British officer’s daughter, a
-_belle_ who was ridiculed by her gay friends for having refused more
-brilliant adorers to accept a plain member of Congress.
-
-During Mr. Monroe’s ministry to Paris, she was called “_la belle
-Americaine_,” and entertained the most stately society of the old
-_régime_ with great elegance. The only individual act which has survived
-her career, as the wife of the American minister to France, is her visit
-to Madame Lafayette in prison. The indignities heaped on this grand and
-truly great woman, were hard to be borne by an American, to whom the
-very name of Lafayette was endeared. The carriage of the American
-minister appeared at the jail. Mrs. Monroe was at last conducted to the
-cell of the emaciated prisoner. The Marchioness, beholding the stranger
-sister woman, sank at her feet, too weak to utter her joy. That very
-afternoon she was to have been beheaded. Instead of the messenger
-commanding her to prepare for the guillotine, she beheld a woman and a
-friend! From the first moment of its existence the American Republic had
-_prestige_ in France. The visit of the American ambassadress changed the
-minds of the blood-thirsty tyrants. Madame Lafayette was liberated the
-next morning,—she gladly accepted her own freedom, that she might go and
-share the dungeon of her husband.
-
-The same quiet splendor of spirit and bearing reigned through Mrs.
-Monroe in the unfinished “White House.” Mrs. Madison maintained the
-courtly forms copied from foreign courts—but the richness of her
-temperament and the warmth of her heart pervaded all the atmosphere
-around her with a genial glow. Mrs. Monroe mingled very little in the
-society of Washington, and secluded herself from the public gaze, except
-when the duties of her position compelled her to appear. Her love was
-for silence, obscurity, peace, not for bustle, confusion, or glare. Yet,
-even in her courtly reign, “the dear people” were many and strong enough
-to arise and push on to their rights in the “people’s house.”
-
-James Fennimore Cooper has left on record a letter describing a state
-dinner and _levée_, during Mr. Monroe’s time, and any one who has
-survived a latter-day jam at the President’s house, will say it was
-precisely what a Presidential reception was in the stately Monroe day.
-Says Mr. Cooper:
-
- The evening at the White House, or drawing-room, as it is sometimes
- pleasantly called, is in fact, a collection of all classes of people
- who choose to go to the trouble and expense of appearing in dresses
- suited to an evening party. I am not sure that even dress is very much
- regarded, for I certainly saw a good many there in boots....Squeezing
- through a crowd, we achieved a passage to a part of the room where
- Mrs. Monroe was standing, surrounded by a bevy of female friends.
- After making our bow here, we sought the President. The latter had
- posted himself at the top of the room, where he remained most of the
- evening, shaking hands with all who approached. Near him stood the
- Secretaries and a great number of the most distinguished men of the
- nation. Besides these, one meets here a great variety of people in
- other conditions of life. I have known a cartman to leave his horse in
- the street, and go into the reception room, to shake hands with the
- President. He offended the good taste of all present, because it was
- not thought decent that a laborer should come in a dirty dress on such
- an occasion; but while he made a mistake in this particular, he proved
- how well he understood the difference between government and society.
-
-It is very doubtful, however, if a cartman would have found it possible
-to have paid his respects to the government in the person of Washington,
-in such a plight. Such a visitor in the Blue Room, to-day, would make a
-sensation. In spite of the “cartman,” we read that at Mrs. Monroe’s
-drawing-rooms “elegance of dress was absolutely required.” On one
-occasion, Mr. Monroe refused admission to a near relative, who happened
-not to have a suit of small-clothes and silk hose, in which to present
-himself at a public reception. He was driven to the necessity of
-borrowing.
-
-When the Monroes entered the White House, it had been partly rebuilt
-from its burning in 1814, but it could boast of few comforts, and no
-elegance. The ruins of the former building lay in heaps about the
-mansion; the grounds were not fenced, and the street before it in such a
-condition that it was an hourly sight to see several four-horse wagons
-“stalled” before the house. In the early part of the administration, the
-East Room was the play-room of Mrs. Monroe’s daughters. It was during
-her reign here that the stately furniture, which now stands in the East
-Room, was bought by the government in Paris. Each article was surmounted
-by the royal crown of Louis XVIII. This was removed, and the American
-Eagle took its place. These chairs and sofas have more than once been
-“made over, good as new,” but the original eagles remain, more brightly
-burnished than ever. May they gleam forever, and let no “modern
-furniture,” with surface gilding and thin veneering, take the place of
-this historic furniture, in the Nation’s house, fraught, as it is, with
-so many memories of the illustrious dead.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
- NOTED WOMEN OF WASHINGTON—A CHAPTER OF GOSSIP.
-
-Quaint Habiliments—Portrait of a President’s Wife—A Travelling Lady—Life
- in Russia—A Model American Minister—A Long and Lonely Journey—When
- Napoleon Returned from Elba—The Court of St. James—“Mrs. Adams’
- Ball”—Mr. John Agg’s Little “Poem”—Verses which Our Fathers
- Endured—Peculiar Waists—Costume of an Ancient _Belle_—Fearful and
- Wonderful Attire of a _Beau_—“A Suit of Steel”—“Smiling for the
- Presidency”—Attending Two Balls the Same Evening—An Ascendant Star—A
- Man who Hid his Feelings—The Candidate at a Cattle Show—“She Often
- Combed Your Head”—“I Suppose She Combs Yours Now”—Giving “Tone” to
- the Whole Country—A Circle of “Rare” Women—A “Perpetual Honor to
- Womanhood”—Charles’s Opinion of His Mother—How a Lady “Amused” Her
- Declining Days—Lafayette’s Visit to Washington—His Farewell to
- America—“A Species of Irregular Diary”—“For the Benefit of My
- Grandfather”—Mrs. Andrew Jackson—A Woman’s Influence—Politics and
- Piety Disagree—Why the General Didn’t Join the Church—A Head “Full
- of Politics”—Swearing Some—The President Becomes a Good Boy—Domestic
- Tendencies—His Greatest Loss—Sad News from the Hermitage.
-
-
-The portrait which Leslie gives us of Louisa Catharine Johnson, the wife
-of John Quincy Adams, reminds us in outline and costume of the Empress
-Josephine and the Court of the first Napoleon.
-
-She wears the scanty robe of the period, its sparse outline revealing
-the slender elegance of the figure, the low waist and short sleeves
-trimmed with lace and edged with pearls. One long glove is drawn nearly
-to the elbow, the other is held in the hand, which droops carelessly
-over the back of the chair. There is a necklace round the throat. From
-over one shoulder, and thrown over her lap, is a mantle of exquisite
-lace. The close bands of the hair, edged with a few deft curls, and
-fastened high at the back with a coronet comb, reveals the classic
-outline of the small head; the face is oval, the features delicate and
-vivacious; the eyes, looking far on, are beautiful in their clear,
-spiritual gaze. This is the portrait of a President’s wife, whose early
-advantages of society and culture far transcended those of almost any
-other woman of her time.
-
-The daughter of Joshua Johnson, of Maryland, she was born, educated and
-married in London. As a bride she went to the court of Berlin, to which
-her husband was appointed American Minister on the accession of his
-father to the Presidency. In 1801 she went to Boston, to dwell with her
-husband’s people, but very soon came to Washington as the wife of a
-senator. On the accession of Madison, leaving her two elder children
-with their grandparents, she took a third, not two years of age, and
-embarked with her husband for Russia, whither he went as United States
-Minister.
-
-Nothing could be more graphic than the diary which she kept on this
-voyage. It consumed three months. Summer merged into winter before the
-little wave-and-wind-beaten bark touched that then inhospitable shore.
-The first American Minister to Russia, Mr. Adams lived in St. Petersburg
-for six years, “poor, studious, ambitious and secluded.” Happily for
-him, his wife possessed mental and spiritual resources, which lifted her
-above all dependence on surface or conventional attention from the
-world, and made her in every respect the meet companion of a scholar and
-patriot.
-
-In the wake of furious war, through storm and snow-drifts, through a
-country ravaged by passion and strife, she traveled alone, with her only
-child, from St. Petersburg to Paris, whither she went to meet her
-husband. Here she witnessed the storm of delight which greeted Napoleon
-on his return from Elba. Mr. Adams was appointed Minister to the Court
-of St. James, and after a separation of six years Mrs. Adams was
-re-united to her children.
-
-In 1817 Mr. Monroe, on his accession to the Presidency, immediately
-appointed John Quincy Adams Secretary of State, when Mrs. Adams returned
-with him to Washington. For eight years she was the elegant successor of
-Mrs. Madison, who filled the same position with so much distinction. No
-one was excluded from her house on account of political hostility—all
-sectional bitterness and party strife were banished from her
-drawing-rooms.
-
-As the wife of the Secretary of State, Mrs. Adams gave a famous ball,
-whose fame still lives in Washington. “Mrs. Adams’s Ball” lives in
-history as well as in the memories of a few still living. It was given
-January 8th, 1824, in commemoration of General Jackson’s victory at New
-Orleans. It was announced in advance by the newspapers, and on the
-morning before its occurrence its splendor was anticipated and
-celebrated by the following lines written by Mr. John Agg, who has
-passed into oblivion, although his early poems in his native England
-were said to have been taken for Byron’s, and although he was one of the
-first of newspaper correspondents and the first short-hand reporter ever
-in Washington.
-
-The ladies referred to in the following lines were among the most
-celebrated beauties of their day, many of whose descendants still live
-in Washington.
-
- MRS. ADAMS’S BALL.
-
-[From the Washington _Republican_, Jan. 8th, 1824.]
-
- Wend you with the world to-night?
- Brown and fair, and wise and witty,
- Eyes that float in seas of light,
- Laughing mouths and dimples pretty,
- _Belles_ and matrons, maids and madams,
- All are gone to Mrs. Adams’s.
- There the mist of the future, the gloom of the past,
- All melt into light at the warm glance of pleasure;
- And the only regret is, lest melting too fast,
- Mammas should move off in the midst of a measure.
-
- Wend you with the world to-night?
- Sixty grey, and giddy twenty,
- Flirts that court, and prudes that slight,
- Stale coquettes and spinsters plenty.
- Mrs. Sullivan is there
- With all the charms that nature lent her;
- Gay M’Kim, with city air,
- And charming Gales, and Vandeventer;
- Forsyth, with her group of graces;
- Both the Crowninshields in blue;
- The Peirces, with their heavenly faces,
- And eyes like suns, that dazzle through;
- _Belles_ and matrons, maids and madams,
- All are gone to Mrs. Adams’s.
-
- Wend you with the world to-night?
- East and West, and South and North,
- Form a constellation bright,
- And pour a blended brilliance forth.
- See the tide of fashion flowing,
- ’Tis the noon of beauty’s reign;
- Webster, Hamiltons are going,
- Eastern Lloyd and Southern Hayne;
- Western Thomas, gaily smiling;
- Borland, nature’s _protégé_;
- Young De Wolfe, all hearts beguiling;
- Morgan, Benton, Brown and Lee;
- _Belles_ and matrons, maids and madams.
- All are gone to Mrs. Adams’s.
-
- Wend you with the world to-night?
- Where blue eyes are brightly glancing,
- While to measures of delight
- Fairy feet are deftly dancing;
- Where the young Euphrosyne
- Reigns, the sovereign of the scene,
- Chasing gloom and courting glee
- With the merry tambourine.
- Many a form of fairy birth,
- Many a Hebe yet unwon;
- Wirt, a gem of purest worth,
- Lively, laughing Pleasanton,
- Vails and Taylor will be there;
- Gay Monroe, so _débonnaire_,
- Helen, pleasure’s harbinger,
- Ramsay, Cottringers, and Kerr;
- _Belles_ and matrons, maids and madams,
- All are gone to Mrs. Adams’s.
-
- Wend you with the world to-night?
- Juno in her court presides,
- Mirth and melody invite,
- Fashion points and pleasure guides!
- Haste away then, seize the hour,
- Shun the thorn and pluck the flower.
- Youth, in all its spring-time blooming,
- Age, the guise of youth assuming,
- Wit, through all its circle gleaming,
- Glittering wealth, and beauty beaming;
- _Belles_ and matrons, maids and madams,
- All are gone to Mrs. Adams’s.
-
-The picture of this celebrated entertainment is still extant, and shows
-the _belles_ in the full dress of the period, when the dress waists
-ended just under the arms, and its depth, front and back, was not over
-three or four inches. The skirts, narrow and plain, were terminated by a
-flounce just resting on the floor. The gloves reached to the elbow, and
-were of such fine kid that they were often imported in the shell of an
-English walnut. Slippers and silk stockings of the color of the dress
-were worn, crossed and tied with gay ribbons over the instep. The hair
-was combed high, fastened with a tortoise-shell comb—the married ladies
-wearing ostrich feathers and turbans. While the _belles_ were thus
-attired, their _beaux_ were decked in blue coats, and gilt buttons, with
-white or buff waistcoats, white neck-ties and high “chokers,” silk
-stockings and pumps.
-
-In this picture Daniel Webster, Clay and Calhoun are conspicuous in this
-dress. General Jackson, wearing bowed pumps, with Mrs. Adams on his arm,
-make the central figures of the assembly. Mrs. Adams wore “a suit of
-steel.” The dress was composed of steel llama; her ornaments for head,
-throat and arms, were all of cut steel, producing a dazzling effect.
-General Jackson’s entire devotion to her, during the evening, was the
-subject of comment. After the manner of to-day, it was declared that he
-was “smiling for the Presidency.” He was the lion of the evening. All
-the houses of the first ward were illuminated in his honor. Bonfires
-made the streets light as day, and the “sovereign people” shouted his
-name and fame. The same evening, he attended a ball given by the famous
-dancing-master, Carusi, and finished the festivities, celebrating his
-glory by the side of the reigning lady, the wife of the Secretary of
-State.
-
-That night fixed his presidential star in the ascendency. A few days
-later the name of Calhoun was withdrawn as the nominee of his party, and
-that of Jackson put in its place. The house, a double one, in which this
-famous ball was given, still stands unaltered, on F street, opposite the
-Ebbitt House. A portion of it was long occupied as lodgings by Hon.
-Charles Sumner.
-
-Through fiery opposition, John Quincy Adams was elected President. From
-the time she became mistress of the President’s house, failing health
-inclined Mrs. Adams to seek seclusion, but she still continued to
-preside at public receptions. Her vivacity and pleasing manners did much
-to warm the chill caused by Mr. Adams’ apathy or apparent coldness.
-Those who knew him, declared that he had the warmest heart and the
-deepest sympathies, but he had an unfortunate way of hiding them. It is
-told that when he was candidate for the Presidency, his friends
-persuaded him to go to a cattle show. Among the persons who ventured to
-address him, was a respectable farmer who impulsively exclaimed: “Mr.
-Adams, I am very glad to see you. My wife, when she was a gal, lived in
-your father’s family; you were then a little boy, and she has often
-combed your head.”
-
-“Well,” said Mr. Adams, in a harsh voice, “I suppose she combs yours
-now?”
-
-The poor farmer slunk back extinguished. If he gave John Quincy his
-vote, he was more magnanimous than the average citizen of to-day would
-be to so rude a candidate.
-
-A writer of her time speaks of Mrs. Adams’ “enchanting, elegant and
-intellectual _régime_,” declaring that it should give tone to the whole
-country. Her fine culture, intellectual tastes, and charming social
-qualities, combined to attract about her a circle of rare and
-distinguished women. Among these were Mrs. Richard Rush, Mrs. Van
-Rensselaer, the wife of the Patroon, and Mrs. Edward Livingston.
-Notwithstanding the opposition of her husband’s politics, Mrs.
-Livingston was Mrs. Adams’ most intimate friend; a lady whom any land
-might be proud to claim, and whose memory lives a perpetual honor to
-womanhood.
-
-Mrs. Adams’ son, Charles Francis Adams, writing of his mother in 1839,
-says:
-
- “The attractions of great European capitals, and the dissipations
- consequent upon high official stations at home, though continued
- through that part of her life when habits become the most fixed, have
- done nothing to change the natural elegance of her manners, nor the
- simplicity of her tastes.... To the world, Mrs. Adams presents a fine
- example of the possibility of retiring from the circles of fashion,
- and the external fascinations of life, in time still to retain a taste
- for the more quiet, though less showy attractions of the domestic
- hearth.
-
- A strong literary taste, which has caused her to read much, and a
- capacity for composition in prose and verse, have been resources for
- her leisure moments; not with a view to that exhibition which renders
- such accomplishments too often fatal to the more delicate shades of
- feminine character, but for her own gratification, and that of a few
- relatives and friends.
-
- The late President Adams used to draw much amusement, in his latest
- years at Quincy, from the accurate delineation of Washington manners
- and character, which was regularly transmitted, for a considerable
- period, in letters from her pen. And if, as time advances, she becomes
- gradually less able to devote her sense of sight to reading and
- writing, her practice of the more homely virtues of manual industry,
- so highly commended in the final chapter of the book of Solomon, still
- amuses the declining days of her varied career.”
-
-Mrs. Adams was the “lady of the White House” when, in 1825, Lafayette
-visited the United States, and, at the invitation of the President,
-spent the last weeks of his stay at the “Executive Mansion,” from which,
-on the seventh of September, he bade his pathetic farewell to the land
-of his adoption.
-
-Notwithstanding the rare qualities of mind and heart which she brought
-to it, and the popularity which she attained in it, her son writes:
-
- “Her residence in the President’s house I have always considered as
- the period she enjoyed the least during the public career of my
- father. All this appears more or less in her letters, and especially
- in a species of irregular diary which she kept for some time at
- Washington, for the benefit of my grandfather, John Adams, then living
- at Quincy, and of her brother, who was residing in New Orleans.”
-
-Mrs. Adams died May 14, 1852, and was buried beside her husband, in the
-family burying ground at Quincy, Massachusetts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In mental attainments, there was an absolute contrast between Mrs. Adams
-and Rachel Donaldson, the next President’s wife.
-
-Mrs. Andrew Jackson never entered the President’s house in visible form,
-for she had passed from earth before her husband became the Chief
-Magistrate of the Nation. Yet it is doubtful if the wife of any other
-President ever exerted so powerful and positive an influence over an
-administration in life as did she in death.
-
-Born and reared on the frontiers of civilization, her educational
-advantages had been most scanty, and she never mastered more than the
-simplest rudiments of knowledge. Yet, looking on her pictured face, it
-is easy to fathom and define the power which, through life and beyond
-the grave, held the master will of the husband who loved her in sweet
-abeyance. It was a power purely womanly—the affectional force of a woman
-of exalted moral nature and deep affections. It was impossible that such
-a woman should use arts to win love, and equally impossible that she
-should not be loved. Men would love her instinctively, through the best
-and highest in their natures.
-
-With the wound of her loss fresh and bleeding, President Jackson entered
-upon his high office. Thus in death Rachel Jackson became the tutelary
-saint of the President’s house. Wherever he went, he wore her miniature.
-No matter what had been the duties or pleasures of the day, when the man
-came back to himself, and to his lonely room, her Bible and her picture
-took the place of the beloved face and tender presence which had been
-the one charm and love of his heroic life.
-
-No other President’s wife looks down upon posterity with so winsome and
-innocent a gaze as Rachel Jackson. A cap of soft lace surmounts the dark
-curls which cluster about her forehead, falling veil-like over her
-shoulders. The full lace ruffle around her neck is not fastened with
-even a brooch, and, save the long pendants in her ears, she wears no
-ornaments. Her throat is massive, her lips full and sweet in expression,
-her brow broad and rounded, her eye-brows arching above a pair of large,
-liquid, gazelle-like eyes, whose soft, feminine outlook is sure to win
-and to disarm the beholder. This remarkable loveliness of spirit and
-person was the source of fatal sorrow to Rachel Jackson. It won her
-reverence, amounting almost to adoration, but it made her also the
-victim of jealousy, envy and malice. These made the shadow always flung
-athwart the sunshine of love which made her life.
-
-She was a woman of deep personal piety, and longed for nothing so much
-as the time when her husband would be done with political honors, as he
-had assured her that then, and not till then, could he “be a Christian.”
-The following anecdote, told by the late Judge Bryan of Washington,
-illustrates the piety of her character and the profound personal
-influence she held over the moral nature of her husband:
-
-The father of Judge Bryan, an intimate friend of Mrs. Jackson, was on a
-visit to the Hermitage. Mrs. Jackson talked to him of religion, gave him
-a hymn to read that was sung at a late funeral, and said the General was
-disposed to be religious, and she believed would join the church but for
-the coming presidential election; that his head was now full of
-politics. While they were conversing, the General came in with a
-newspaper in his hand, to which he referred as denouncing his mother as
-a camp follower. “This is too bad!” he exclaimed, rising into a passion
-and swearing terribly as our “army in Flanders.” When nearly out of
-breath, his wife approached him and, looking him in his face, simply
-said: _Mr._ Jackson. He was subdued in an instant, and did not utter
-another oath.
-
-In the same presidential contest this gentle being did not herself
-escape calumny. When her husband was elected President of the United
-States, she said: “For Mr. Jackson’s sake, I am glad; for my own, I
-never wished it.” To an intimate friend she said in all sincerity: “I
-assure you I would rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God than
-to dwell in that palace in Washington.” Dearer to her heart was the
-Hermitage, with the little chapel built by her husband for her own
-especial use, than all the prospective pomp of the President’s house.
-
-She was a mother to every servant on the estate, and anxious to make
-every one comfortable during her absence in Washington. She made
-numerous journeys to Nashville, to purchase, for all left behind, their
-winter supplies. Worn out, after a day’s shopping, she went to the
-parlor of the Nashville Inn to rest. While she waited there for the
-family coach which was to convey her back to the Hermitage, she heard
-her own name spoken in the adjoining room. She was compelled to hear,
-while she sat there, pale and smitten, the false and cruel calumnies
-against herself which had so recklessly been used during the campaign to
-defeat her husband, and which he had zealously excluded from her sight
-in the newspapers. Here the arrow came back from the misfortune of her
-youth, when she married a man intellectually and morally her inferior,
-from whom she was afterwards divorced, and it entered her gentle heart
-too deep to be withdrawn. She was seized almost immediately with
-spasmodic disease of the heart. Everything possible was done for her
-relief without avail. A few nights afterwards she exclaimed: “I am
-fainting,” was lifted to her bed, and in a few moments had breathed her
-last sigh.
-
-The grief of her husband amounted to agony. It seemed for a time that
-his frame must break under such grief, but he lived to worship and serve
-her memory for many years. December 23, 1828, a great ball and banquet
-was to have been given in Nashville, in honor of General Jackson’s
-victory at New Orleans. The whole city was gay with preparations, when
-the word came from the Hermitage: “The President’s wife is dead!”
-
-From that hour her husband seemed to live to avenge her wrongs and to
-honor her memory. Probably into no other administration of the
-government, from its first to the present, has personal feeling had so
-much to do with official appointments as in the offices emptied and
-filled by Andrew Jackson. It had only to enter his suspicion that a man
-had failed to espouse the cause of the beloved Rachel, and his unlucky
-official head immediately came off. It was told him that Mr. Watterson,
-the Librarian of Congress, had told, or listened to something to the
-detriment of Mrs. Jackson, and Mr. Watterson was immediately deposed.
-Thus she was avenged at times, probably in acts of personal injustice,
-but in her own pure tones she spoke through him in all the higher acts
-of his administration. Thus it was in spirit that Rachel Jackson lived
-and reigned at the White House.
-
-The “lovely Emily” Donelson, wife of Andrew Jackson Donelson, Mrs.
-Jackson’s nephew and adopted son, with Mrs. Andrew Jackson, Jr., the
-wife of another adopted son, shared together the social honors of the
-White House during the administration of President Jackson. The delicate
-question of precedence between them was thus settled by him. He said to
-Mrs. Jackson: “You, my dear, are mistress of the Hermitage, and Emily is
-hostess of the White House.”
-
-This Emily was of remarkable beauty, strongly resembling Mary, Queen of
-Scots. Her manners were of singular fascination, and she dressed with
-exquisite taste. The dress she wore at the first inauguration is still
-preserved. It is an amber-colored satin, brocaded with _bouquets_ of
-rose-leaves and violets, trimmed with white lace and pearls. It was a
-present from General Jackson, and even at that day, before “Jenkins”
-supposed birth, it was described in every paper of the Union. General
-Jackson always called her “my daughter.” She was the child of Mrs.
-Jackson’s brother, and married to her cousin. She was quick at repartee,
-and possessed the rare gift of being able to listen gracefully. A
-foreign minister once said: “Madame, you dance with the grace of a
-Parisian. I can hardly realize that you were educated in Tennessee.”
-
-“Count, you forget,” was the spirited reply, “that grace is a
-cosmopolite, and, like a wild flower, is found oftener in the woods than
-in the streets of a city.”
-
-Her four children were all born in the White House. But in the midst of
-its honors, in the flower of her youth, “the lovely Emily” went out from
-its portals to die. She sought the softer airs of “Tulip Grove,” her
-home in Tennessee, where she died of consumption, December, 1836. A lady
-gives the following picture of an evening scene at the White House, in
-the early part of Jackson’s administration:
-
- “The large parlor was scantily furnished; there was light from the
- chandelier, and a blazing fire in the grate; four or five ladies
- sewing around it; Mrs. Donelson, Mrs. Andrew Jackson, Jr., Mrs. Edward
- Livingston. Five or six children were playing about, regardless of
- documents or work-baskets. At the farther end of the room sat the
- President, in his arm-chair, wearing a long loose coat, and smoking a
- long reed pipe, with bowl of red clay—combining the dignity of the
- patriarch, monarch, and Indian chief. Just behind, was Edward
- Livingston, the Secretary of State, reading a dispatch from the French
- Minister for Foreign Affairs. The ladies glance admiringly, now and
- then, at the President, who listens, waving his pipe toward the
- children, when they become too boisterous.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- SCENES AT THE WHITE HOUSE—MEN AND WOMEN OF NOTE.
-
-Widows “at par”—Four Sonless Presidents—Supported by Flattery—A Delicate
- Constitution—Living to a Respectable Age—Teaching Her Grandsons How
- to Fight—Inheriting Religion—“Another Sensitive, Saintly Soul”—A
- Pathetic Reminiscence—A Perfect Gentlewoman—A Stately Black-eyed
- Matron—A Lady of the Old School—Obeying St. Paul—A Woman Who “Kept
- Silence”—“Sarah Knows Where It Is”—Commanding “Superlative
- Respect”—An English Lady “Impressed”—Three Queens in the
- Background—A Very Handsome Woman—Retiring from Active Life—A Lady’s
- Heroism—“My Home, the Battle-field”—A Man Who Kept to His Post—A
- Life in the Savage Wilderness—A Life’s Devotion—The Colonel’s Brave
- Wife—The Conquering Hero from Mexico—Objecting to the
- Presidency—“Betty Bliss”—The Reigning Lady—An Overpowering
- Reception—“A Bright and Beaming Creature, Dressed Simply in
- White”—An Inclination for Retirement—The Penalty of Greatness—Death
- in the White House—A Wife’s Prayers—A New _Regime_—The Clothier’s
- Apprentice and the School Teacher—The Future President Builds His
- Own House—Becomes a Lawyer—Chosen Representative—Domestic
- Happiness—Twenty-seven Years of Married Life—“A Matron of Commanding
- Person”—A Scarcity of Books—Home “Comforts” at the White House—The
- Memory of a Loving Wife—A Well Balanced Young Lady.
-
-
-Three of the first four Presidents of the United States married widows.
-Jefferson, Jackson, Martin Van Buren, and Tyler, were all widowers while
-occupying the White House. Neither Washington, Jefferson, Madison, or
-Monroe, left sons to succeed them. The wife of Martin Van Buren died in
-her youth, long before he had grown to high political honors. She had
-been dead seventeen years when, as the eighth President of the United
-States, he entered the White House. During his administration, its
-social honors were dispensed by his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Abram Van
-Buren, born Angelica Singleton, of South Carolina, who entered upon her
-duties and pleasures as a bride. She was of illustrious lineage,
-possessed finely cultivated powers, and “is said to have borne the
-fatigue of a three hours’ _levée_ with a patience and pleasantry
-inexhaustible.” Doubtless she shared some of the help which bore Mr.
-Monroe triumphantly through a similar scene.
-
-“Are you not completely worn out?” inquired a friend.
-
-“O, no,” replied the President. “A little flattery will support a man
-through great fatigue.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Anna Symnes, the wife of President Harrison, a lady of strong
-intelligence and deep piety, never came to the White House. Her delicate
-health forbade it, when her husband made his presidential journey to
-Washington. In a little more than a month he was borne back to her,
-redeemed by death. She survived, almost to the age of ninety, to bid
-sons and grandsons Godspeed when they went forth to fight for their
-country—as she had bidden her gallant husband the same, when he left her
-amid her flock of little ones, in the days of her youth, for the same
-cause. From time to time sons and grandsons came from the field of
-battle to receive her blessing anew. She said to one: “Go, my son. Your
-country needs your services. I do not. I feel that my prayers in your
-behalf will be heard, and that you will return in safety.” And the
-grandson did come back to receive her final blessing, after many
-hard-fought battles. Her only surviving son writes: “That I am a firm
-believer in the religion of Christ, is not a virtue of mine. I imbibed
-it at my mother’s breast, and can no more divest myself of it, than of
-my nature.”
-
-
-Mrs. Letitia Christian Tyler, wife of the tenth President of the United
-States, was another sensitive, saintly soul, whose children rise up
-to-day, and call her blessed. She died in the White House, September 10,
-1842. Her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Robert Tyler, writing of the event,
-says:
-
- “Nothing can exceed the loneliness of this large and gloomy mansion,
- hung with black, its walls echoing only sighs and groans. My poor
- husband suffered dreadfully when he was told his mother’s eyes were
- constantly turned to the door, watching for him. He had left
- Washington to bring me and the children, at her request. She had every
- thing about her to awaken love. She was beautiful to the eye, even in
- her illness; her complexion was clear as an infant’s, her figure
- perfect, and her hands and feet were the most delicate I ever saw. She
- was refined and gentle in every thing that she said and did; and,
- above all, a pure and spotless Christian. She was my _beau ideal_ of a
- perfect gentlewoman.
-
- “The devotion of father and sons to her was most affecting. I don’t
- think I ever saw her enter a room that all three did not spring up to
- lead her to a chair, to arrange her footstool, and caress and pet
- her.”
-
-Mrs. Robert Tyler presided at the White House till June, 1844, when
-President Tyler was married to Julia Gardiner, of Gardiner’s Island, New
-York, a youthful beauty and _belle_. After many vicissitudes Mrs. Tyler
-entered the Catholic church, and now resides in Georgetown. Like Mrs.
-Madison, she has returned to the scenes of her early triumphs, and
-during the sessions of Congress may often be seen in the diplomatic
-gallery of the senate chamber, a stately black-eyed matron dressed in
-deep mourning.
-
-Mrs. Polk, intellectually, was one of the most marked women who ever
-presided in the White House. A lady of the old school, educated in a
-strict Moravian Institute, her attainments were more than ordinary, her
-understanding stronger than that of average women; but she obeyed St.
-Paul, and held her gifts in silence. She never astonished or offended
-her visitors by revealing to them the depth or breadth of her
-intelligence; nevertheless she used that intelligence as a power—the
-power behind the throne. Never a politician, in a day when politics, by
-precedent and custom, were forbidden grounds to women, she no less was
-thoroughly conversant with all public affairs, and made it a part of her
-duty to inform herself thoroughly on all subjects which concerned her
-country, or her husband.
-
-She was her husband’s private secretary, and, probably, was the only
-lady of the White House who ever filled that office. She took charge of
-his papers, he trusting entirely to her memory and method for their safe
-keeping. If he wanted a document, long before labeled and “pigeonholed,”
-he said: “Sarah knows where it is;” and it was “Sarah’s” ever ready hand
-that laid it before his eyes. At the age of twenty she came to
-Washington as the wife of Mr. Polk, then a Member of Congress from
-Tennessee. Many years of her youth and prime were spent at the Capital,
-and, as she had no children, she had more than ordinary opportunity to
-devote herself exclusively to the service of her husband. She was the
-wife of the Speaker of the House before she was the wife of the
-President of the United States, and in every position seems to have
-commanded superlative respect and admiration on her own behalf, aside
-from the honor always paid to the person holding high station. Many
-poems in the public prints were addressed to her—one, while she was the
-wife of a Member of Congress, by Judge Story. When her husband became
-the President, Mrs. Polk was deemed the supreme ornament of the White
-House, and the public journals of the land broke forth into gratulation
-that the domestic life of the Nation’s house was to be represented by
-one who honored American womanhood. Mrs. Polk was tall, slender, and
-stately, with much dignity of bearing, and a manner said to resemble
-that of Mrs. Madison. The stateliness of her presence was conspicuous,
-and so impressed an English lady, that she declared that “not one of the
-three queens whom she had seen, could compare with the truly feminine,
-yet distinguished presence of Mrs. Polk.”
-
-Mrs. Polk was considered a very handsome woman. Her hair and eyes were
-very black, and she had the complexion of a Spanish donna. Without being
-technically “literary,” she was fond of study, and of intellectual
-pursuits, and possessed a decided talent for conversation. In her youth,
-she became a member of the Presbyterian church, and through a long life
-her character has been eminently a Christian one. Always devout, her
-piety in later years is said to have merged into austerity; but even in
-the prime of her beauty and power, she never gave her smile or presence
-to the dissipation, the insidiously corrupting influence of what is
-termed “gay life in Washington,” whose baleful exponent to-day is the
-all-night “German” so destructive to freshness of beauty and purity of
-soul.
-
-Mrs. Polk still lives at “Polk Place,” Nashville, Tennessee, a stately
-and noble home, like the Hermitage in this respect, that the mortal
-remains of its master, amid verdure and flowers, beneath the shadow of
-its trees, await the final call. The inscription on the monument, to the
-memory of President Polk, is in Mrs. Polk’s own words; and here, in this
-home, consecrated by his death, the venerable widow of the eleventh
-President of the United States peacefully awaits the summons which will
-recall her to the Soul whose life and name it has been her chief earthly
-glory to embellish and to represent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mrs. Taylor, the wife of General Taylor, the twelfth President of the
-United States, was one of those unknown heroines of whom fame keeps no
-record. Her life, in its self-abnegation and wifely devotion, under
-every stress of privation and danger on the Indian’s trail, amid
-fever-breeding swamps, and on the edge of the battle-field, was more
-heroic than that ever dreamed of by Martha Washington—or continuously
-lived by any Presidential lady of the Revolution—yet time will never
-give her a chronicler.
-
-When General Taylor received the official announcement that he was
-elected President of the United States, among other things he said: “For
-more than a quarter of a century my house has been the tent, and my home
-the battle-field.” This utterance was simply true, and through all these
-years, this precarious house and home were shared by his devoted wife.
-He was one of the hardest worked of fighting officers. Intervals of
-official repose at West Point and Washington never came to this young
-“Indian fighter.” His life was literally spent in the savage wilderness,
-but whether in the swamps of Florida, on the plains of Mexico, or on the
-desolate border of the frontier, the young wife persistently followed,
-loved and served him. Thus all her children were born, and kept with her
-till old enough to live without her care; then, for their own sakes, she
-gave them up, and sent them back to “the settlements,” for the education
-indispensable to their future lives—but, whatever the cost, she stayed
-with her husband.
-
-The devotion to duty, and the cheerfulness under privation of this
-tender woman—the wife of their chief,—penetrated the whole of his
-pioneer army. It made every man more contented and uncomplaining, when
-he thought of her. Her entire married life had been spent thus; but when
-her husband, as Colonel Taylor, took command against the treacherous
-Seminoles, in the Florida war, when the newspapers heralded the new-made
-discovery, that the wife of Colonel Taylor had established herself at
-Tampa Bay, it was considered unpardonably reckless, that she should thus
-risk her life, when the odds of success seemed all against her husband.
-Nothing could move her from her post. As ever, she superintended the
-cooking of his food; she ministered to the sick and wounded; she upheld
-the _morale_ of the little army by the steadfastness of her own
-self-possession and hope, through all the long and terrible struggle.
-Time passed, and the brave Colonel of the Border became the conquering
-hero from Mexico, bearing triumphantly back to peace the victories of
-Palo Alto, Monterey, and Buena Vista, inscribed upon his banners. The
-obscure “Indian fighter” was at once the hero and idol of the Nation.
-The long day of battle and glory was ended at last, the wife
-thought,—and now she, the General, their children, in a four-roomed
-home, were to be kept together at last, in peace unbroken.
-
-It is not difficult to imagine what a home so hardly earned, so nobly
-won, was to such a woman. Nor is it hard to realize that when that home
-was almost immediately invaded by a nomination of its chief to the
-Presidency of the Nation, the woman’s heart at last rebelled. The wife
-thought no new honor could add to the lustre of her husband’s renown.
-She declared that the life-long habits of her husband would make him
-miserable under the restraints of metropolitan life, and the duties of a
-civil position. From the first, she deplored the nomination of General
-Taylor to the Presidency as a misfortune, and sorrowfully said: “It is a
-plot to deprive me of his society, and to shorten his life by
-unnecessary care and responsibility.”
-
-When, at last, she came to the White House, as its mistress, she
-eschewed the great reception-rooms and received her visitors in private
-apartments. She tried, as far as possible, to establish her daily life
-on the routine of the small cottage at Baton Rouge, and she essayed
-personally to minister to her husband’s comforts, as of old, till her
-simple habits were ridiculed and made a cause of reproach by the
-“opposition.”
-
-The reigning lady of the White House, at this time, was General and Mrs.
-Taylor’s youngest daughter, Elizabeth, or, as she was familiarly and
-admiringly called, “Betty Bliss.” She entered the White House at the age
-of twenty-two, a bride, having married Major Bliss, who served
-faithfully under her father as Adjutant-general. Perhaps no other
-President was ever inaugurated with such overwhelming enthusiasm as
-General Taylor—and the reception given his youngest child, who greatly
-resembled him, and who, at that time, was the youngest lady who had ever
-presided at the White House, was almost as overpowering. The vision that
-remains of her loveliness, shows us a bright and beaming creature,
-dressed simply in white, with flowers in her hair. She possessed beauty,
-good sense and quiet humor. As a hostess she was at ease, and received
-with affable grace; but an inclination for retirement marked her as well
-as her mother. Formal receptions and official dinners were not to their
-taste. Nevertheless, these are a part of the inevitable penalty paid by
-all who have received the Nation’s highest honor. Society, in its way,
-exacts as much of the ladies of the White House, as party politics do of
-the men who administer state affairs in it. A lack of entertainment
-caused part of the universal discontent, already voiced against the hero
-President, whose heroic ways were naturally not the ways of policy or
-diplomacy.
-
-The second winter of President Taylor’s term, the ladies of his family
-seemed to have assumed more prominently and publicly the social duties
-of their high position. A reception at the President’s house, March 4,
-1850, was of remarkable brilliancy. Clay, Calhoun, Webster, Benton and
-Cass, with many beautiful and cultured women, then added their splendor
-to society in Washington. The auguries of a brilliant year were not
-fulfilled. Amid the anguish of his family, President Taylor died at the
-White House, July 9, 1850. When it was known that he must die, Mrs.
-Taylor became insensible, and the agonized cries of his family reached
-the surrounding streets.
-
-Dreadful to the eyes of the bereaved wife were the pomp and show with
-which her hero was buried.
-
-After he became President, General Taylor said, that “his wife had
-prayed every night for months that Henry Clay might be elected President
-in his place.” She survived her husband two years, and to her last hour
-never mentioned the White House in Washington, except in its relation to
-the death of her husband.
-
-She was succeeded by a woman of superior intellect, who in a different
-sphere had proved herself an equally devoted wife. Mrs. Abigail Filmore,
-the daughter of a Baptist clergyman, grew up in Western New York, when
-it was a frontier and a wilderness. Yearning for intellectual culture,
-with all the drawbacks of poverty and scanty opportunity, she obtained
-sufficient knowledge to become a school-teacher. It was while following
-this avocation that she first met her future husband, the thirteenth
-President of the United States, then a clothier’s apprentice, a youth of
-less than twenty years, himself, during the winter months, a teacher of
-the village school. They were married in 1826, and began life in a small
-house built by her husband’s hands. In this little house the wife added
-to her duties of maid-of-all-work, house-keeper, hostess and wife, the
-avocation of teacher. She bore full half of the burden of life, and the
-husband, with the weight of care lifted from him by willing and loving
-hands, rose rapidly in the profession of law, and in less than two years
-was chosen a member of the State Legislature. Thus, side by side, they
-worked and struggled, from poverty to eminence.
-
-Strong in intellect and will, her delights were all feminine. Her tasks
-accomplished, she lived in books and music, flowers and children. At her
-death, her husband said: “For twenty-seven years, my entire married
-life, I was always greeted with a happy smile.” She entered the White
-House a matron of commanding person and beautiful countenance. She was
-five feet six inches in height, with a complexion extremely fair and
-pure, blue, smiling eyes, and a wealth of light-brown curling hair. A
-personal friend of Mrs. Filmore, writing from Buffalo, says:
-
- “When Mr. Filmore entered the White House, he found it entirely
- destitute of books. Mrs. Filmore was in the habit of spending her
- leisure moments in reading, I might almost say, in studying. She was
- accustomed to be surrounded with books of reference, maps, and all the
- other requirements of a well furnished library, and she found it
- difficult to content herself in a house devoid of such attractions. To
- meet this want, Mr. Filmore asked of Congress, and received an
- appropriation, and selected a library, devoting to that purpose a
- large and pleasant room in the second story of the White House. Here
- Mrs. Filmore surrounded herself with her little home comforts; here
- her daughter had her own piano, harp, and guitar, and here Mrs.
- Filmore received the informal visits of the friends she loved, and,
- for her, the real pleasure and enjoyments of the White House were in
- this room.”
-
-Mrs. Filmore was proud of her husband’s success in life, and desirous
-that no reasonable expectation of the public should be disappointed. She
-never absented herself from the public receptions, dinners, or _levées_,
-when it was possible to be present; but her delicate health frequently
-rendered them very painful. She sometimes kept her bed all day, to favor
-that weak ankle, that she might be able to endure the fatigue of the two
-hours she would be obliged to stand for the Friday evening _levées_.
-
-Mrs. Filmore was destined never to see again her old home in Buffalo,
-with mortal eyes. She contracted a cold on the day of Mr. Pierce’s
-inauguration, which resulted in pneumonia, of which she died, at
-Willard’s Hotel, Washington, 1853. What she is in the memory of her
-husband, may be judged by the fact—that he has carefully preserved every
-line that she ever wrote him, and has been heard to say that he could
-never destroy even the little notes that she sent him on business, to
-his office.
-
-The child of this truly wedded pair, Mary Abigail Filmore, was the
-rarest and most exquisite President’s daughter that ever shed sunshine
-in the White House. She survived her mother but a year, dying of
-cholera, at the age of twenty-two, yet her memory is a benison to all
-young American women, especially to those surrounded by the allurements
-of society and high station. She was not only the mistress of many
-accomplishments, but possessed a thoroughly practical education. She was
-taught at home, at Mrs. Sedgwick’s school, in Lenox, Massachusetts, and
-was graduated from the State Normal School of New York, as a teacher,
-and taught in the higher departments of one of the public schools in
-Buffalo. She was a French, German, and Spanish scholar; was a proficient
-in music; and an amateur sculptor. She was the rarest type of woman, in
-whom were blended, in perfect proportion, masculine judgment and
-feminine tenderness. In her were combined intellectual force, vivacity
-of temperament, genuine sensibility, and deep tenderness of heart. She
-saw clearly through the forms and shows of life, her views of its duties
-were grave and serious; yet, in her intercourse with others, she
-overflowed with bright wit, humor and kindliness. Her character was
-revealed in her face, for her soul shone through it. Words cannot tell
-what such a nature and such an intelligence would be, presiding over the
-social life of the Nation’s House. She used her opportunities, as the
-President’s daughter, to minister to others. She clung to all her old
-friends, without any regard to their position in life; her time and
-talents were devoted to their happiness. She was constantly thinking of
-some little surprise, some gift, some journey, some pleasure, by which
-she could contribute to the happiness of others. After the death of her
-mother, she went to the desolate home of her father and brother, and,
-emulating the example of that mother, relieved her father of all
-household care; her domestic and social qualities equalled her
-intellectual power. She gathered all her early friends about her; she
-consecrated herself to the happiness of her father and brother; she
-filled her home with sunshine. With scarcely an hour’s warning, the
-final summons came. “Blessing she was, God made her so,” and in her
-passed away one of the rarest of young American women.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- THE WHITE HOUSE DURING THE WAR.
-
-Under a Cloud—“A Woman Among a Thousand”—Revival of By-gone Days—Another
- Lady of the White House—A “Golden Blonde”—Instinct Alike with Power
- and Grace—A Fun-Loving Romp—Harriet with her Wheelbarrow of Wood—A
- Deed of Kindness—The Wheel Turns Round—An Impression Made on Queen
- Victoria—In Paris and on the Continent—An American Lady at
- Oxford—Gay Doings at the Capital—Rival Claims for a Lady’s
- Hand—Reigning at the White House—Doing Double Duty—Visit of the
- Prince of Wales—Marriage of Harriet Lane—As Wife and Mother—Mrs.
- Abraham Lincoln—Standing Alone—A Time of Trouble and
- Perplexity—Conciliatory Counsels Needful—Rumors of War—the Life of
- the Nation Threatened—Whispers of Treason—Awaiting the
- Event—Peculiar Position of Mary Lincoln—A Life-long Ambition
- Fulfilled—The Nation Called to Arms—Contagious Enthusiasm—What the
- President’s Wife Did—Nothing to do but “Shop”—Sensational Stories
- Afloat—Stirring Times at the Capital—What Came from the River—The
- Dying and the Dead—Churches and Houses Turned into Hospitals—Arrival
- of Troops—“Mrs. Lincoln Shopped”—The Lonely Man at the White
- House—Letters of Rebuke—An Example of Selfishness—Petty
- Economies—The Back Door of the White House—An Injured
- Individual—Death of Willie Lincoln—Injustice which Mrs. Lincoln
- Suffered—The Rabble in the White House—Valuables Carried Away—Big
- Boxes and Much Goods—Going West—Mrs. Lincoln Disconsolate—False and
- Cruel Accusations—Considerable Personal Property—Missing
- Treasures—Mrs. Lincoln as a Woman—Tears and Mimicry—The Faults of a
- President’s Wife.
-
-
-Mrs. Franklin Pierce entered the White House under the shadow of
-ill-health and sore bereavement, having seen her last surviving child
-killed before her eyes on a railroad train, after the election of her
-husband to the Presidency of the United States.
-
-Mrs. Pierce was remarkable for fragility of constitution, exquisite
-sensitiveness of organism, and deep spirituality of nature. She
-instinctively shrank from observation, and nothing could be more painful
-to her in average life than the public gaze. She found her joy in the
-quiet sphere of domestic life, and herein, through her wise counsels,
-pure tastes, and devoted life, she exerted a powerful influence. One who
-knew her writes:
-
- “Mrs. Pierce’s life, as far as she could make it so, was one of
- retirement. She rarely participated in gay amusements, and never
- enjoyed what is called fashionable society. Her natural endowments
- were of a high order. She inherited a judgment singularly clear, and a
- taste almost unerring. The cast of her beauty was so dream-like; her
- temper was so little mingled with the common characteristics of woman;
- it had so little of caprice, so little of vanity, so utter an absence
- of all jealousy and all anger; it was so made up of tenderness and
- devotion, and yet so imaginative and fairy-like in its fondness, that
- it was difficult to bear only the sentiments of earth for one who had
- so little of life’s clay.”
-
-It was but natural that such a being should be the life-long object of a
-husband’s adoring devotion. Nor is it strange that the husband of such a
-wife, reflecting in his outer life the urbanity, gentleness, and
-courtesy which marked his home intercourse, in addition to his own
-personal gifts, should have been, what Franklin Pierce was declared to
-be, the most popular man, personally, who ever was President of the
-United States. Notwithstanding her ill health, her shrinking
-temperament, and personal bereavement, Mrs. Pierce forced herself to
-meet the public demands of her exalted station, and punctually presided
-at receptions and state dinners, at any cost to herself. No woman, by
-inherent nature, could have been less adapted to the full blaze of
-official life than she, yet she met its demands with honor, and departed
-from the White House revered by all who had ever caught a glimpse of her
-exquisite nature. She died December, 1863, in Andover, Massachusetts,
-and now rests, with her husband and children, in the cemetery at
-Concord, New Hampshire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the administration of Mr. Buchanan, the White House seemed to
-revive the social magnificence of old days. Harriet Lane brought again
-into its drawing-rooms the splendor of courts, and more than repeated
-the elegance and brilliancy of fashion, which marked the administration
-of Mr. John Quincy Adams.
-
-Harriet Lane, the adopted daughter of James Buchanan, and “lady of the
-White House” during his administration, was one of those golden blondes
-which Oliver Wendell Holmes so delights to portray. “Her head and
-features were cast in noble mould, and her form which, at rest, had
-something of the massive majesty of a marble pillar, in motion was
-instinct alike with power and grace.” Grace, light and majesty seemed to
-make her atmosphere. Every motion was instinct with life, health and
-intelligence. Her superb _physique_ gave the impression of intense,
-harmonious vitality. Her eyes, of deep violet, shed a constant, steady
-light, yet they could flash with rebuke, kindle with humor, or soften in
-tenderness. Her mouth was her most peculiarly beautiful feature, capable
-of expressing infinite humor or absolute sweetness, while her classic
-head was crowned with masses of golden hair, always worn with perfect
-simplicity.
-
-As a child she was a fun-loving, warm-hearted romp. When eleven years of
-age she was tall as a woman, nevertheless Mr. Buchanan, one day looking
-from his window, saw Harriet with flushed cheek and hat awry, trundling
-through the leading street of Lancaster a wheelbarrow, full of wood. He
-rushed out to learn the cause of such an unseemly sight, when she
-answered in confusion, “that she was on her way to old black Aunt
-Tabitha with a load of wood, because it was so cold.” A few years later
-this young domestic outlaw, having been graduated with high honor from
-the Georgetown convent, was shining at the Court of St. James, at which
-her uncle was American Minister. Queen Victoria, upon whom her
-surpassing brightness and loveliness seemed to make a deep impression,
-decided that she should rank not as niece or daughter, but as the wife
-of the United States Minister. Thus the youthful American girl became
-one of the “leading ladies” of the diplomatic corps of St. James.
-
-On the continent and in Paris she was everywhere greeted as a
-girl-queen, and in England her popularity was immense. On the day when
-Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Tennyson received the degree of Doctor of Civil
-Laws at the University of Oxford, her appearance was greeted by loud
-cheers from the students, who arose _en masse_ to receive her. From this
-dazzling career abroad, she came back to her native land, to preside
-over the President’s House. She became the supreme lady of the gayest
-administration which has marked the government of the United States.
-Societies, ships of war, neck-ties were named after her. Men, gifted and
-great, from foreign lands and in her own, sought her hand in marriage.
-Such cumulated pleasures and honors probably were never heaped upon any
-other one young woman of the United States.
-
-At White House receptions, and on all state occasions, the sight of this
-golden beauty, standing beside the grand and gray old man, made a unique
-and delightful contrast, which thousands flocked to see. Her duties were
-more onerous than had fallen to the share of any lady of the White House
-for many years; the long diplomatic service of Mr. Buchanan abroad
-involving him in many obligations to entertain distinguished strangers
-privately, aside from his hospitalities as President of the United
-States. During his administration the Prince of Wales was entertained at
-the White House, who presented his portrait to Mr. Buchanan and a set of
-valuable engravings to Miss Lane, as “a slight mark of his grateful
-recollection of the hospitable reception and agreeable visit at the
-White House.”
-
-During the last troubled months of Mr. Buchanan’s administration, he
-always spoke with warmth and gratitude of Miss Lane’s patriotism and
-good sense. Neither he nor her country ever suffered from any
-conversational lapse of hers, which, in a day so rife with passion and
-injustice, is saying much. In 1863, Miss Lane was confirmed in the
-Episcopal church at Oxford, Philadelphia, of which her uncle, Rev.
-Edward L. Buchanan, was the rector.
-
-In 1866, Miss Lane was married, at Wheatland, to Mr. Henry Elliott
-Johnston of Baltimore, a gentleman who had held her affections for many
-years. The congenial pair now abide in their luxurious home in
-Baltimore, and in private life, as wife and mother, she is as beautiful
-and more beloved than when, as Miss Lane, she was the proud lady of the
-President’s House.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was the misfortune of Mrs. Lincoln to be the only woman personally
-assailed who ever presided in the White House. She entered it when
-sectional bitterness was at its height, and when the need of her country
-for the holiest and highest ministry of women was deeper than it had
-been in any era of its existence, even that of the Revolution. In that
-troubled hour, the White House needed a woman to preside over it of
-lofty soul, of consecrated purpose, of the broadest and profoundest
-sympathies, and of self-forgetting piety.
-
-The life of the Nation was threatened. The horror of war was imminent.
-The capital was menaced, as it had never been before, by the treason of
-its own children. Wives, mothers and daughters, in ten thousand homes,
-were looking into the faces of husbands, sons and fathers, with
-trembling and with tears, and yet with sacrificial patriotism. They
-knew, they felt that the best-beloved were to be slain on their
-country’s battle-fields. With what supreme devotion and consecration
-would Abigail Adams, or a thousand women of her heroic type, have
-approached the Nation’s House as the wife of its President in such an
-hour. It was the hour for self-forgetting—the hour of sacrifice.
-Personal vanity and elation, excusable in a more peaceful time, seemed
-unpardonable in this. Yet, in reviewing the character of the Presidents’
-wives, we shall see that there was never one who entered the White House
-with such a feeling of self-satisfaction, which amounted to personal
-exultation, as did Mary Lincoln. To her it was the fulfillment of a
-life-long ambition, and with the first low muttering of war distinctly
-heard, on every side, she made her journey to Washington a triumphal
-passage.
-
-A single month, and the President’s call for troops to protect the
-capital had penetrated the remotest hamlet of the land. All the manly
-life-blood of the Nation surged toward its defence. All the heart of its
-womanhood went up to God, crying for its safety. In the distant
-farm-house women waited, breathless, the latest story of battle. In the
-crowded cities they gathered by thousands, crying, only, “Let me work
-for my brother: he dies for me!”
-
-With the record of the march and the fight, and of the unseemly defeat,
-the newspapers teemed with gossip concerning the new lady of the White
-House. While her sister-women scraped lint, sewed bandages, and put on
-nurses’ caps, and gave their all to country and to death, the wife of
-its President spent her time in rolling to and fro between Washington
-and New York, intent on extravagant purchases for herself and the White
-House. Mrs. Lincoln seemed to have nothing to do but to “shop,” and the
-reports of her lavish bargains, in the newspapers, were vulgar and
-sensational in the extreme. The wives and daughters of other Presidents
-had managed to dress as elegant women, without the process of so doing
-becoming prominent or public. But not a new dress or jewel was bought by
-Mrs. Lincoln that did not find its way into the newspapers.
-
-Months passed, and the capital had become one vast hospital. The
-reluctant river every hour laid at the feet of the city its priceless
-freight of lacerated men. The wharves were lined with the dying and
-dead. One ceaseless procession of ambulances moved to and fro. Our
-streets resounded with the shrieks of the sufferers which they bore.
-Churches, halls and houses were turned into hospitals. Every
-railroad-train that entered the city bore fresh troops to the Nation’s
-rescue, and fresh mourners seeking their dead, who had died in its
-defence. Through all, Mrs. Lincoln “shopped.”
-
-At the White House, a lonely man, sorrowful at heart, and weighed down
-by mighty burdens, bearing the Nation’s fate upon his shoulders, lived
-and toiled and suffered alone. His wife, during all the summer, was at
-the hotels of fashionable watering-places. Conduct comparatively
-blameless in happier times, became culpable under such exigencies and in
-such shadow. Jarred, from the beginning, by Mrs. Lincoln’s life, the
-Nation, under its heavy stress of sorrow, seemed goaded at last to
-exasperation. Letters of rebuke, of expostulation, of anathema even,
-addressed to her, personally, came in to her from every direction. Not a
-day that did not bring her many such communications, denouncing her mode
-of life, her conduct, and calling upon her to fulfil the obligations,
-and meet the opportunities of her high station.
-
-To no other woman of America had ever been vouchsafed so full an
-opportunity for personal benevolence and philanthropy to her own
-countrymen. To no other American woman had ever come an equal chance to
-set a lofty example of self-abnegation to all her countrywomen. But just
-as if there were no national peril, no monstrous national debt, no
-rivers of blood flowing, she seemed chiefly intent upon pleasure,
-personal flattery and adulation; upon extravagant dress and ceaseless
-self-gratification.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE CABINET ROOM.
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-Vain, seeking admiration, the men who fed her weakness for their own
-political ends were sure of her favor. Thus, while daily disgracing the
-State by her own example, she still sought to meddle in its affairs. Woe
-to Mr. Lincoln if he did not appoint her favorites. Prodigal in personal
-expenditure, she brought shame upon the President’s House, by petty
-economies, which had never disgraced it before. Had the milk of its
-dairy been sent to the hospitals, she would have received golden praise.
-But the whole city felt scandalized to have it haggled over and peddled
-from the back door of the White House. State dinners could have been
-dispensed with, without a word of blame, had their cost been consecrated
-to the soldiers’ service; but when it was made apparent that they were
-omitted from personal penuriousness and a desire to devote their cost to
-personal gratification, the public censure knew no bounds.
-
-From the moment Mrs. Lincoln began to receive recriminating letters, she
-considered herself an injured individual, the honored object of envy,
-jealousy and spite, and a martyr to her high position. No doubt some of
-them were unjust, and many more unkind; but it never dawned upon her
-consciousness that any part of the provocation was on her side, and
-after a few tastes of their bitter draughts she ceased to open them.
-Even death did not spare her. Willie Lincoln, the loveliest child of the
-White House, was smitten and died, to the unutterable grief of his
-father and the wild anguish of his mother. She mourned according to her
-nature. Her loss did not draw her nearer in sympathy to the nation of
-mothers that moment weeping because their sons were not. It did not lead
-her in time to minister to such, whom death had robbed and life had left
-without alleviation. She shut herself in with her grief, and demanded of
-God why he had afflicted _her_! Nobody suffered as she suffered. The
-Nation’s House wore a pall, at last, not for its tens of thousands of
-brave sons slain, but for the President’s child. The Guests’ Room, in
-which he died, Mrs. Lincoln never entered again; nor the Green Room,
-wherein, decked with flowers, his fair young body awaited burial.
-
-In the same way, Mrs. Lincoln bewept her husband. And there is no doubt
-but that, in that black hour, she suffered great injustice. She loved
-her husband with the intensity of a nature, deep and strong, within a
-narrow channel. The shock of his untimely and awful taking-off, might
-have excused a woman of loftier nature than hers for any accompanying
-paralysis.
-
-It was not strange that Mrs. Lincoln was not able to leave the White
-House for five weeks after her husband’s death. It would have been
-stranger, had she been able to have left it sooner. It was her
-misfortune, that she had so armed public sympathy against her, by years
-of indifference to the sorrows of others, that when her own hour of
-supreme anguish came, there were few to comfort her, and many to assail.
-She had made many unpopular innovations upon the old, serene and stately
-_régime_ of the President’s house. Never a reign of concord, in her best
-day, in her hour of affliction it degenerated into absolute anarchy. I
-believe the long-time steward had been dethroned, that Mrs. Lincoln
-might manage according to her own will. At-any-rate, while she was shut
-in with her woe, the White House was left without a responsible
-protector. The rabble ranged through it at will. Silver and dining-ware
-were carried off, and have never been recovered. It was plundered, not
-only of ornaments, but of heavy articles of furniture. Costly sofas and
-chairs were cut and injured. Exquisite lace curtains were torn into
-rags, and carried off in pieces.
-
-While all this was going on below, Mrs. Lincoln, shut up in her
-apartments, refused to see any one but servants, while day after day,
-immense boxes, containing her personal effects, were leaving the White
-House for her newly-chosen abode in the West. The size and number of
-these boxes, with the fact of the pillaged aspect of the White House,
-led to the accusation, which so roused public feeling against her, that
-she was robbing the Nation’s House, and carrying the national property
-with her into retirement. This accusation, which clings to her to this
-day, was probably unjust. Her personal effects, in all likelihood,
-amounted to as much as that of nearly all other Presidents’ wives
-together, and the vandals who roamed at large through the length and
-breadth of the White House, were quite sufficient to account for all its
-missing treasures.
-
-The public also did Mrs. Lincoln injustice, in considering her an
-ignorant, illiterate woman. She was well-born, gently reared, and her
-education above the average standard given to girls in her youth. She is
-a fair mistress of the French language, and in English can write a more
-graceful letter than one educated woman in fifty. She has quick
-perceptions, and an almost unrivalled power of mimicry. The only
-amusement of her desolate days, while shut in from the world in Chicago,
-when she refused to see her dearest friends and took comfort in the
-thought that she had been chosen as the object of pre-eminent
-affliction, was to repeat in tone, gesture and expression, the words,
-actions and looks of men and women who, in the splendor of her life in
-Washington, had happened to offend her. Her lack was not a lack of keen
-faculties, or of fair culture, but a constitutional inability to rise to
-the action of high motive in a time when every true soul in the nation
-seemed to be impelled to unselfish deeds for its rescue. She was
-incapable of lofty, impersonal impulse. She was self-centred, and never
-in any experience rose above herself. According to circumstance, her own
-ambitions, her own pleasures, her own sufferings, made the sensation
-which absorbed and consumed every other. As a President’s wife she could
-not rise above the level of her nature, and it was her misfortune that
-she never even approached the bound of her opportunity.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
- THE WHITE HOUSE NOW.
-
-After the War—The Home of President Johnson—Shut Up in the Mountains—Two
- Years of Exile—A Contrast—Suffering for their Country—Secretly
- Burying the Dead—A Wife of Seventeen Years—Midnight Studies—Broken
- Down—A Party of Grandchildren—“My Dears, I am an Invalid”—“God’s
- Best Gift to Man”—The Woman Who Taught the President—A “Lady of
- Benign Countenance”—Doing the Honors at the White House—“We are
- Plain People”—The East Room Filled with Vermin—Traces of the
- Soldiers—A State of Dirt and Ruin—Mrs. Patterson’s Calico Dress—In
- the Dairy—A Nineteenth Century Wonder—How the Old Carpets were
- Patched—The Greenbacks are Forthcoming—How $30,000 were Spent—Buying
- the Furniture—Working in Hot Weather—“Wrestling with Rags and
- Ruins”—“Renovated from Top to Bottom”—What the Ladies Wore, and What
- They Didn’t—The Memory of Elegant Attire—Impressing the Public
- Mind—How Unperverted Minds are Affected—“Bare-necked Dowagers”—“A
- Large Crowd of Bare Busts”—Elderly Ladies with Raven Locks—The
- Opinion of a Woman of Fashion—Very Good Dinners—Obsequious to the
- Will of “the People”—Doors Open to the Mob—Sketching a
- Banquet—Sentimental Reflections on the Dining Room—The Portraits of
- the Presidents—The Impeachment Trial—Peace in the Family—The Grant
- Dynasty—Looking Home-like—Mrs. Grant at Home—What Might Be Done,
- if—What Won’t Work a Reformation—A Pity for Miss Nellie Grant—How
- She Suddenly “Came Out”—“A Full Fledged Woman of Fashion”—A “Shoal
- of Pretty Girls”—How a Certain Young Lady was Spoilt—Brushing Away
- “the Dew of Innocence”—Need of a Centripetal Soul—Society in the
- Season—Rare Women with no Tastes—The Wives of the Presidents Summed
- Up.
-
-
-Mrs. Lincoln was succeeded in the White House by three women, who
-entered its portals through the fiery baptism of suffering for their
-country’s sake.
-
-While President Johnson was performing his duties as Senator in
-Washington, his family were shut up in the mountains of East Tennessee,
-where the ravages of war were most dreadful. For more than two years he
-was unable to set eyes on either wife or child. While many of the
-mushroom aristocracy, who afterwards looked upon them so superciliously,
-were coining their ill-gotten dollars out of the blood of their country,
-these brave, loyal women were being “hunted from point to point, driven
-to seek refuge in the wilderness, forced to subsist on coarse and
-insufficient food, and more than once called to bury with secret and
-stolen sepulture those, whom they loved, murdered because they would not
-join in deeds of odious treason to union and liberty.”
-
-President Johnson’s youngest daughter entered the White House a widow,
-recently bereaved of her husband, who fell a soldier in the Union cause.
-His wife, who at seventeen was his teacher, when “in the silent watches
-of the night the youthful couple studied together,” when their weary
-tasks were done, came to the White House broken in health and spirits,
-through the suffering and bereavements through which she had passed. She
-was never seen but on one public occasion at the White House, that of a
-children’s party, given to her grandchildren. At that time she was
-seated in one of the republican court-chairs of satin and ebony. She did
-not rise when the children or guests were presented, but simply said,
-“My dears, I am an invalid,” and her sad, pale face and sunken eyes
-proved the expression. She is an invalid now; but an observer would say,
-contemplating her, “A noble woman, God’s best gift to man.” It was that
-woman who taught the President, after she became his wife; and in all
-their early years she was his assistant counsellor and guide.
-
-Liable to be arrested for the slightest offense; ofttimes insulted by
-the rabble, Mrs. Johnson performed the perilous journey from Greenville
-to Nashville. Few who were not actual participators in the civil war can
-form an estimate of the trials of this noble woman. Invalid, as she was,
-she yet endured exposure and anxiety, and passed through the extended
-lines of hostile armies, never uttering a hasty word, or, by her looks,
-betraying in the least degree her harrowed feelings. She is remembered
-by friend and foe as a lady of benign countenance and sweet and winning
-manners.
-
-During her husband’s administration, the heavy duties and dubious honors
-of the White House were performed by her oldest daughter, Martha
-Patterson, the wife of Senator Patterson of Tennessee. That lady’s
-utterance, soon after entering the White House, was a key to her
-character, yet scarcely a promise of her own distinguished management of
-the President’s house. She said: “We are plain people from the mountains
-of Tennessee, called here for a short time by a national calamity. I
-trust too much will not be expected of us.” The career of Mrs. Lincoln
-had chilled the people to expect little from the feminine administrator
-of the White House; but from Martha Patterson they received much, and
-that of the most unobtrusive and noble service.
-
-The family of the new President arrived in June. Here was a new field
-entirely for the diffident woman who was compelled to do the honors, in
-lieu of her mother—a confirmed invalid. The house looked anything but
-inviting. Soldiers had wandered unchallenged through the entire _suites_
-of parlors. The East Room, dirty and soiled, was filled with vermin.
-Guards had slept upon the sofas and carpets till they were ruined, and
-the immense crowds who, during the preceding years of war, filled the
-President’s house continually had worn out the already ancient
-furniture. No sign of neatness or comfort greeted their appearance, but
-evidences of neglect and decay everywhere met their eyes. To put aside
-all ceremony and work incessantly, was the portion of Mrs. Patterson
-from the beginning. It was her practice to rise very early, don a calico
-dress and spotless apron, and then descend to skim the milk and attend
-to the dairy before breakfast. Remembering this fact, of a President’s
-daughter, in the President’s house, in the nineteenth century, for a
-brief moment, let us cease to bemoan the homely virtues of our
-grandmothers as forever dead and buried.
-
-At the first reception of President Johnson, held January 1, 1866, the
-White House had not been renovated. Dingy and destitute of ornament
-Martha Patterson had by dint of covering its old carpets with pure
-linen, and hiding its wounds with fresh flowers, and letting her
-beautiful children loose in its rooms, given it an aspect of purity,
-beauty and cheer, to which it had long been a stranger.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE BLUE ROOM.
-
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-In the spring, Congress appropriated thirty thousand dollars to the
-renovation of the White House. After consulting various firms, Mrs.
-Patterson found that it would take the whole amount to furnish simply
-the parlors. Feeling a personal responsibility to the government for the
-expenditure of the money, unlike her predecessor, she determined not to
-surpass it. She made herself its agent, and superintended the purchases
-for the dismantled house herself. Instead of seeking pleasure by the
-sea, or ease in her own mountain home, the hot summer waxed and waned
-only to leave the brave woman where it found her, wrestling with rags
-and ruins that were to be reset, repolished, “made over as good as new.”
-For herself? No, for her country; and all this in addition to caring for
-husband, children and invalid mother.
-
-The result of this ceaseless industry and self-denial was, the
-President’s house in perfect order and thoroughly renovated from top to
-bottom. When it was opened for the winter season, the change was
-apparent and marvelous, even to the dullest eyes, but very few knew that
-the fresh, bright face of the historic house was all due to the energy,
-industry, taste and tact of one woman, the President’s daughter. The
-warm comfort of the dining room, the exquisite tints of the Blue Room,
-the restful neutral hues meeting and blending in carpets and furniture
-in many rooms of the White House still remain harmonious witnesses of
-the pure taste of Martha Patterson. The dress of the ladies of the White
-House was equally remarkable. The public had grown to expect loud
-display in the costume of its occupants. But all who went to see the
-“plain people from Tennessee” overloaded with new ornaments, were
-disappointed. Instead, they saw beside the President a young,
-golden-haired woman, dressed in full mourning,—the sad badge still worn
-for the gallant husband slain by war,—and a slender woman with a single
-white flower in her dark hair. Instead of the bare bosom and arms, the
-pronounced hues and glittering jewels which had so long obtained in that
-place, they saw soft laces about the throat ending the high corsage; a
-robe of soft tints and a shawl of lace veiling the slender figure. It
-was like a picture in half tints, soothing to the sight; yet the dark
-hair, broad brow and large eyes were full of silent force and reserved
-power. Little was expected, even in dress, of these “plain people from
-Tennessee,” yet the chaste elegance of their attire was never surpassed
-by any ladies of the White House, and its memory remains an example
-which it is a pity that ladies of society are so slow to imitate.
-
-The impression made upon the public mind by the tone and spirit of their
-attire is significant as gathered from the utterance of contemporaneous
-newspapers. It betrays how dress of an opposite character always affects
-unperverted minds. A journal of the day says: “Mrs. Patterson, who stood
-at the right of the President, wore a black Lyons velvet, a shawl of
-white thread lace falling over her dress. The simple, unaffected grace
-of this lady, and her entire freedom from pretension, either in garb or
-manner, attracted highly favorable comment. Mrs. Patterson is quite a
-young lady, and when some of the bare-necked would-be juvenile dowagers
-were presented to her, the contrast was entirely in favor of the
-President’s daughter.”
-
- “Mrs. Stover assisted the President, and won golden opinions from
- sensible people for her faultless taste, and high-necked costume in a
- large crowd of bare busts. Elderly ladies, whose truthful wrinkles,
- despite their raven locks, betrayed their years, stood about her in
- low bodices, exposing to view shoulders long ago bereft of beauty and
- symmetry. Mothers, whose daughters walked beside them, in similar
- attire, gathered about her in their flashing diamonds and expensive
- apparel, but no peer of hers eclipsed her rich simplicity. Alone she
- stood, so tastefully arrayed that the poor who came were not abashed
- by her presence, nor the rich offended by her rarer _toilette_. The
- perfect harmony of her appearance pleased the eyes of all.”
-
-The spirit of these comments redeems them from the faintest touch of
-Jenkinsism. In this connection, it is easy to understand the comment of
-a woman of fashion, on Mrs. Stover. She said: “She has very fine points,
-which would make any woman a _belle_, if she knew how to make the most
-of them.”
-
-The state dinners given by President Johnson, were never surpassed in
-any administration. They were conducted on a generous, almost princely
-scale, and reflected lasting honor upon his daughter, to whom was
-committed the entire care and arrangement of every social entertainment.
-Simple and democratic in her own personal tastes, Mrs. Patterson had a
-high sense of what was due to the position, and to the people, from the
-family of the President of a great Nation. This sense of duty and
-justice led her to spare no pains in her management of official
-entertainments, and the same high qualities made her keep the White
-House parlors and conservatories open and ready for the crowds of people
-who daily visited them, at any cost to her own taste or comfort.
-
-The following sketch of the last state dinner given by President
-Johnson, written by a personal friend, is so vivid and life-like,
-bringing the historic house so near, in the closing hours of an
-administration, I am constrained to give it to you:
-
- “Late in the afternoon, I was sitting in the cheerful room occupied by
- the invalid mother, when Mrs. Patterson came for me to go and see the
- table. The last state dinner was to be given this night, and the
- preparation for the occasion had been commensurate with those of
- former occasions.
-
- “I looked at the invalid, whose feet had never crossed the apartment
- to which we were going, and by whom the elegant entertainments, over
- which her daughters presided, were totally unenjoyed. Through the
- hall, and down the stairway, I followed my hostess, and stood beside
- her in the grand old room.
-
- “It was a beautiful, and altogether a rare scene, which I viewed in
- the quiet light of that closing winter day. The table was arranged for
- forty persons, each guest’s name being upon the plate designated on
- the invitation list. In the centre stood three magnificent _ormolu_
- ornaments, filled with fadeless French flowers, while, beside each
- plate, was a _bouquet_ of odorous greenhouse exotics. It was not the
- color or design of the Sévres China, of green and gold, the fragile
- glass, nor yet the massive plate, which attracted my admiration, but
- the harmony of the whole, which satisfied and refreshed. From the
- heavy curtains, depending from the lofty windows, to the smallest
- ornament in the room, all was ornate and consistent. I could not but
- contrast this vision of grandeur with the delicate, child-like form of
- the woman who watched me with a quiet smile, as I enjoyed this
- evidence of her taste, and appreciation of the beautiful. All day she
- had watched over the movements of those engaged in the arrangement of
- this room, and yet so unobtrusive had been her presence, and so
- systematically had she planned, that no confusion occurred in the
- complicated domestic machinery. For the pleasure it would give her
- children, hereafter, she had an artist photograph the interior of the
- apartment, and he was just leaving with his trophy, as we entered. All
- was ready and complete, and when we passed from the room, there was
- still time for rest before the hour named in the cards of invitation.
-
- .... “It was almost twilight, as we entered the East Room, and its
- sombreness and wondrous size struck me forcibly. The hour for
- strangers and visitors had passed, and we felt at liberty to wander,
- in our old-fashioned way, up and down its great length.”
-
- “It was softly raining, we discovered, as we peered through the
- window, and a light fringe of mist hung over the trees in the grounds.
- The feeling of balmy comfort one feels in watching it rain, from the
- window of a cozy room, was intensified by the associations of this
- historic place, and the sadness of time was lost in the outreachings
- of eternity. Its spectral appearance, as we turned from the window and
- looked down its shadowy outlines, the quickly succeeding thoughts of
- the many who had crowded into its now deserted space, and the
- remembrance of some who would no more come, were fast crowding out the
- practical, and leaving in its place mental excitement, and
- spiritualized nervous influences. Mrs. Patterson was the first to note
- the flight of time, and, as we turned, to leave with the past the hour
- it claimed, her grave face lighted up with a genuinely happy
- expression, as she said: ‘I am glad this is the last entertainment; it
- suits me better to be quiet, and in my own home. Mother is not able to
- enjoy these things. Belle is too young, and I am indifferent to
- them—so it is well it is almost over.’
-
- “As she ceased speaking, the curtains over the main entrance parted,
- and the President peered in, ‘to see,’ he said, ‘if Martha had shown
- me the portraits of the Presidents.’ Joining him in his promenade, we
- passed before them, as they were hanging in the main hall, he dwelling
- on the life and character of each, we listening to his descriptions,
- and personal recollections.
-
- “At the dinner, afterwards, not the display of beautiful _toilettes_,
- nor the faces of lovely women, could draw from my mind the memory of
- that afternoon. More than ever, I was convinced that the best of our
- natures is entirely out of the reach of ordinary events, and the
- finest fibres are rarely, if ever, made to thrill in sympathy with
- outward influences. Grave statesmen, and white-haired dignitaries
- chatted merrily with fair young ladies, or sedate matrons; but turn
- where I would, the burden of my thoughts were the remarks of Mrs.
- Patterson, whose unselfish devotion to her father, deserves a more
- fitting memorial than this insignificant mention. With her opposite
- him, and by her proximity, relieving him of much of the necessity of
- entertaining, he enjoyed and bestowed pleasure, and won for these
- social entertainments a national reputation.
-
- “During the impeachment trial of her father, unflinchingly Mrs.
- Patterson bent every energy to entertain, as usual, as became her
- position, wearing always a patient, suffering look. Through the long
- weeks of the trial, she listened to every request, saw every caller,
- and served every petitioner, (and only those who have filled this
- position, know how arduous is this duty,) hiding from all eyes the
- anxious weight of care oppressing herself. That she was sick after the
- acquittal, astonished nobody who had seen her struggling to keep up
- before.”
-
-But no matter what the accusations against Andrew Johnson, they died
-into silence without touching his family. If corruption crossed the
-outer portals of the White House, the whole land knew that they never
-penetrated into the pure recesses of the President’s home. Whatever
-Andrew Johnson was or was not, no partisan foe was bitter or false
-enough to throw a shadow of reproach against the noble characters of his
-wife and daughters. There was no insinuation, no charge against them.
-There was no furniture or ornaments gone; nor could any one say that
-they had received costly presents:—no expensive plate, no houses,
-horses, or carriages. No family ever left Washington more respected by
-the powerful, more bewept by the poor. From the Nation’s House, which
-they had redeemed and honored, they went back empty-handed to their own
-dismantled home, followed by the esteem and affection of all who knew
-them. The White House holds the record of their spotless fame.
-Generations will pass before, from its grand old rooms, will fade out
-the healing and saving touches of one President’s daughter.
-
-The life of the White House under the administration of President Grant
-is a purely domestic one. It is the remark of all who have known its
-past, that the White House never looked so home-like as at the present
-time. It took on this aspect under the reign of Martha Patterson. But
-since then, pictures and ornaments have been added, one by one, till all
-its old-time stiffness seems to have merged into a look of grand
-comfort. Its roof may leak occasionally, and it certainly was built
-before the day of “modern conveniences,” and may be altogether
-inadequate to be the President’s house of a great Nation; nevertheless,
-that Nation has no occasion to be ashamed of its order or adornment
-to-day.
-
-As in the Johnson administration, the house is brightened by
-ever-blooming flowers, and the presence of happy children. Mr. Dent, the
-venerable father of Mrs. Grant, also makes a marked feature of its
-social life, and is the object not only of the ceaseless devotion of his
-family, but of the respect of all their visitors.
-
-Mrs. Grant is now, as she always has been, devoted to her family. Her
-chief enjoyment is in it, in its cares and pleasures; the latter,
-however, in her present life, largely preponderating. Born without the
-natural gifts or graces which could have made her a leader of other
-minds, even in the surface realm of society, she is, nevertheless, very
-fond of social entertainments, and enters into them with a good nature,
-and visible enjoyment, which at times goes far to take the place of
-higher and more positive characteristics. If to the affectionate
-domestic life of the White House could be added a finer culture and
-higher intellectual quality as the highest social centre of the land,
-giving exclusive tone to the official society, it might do more than
-words could tell to redeem from frivolity and vicious dissipation the
-fashionable life of the capital. Mere good nature, good clothes, and
-unutterable commonplace are not forces sufficient to, in themselves,
-work out this reformation.
-
-On the whole it is a sad sight to see a President’s daughter, an only
-daughter, at an age when any thoughtful mother would shield her from the
-allurements of pleasure, and shut her away in safety to study and grow
-to harmonious and beautiful womanhood, suddenly launched into the wild
-tide of frivolous pleasure. Thus, while the daughters of Senators and
-Cabinet ministers, far from Washington, under faithful teachers, were
-learning truly how to live, and acquiring the discipline and
-accomplishments which would fit them to adorn their high estate, Ellen
-Grant, a gentle girl of seventeen, with mind and manners unfed and
-unformed, suddenly “came out” a full-fledged young woman of fashion,
-spoken of almost exclusively as the driver of a phaeton, and the leader
-of the all-night “German.”
-
-As a result, Washington is crowded with a shoal of pretty girls, bright
-and lovely as God had made them; by a false life, late hours, voluptuous
-dances, made already hard, old, _blasé_, often before their feet have
-touched the first verge of womanhood. I think of one, but one, amid
-hundreds, the daughter of a high officer, graceful, tasteful, the queen
-of dancers, and of all night revels, but empty of mind, hard of heart,
-brazen of manners! Who looking on her face can fail to see that the dew
-of innocence is brushed from it forever.
-
-The prevailing lack of fashionable society in Washington, to-day, is
-high motive, purity of feeling, a more varied and brighter intelligence.
-These all exist, and in no meagre proportion, but as scattered elements,
-they wait the supreme social queen, the centripetal soul which shall
-draw them into one potent and prevailing power that shall lift the whole
-social life of the capital to a higher plane of æsthetic attire,
-culture, and amusement. Fortunately, Mrs. Grant has been surrounded by
-numerous ladies in official life of superior mental endowment and
-culture, and true social grace. This is especially true of a portion of
-“the ladies of the Cabinet,” of the Senators’ wives from several States,
-and of no small number among the wives of Representatives. Many ladies,
-whose husbands are in Congress, bring the most exquisite tastes in art,
-music and literature, and the loveliest of womanhood to grace the life
-of Washington. For what is termed its “society” in the “season,” the
-pity is these rare women have no taste, it is to them a burden, or an
-offence, and they have never yet combined in organized force (which
-alone is power) to uplift and redeem it.
-
-Nevertheless, Washington is rapidly becoming an intellectual as well as
-social centre. The large and varied interests which concentrate in a
-national capital tend more and more to draw the highest intellectual as
-well as social forces into its life. These need but assimilation,
-fusion, unity and purpose to develop into the most superb manifestation
-of civilization. In looking back upon the wives of the Presidents, we
-discover, with but two or three exceptions, they were women of
-remarkable powers and exalted character.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- RECEPTION DAY AT THE WHITE HOUSE—GLIMPSES OF LIFE.
-
-Mrs. Grant at Home—A Reception—Feeling Good-Natured—Looking After One’s
- Friends—Ready to Forgive—Mr. Grant’s “Likeable Side”—The East Room
- on a Reception Day—“The Nation’s Parlor”—Rags and Tatters
- Departed—The Work of Relic-hunters—Internal Arrangements—Eight
- Presidents, All In a Row—“As Large as Life”—Shadows of the
- Departed—A Present from the Sultan of Turkey—A List of Finery—A
- Scene Not Easily Forgotten—How They Wept for Their Martyr—Tales
- which a Room Might Tell—David, Jonathan and Sir Philip Sidney
- Superseded—Underneath the Gold and Lace—“Into the Ear of a Foolish
- Girl”—“The Census of Spittoons”—“A Horror in Our Land”—An Under-bred
- People—“We Talk too Loud”—Preliminaries to Perfection—“More Than
- Shakespeare’s Women”—The Shadow of Human Nature—Two “Quizzing”
- Ladies—Nothing Sacred to Them—An Illogical Dame—Her “Precarious
- Organ”—A “Vice that Thrives Amid Christian Graces”—How some Pious
- People “Avenge their Defrauded Souls”—A Lady of Many Colors—“A New
- Woman”—A Vegetable Comparison—What “a Good Little Girl” was Allowed
- To Do—The Lady of the Manor—Women Who are Not Ashamed of
- Womanhood—Observed and Admired of All—Another “Reigning
- _Belle_”—Sketch of a Perfect Woman—After the Lapse of
- Generations—The “German”—“You Had Better Be Shut Up”—The “Withering”
- of Many American Women—Full Dress and No Dress—What the Princess
- Ghika Thinks—A Young Girl’s Dress—“That Dreadful Woman”—“_My_
- Wife’s” Dress—The Resolution of a Young Man.
-
-
-It is Tuesday—Mrs. Grant’s day—and all the gay world is going to the
-White House, besides a portion of that world which is not gay.
-
-Mrs. Grant’s morning receptions are very popular, and deservedly so.
-This is not because the lady is in any sense a conversationalist, or has
-a fine tact in receiving, but rather, I think, because she is thoroughly
-good-natured, and for the time, at least, makes other people feel the
-same. At any rate, there was never so little formality or so much
-genuine sociability in the day-receptions at the White House as at the
-present time. General Babcock pronounces your name without startling you
-out of your boots by shouting it, as on such occasions is usually done.
-He passes it to the President, the President to Mrs. Grant, Mrs. Grant
-to ladies receiving with her. After exchanging salutations with each,
-you pass on to make room for others, and to find your own personal
-friends dispersed through the great rooms. They are in each of them;
-loitering in the Blue Room, where the receiving is going on; chatting in
-the Green Room; promenading in the East Room. You may go through the
-long corridor into the state dining-room, into the conservatories, full
-of flowers and fragrance, and back, if you choose, to your
-starting-point, where the President and Mrs. Grant are still receiving.
-
-This is one of the pleasantest facts of these morning receptions—the
-informal coming down of the President to receive with Mrs. Grant. I have
-never been accused of over enthusiasm for him, but find myself ready to
-forgive in him the traits which I cannot like, when I see him, with his
-daughter, beside Mrs. Grant. _Then_, it is so perfectly evident that,
-whatever the President may or may not be, “Mr. Grant” has a very true
-and likeable side, with which nobody is so well acquainted as Mrs.
-Grant.
-
-Here is the East Room, that you have read about so long. It never looked
-so well before. There are flaws in the harmony of its decorations which
-we might pick at; but we won’t, as we are not here to-day to find fault.
-Besides, it is too pleasant to see that the nation’s parlor, erst so
-forlorn, has absolutely taken on a look of home comfort. In proportions
-it is a noble room, long and lofty. It has seven windows—three in front,
-facing Pennsylvania avenue and Lafayette square; three looking out upon
-the presidential grounds and the Potomac; and a stately bay window
-overlooking the Treasury. It has four white marble mantel-pieces, two on
-each side. It has eight mirrors, filling the spaces over the mantels and
-between the windows. Richly wrought lace curtains have taken the place
-of the tatters left there a few years ago, when the curtains of the
-White House windows were scattered over the country in tags, taken home
-by relic-hunters. Over these hang draperies of crimson brocatelle,
-surmounted by gilt cornices, bearing the arms of the United States. The
-walls and ceilings are frescoed, and from the latter depend three
-immense chandeliers of cut glass, which, when lighted, blaze like mimic
-suns. On the walls hang the oil portraits, in heavy gilt frames, of
-eight Presidents of the United States. Opposite the door, as you enter,
-is the portrait of Filmore. On the other side of the mantel, that of
-Lincoln. Next beyond the bay window, that of Washington; all of life
-size. Beyond the further mantel is that of Franklin Pierce. Above the
-door opposite, one of John Adams. Above the next door, of Martin Van
-Buren; the next, of Polk; the last above the entrance door, of John
-Tyler.
-
-[Illustration: THE GREAT EAST ROOM.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE GREEN ROOM.
-
- INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-The carpet on the East Room, last year, was presented to the United
-States by the Sultan of Turkey. It seemed like one immense rug, covering
-the entire floor, and filled the room with an atmosphere of comfort,
-grand, soft, and warm. The chairs and sofas are of carved wood, crimson
-cushioned. A handsome bronze clock ticks above one of the mantels, the
-others are adorned with handsome bronzes. The air is summer warm. On the
-whole, isn’t the people’s parlor a pleasant place? I never enter it, but
-comes back to me that tearful April morning when, in the centre of this
-floor, under the white catafalque, lay the body of Abraham Lincoln,
-dead. The crowd pressing in then, how different from this one! Rugged
-soldiers bent down and kissed his face and wept, women scattered flowers
-upon his breast, with their tears. Rich and poor, old and young, black
-and white, all crowded round his coffin, and wept for him,—one, _only
-one_, if the most august, of the martyrs of liberty.
-
-Think what tales the room could tell, since the day when Abigail Adams
-dried her clothes from the weekly wash, in it, if it but had a tongue.
-Stand here, and see the stately procession move by. Believe in your own
-day, my dears. You need not go back to Sir Philip Sidney, to find a
-perfect gentleman, nor to David and Jonathan, to find faith and love
-between man and man, passing the love of woman, nor to the days of
-chivalry, to find true knights who would die for you. Here are men
-bearing, under all this glitter of gold and lace, bodies battered and
-maimed in their country’s cause. There, is a man, pouring foolish
-nothings into the ear of a foolish girl, who would die for the truth.
-
-We are far from being a thorough-bred people. The census of spittoons is
-a horror in our land. We talk too loud, and too long; we gesticulate too
-much; we can not keep quiet. We need, at least, more capacity for
-repose, more unselfish consideration for the sensibilities of others,
-more of the golden rule, before we can flower into the perfection of
-fine breeding. Yet, no less here, are men at once strong and gentle,
-brave and tender, gallant and yet true. Here are all and more than
-Shakespeare’s women: Juliet, searching for her Romeo; Miranda, looking
-through her starry eyes for a “thing divine” even in the Red Room;
-tender Imogen; fair Titania; Portia, with hair of golden brown; and
-Desdemona, imprudent, fond, yet truth itself. Here is not only the
-beauty and the _belle_, but the sibyl, whose divining eyes beyond
-volition, strike below every sham and every falsehood.
-
-Yet here, too, falls the shadow of human nature. There stand two ladies,
-whose supreme enjoyment here is “quizzing.” Among their thousand “dear
-friends” here, not one is too sacred to be ridiculed. One of these
-ladies, at least, would feel as if she had forfeited “her soul’s
-salvation,” if she were to go to the theatre, or to give countenance to
-a dance; but it does not occur to her, that she puts that precarious
-organ in the slightest peril, when she stands in a public assembly, and
-ridicules her friends.
-
-These ladies are merely yielding to a vice which has grown with their
-years, strengthened with their strength, the vice that thrives amid
-Christian graces, the vice paramount of the Christian church. The most
-unkind people whom I have ever known, have been distinguished for an
-ostentatious sort of piety. The most uncharitable conclusions, the most
-pitiless judgments, the most merciless ridicule, that I have ever
-listened to, of poor human beings, I have heard from people high in the
-church, not from people of the so-called “world.” This, not because the
-normal human nature in either differs, but because the people of the
-world have a thousand outlets and activities which draw them away from
-microscopic inspection of the flaws in their neighbors; while ascetic
-pietists, denied legitimate amusements, shut out from innocent
-recreation, avenge their defrauded souls by feeding them on small vices.
-I offer no defence for a life of folly; there is nothing I should dread
-more, save a life of sin. Yet, if I were to make a choice, I would
-choose foolishness rather than meanness.
-
-This lady, flashing by in many hues, represents what one sees
-continually in Washington—a new woman. Not new to the city merely, but
-new to position and honor. These are but slight external accidents to a
-nature that has ripened from within, drawing culture, refinement, and
-dignity out of the daily opportunities of retired life. But, when the
-public position is _all_ that gives the honor, how easy to tell it!
-There is all the difference in the quality of the put-on, puckering
-manner, and the simple dignity of real ladyhood, that there is between
-the quality of a persimmon and a pomegranate. All she has is new. She,
-herself, is new. Her bearing and her honors do not blend. There is no
-soft and fine shading of thought, of manner, of accent, of attire. The
-sun of prosperity may strike down to a rarer vein, and draw it outward,
-to tone down this boastful commonplace; but we must bear the glare, the
-smell of varnish, and the crackle of veneering, during the process.
-
-When I was a very good little girl, I was allowed to read Mrs.
-Sherwood’s Lady of the Manor, on Sunday. I read, and thought that heaven
-on earth must be shut up in a manor house. When I grew to be a somewhat
-bigger girl, sailing down the Hudson, a manor house, rich in historic
-recollections, was pointed out to me. And here, in my summer-time, comes
-the lady of this manor house, drops her gentle courtesy, and gives me
-her hand, making more than real the enchanted story of childhood. The
-lady of the manor in crude Washington revives the stately graces of old
-days.
-
-How quaint and rare they are! How I look and long for it; how glad I am
-when I find it,—that indefinable, yet ever-felt presence of fine
-womanliness, a thing as precious as the highest manliness,—each the
-rarest efflovescence of human nature. I confess to a clinging adoration
-for it, whether felt in the lady of the manor or in the sad-eyed woman
-who cleans my gloves. The womanliness that is not ashamed nor
-dissatisfied with womanhood, nor yet vain of it; the womanliness that
-gives us the gracious, blending dignity and sweetness of wisdom and
-humility, of self-respect and reticence, of spirituality and
-tenderness—that ineffable charm of femininity, which is the counterpart
-and crown of manhood, in very distinction equal with it, each together
-maintaining in equilibrium the brain and soul of the human race.
-
-Even while I write word comes: The lady of the manor is dead. The quaint
-hood, the stately grace, the winning smile we shall see no more. All
-have gone into the darkness of death. And who was the lady of the manor,
-who for three winters in Washington has been the observed and admired of
-all who met her in the circles of society? She was Cora Livingston
-Barton, the reigning _belle_ of Jackson’s administration. She was the
-daughter of Edward Livingston, who served his country as Member of
-Congress and Senator from Louisiana, as Secretary of State during
-Jackson’s administration, and as United States Minister to France. Her
-father was as distinguished for goodness as he was for noble intellect
-and exalted public service, and her mother was one of the most
-remarkable women who ever graced the National Capital. She was a social
-queen of the rarest endowments. She was the chosen friend and dear
-counsellor of two persons as opposite in nature and temperament as
-General Jackson and Mrs. John Quincy Adams. She was a very queen of
-entertainers, as the wife of the Secretary of State, entertaining
-foreigners and Americans and political foes, with an ease, elegance and
-fascination of manner, which annihilated alike all prejudice and
-animosity. She was a classical scholar, familiar with the best ancient
-and modern thoughts. The chosen counsellor of her husband in the gravest
-affairs of State,—a self-abnegating mother,—a devout Methodist, she
-having chosen that communion as her own on account of the simplicity and
-fervor of its mode of worship.
-
-Of this rare woman, our “lady of the manor” was the only child. “Upon
-her she lavished extraordinary maternal devotion, hardly ever suffering
-her to be out of her sight. Her daughter had hardly reached girlhood
-when her beautiful mother assumed the simplest matronly attire. Ever
-afterwards she seemed rather displeased than flattered when allusions
-were made to her own still remarkable appearance.”
-
-Cora Livingston was worthy to be the child of such a mother. She was the
-most famous _belle_ of the Jackson administration. She married Thomas
-Barton, who went as Secretary of Legation with her father, the Minister
-to France, and who remained as _Chargé d’Affaires_ when Edward
-Livingston returned.
-
-In the course of time, mother and daughter, both widows, spent their
-winters in New York and their summers at Montgomery Place, that grand
-old manor on the Hudson, of which we catch glimpses through its
-immemorial trees, as we sail by on the river. Here, beautiful and
-saintly, that mother died, October, 1860, at the age of seventy-eight.
-
-Warned by physicians to seek a softer climate, after the lapse of
-generations, in the winter of 1871 the daughter returned to Washington,
-the scene of her childish home and early triumphs. She did not belong to
-things gone by. With her two stately and beautiful nieces she became at
-once the centre of a rare group of friends, of the attention and
-reverence of the first men in the State, and an object of admiring
-comment wherever she appeared. She appeared at many morning receptions.
-I see her now as I saw her the first time stepping from her carriage
-into the great portico of the White House, across its corridor to the
-Blue Room, with the light, springing step of a girl; and yet, the soft
-clinging black dress, the quaint hood of black silk, with its inside
-snowy _ruche_, all told that she made not the slightest pretence to
-youth. And now, in these summer days, comes the word: “While packing
-some books in a trunk to go to Montgomery Place, she bent down, burst a
-blood vessel in the head, and without warning died.”
-
-They have all been morning receptions to which I have asked you,—the
-“morning” ending at 5 P. M. I cannot invite you to go to the “German,”
-which begins at 11 P. M. and ends at daybreak. I have too deep a care
-for your physical and spiritual health to ask you to do any such thing.
-When you read of the gay doings and bright assemblies here, perhaps you
-think it hard sometimes that you must stay away in a quiet place to work
-or study. You feel almost defrauded because you are shut out from the
-splendor and mirth and flattery of fashion. You long for the pomp and
-glory of the world, and sigh that so little of either falls on your
-life-path. Thus I shall seem cruel to you when I say that you had better
-be shut up for the next five years, even in a convent, silently growing
-toward a noble life in the world afterward, than to be caught and
-carried on by its follies now, before you have learned how to live.
-
-Are you young? Then you should be more beautiful at twenty-five, at
-thirty, at thirty-five, than you are now. Not with the budding bloom of
-first youth, that is as evanescent as it is exquisite. What a pity that
-it is beauty’s only dower to so many American women. They waste it, lose
-it, then wilt and wither. I want you so to feed the sources of life
-to-day that you may grow, not wither; that you may bloom, not fade, into
-the perfect flower of womanhood.
-
-Terpsichore is a sad sight to me; not because Terpsichore dances, for
-dancing in itself may be as innocent as a bird’s flying; not because she
-loves beautiful attire, for exquisite dress is a feminine fine art, as
-meet for a woman as the flower’s tint, or the bird’s plumage. I sigh at
-the sight of my pretty Terpsichore, because the first bloom of her
-exquisite youth is being exhaled and lost forever in a feverish, false
-atmosphere of being. Something of delicate sensibility, something of
-unconscious innocence, something of freshness of feeling, of purity of
-soul is wasted with the fresh young bloom of her cheeks in the midnight
-revel, lengthened into morning; wasted in the heated dance, in the
-indigestible feast, in the wild, unhealthy excitement through which she
-whirls night alter night. Terpsichore, in her tattered tarletan dress,
-creeping to bed in the gray morning, after having danced all night, is a
-sad sight to see to any one who can see her as she is. Terpsichore’s
-mother would be a sadder sight still, if she were not a vexatious one.
-She brought back from Europe the notion, which so many of our
-countrywomen think it fine to bring, that “full dress” is necessarily
-next to no dress. She tells you, in a supreme tone, that admits no
-denial, that you would not be admitted into the drawing-room of a court
-in Europe unless in full dress, viz., semi-nakedness. She would be
-nothing, if not European in style. Thus, night after night, this mother
-of grown-up daughters and sons appears in crowded assemblies in attire
-that would befit in outline a child of eight years of age. If we venture
-to meet her _ipse dixit_ on European style, with the assurance of the
-Princess Helena, Ghika, Dora D’Istria, one of the most learned and
-beautiful women of this world, that the conventional society dress of
-Europe is more immodest than any she saw while traveling over the
-mountains and valleys of the East, she will tell you that Princess Ghika
-“is not an authority on dress in Paris,” which is doubtless true.
-
-Thus, in republican Washington, in glaring drawing-rooms, we are treated
-to a study of female anatomy, which is appalling. Don’t jump to the
-conclusion that I want every lady to go to a party in a stuff dress,
-drawn up to her ears; nor that I am so prudish as to think no dress can
-be modestly, as well as immodestly low. No matter how it be cut, the
-_way_ in which a dress is worn is more impressive than the dress itself.
-I have seen a young girl’s shoulders rise from her muslin frock as
-unconsciously and as innocently as the lilies in the garden; and I have
-come upon a wife and mother, in a public assembly, so dressed for
-promiscuous gaze that I have involuntarily shut my eyes with shame.
-
-I never saw Lydia Thompson; but from what I have heard of her, have come
-to the conclusion that her attire is just as modest as that of many
-ladies whom I meet at fashionable parties. They cast up their eyes in
-horror at the name of poor Lydia Thompson. _They_ go to see Lydia
-Thompson! No, indeed! How could their eyes endure the sight of that
-dreadful woman? No less they themselves offer gratis, to a promiscuous
-company, every evening, a sight, morally, quite as dreadful. The men,
-who pay their money to Lydia Thompson and her _troupe_, know that their
-dress and their burlesque, however questionable, make at once their
-business and their livelihood. They cannot make the same excuse for
-their wives, their sisters, and their sweethearts, if they see them
-scarcely less modestly attired in some fashionable ball-room. Remember
-this; if you ever find yourself in such a place, the best men in that
-room, at heart, are not delighted with such displays. Being men, they
-will look at whatever is presented to their gaze; more, many will
-compliment and flatter the very woman, whose vanity at heart they pity
-or despise; but it will always be with the mental reservation: “_My
-wife_ should never dress like that!” “I don’t want to see my sister
-dancing round dances for hours in the arms of a man whom even I cannot
-think of without horror; and if —— dances with him again, I’ll not go to
-another ‘German;’” said a young man to his mother, this very winter.
-
-This is perpetually the fact; and it is the danger and the shame of the
-round dances. Young girls guarded, from babyhood, from all contact with
-vice, from all knowledge of men as they exist, in their own world of
-clubs and dissipation, suddenly “come out” to whirl, night after night,
-and week after week, in the arms of men whose lightest touch is
-profanation. It would be long before it would dawn upon the girl to
-dream of the evil in that man’s heart; far longer to learn the evil of
-his life; yet no less, to her, innocent and young, in the very
-association and contact there is unconscious pollution. There is a
-sacredness in the very thought of the body which God created to be the
-human home of an immortal soul. Its very beauty should be the seal of
-its holiness. Every where in Scripture its sacredness is recognized and
-enforced. Therein we are told that our bodies are the temples of God. We
-are commanded to make them meet temples for the indwelling of the Holy
-Spirit; and our very dress, in its harmony and purity, should
-consecrate, not desecrate, the beautiful home of the soul.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- INAUGURATION DAY AT WASHINGTON.
-
-My Own Private Opinion—Sublime Humanity in the Lump—The Climate
- Disagrees—The Little “Sons of War” Feeling Bad—“Think of the
- Babies”—Brutal Mothers—The “Boys in Blue”—“Broke their Backs and
- Skinned their Noses”—Our Heroes—Later Festivities—“Devoted to
- Art”—Scene in “the Avenue”—A Lively Time—The Mighty Drum-Major—West
- Point Warriors Criticised—Faultlessly Ridiculous—Pitilessly
- Dressed—“Taken for a Nigger”—Magnificent Display—The Oldest Regiment
- in the States—The President—The Senators—Invitation of the
- Coldstream Guards—The Strangers—Generals Sherman and
- Sheridan—Admiral Porter—Sketches of Well-known Men—The Diplomatic
- Corps—Blacque Bey—Full Turkish Costume—Sir Edward Thornton—The
- Japanese Minister—Senator Sumner Appears—The Supreme Court—Senator
- Wilson—Cragin, Logan, and Bayard—Vice-President Colfax—Enter, the
- President—Congress Alive Again—The Valedictory—Taking the Oaths—“The
- Little Gentleman in the Big Chair”—His Little Speech—His Wife and
- Family Behind—The New President—Memories of Another Scene—Grand
- Jubilation—The Procession—The Curtain Falls.
-
-
-I don’t like Inauguration day, but I hope you do, or will, when I have
-told you what a gala day it is to many—to all who stay at home, and
-catch the splendor which it sheds, through lines of printer’s ink.
-
-Surely, there is something inspiriting and uplifting in the sight of
-massed humanity, in throbbing drums and soaring music, in waving pennons
-and flashing lances, all laden with heroic memories, all bristling with
-intelligence and the conscious power of human freedom; but, in our
-climate, and at the inauguration season of the year, enthusiasm and
-patriotism demand a fearful price in nerve, muscle, and human endurance.
-If you doubt it, think of the West Point Cadets—those young sons of war,
-inured to martial training—who sank to the pavements in the ranks, at
-the last inauguration of President Grant, overcome, and insensible with
-the bitter cold which chilled and benumbed even the warm currents of
-their strong young hearts. Think of the babies who shuddered and cried
-in their mothers’ arms, who _would_ see the sight, if baby died!
-
-No less the second inaugural procession of President Grant transcended,
-in civic and military splendor, any sight seen in Washington since the
-great review when the boys in blue, fresh from the victory of bloody
-battle-fields, broke their backs and skinned their noses, in the June
-sun of 1865, for the sake of shouting thousands who came hither to
-behold them. Oh what a sight was that! when the bronzed and haggard, and
-aged-in-youth faces of the boys before us, made our hearts weep afresh
-at the thought of the upturned faces of the boys left behind—some in the
-cruel wilderness, some in half dug graves on solitary hill-sides, and
-lonely plains—all left behind forever, for freedom’s sake. Who that knew
-old Washington can forget it? This is another Washington. But here they
-come! Safe from cold and wind, thanks to—I look up. From this window, on
-Fifteenth street, you can see Pennsylvania avenue past the Treasury
-building, (whose marble steps are boarded in from the advancing people,)
-to the Executive Mansion, glittering white through the leafless trees
-just beyond. Opposite is Lafayette square, the prettiest little park of
-its size in the United States. Above, you see the towering mansard of
-Corcoran’s building, “Devoted to Art,” and just this side, the lofty
-brown front of the Freedman’s Savings Bank. The avenue opens before
-you—a broad, straight vista, with garlands of flags, of every nation and
-hue, flung across from roof to roof. Above glitters an absolutely
-cloudless sky, dazzlingly blue, and pitilessly cold. The very
-tree-boughs swing like crystals glittering and freezing in the sun. The
-air seems full of rushing fiends, or rushing locomotives running into
-each other with hideous shrieks, whichever you please (on the whole, I
-prefer locomotives, being fresher). Your imagination need not be Dantean
-to make you feel that there is a dreadful battle going on in the air,
-above you and about you. The imps come down and seize an old man’s hat,
-and fly off with a woman’s veil, and blow a little boy into a cellar.
-The bigger air-warriors, intent on bigger spoil, sweep down banners,
-swoop off with awnings, concentrate their forces into swirling cyclones
-in the middle of the streets, and bang away at plate-glass windows till
-they prance in their sockets.
-
-Before such unfriendly and tricksy foes, through the biting air, comes
-the great procession. First, a battalion of mounted police; then West
-Point, with its band and drum-major. Not a sprite of the air has caught
-the baton of its drum-major. Not a sting of zero, has stiffened that
-fantastic arm as he lifts and swings the symbol of his foolishness. He
-is as inimitable in the bleak and dusty street as when I saw him last,
-on the velvet sward of West Point, that delicious evening in October.
-Something utterly ridiculous to look at, _is_ refreshing, and anything
-more faultlessly ridiculous than the drum-major of West Point I never
-saw.
-
-I believe it is fashionable to find fault with West Point; but I
-wouldn’t give much for anybody who could see these boys and not admire
-them. They have their faults (their caste and their army exclusiveness
-sometimes reaches an absurd pitch) but look at them! What faces, what
-muscle, what manhood! Their movement is the perfect poetry of motion; a
-hundred men stepping as one. What marching, and at what odds! They are
-so pitilessly dressed! Thousands of men come behind, warmly muffled; but
-the West Point Cadets have on their new uniforms, single jackets. More
-than one will receive through it the seeds of death this morning. What
-wonder, that two while standing in line sank insensible with the cold
-not an hour ago. But, dear me! to think that more than one of them
-should be taken for a “nigger!” The colored Cadet is whiter than a dozen
-of his class-mates, and has straight hair.
-
-In the distance rises, wave on wave, a glittering sea of helmets;
-bayonets flash, plumes wave, bands play; all tell one story—the love of
-military pomp and parade, the pride and patriotism which brings these
-soldiers back to celebrate the second inauguration of their chief; and
-at what cost of suffering to many of them. What cold and hunger, and
-delay on the way, and now! what nerve and will it takes to march in a
-wind like this!
-
-After West Point comes Annapolis. Pretty “Middies,” young and slender,
-in their suits of dark blue! As a body, they are younger than the West
-Pointers, and slighter. Nor can any comparison be drawn between their
-marching, for the Middies drag their howitzers. They look true sons of
-their class; and for intelligence, chivalric manners, and gentle
-manhood, the true officer of the American navy is unsurpassed.
-
-The Midshipmen are followed by the famous United States Marine Corps,
-then the Old Guard of New York with Dodworth’s band, the Washington
-Light Infantry, the Corcoran Zouaves, the Washington Grenadiers, the St.
-Louis National Guard. The Philadelphia City Troop, in navy-blue jackets,
-tight knee-breeches, white braid trimming, high boots, bearskin helmets
-with silver mountings—the oldest regiment in the United States, two
-years older than the government, organized in 1774, and furnished men to
-every war of this country since. It was in the battles of Trenton and
-Princeton, in the Revolutionary War, and has in its armory a letter from
-General Washington thanking the regiment for its services.
-
-Now, the President’s mounted guard, in dark blue, yellow-trimmed
-uniform, regulation-hat and black feathers. Now, the President in open
-barouche, drawn by four horses, with the Senate Committee, Senators
-Cragin, Logan and Bayard. The President looks decidedly cooler than
-usual, and less indifferent; at least he has just lifted his hat to the
-shouting crowd in the street, which requires an impulse of self-denial
-this morning.
-
-Now come the Boston National Lancers. They have left their milk-white
-steeds there, and to their chagrin, no doubt, are mounted on sorry
-Virginian roans instead,—old road and car horses, who act dazed and daft
-under their light unwonted burdens. The Lancers are the oldest cavalry
-regiment of Massachusetts, organized in 1836, under Governor Edward
-Everett. This dashing looking squadron, which has the reputation of
-being one of the most perfect military organizations of the United
-States, is dressed in scarlet cloth coats, faced with a light blue and
-trimmed with gold lace, sky-blue pants with yellow stripes on sides,
-Polish dragoon cap, gold trimmings, flowing white feathers and
-_aiguillette_, cavalry boots with patent leather tops, white belts and
-shoulder straps; red epaulettes, with blue trimmings for the privates,
-and gold for the officers, and armed with cavalry sabre and lance, on
-which is appended a small red flag.
-
-The Albany Burgess Corps, another famous regiment, led by Capt. Henry B.
-Beecher, son of the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, make a splendid appearance.
-They are uniformed in scarlet coats, trimmed with white, light blue
-pants, buff stripe, and bearskin shakoes, with gold clasp—similar to the
-celebrated English Coldstream Guards.
-
-But we shall not reach the capitol till next week, unless we leave the
-rest of this splendid procession,—the “orphans of soldiers and sailors,”
-the burnished and flower-garlanded fire-engines, the brave firemen,
-black and white, and the civic societies. The strangers who rushed on to
-inauguration, swarm the galleries till they overflow as they did on
-_Credit Mobilier_ days. Generals Sherman, and Sheridan and Admiral
-Porter; the first tall and red; the second, little, round, red and
-bullet-headed; the third, tall, straight and black, are all being
-intently gazed at.
-
-The Diplomatic Corps enter the chamber by the main entrance, led by
-Blacque Bey, the dean of the Corps, a tall, dark, gray-haired, handsome
-man, wearing scarlet fez and full Turkish court regalia; next, the
-English Minister, Sir Edward Thornton, a white-haired, ruddy-faced,
-black-eyed, shrewd-looking gentleman; next, the Peruvian Minister,
-Colonel Freerye, followed by the Italian and French Ministers, with all
-the representatives of foreign governments, in order of seniority—over
-fifty ministers, secretaries and _attachés_ in full uniform, excepting
-Mr. Mori, Minister from Japan, in citizen’s dress. Just now Mr. Sumner
-appears, for the first time in months. He looks pale, and shows the
-traces of the acute suffering through which he has passed. His
-appearance creates a buzz on floor and in gallery, and many senators go
-over to him and exchange friendly greetings. Now the Supreme Court
-appear, in their robes of office, kicking them high up behind, as usual,
-and take their seats in front of the Vice-President’s desk. At fifteen
-minutes to twelve o’clock, Vice-President elect Wilson, escorted by
-Senators Cragin, Logan, and Bayard, comes down the centre aisle and
-takes his seat at the right of Vice-President Colfax.
-
-At three minutes before twelve, the President appears, leaning on the
-arm of Senator Cragin, followed by Logan and Bayard, and takes the seat
-assigned him, in front of the Secretary’s table. A deep hush falls on
-the throng, as if something awful were about to happen. It’s a sort of
-Judgment-Day atmosphere, yet nothing more terrific follows than the
-pleasant voice of Vice-President Colfax, beginning the words of his
-valedictory. (My! I forgot to say that the dying Congress has come to
-life again, and is comfortably, and perforce quietly seated between the
-Senate and Diplomatic Corps.) Now comes the new Vice-President’s little
-speech. Then the oaths of office, the swearing in of new senators, the
-proclamation of the President convening an extra session of the Senate,
-to begin this minute, when all start for the back door—no, it’s the
-front door of the Capitol, the Supreme Court leading, kicking up their
-gowns worse than usual.
-
-On the eastern portico, what do we see? Below, a vast mass of human
-beings, line on line of soldiers—cavalry, artillery and infantry; a line
-of battle flags at the base of the steps—shot-riddled, battle-torn, all
-shuddering or numb in the freezing air. Before us, a little gentleman
-sits down in a big chair—Washington’s inaugural chair, we are told. (Oh!
-no, we’re not at all sentimental.)
-
-A big gentleman, the Chief Justice, who has most unaccountably fringed
-out in a long grey beard and a muffling moustache, holds forth with
-solemnity a big Bible. The little gentleman kisses it—kisses these words
-from the eleventh chapter of Isaiah:
-
- “‘And the spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom
- and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of
- knowledge and of the fear of the Lord.
-
- “‘And shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord;
- and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove
- after the hearing of his ears.’
-
-Then he rises, and, with manuscript in his hands, begins to “battle with
-the breeze,” and to read his inaugural, which nobody hears. Behind him
-sits his wife and daughter, the ladies of the Cabinet, the Diplomatic
-Corps. What a compound of the ornamental and comfortable? Yet nobody is
-comfortable—not here. We can catch no word through the outbearing wind,
-yet know that for the second time Ulysses S. Grant has sworn to the oath
-of office, according to the constitution, and for four more years is
-made President of the United States. It seems but yesterday we saw a
-loftier head, a sadder face, bowed above that book, within one little
-month of its eternity; when, amid the booming of cannon and the huzzas
-of the people, Abraham Lincoln for the second time was pronounced the
-people’s President, and by the same lips which now utter the same words
-for another, a happier, a more fortunate man.
-
-Now the carnival of salute; the Middies fire their howitzers,
-thirty-seven guns; the Second Artillery fire twenty-one salvos; the
-Firemen ring the bells of their engines; ten thousand men warm their
-hands with hat swinging, and make their throats sore with shouting. Amid
-all, the multitude and the procession surge back towards the Executive
-Mansion. Between the latter and Lafayette square, the review, the return
-march, the military pageant culminates. The President, with lady
-friends, enters the pavilion built for the purpose, and the troops march
-by, encircling two solid squares; the West Point Cadets appear below
-Corcoran’s building, marching downward, as the magnificent New York
-Regiment—a thousand men—just arrived after an all night’s freezing
-delay, have reached Fifteenth street, marching up. The entire body of
-soldiery march and mass, till as far as the eyes can reach through the
-glittering sunshine, one only sees gleaming helmets, flashing bayonets,
-glancing sabers, the Cadets on double quick, the Middies firing their
-howitzers, officers displaying fine horses and uniforms, drum-majors
-tossing their batons, bands playing, and cannon thundering.
-
-Amid all these the four horses dashing before the Presidential barouche,
-bear the President to the Executive door, which now mercifully shuts
-them from our sight.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
- A PEEP AT AN INAUGURATION BALL.
-
-How Sixty Thousand Dollars were Spent—Something wrong: “’Twas ever
- Thus”—Recollection of another Festival—How “the dust” was Raised—A
- Fine Opportunity for a Few Naughty Words—Lost Jewels—The Colored
- Folks in a Fix—Overpowered by Numbers—Six Thousand People Clamoring
- for their Clothes!—“Promiscuous” Property—A Magnificent
- “Grab”—Weeping on Window-ledges—Left Desolate—Walking under
- Difficulties—The Exploits of Two Old Gentlemen—Horace Greeley Loses
- his Old White Hat—He says Naughty Words of Washington—Seeking the
- Lost—Still Cherished by Memory—Some People Remind General
- Chipman—“Regardless of Expense”—A Ball-Room Built of Wooden Laths
- and Muslin—A Little Too Cold—Gay Decorations—How “Delicate” Women
- can Endure the Cold—Modesty in Scanty Garments—The President
- Frozen—The “Cherubs, Perched up Aloft,” Refuse to Sing—On the
- Presidential Platform—Ladies of Distinction—Half-frozen
- Beauties—“They did not Make a Pretty Picture”—Why and Wherefore?—A
- Protest against “Shams”—A Stolid Tanner who Fought his Way.
-
-
-Untold time, and trouble, and sixty thousand dollars were expended on
-the last inauguration ball building, and yet there was something the
-matter with the inaugural ball. There is always something the matter
-with every inauguration ball.
-
-When I wish to think of a spot especially suggestive of torments, I
-think of an inauguration ball. There was the one before the last, held
-in the Treasury Building. The air throughout the entire building was
-perforated with a fine dust ground till you felt that you were taking in
-with every breath a myriad homœopathic doses of desiccated
-grindstone. The agonies of that ball can never be written. There are
-mortals dead in their grave because of it. There are mortals who still
-curse, and swear, and sigh at the thought of it. There are diamonds, and
-pearls, and precious garments that are not to their owners because of
-it. The scenes in those cloak and hat rooms can never be forgotten by
-any who witnessed them. The colored messengers, called from their posts
-in the Treasury to do duty in these rooms, received hats and wraps with
-perfect facility, and tucked them in loop-holes as it happened. But to
-give them back, each to its owner, that was impossible. Not half of them
-could read numbers, and those who could soon grew bewildered,
-overpowered, ill-tempered and impertinent under the hosts that advanced
-upon them for cloaks and hats.
-
-Picture it! Six or more thousand people clamoring for their clothes! In
-the end they were all tumbled out “promiscuous” on the floor. Then came
-the siege! Few seized their own, but many snatched other people’s
-garments—anything, something, to protect them from the pitiless morning,
-whose wind came down like the bite of death. Delicate women, too
-sensitive to take the property of others, crouched in corners, and wept
-on window ledges; and there the daylight found them. Carriages, also,
-had fled out of the scourging blast, and the men and women who emerged
-from the marble halls, with very little to wear, found that they must
-“foot it” to their habitations. One gentleman walked to Capitol Hill,
-nearly two miles, in dancing pumps and bare-headed; another performed
-the same exploit, wrapped in a lady’s sontag.
-
-Poor Horace Greeley, after expending his wrath on the stairs and cursing
-Washington anew as a place that should be immediately blotted out of the
-universe, strode to his hotel hatless. The next day and the next week
-were consumed by people searching for their lost clothes, and General
-Chipman says that he still receives letters demanding articles lost at
-that inauguration ball.
-
-Well, our latest brought discomfort, and discomfiture of another sort.
-Neither money, time nor labor were stinted in this leviathan, that still
-lifts up its broken and propped up back in Judiciary square. The
-building was 350 feet long. The ball-room 300 by 100 feet. All this was
-temporary, built of light boards, lined with lighter muslin. You might
-as well have attempted to have warmed Pennsylvania avenue as such a
-place on such a night. Twenty-four hours before the ball the wind-devils
-went at it. If a host from the pit had received full power to move and
-dismember it, it could scarcely look more forlorn than it did one Monday
-morning. They had sat on its spine in one place till it curved in,
-punched it up in another till it was hunchbacked. They had inflated its
-sides till they swelled out like an inflated balloon, while the air was
-black with the tar-rags, seaming its roof, which flying imps were
-carrying up to high heaven.
-
-No less the official report said of the inside: “The mighty American
-Eagle spreads his wings above the President’s platform. He has
-suspended, from his pinions, streamers one hundred feet in length,
-caught up on either side by coats of arms. The circumference of this
-vast design is one hundred and eighty feet. The President’s reception
-platform is sixty feet long, and thirty feet wide. Twelve pilasters
-support alternate gold-figured, red and blue stands, on which are pots
-of blooming flowers. The platform and steps are richly carpeted. In the
-rear of the balcony, are immense festoons of flags, banners, shields,
-radiating from a huge illuminated star of gas-lights.”
-
-What were all those white and rosy walls of cambric, to the
-all-pervading polar wave that froze sailors’ fingers, and struck West
-Point Cadets to the pavements, in congestive chills, at noonday? Why,
-they were nothing but an immense sieve, to strain that same polar wave
-through on to the persons of delicate (?) women, who, without money, and
-without price, for the sake of dubious admiration and commend, in
-promiscuous assemblies, outvie Lydia Thompson in paucity of attire.
-
-But the ball. My intention was to say, that the President was so near
-frozen in the day-time, he was not sufficiently thawed out to appear
-under that spreading eagle, until half-past eleven o’clock, when the
-north wind swooped in from behind, and he congealed again immediately.
-The President’s platform was at the north end, and all the muslin
-splendors of the presidential dressing and waiting-room could not, and
-did not, warm that polar wave. The thousands of canary-birds perched
-aloft, who were expected to burst into simultaneous song at the sight of
-him, and to trill innumerable preludes in honor of Miss Nelly, instead,
-poor wretches, had, one and all, gone to bed, with their toes tucked in
-their feathers, and their bills buried in their breasts, in dumb effort
-to keep them from freezing. Not a canary-bird sang. No, they were as
-paralyzed with cold as the bipeds below.
-
-On the presidential platform, the President and Mrs. Grant sat, the
-central figures. A little in the rear, sat Mrs. Fish—stately, lovely,
-and serene as ever; and just behind her, the Secretary of State. Next,
-were Mrs. Boutwell and Miss Boutwell, and the Secretary of the Treasury;
-then came, dream-like, Mrs. Creswell, handsome Mrs. Williams, and
-motherly Mrs. Delano. Ellen Grant stood beside her mother, and Edith
-Fish hovered beside her’s—both winsome and unaffected girls, though the
-girlish grace of the latter shows, already, the fine intellectual
-quality of her mother. The Governor of the District, with his wife and
-daughter, and numerous other officials, filled the platform.
-
-Back of the Cabinet stood the Foreign Ministers, bereft of their court
-attire, but glittering with decorations. Tall Lady Thornton bent like a
-reed in the blast; and Madame Flores, the beautiful young wife of the
-Minister from Equador, glowed in her warm rich beauty, even at zero.
-Alas! that all those wondrous tints of blue and gold, of royal purple
-and emerald, of lavender and rose, all the gleam of those diamonds, all
-the show of necks and arms, which was to have made the glory of this
-“court circle,” alas! that they were all held in eclipse, by layers on
-layers of wrappings, till, at a little distance, the whole platform
-seemed to be filled with a crowd of animated mummies, set upright, whose
-motions were as spasmodic and jerky as those of Mrs. Jarley’s wax works.
-It was very sensible—the only refuge from certain death—that all those
-necks and arms, diamonds, pearls, velvets and satins, should hide away
-under ermine capes, cloaks and shawls; but, lumped in aggregate, they
-did not make a pretty picture (the wraps, I mean). Indeed, the polar
-wave submerged the presidential platform, and made anything but a
-picturesque success. And how unlucky, when for the first time in the
-history of inauguration balls, there was a “cubby” for every hat and
-wrap, that every man and woman should be obliged to keep them on.
-
-But why a “presidential platform,” and why a private presidential
-“supper room” at an inauguration ball? Both are vulgarly pretentious.
-Both are preposterous, in the representatives of a republican people, in
-a national assembly. I am not a universal leveller. I respect the
-inevitable distinctions begotten of personal taste and condition. I make
-this remark to add a little force to my protest against meretricious,
-and fictitious pretence and shams. The President, as an individual, is
-not under the slightest obligation to invite anybody that he does not
-want, to his private dinner table. But when the President, _as_ the
-President, comes into the presence of a promiscuous assembly of the
-people, through whose gift he holds all the honor he possesses,—a
-citizen uplifted by citizens to the chief magistracy of their
-government, how false to republican fact is the feeling that perches him
-up, and hedges him about, with a mock heroic exclusiveness, as if he
-were a king, or demi-god, instead of a stolid tanner, who fought his way
-to place and power, conferred on him by a nation of stavers and fighters
-like himself.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
- THE UNITED STATES TREASURY—ITS HISTORY.
-
-The Responsibilities and Duties of the Secretary of the Treasury—“The
- Most Remarkable Man of His Time”—Three Extraordinary Men—Hamilton
- Makes an Honest Proposal—How to Pay the National Debt—The New
- Secretary at Work—Laying the Foundation of Financial Operations—The
- Mint at Philadelphia—A Little Personal Abuse—The Secretary Borrows
- Twenty Dollars—Modern Greediness—The Genius Becomes a Lawyer—Burning
- of Records—Hunting for Blunders and Frauds—The Treasury
- Building—Treasury Notes go off Nicely—Mr. Crawford Under a Cloud—He
- Comes out Gloriously—A Little Variety—A Vision of Much Money—Fidgety
- Times—Lighting the Mariner on His Way—Old Debts Raked Up—Signs of
- the Times—Under Lincoln—S. P. Chase as Secretary—The National
- Currency Act—Enormous Increase of the National Debt—Facts and
- Figures—The Credit of the Government Sustained—President Grant’s
- Rule—George S. Boutwell made Secretary—Great Expectations—Mr.
- Boutwell’s Labors, Policy and Success—The Great and Growing
- Prosperity of the Nation.
-
-
-After the Declaration of Independence, the first thing that the
-Continental Congress did was to organize a Treasury Department for the
-new government of the colonies.
-
-[Illustration: UNITED STATES TREASURY.—WASHINGTON.]
-
-Michael Hilligas and George Clymer were appointed Joint-Treasurers of
-the United Colonies. They were to reside in Philadelphia, and to receive
-each a salary of five hundred dollars the first year, and to give bonds
-in the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. The second year their salary
-was raised to eight hundred dollars each. In a short time George Clymer
-was sent to Congress as a delegate from Pennsylvania, and Michael
-Hilligas remained Treasurer for the Colonies to the close of the
-Revolution.
-
-In six months after the resignation of Mr. Clymer, a committee of five
-persons was appointed to assist him to superintend the small Treasury.
-Three months after, an office was created in which to keep the Treasury
-accounts. That office was an itinerant, like Congress, following it to
-whatever place it assembled. Acts were passed for the establishment of a
-National Mint. Alas! the poor Continentals had no precious ore to coin,
-and never struck off a dollar or cent. An Auditor General’s office was
-organized, and John Gibson appointed, with an annual salary of one
-thousand and sixty-six dollars and sixty-seven cents.
-
-The office of Comptroller of the Treasury was created November 3, 1778,
-and Jonathan Trumbull, Jr., appointed, with a salary of four thousand
-dollars. Money was painfully scarce. That made it the more imperative
-that this poor little empty Treasury should have some supreme
-responsible head who, by the adroit magic of financial genius, should
-create a way to fill it, and by some way provide cash for the
-unprovided-for emergencies which were perpetually imminent. Thus in
-September, 1781, Congress repealed the act appointing five
-Commissioners, and in their stead appointed a single supreme
-“Superintendent of Finance.”
-
-The first high functionary of the Treasury was Robert Morris, of
-Philadelphia. He had already distinguished himself for his remarkable
-financial talents as a merchant, and for his devoted patriotism.
-Besides, he was the intimate friend and confidential adviser of
-Washington. He was the man for the place and the hour. He kept the
-credit of the struggling Colonies afloat in their direst moment. He gave
-from his private fortune without stint, and added thereto the
-contributions of the infant nation. When even Washington was ready to
-give up in despair, because he had no money to pay his troops, and the
-troops were ready to surrender and disband from sheer misery and
-suffering, Robert Morris applied to “the purser of our allies, the
-French,” and saved the perishing army and the struggling republic. He
-proved then, what has been proved so conspicuously since during a still
-greater struggle, that he who preserves the credit of his country in the
-hour of its peril is as truly a patriot as he who dies for her sake on
-the battle-field.
-
-Notwithstanding his benefactions, at the close of the Revolution, the
-jealousy among foremost men was so great, it was found to be impossible
-to give to one man the precedence and power in so responsible a place.
-The claims of the three contending sections were acknowledged by the
-appointment of three Commissioners: one from the Eastern, one from the
-Middle, and one from the Southern districts, in the persons of Samuel
-Osgood, Walter Livingston and Arthur Lee. Robert Morris became a member
-of the Convention which framed the Constitution of the United States,
-and concluded his public services to his country as United States
-Senator.
-
-At the end of three years, the administration of the three Commissioners
-of Finance had proved so inharmonious and unsuccessful that the country
-was nearly bankrupt, and the Union of States ready to break into ruins,
-for lack of money to pay its expenses and hold it together.
-
-The Constitution of the United States went into effect March 4, 1789,
-and Congress went into its first session in the City of New York. Two
-subjects moved it to its depths at once—the impending bankruptcy of the
-country, and the location of the National Capital. The prevention of the
-first depended upon the establishment of the latter. The Nation was
-impoverished by a long and harassing war, and depressed by an enormous
-debt which that war had caused. The Nation possessed no statistics
-indicating the resources of the country, and there was no department
-organized through which fiscal operations could be carried on.
-
-The strife between the Northern and Southern States, concerning the
-location of the Capital, made harmonious financial legislation
-impossible during the opening session of the first Congress. But the
-committee appointed to organize a system for the collection of the
-revenue, were equal to its accomplishment. After four months’
-deliberation, July 31, 1789, the first important act connected with the
-Treasury Department was passed, entitled “An act to regulate the
-collection of the duties imposed by law on the tonnage of ships or
-vessels, and on goods, wares and merchandise.” September 2, 1789, the
-fundamental act establishing the Treasury Department was enrolled as a
-whole, and passed.
-
-The new Department consisted of a Secretary of the Treasury, a
-Comptroller, an Auditor, a Treasurer, a Registrar, and an assistant to
-the Secretary of the Treasury. It was decided that the settlement of all
-public accounts should be in the Treasury Department, making the
-Secretary of the Treasury the head of the Fiscal Department of the
-Government, placing him, however, under the authority and requirements
-of either House of Congress. He superintends the collection and
-disbursement of the revenue of the United States, from every source
-derived, except that of the Post Office. He receives the returns of the
-revenue in general, and reports to Congress all plans of finance, and
-the final results of his own official action, and that of his
-subordinates.
-
-The first popular candidate for the position of chief of the Treasury
-Department was Oliver Wolcott, a son of a signer of the Declaration of
-Independence, and his own services to his country, both under the
-Colonial Government and the Union, were acknowledged to have been
-important. Meanwhile Washington, who was more anxious to find out how he
-was to get money to pay the public debt, than to find a man to pay it,
-invited his intimate and tried friend, Robert Morris, to give him the
-benefit of his advice. In one of their interviews, the great chief
-groaned out: “What is to be done with this heavy national debt?” “There
-is but one man,” said the astute financier, “who can help you, and that
-man is Alexander Hamilton. I am glad that you have given me the
-opportunity to disclose the extent of the obligation I am under to him.”
-
-In ten days after the establishment of the Treasury Department,
-Alexander Hamilton was appointed its chief. He was still in the flower
-of his youth, but had already proved himself, not only in practical
-action, but in the rarest gifts of pure intellect, to be the most
-versatile and remarkable man of his time. Of good birth, yet, at twelve
-years of age, dependent upon his own exertions for support, he bore, at
-that tender age, the entire responsibility of a large shipping house. He
-seemed endowed with the quality of intellect which amounts to
-inspiration—unerring in perception, sure of success. The boy-manager of
-the shipping house earned his bread in the day time, and in the night
-wrote articles on commercial matters, equally remarkable for their
-comprehensiveness and practical knowledge. A native of St. Croix, West
-Indies, at fourteen he came to the United States; at eighteen, entered
-Kings, now Columbia College, where he at once attracted attention by his
-brilliant essays on political subjects. At the beginning of the
-Revolution, he raised and took command of a company of artillery. The
-same transcendent intuition which made him supreme as a financier, made
-him remarkable as a soldier. In Washington’s first interview with him,
-he made him his _aide-de-camp_, and through the entire Revolutionary
-war, he was called “the right arm” of the Commander-in-chief.
-
-At the close of the war he returned to New York, and stepped at once to
-the very front of his profession. A more remarkable and interesting
-group of men probably never discussed and decided the fate of a nation,
-than Washington, Morris, and Hamilton. Morris, wise, experienced,
-analytic; Washington, grave, thoughtful, far-seeing, slow to invent, but
-ready to comprehend, and quick to follow the counsel which his judgment
-approved; Hamilton, young, impetuous, impassioned, prophetic, yet
-practical; in comprehension and gifts of creation, the supreme of the
-three. Never was a nation more blessed than this, in the united quality
-of the men who decided its financial destiny.
-
-The first official act of Hamilton, as Secretary of the Treasury, was to
-recommend that the domestic and foreign war debt be paid, dollar for
-dollar. When the paper containing this recommendation was read before
-Congress, it thought that the new Secretary of the Treasury had gone
-mad. How was a nation of less than four millions of people to
-voluntarily assume a debt of seventy-five millions of dollars! Hamilton
-thought that this aggregated debt, created for the support of the
-national cause, should be assumed by the individual States; the
-outstanding Continental money to be funded at the rate of one dollar in
-specie for each hundred in paper, and the whole united to make the
-national resources available for the security of the public creditors.
-
-The long strife in Congress over this great fundamental financial
-question is a matter of history. There appeared to be no national
-resources to meet such a demand. There was not money enough in the
-Treasury to pay current expenses, to say nothing of paying a debt of
-tens of millions. Probably no body of legislators in the world ever
-represented wisdom, statesmanship, pertinacity of opinion so tried in
-the fiery crucible of war, poverty and suffering, as did this first
-Congress; yet it was left to the untried minister of finance of
-thirty-three to save the national credit against mighty odds, and to
-foresee and to foretell the future resources of a vast, consolidated
-people. This inspiration of enthusiasm and faith, combined with
-practical administrative force, and a broad financial policy, averted
-the horrors of national bankruptcy, preserved the credit of the
-government, and gave to the sufferings of Valley Forge and the surrender
-at Yorktown their final fruition.
-
-The young financier, bearing his burden alone, seemed to hold in himself
-the guarantee of future triumph. He gave to the most despairing a
-security of success when they remembered that, at the age of nineteen,
-this same young prophet and patriot was the “right hand” of Washington.
-
-The long struggle ended in the adoption of Hamilton’s great financial
-scheme of funding the domestic debt.
-
-When the government was removed to Philadelphia, the Treasury was
-established in a plain building in Arch street, two doors east from
-Sixth. Here Morris, Hamilton and Washington were united in the closest
-bonds of personal friendship. Then followed, in rapid succession, those
-great state-papers on finance from Hamilton, whose embodiment into laws
-fixed the duties on all foreign productions, and taxed with just
-distinction the home luxuries and necessities of life. From these were
-evolved in gradual development the entire system of the Treasury
-Department of the United States. Time has proved how perfect were the
-plans which sprang without precedent from the brain of Alexander
-Hamilton.
-
-First, from his suggestions came the act which established the routine
-by which customs were to be collected. Then came the acts for the
-levying of taxes and the accumulation of the revenue. Then the
-imposition on ships and our commercial marine, foreign and domestic.
-Next, a bank was established for the depository of collected funds, and
-their distribution throughout the country. Then was needed the crown of
-the grand financial structure—a legalized institution for the coinage of
-gold and silver. To accomplish this great design, Hamilton recommended
-for the adoption of Congress the establishment of a mint for the
-purposes of national coinage, and the act was passed April 2, 1792,
-fixing the establishment at the then seat of government, Philadelphia,
-from whence, through later legislation, it has never been transferred.
-
-While consuming himself for his country, Hamilton was harassed by the
-abuse of personal and political enemies, and suffering for the adequate
-means to support his family. While building up the financial system
-which was to redeem his country, the state of his own finances may be
-judged by the following letter from him to a personal friend, dated
-September 30, 1791:
-
- “DEAR SIR:—If you can conveniently let me have twenty dollars for a
- few days, send it by bearer.
-
- A. H.”
-
-The amount of personal toil he performed for the government was
-enormous. Talleyrand, who was at this time a refugee in Philadelphia,
-after his return to France, spoke with admiring enthusiasm of the young
-American patriot. In speaking of his experience in America, he once
-said:
-
- “I have seen in that country one of the wonders of the world—a man,
- who has made the future of the Nation, laboring all night to support
- his family.”
-
-Nobody believes that any servant of his country should be compelled to
-this, to-day, yet had not long-sufficed selfishness made them insensible
-to it, the over-greedy legislator of to-day might learn from the example
-of Alexander Hamilton a salutary lesson.
-
-After six years of personal service in the Treasury, amid personal and
-political opposition, greater than has ever assailed any one statesman;
-after seeing his financial system a part of the governmental policy of
-his country, Hamilton resigned his office, and resumed the practice of
-law in the city of New York.
-
-Established in that day of small things, in human judgment it seems
-impossible that the brain of one man could have devised a monetary
-system that would anticipate all the varied, conflicting and unexpected
-demands of a country as large and swiftly developed as ours. Yet, with
-slight modifications, the system of Hamilton has met all exigencies,
-saved the national credit, and assured the national prosperity through
-the deepest trials. It paid the national debt of the Revolution, and of
-1812, and in the War of the Rebellion, when the governmental expenses of
-a single day were more than the national income for a whole year in
-Hamilton’s time, the foresight and genius of this man of thirty-three
-had suggested ways for the vast accumulation and disbursement.
-Personally, Hamilton was under middle size, slight, well-proportioned,
-erect and graceful. His complexion was white and pink, his features
-mobile, his expression vivacious, his voice musical, his manner cordial,
-his entire appearance attractive and refined.
-
-Alexander Hamilton was succeeded by Oliver Wolcott, Jr., as Secretary of
-the Treasury. The great act of Mr. Wolcott’s administration was the
-revision and completion of the laws relative to the collection of the
-revenue. He carried out, through his administration, the great
-fundamental principles of national finance established by Hamilton, and
-was re-appointed by John Adams.
-
-When, in 1800, the Treasury Department performed its six days’ journey
-from Philadelphia to Washington, it went into a plain, three-story
-building, facing Fifteenth street, erected for the Treasury. It was near
-the unfinished White House, and, like all the first Federal buildings,
-plain and small. It was so small, when first taken possession of, that
-it did not even afford sufficient room for the clerical force, then
-fifty in number. Its cramped space made it necessary to deposit all the
-official records brought from Philadelphia in a house known as Sears’
-store, and the records, which would now be invaluable, were all
-consumed.
-
-The first official act of the Treasury Department of national interest,
-dated at the national capital, directed that the Secretary should make
-an annual report to Congress of the state of the finances of the nation,
-containing estimates of the public revenue and expenditure, as well as
-plans for improving and increasing the revenues. Hamilton had done this
-voluntarily, and his example, of a Cabinet officer making communications
-with Congress, was now made imperative by the action of law. May 10,
-1800, Samuel Dexter, another signer of the Declaration of Independence,
-was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in place of Oliver Wolcott. On
-the election of Jefferson, the foe of the Hamiltonian financial policy,
-the Washingtonian era of the Federal Government ended, and Mr. Dexter
-found himself out of harmony with the Government. After the lapse of a
-year, President Jefferson set the precedent of removal, and, January 26,
-1802, appointed Albert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury.
-
-Albert Gallatin was born in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1761. After
-receiving a liberal education, he came to this country at the age of
-eighteen. He became a tutor in Harvard College, but removing to
-Philadelphia, then the national capital, rose so high in public esteem
-that in 1790, at the age of thirty, he was elected to Congress, and
-afterwards to the Senate. In this body, his reports on matters of
-finance attracted universal attention, and, as a result, he was made
-Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. President Jefferson, on
-handing him his commission, said: “Mr. Gallatin, your most important
-duty will be to examine the accounts, and all the records of your
-department, in order to discover the blunders and frauds of Hamilton,
-and to ascertain what changes will be required in the system. This is a
-most important duty, and will require all your industry and acuteness.
-To do it thoroughly, you may employ whatever extra service you require.”
-
-Gallatin was an ardent partisan of the President, and declares, himself,
-that he undertook his task of exposing Hamilton, and bringing his lofty
-head low, with great zest and thoroughness. But his hunt for “blunders”
-and venality merged soon into a labor of love. Upon his just and
-comprehensive mind, Hamilton’s perfect system, day by day, revealed
-itself. By the time he had mastered its details, and measured its
-completeness, he was filled with admiration. “In the honest enthusiasm
-of a truly great mind he went to Mr. Jefferson and said: ‘Mr. President,
-I have, as you directed, made a thorough examination of the books,
-accounts and correspondence of my department, from its commencement. I
-have found,’ said the conscientious Secretary, ‘the most perfect system
-ever formed. Any change under it would injure it.’ Hamilton made no
-blunders, committed no frauds; he did nothing wrong.”
-
-Albert Gallatin marked his administration by a series of reports
-regarding the best method of canceling the national debt, the proper
-policy of disposing of the public lands, and the legality and necessity
-of establishing a national bank. Thus, contrary to his original
-intention, he associated himself with Morris and Hamilton as one of the
-three founders of the financial policy of the nation.
-
-By the year 1804, the business of the Treasury had so increased, that an
-effort was made toward the erection of a building, to become the
-especial depository of the records. An idea may be given of the demands
-of the infant government and its notions of economy, in the facts that
-this vaunted fire-proof public building is much smaller than an
-unpretentious private dwelling of the present time, and that it cost
-less than the sum of twelve thousand dollars.
-
-Mr. Madison, on his accession to the Presidency, retained Mr. Gallatin
-at the head of the Treasury.
-
-On March 1, 1809, an act of Congress directed that all warrants drawn on
-the Treasury by the Secretaries of the different executive departments,
-should designate the appropriation to which they were charged.
-
-June 18, 1812, war was declared, and Congress was convened in special
-session, to consider the necessities of the Treasury. Out of the
-legislation which followed, came our present internal revenue laws. Mr.
-Gallatin, after having held his office longer than any of his
-predecessors, resigned, and went on a foreign mission. A period of
-extreme money depression succeeded his resignation. August 24, 1814, the
-British troops entered Washington, and, with the Capitol and other
-public buildings, burned the Treasury. The business of the Treasury, for
-a considerable time afterwards, was carried on in what was known as “the
-Seven Buildings,” in the western part of the city.
-
-George N. Campbell, of Tennessee, Mr. Gallatin’s successor, attempted to
-negotiate a loan of twenty-five millions of dollars, but failed, and
-resigned his office. The national credit was at its lowest ebb.
-
-When the need of a great man is absolute, Providence usually has one
-ready for the emergency. He appeared at this crisis, in the person of
-Alexander J. Dallas, of Pennsylvania. On entering upon his office, as
-head of the Treasury, he replied to the request of Congress, that he
-should suggest ways for the restoration of the public credit, in one of
-the most powerful documents extant in the archives of the Treasury. Mr.
-Dallas so inspired the faith of the capitalists of the country, that the
-national credit was at once restored. “The Treasury notes, issued on the
-universal opinion that they would be a drug in the market, rose to a
-premium.”
-
-Mr. Monroe made W. H. Crawford, of Georgia, Secretary of the Treasury.
-Under him, the routine of the Department was improved by the appointment
-of a second Comptroller and four additional Auditors. Charges of
-malfeasance were brought against him toward the close of his term of
-office. They were examined by a committee consisting of John Randolph,
-Edward Livingston, and Daniel Webster, who pronounced the charges false.
-President John Quincy Adams recalled Richard Rush, of Pennsylvania, then
-Minister to England, and made him Secretary of the Treasury.
-
-Under Andrew Jackson’s Presidency, the conservative management of the
-Treasury Department changed into “the anti-bank period.” His
-administration was marked by five different Secretaries, and a
-prevailing state of excitement. The first Secretary of the Treasury,
-under Jackson, was Samuel D. Ingham, of Pennsylvania, whose trust ended
-in a violent breaking up of the Cabinet. He was succeeded by William J.
-Doane, of Pennsylvania, who refused to remove the national deposits from
-the United States Bank, and was dethroned by Roger B. Taney, of
-Maryland. The Senate refused to confirm his appointment, and Levi
-Woodbury, of New Hampshire, was installed in the office, holding it to
-the end of Jackson’s administration.
-
-April 1, 1833, the Treasury Building was for the third time destroyed by
-fire, and a large amount of valuable public documents destroyed.
-Afterwards, the business of the Department was carried on in a row of
-brick buildings opposite Willard’s Hotel. At this time the “Agent of the
-Treasury,” was changed to Solicitor of the Treasury, and a sixth Auditor
-was created. Jackson’s administration closed with an “apparent plethora
-of money among the people, and the glorious consummation of paying off
-the national debt.”
-
-Mr. Woodbury continued at the head of the Treasury, under President Van
-Buren. It was his fate to be its director “in the times of unparalleled
-plenty, speculation and extravagance, and two years afterwards, to
-witness a pecuniary revulsion that had no precedent in financial
-history.” In 1837, financial ruin dismayed the Nation. Congress was
-convened by special proclamation, to devise ways and means to relieve
-the people. Specie payments were suspended, and all business involved in
-apparent ruin. Binding laws were passed, divorcing the Government from
-all banking institutions, and a new policy was created for the control
-of our national finances.
-
-Under Presidents Harrison and Tyler there were five Secretaries of the
-Treasury: Thomas Ewing, of Ohio; Walter Howard, of Pennsylvania; John C.
-Spencer, of New York, and George M. Beble, of Kentucky. President Polk
-made Robert J. Walker the head of the Treasury. He was known as “the
-apostle of free trade.” His administration was marked by the
-introduction of the present warehousing system, based upon English
-precedent; by his reciprocity system between Canada and the United
-States abolishing all customs and imports, and the establishment of an
-“Interior Department” upon the old overgrown Land Office, with a Cabinet
-officer to administer its affairs, under the title of Secretary of the
-Interior.
-
-The Secretary of the Treasury, under President Taylor, was William M.
-Meredith, of Pennsylvania; who was succeeded, under President Fillmore,
-by Thomas Corwin, of Ohio. Secretary Corwin established the present
-lighthouse department and wrote the instructions regarding
-light-vessels, beacons and buoys. This beneficent legislation gave over
-six hundred lights to protect the hitherto neglected mariner on his way.
-
-The Chief of the Treasury under President Pierce, was James Guthrie, of
-Kentucky. He is remembered as a strict and efficient officer, carrying
-out in minutiæ, the duties and laws of the department. He discovered
-outstanding balances against the Treasury, which, if collected, would
-more than pay the national debt. Of this sum he collected hundreds of
-millions into the Treasury, and raised the standard of efficiency in the
-Treasury service by demanding monthly, instead of quarterly reports,
-from all its _employés_.
-
-Three Secretaries of the Treasury served under James Buchanan—Howell
-Cobb, of Georgia; Philip F. Thomas, of Maryland; and John A. Dix, of New
-York. A monetary crisis, almost as severe as that of 1837, marked this
-administration. The throes of Secession shook the Union to its
-foundation, and the Secretaries of the Treasury, like all other public
-servants, were occupied with the “signs of the times,” the swiftly
-advancing portents of revolution, more than with the mere financial
-duties of the public Treasury.
-
-Abraham Lincoln began his troubled administration by the appointment of
-Salmon P. Chase, of Ohio, as Secretary of the Treasury. Never was man
-asked to help steer the ship of state through more overwhelming
-breakers. With the dissolution of the Union imminent, the national debt
-had increased to three times the amount it was at the close of the
-previous administration. The number of clerks which, in 1861, was three
-hundred and eighty-three, in 1864 was two thousand. Such a demand was
-without precedent, and arose from the immense labor of examining
-accounts, and of preparing and supervising the national currency and
-securities.
-
-The first important measure of Mr. Chase’s administration was the
-“Internal Revenue Act,” which, in four years, increased the income of
-the Government from forty-one millions to three hundred and nine
-millions. Next came the great “National Currency Act,” which, though
-severely criticised, and probably not free from defects, nevertheless
-established a paper currency of equal value in every part of the Union,
-and was, at least, in keeping with the principles of our Government, and
-freer from chances of corruption and abuse than any other system yet
-adopted. It met the awful demand of the hour, and offered the guarantee
-of redemption, rather than of loss and ruin.
-
-In a single month, the tax upon the income of the Treasury became
-stupendous. In one day, it paid out for quartermasters’ stores alone,
-forty-six millions of dollars—more than were needed to support the
-entire National Government during the first year of Washington’s
-administration. In four years, the public debt, from ninety millions,
-had grown to be two thousand six hundred millions—yet under this mighty
-demand, with two millions of its sons withdrawn from productive labor,
-the exports of the country were double what they had ever been before,
-and the credit of the Government of the United States day by day
-increased.
-
-When Mr. Chase was appointed Chief Justice by Mr. Lincoln, his high seat
-in the Treasury was taken by Hon. William Pitt Fessenden, whose brief
-career as Secretary of the Treasury was marked by a single State paper
-of great ability. He was succeeded by Hugh McCulloch, of Indiana, who
-dispensed the duties of his office creditably till the close of
-Johnson’s administration.
-
-President Grant, upon his accession to the Presidency, chose George S.
-Boutwell, of Massachusetts, to be Secretary of the Treasury. Mr.
-Boutwell had already served as Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and now
-on him devolved the huge task of reducing the high impost and revenue
-tax created by the war debt, and borne as a mighty burden by the people.
-He had to lighten the load on the people’s shoulders, and yet keep the
-national tax high enough to meet the interest, and reduce the amount of
-the national debt—in fine, he was expected to relieve the Nation, and to
-pay the national debt at the same time. A more conflicting demand never
-rested on a Financial Minister. How ably he met it, the “monthly
-statement” of the perpetual ebb of the war debt, with the constant
-legislation to reduce all revenue taxation to the luxuries of life, were
-ample proof.
-
-Before the election of Mr. Boutwell, as United States Senator from
-Massachusetts, to succeed Vice-President Henry Wilson, the President
-appointed Judge Richardson, Acting Assistant Secretary, to be Secretary
-of the Treasury. Judge Richardson stepped from comparative obscurity,
-and an opposite sphere of labor, to his present high official position.
-There are many who challenge his claim to it, and his fitness for it.
-Time may prove one, and disprove the other. As Secretary of the
-Treasury, his official record is yet to be made—until his administration
-has been marked by an act of national importance, it is too early to
-pronounce a verdict.
-
-In the statistics of the Treasury Department, we read the marvellous
-financial history of our country. In them we trace the material progress
-of the Nation from its beginning. In the accounts current business of
-the country, we learn that in the years 1793, ’94, ’95, ’96, the Nation
-imported productions valued at one hundred and seventy-four millions of
-dollars. In the years 1866, ’67, ’68, ’69, the United States exported
-values to the amount of nineteen hundred millions. The value between
-these sums marks the growth of population, territory, and material
-resources in the space of seventy years—surely, a narrow span in the
-life of a nation!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
- INSIDE THE TREASURY—THE HISTORY OF A DOLLAR.
-
-A Washington Tradition—“Old Hickory” Erects his Cane—“Put the Building
- Right Here”—Treasury Corner-Stone Laid—Robert Mills’ Discolored
- Colonnade—Where “Privileged Mortals” Work—A Very Costly
- Building—Rapid Extension of Business—Splendid Situation of the
- Building—The Workers Within—The Government Takes a Holiday—The
- Business of Three Thousand People—The Mysteries of the
- Treasury—Inside the Rooms—Mary Harris’s Revenge—The “Drones” in the
- Hive—Making Love in Office Hours—Flirtations in Public—A Vast Refuge
- for the Unfortunate—Two Classes of _Employés_—A List of Miserable
- Sinners—A Pitiful Ancient Dame—A _Protégé_ of President
- Lincoln—Women’s Work in the Treasury—The Bureau of Printing and
- Engraving—A very Hot Precinct—Rendering a Strict Account—Not a Cent
- Missing—The “Chief’s” Report—Dealing in Big Figures—The Story of a
- Paper Dollar—In the Upper Floor—The Busy Workers—Night Work—Where
- the Paper is Made—The “Localized Blue Fibre”—_The_ Obstacle to the
- Counterfeiter—The Automatic Register—Keeping Watch—The Counters and
- Examiners—Supplying the Bank Note Companies—“The American” and “The
- National”—An Armed Escort—No Incomplete Notes Possible—Varieties of
- Printing—The Contract with Adams’ Express—Printing the Notes and
- Currency—Internal Revenue Stamps—Thirty Young Ladies Count the
- Money—Manufacturing the Plates—The Engraving Division—“The Finest
- Engravers in the Country”—The Likeness of Somebody—Transferring a
- Portrait—“Men of Many Minds”—The Division of Labor—Delicate
- Operations—A Pressure of Five or Six Tons—The Plate
- Complete—“Re-entering” a Plate—An “Impression”—How Old Plates are
- Used up—A Close Inspection—Defying Imitation—The Geometric
- Lathe—Tracing “Lines of Beauty” for More than Forty Years.
-
-
-It is one of the traditions of Washington that Andrew Jackson decided
-the exact site of the present Treasury Building.
-
-After the third destruction by fire, in 1833, of the early Treasury
-Buildings, a great strife came up concerning the location of the new
-Treasury. Worn out with the claims of “rival factions,” it is said that
-President Jackson walked out a few rods from the White House one
-morning, and thrusting his cane into the ground, exclaimed: “Put the
-building right here!” This ended all disputes, and the end of the “old
-hero’s” cane marked the north-east corner of the present site of the
-Treasury of the United States.
-
-Though nearly approached by the Patent Office, the Treasury Building, in
-architectural splendor, ranks next to the Capitol. Its corner-stone was
-laid in 1834 by Levi Woodbury, then Secretary of the Treasury. The
-original building was designed by Robert C. Mills, whose long and
-discolored colonnade on Fifteenth street is still visible. It was built
-of the freestone brought from near Acquia Creek, Virginia, which has
-touched with premature dinginess too many of the Federal buildings of
-the Capital. But in the Treasury its long line of smut is lost in the
-marble splendor of the extensions. The extension of the building was
-authorized in 1835, and built from the designs of Thomas W. Walter. It
-embodies the most perfect Grecian architecture, adapted to modern uses.
-It surrounds a hollow square, on which its inner offices look out on
-green grass and cooling fountain through the summer heats. Instead of
-cooped-up cells, the lower stories of the Treasury are filled with airy
-apartments, in which privileged mortals serve their country and earn
-their bread and butter. The new Treasury is built of gleaming granite
-brought from Dix Island, on the coast of Maine.
-
-The walls of the extension are composed of pilasters, resting on a base
-which rises some twelve feet above the ground on the southern or lower
-side. Between the pilasters are _antæ_ or belt-courses, nobly moulded;
-the facings of the doors and windows bear mouldings in harmony. The
-southern, western and northern fronts present magnificent porticoes. Its
-lofty pillars are of the Ionic order, and the entire building is at last
-surmounted by a massive balustrade. The south wing was completed and
-occupied in 1860. The west wing was completed in 1863—the north in
-1867—the whole at a cost of $6,750,000. The exterior is four hundred and
-sixty-four feet by two hundred and sixty-four feet.
-
-The Treasury was begun and consummated on a truly magnificent scale, and
-with the expectation that it would meet every demand of its own branch
-of the public service for at least a century. Like every one of the
-public buildings, it is already too small to accommodate the
-over-crowded bureaus of its own departments, several of which, for want
-of room in the Treasury Building, already occupy other houses in
-different parts of the city; and yet there is not space left for those
-who remain. Before the year 1900, another Treasury Building as
-magnificent as the one now our pride, will be indispensable to the
-ever-increasing demand of the departments of the financial service.
-
-The Treasury borrowed its face from the Parthenon; and, as it turns it
-toward the Potomac this May morning, it is one of the fairest sites in
-Washington. From the southern portico we look across sloping tree-shaded
-meadows. Beyond, we see the shimmering river, with its girdle of green,
-and above, “the flush and frontage of the hills.” When flowers, and
-trees and soft lights shall have taken the place of all this glare—how
-beautiful it will be to the eyes of generations to come. But even now
-the bright grass, flower-parterres and lapsing fountains are pleasant to
-behold, while the southern front of the Treasury is an object upon which
-the eyes must always rest with a sense of satisfaction.
-
-The Capitol lords it over the east, but the Treasury reigns over the
-west end. To be sure, it stands upon the poorest make-believe of an
-Acropolis, but coming along Pennsylvania avenue we look up to its noble
-façade and fair Ionic columns gleaming before us, as a compensation for
-the poverty of beauty in the streets which we travel. The western
-windows overlook the grounds of the presidential mansion, now gay with
-flowers and dazzling with sunshine, their trees decked in the vivid
-foliage of a southern June-time.
-
-How many pairs of weary human eyes look up from their tasks within these
-walls, and, without knowing it, thank God for this fair outlook. The
-breeze-blown grass, the fragrant winds, the lavish light of these open
-windows—to dusty lips and tired eyes which take them in—are God’s own
-benedictions. Hundreds of such look up from their desks. Past the great
-fountain, tossing its diamonds below, past the sunny knolls and mimic
-mounds of newly-cut grass, above the bloom-burdened trees and all the
-tender verdure of early spring and summer, they see the windows of the
-presidential reception-room, whose doors, through all the winter months,
-are besieged by an army of office and favor seekers, but which are shut
-and silent and deserted now, while “the Government” drives among the
-hills or loiters by the sea.
-
-But I began to talk about the Treasury, and no matter how I wander for
-ever so many pages, I must come back to it again.
-
-It is easier to comprehend the outside than the inside of it. One might
-as well try to snatch up a city and portray it in a sitting, as even to
-outline the Treasury of the United States in a single chapter.
-
-It holds a metropolis within its walls. It affords daily employment to
-over three thousand persons, and thousands more daily throng its halls.
-Just a glimpse into this vast human hive makes us long for a Dickens to
-embody the romance and reveal the mysteries of the Treasury. The story
-of the Circumlocution Office and the Court of Chancery pale before the
-revelations and undreamed of human experiences which it holds. Before
-you, behind you, and on either side stretch out the great marble paved
-halls. Out of these open numberless rooms, whose shut doors stare
-blankly, or whose half-open blinds wink and blink at each other through
-the gleaming cross lights.
-
-Over these doors you read significant inscriptions, such as First
-Comptroller’s Office, First Auditor’s Office, etc. You ascend the great
-stairs and find other halls, such as those below, and like them lined on
-each side by doors. Over these you read, “Loan Branch,” “Redemption
-Branch,” “Office of the Register,” “Office of Secretary of the
-Treasury,” etc. Many of the open doors reveal to you large airy
-apartments filled with busy men and women. Many more show you narrow,
-one-windowed apartments, each containing a desk, or desks, with its
-scribe, or scribes.
-
-Here we see men who have grown gray, weak-limbed and wizened in those
-rooms beside those desks. They have grown to be as automatic as their
-pens, and as narrow as their rooms. Here also are thousands of men in
-their prime and in their youth representing every phase of character. In
-this hall, just by this door, Mary Harris watched for the man who had
-robbed and ruined her—and just here she shot him. Poor thing! With her
-blighted face she is a maniac, now in the Asylum across the river. These
-halls are as thronged as Broadway, and their denizens are as
-cosmopolitan. People of all nations and costumes come and go along their
-vast vistas.
-
-There are drones in this hive. These are office hours, yet here and
-there may be seen a young man and maiden whose in-door costume marks
-them as _employés_ of the Treasury, loitering in the shadow of pillar or
-alcove, lingering by stair or doorway, saying very pleasant things to
-each other, doubtless, after the manner of young maidens and men.
-Flirting or making love in the flare of the public must always be a
-desecration of the heart’s best sanctities. Beside, Sassafras and
-Sacharissa, you ought to be at work. It is precisely such as you who
-have brought discredit even upon the faithful and unfortunate, and
-sometimes rebuke upon the whole Treasury Department. For, as a rule, the
-Treasury, like all the other departments of Washington, is a vast refuge
-for the unfortunate and the unsuccessful. The only exceptions are found
-in two classes, viz.: those who use departmental life as the ladder by
-which to climb to a higher round of life and service, and those who seek
-it without half fulfilling its duties, because too inefficient to fill
-any other place in the world well. Unpractical authors, sore-throated,
-pulpitless clergymen, briefless lawyers, broken down merchants, poor
-widows, orphaned daughters, and occasionally an adventurer, masculine
-and feminine, of doubtful or bad degree,—all are found within the
-Treasury.
-
-I remember an aged woman, with bent back and long, wasted fingers,
-sitting behind the door in the Redemption Bureau. Her dim eyes peered
-through her spectacles and her poor fingers trembled, as she tried to
-count the dirty, ragged currency. “Alas! sad eyes,” I thought, “by this
-time rest from toil should have come to you.” “It is pitiful,” I said,
-to the kind gentleman who reigned over the division, “that one so old
-should have to come through rain and snow to fulfil a daily task. Is she
-not too old to do her duty well!”
-
-“No,” was the answer, “she does it very well. But if not, she would
-never be removed. She is a _protégé_ of President Lincoln.”
-
-But any one who fancies that even woman’s work in the Treasury
-Department is a sinecure, should climb to the Bureau of Printing and
-Engraving. You may climb, but you cannot enter unless you hold a written
-“sesame” from the Secretary of the Treasury; so sacred and guarded is
-this very hot precinct in which Uncle Samuel creates his “Almighty
-Dollar.” The business of this Bureau is to engrave, print, and perfect
-for delivery to the United States Treasurer, all United States notes,
-Treasury checks, gold notes, drafts, fractional currency notes, all
-bonds and revenue stamps issued by the Government of the United States.
-
-At the close of each day, every fraction which has passed through the
-division for the last twelve hours must be accounted for. If a cent is
-missing, all the workers of the Bureau are detained until the missing
-fraction is certainly found and safely deposited in the vault of the
-Treasury. The vast monetary responsibility resting on the Chief of this
-Bureau may be judged from a statement made, in his own report, for the
-fiscal year ending June 30, 1872.
-
- “There has been finished and delivered to the proper officers of the
- Government by this Bureau, during the fiscal years ending June 30,
- 1870, 1871, 1872, in notes, bonds and securities, $2,050,141, and
- 331,273,955 stamps, and not a note, nor a sheet, nor a portion of a
- sheet or note has been lost to the Government.”
-
-But I hold the “open sesame;” so come with me and begin the story of a
-paper dollar. Walking through the long, cool corridors and the airy
-saloons of the lower Treasury, who would dream that afar up, close under
-its clinging roof, ceaseless fires burn, engines play, eager shuttles
-fly, and patient hands ply through all the nights and days to make the
-people’s dollar! Here in these low, close rooms, these crowded halls,
-whose roofs press down so low that even a child, in many places, could
-not stand erect beneath it, patient men and women,—weary, gray, and
-old,—and youth, with its first tints yet unbleached by the burning
-atmosphere in which it toils,—all are at work making the paper dollar.
-
-Sometimes in the dark night, down the granite colonnades, athwart the
-great trees dimly waving in mid-air, across the lapsing fountains,
-stream long gleams of light shooting from the tiny loop-hole windows
-high up under the Treasury roof. They dart from the Printing Bureau of
-the Nation. While the Nation sleeps, its servants, through the long,
-still hours, go on making the people’s money!
-
-First, the paper! It is all manufactured at “Glen Mills,” near
-Philadelphia, by the Messrs. Wilcox, who own the mills, and are the
-patentees of the “localized blue fibre,” made of jute, which runs
-through the right-hand end of the fractional currency and United States
-notes, and on the back of the bonds, etc. This fiber is _the_ obstacle
-to the counterfeiter, and can only be overcome by oiling or soiling the
-spurious paper, so that its absence cannot be discovered. The paper is
-chemically prepared, and the application of an acid will change the tint
-to one color, and an alkali, to another. Thus any attempt to alter the
-filling-in or denomination of the stamped check, is defeated.
-
-A Government superintendent resides at Glen’s Falls, who, with a corps
-of assistants, receives the paper from the contractors, counts,
-examines, holds it carefully guarded night and day, until delivered to
-the Treasury of the United States. To each paper-making machine is
-attached an automatic register, by which the mill-owners account to the
-Government for every square inch and sheet recorded by this register,
-the register being locked, and the key held securely in the pocket of a
-Government officer, who watches the work. During its manufacture and
-storage at the mills, this paper is guarded, by day and night, by a
-regularly organized “watch.” The Government Superintendent has a corps
-of counters and examiners under his direction, who examine and count the
-paper, as received from the makers, before it is packed away for
-shipment. The account is sent to the Department, and paid each day by
-the Secretary.
-
-The paper is supplied the Bank Note Companies only upon requisition from
-the Bureau at Washington. Mr. Bemis, the Superintendent, makes a report
-to the Printing Bureau, also to the Secretary of the Treasury, of all
-the paper delivered to him. The first journey made by this governmental
-infant, is to the Bank Note Companies—two of them, one in New York, the
-other in Philadelphia—the American and the National—that there may not
-be any dangerous monopoly of priceless charms. It is borne to the depot
-by an armed escort, and conveyed on the cars by Adams’ Express. The New
-York Company, printing tints, must turn over to the Company printing
-backs, notes equivalent to the paper, and the second Company must
-similarly account to the Government for every incomplete note
-received—thus neither can possess itself wholly of this beloved child.
-One Company prints the tints of one denomination, and the back of the
-other, no Company executing on the same note both printings.
-
-The national bank notes, hitherto engraved and printed entirely in New
-York, coming only to the Government Printing Bureau for numbering and
-sealing, hereafter will be exclusively engraved and printed in the
-Treasury. The jute-fibred paper will also be used in their making, as it
-is in the United States notes. The face of the Treasury notes is printed
-in black and green, the back in green. The National Bank Note face dares
-to be printed in black, and its back in black and green.
-
-This tinted and outlined paper is conveyed to the Treasury by Adams’
-Express, who have the contract for carrying all the Government moneys
-and securities.
-
-When it reaches the Treasury, the work yet to be done by the Printing
-and Engraving Bureau, before the paper is complete as Government money,
-is to print the face upon the United States notes, and hereafter, on the
-National Bank notes, to plate-seal, to number, trim, and cut them into
-single notes; to trim, surface-seal, and cut into single notes the ten,
-fifteen, and twenty-five, fractional currency notes; to print the face
-of, trim, surface-seal, and separate the fifty cent notes; trim,
-surface-seal, and number the “funded loan bonds;” to trim, number, and
-surface-seal, the national bank notes; and to print the faces upon all
-the tints for internal revenue-stamps, already printed in New York.
-Besides all this work, the following are entirely engraved and printed
-in the Bureau of the Treasury: All strip-tobacco and snuff-stamps, stub
-and sheet snuff-stamps, domestic and customs cigar-stamps, compound
-liquor-stamps, crew lists ships’ registers, brewers’ permits, all the
-new special tax-paid stamps, (sixteen in number,) all miscellaneous
-bonds, gold notes, checks, drafts, etc.
-
-When this precious paper, with its black and green lines and tints,
-fresh from the Bank Note Companies, arrives at the Treasury, it is
-placed into the hands of thirty young ladies for counting, one lady
-counting it twice, then passing it to another, for verification.
-
-The next act in the process of making a dollar, is the manufacture of
-the plates used in printing. They are made in the engraving division of
-the Bureau, under the supervision of Mr. Casilear, a gentleman
-distinguished in his profession, who presides over a corps of the finest
-engravers in the country. Their work upon the plate of the United States
-note, is the engraving of its different parts. First, the face which it
-is to bear. This is always noticeably a perfect likeness of the person
-whom it represents. A daguerreotype or photograph is used. On the
-metallic plate of the daguerreotype the features are drawn lightly, the
-artist following accurately the lines of the portrait. If a photograph
-is used, gelatine is laid over it, and the picture is traced. From this
-outline on the plate, an impression is printed. This impression, by a
-chemical process, is transferred to a steel plate covered with wax. The
-outlines are then traced on steel, the wax removed, and the face, in
-outline, is then on the steel. The shading is then completed.
-
-So many phases of consummate skill are necessary to the completion of a
-single dollar note, that “many men of many minds” are required to
-perfect a single plate. One has a genius for landscape, another for
-portraits, another for animal figures. The portrait is given to one, the
-lettering to another, the ornamental work to a third, and on and on.
-These fragments of the perfect picture to be, are executed upon separate
-bits of soft steel. When the lines on them are completed, these
-different bits of soft steel are put into an iron box, case-hardened and
-annealed in a crucible of intense heat, then suddenly cooled by dipping
-them in oil, which utterly hardens the soft steel. Rolls of soft steel
-are then prepared. By the application of a powerful press, the various
-pictures and lines, that the artists have engraved, are taken up by the
-soft steel rollers from the hard steel plate. The intaglio work appears
-on the roll, just as it afterwards appears on the note.
-
-Now, the note-face is in fragments on the surface of the separate rolls.
-Next, the rolls are hardened, and placed in a transfer press over a flat
-plate of soft steel. Upon this plate, the operator of the press, by
-applying the lever, can, if necessary, impose a pressure equal to five
-or six tons. This pressure transfers the fragmentary picture to the
-plate. Then its counterpart picture is set in exact juxtaposition. The
-operator uses his steady hand, and skilled eyes, to set like a mosaic,
-each fragment of the complete design. Then moving the roller softly, to
-and fro, to equalize the pressure on every part of the picture, he
-continues to do so till the plate is hardened. He then passes a soft
-roll over it, and the entire note-face is taken up. In turn, this roll
-is hardened, and the note-face transferred from it to a soft steel
-plate. This final plate, hardened and polished, is the plate from which
-the note is at last printed.
-
-After this plate has been used for thirty thousand impressions, its
-fading lines are restored by “re-entering” the plate with a roll. It is
-then used for thirty thousand impressions more. When finally “used up,”
-these plates are destroyed in the presence of a mixed committee of
-Treasury officers and members of Congress.
-
-Look closely at the United States notes, the fractional currency bonds,
-and the most valuable revenue stamps, and you will see many lines
-involved and intricate, running to and fro in the most marvellous
-manner. These lines defy imitation. They are the best tantalizer and
-detective of the most accurate counterfeiter. The most absolute
-imitation, made by hand, can be instantly perceived under a glass. These
-involuting lines are the work of the geometric lathe, an instrument
-whose complicated wheels can be set to work out any combination of
-curved lines which the human mind can possibly conceive. The
-counterfeiter, with the same lathe, would be powerless to produce the
-same complications—“he would grow gray in endless and useless
-experiments, and even with a record of the combination, he could not so
-exactly re-produce it, that an expert could not detect the imposition.”
-
-The geometric lathe of the Treasury of the United States, is worked by
-Mr. Tichenor, who has been a skilled artist in such machinery for more
-than thirty years. There are no more interesting objects in the
-Treasury, than the line of clear-eyed men who sit bent over their tasks,
-their subtle lines tracing the exquisite vignettes which have made the
-engravings of the United States Treasury so famous. Here is one who has
-been tracing these lines of beauty for more than forty years: his hair
-is white, but his keen, strong sight—drawing harmony, poetry, nature,
-and life, out of barest outline—remains undimmed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
- THE WORKERS IN THE TREASURY—HOW THE MONEY IS MADE.
-
-The Dollar with the Counters—In the Tubs—Getting a Wetting—Servants of
- Necessity—That Scorching Roof—Brown Paper Bonnets—Earning their
- Daily Dollar—The Work Progressing—In the Press—A State of
- Dampness—Squaring Accounts—Calling for a Thousand Sheets—Accounting
- for Them—Superintending the Work—The Face-printing Division—The
- United States “Sealer”—One Hundred and Thirty-five Presses at
- Work—Printing Cigar-Stamps and Gold-Notes of Many Colors—Presses
- “Flying”—Quick with Dangerous Motion—With a Begrimed Face—The
- “Help-mate” of his Toil—The Fiery Little Brazier—What the Man
- Does—The Woman’s Work-The Automatic Register—An Observer Without a
- Soul—Our Damp Little Dollar—The Drying Room—The First
- Wrinkles—Looking Wizened and Old—Rejuvenating a Dollar—Underneath
- Two Hundred and Forty Tons—Smooth and Polished—Precious to the
- Touch—A Virgin Dollar—The “Sealer” at Work—Mutilated Paper—What the
- Women are Paid—The Surface-Sealing Division—Seal Printing—The
- Aristocratic Green Seal—The Numbering Division—Attended Solely by
- Women and Girls—Critically Examined—A Lady Charged with
- Errors—Securing Adequate Care—Dividing the Dollars—To Start
- Alone—Ladies Serene at Work—Snowy Aprons and Delicate
- Ribbons—Needling the Sheet—A Blade that Does Not Fail—Sorting the
- Notes—The Manipulation of the Ladies—The Dollar “in its Little
- Bed”—Dollar on Dollar—“Awaiting the Final Call”—The Mandate of Uncle
- Sam—Fourteen Divisions—Making up Accounts—Tracing a Note—A Perfect
- System of “Checks”—The Safeguards—The Chief of the Bureau.
-
-
-O my! that dollar! I left far back, flying through the fair hands (more
-or less) of thirty lovely “counters,” to find it here, sopped in the
-tubs of the “wetters.”
-
-Long trough-like tubs run down the middle of an attic-room, at whose
-sides the roof slopes so low, a child could not stand under it. Even at
-its apex, a slender girl beside her tub can scarcely stand upright. At
-either side of the long troughs are rowed maids and matrons, some fair
-and young, some old and worn, all bearing unmistakably the mark of the
-servant of necessity. So near and hot to the brain is the scorching
-roof, each woman wears upon her head a covering of brown paper, for
-protection. Who will say these lowly servants of the Government do not
-earn the scanty pittance of their daily dollar?
-
-In the “wetting division” is received, counted, and “wet down,” all the
-paper that is to be plate printed. Here, in different stages of
-progression, we see blank sheets wetted for first printing, and sheets
-in preparation for second, third, and even fourth printing. The counters
-of this division put every twenty sheets in the hands of the wetters,
-who place them between cloths and submerge them in the liquid of the
-tubs before them. Every one thousand sheets, thus wetted, are placed
-between wooden boards, under the pressure of two hundred and fifty
-pounds. In these cerements they remain for three or four hours, when
-they are taken out, the top sheets made to change places with the middle
-ones, that uniform dampness may be secured. The sheets are then laid
-again between the weights, to remain till the next morning, when they
-are taken out, piled up under damp cloths to wait the call of the
-plate-printers. All this systematic saturation is indispensable to the
-securing of a fine print impression.
-
-[Illustration: MAKING MONEY.—THE ROOM IN THE TREASURY BUILDING WHERE THE
-GREENBACKS ARE PRINTED]
-
-A distinct account is kept with each printer, which must be “all right”
-before he goes home. For example, a plate-printer calls at the wetting
-division for a thousand sheets. These are given him, and charged at once
-on the books of the division. As fast as he prints his work, he sends it
-to the office of his printing division, and is credited with all the
-work that he has accomplished. At the close of the day, if he has any
-sheets left unprinted, he returns them to the wetting division, and is
-credited with them as sheets returned. His work performed and work
-returned must then be ascertained, and his account strictly balanced,
-before he can leave the Treasury.
-
-The wetting division is superintended by Mr. J. H. Lamb, who, with Mr.
-Ward Morgan, the head of the face-printing division, Mr. Edgar of the
-examining division, and Mr. Evans, the United States Sealer, have all
-been chosen to preside over their distinct divisions on account of their
-practical experience in plate-printing, gained by personal toil at the
-press itself.
-
-Now we come to the Face-printing Room of the troublesome little dollar.
-One hundred and thirty-five presses are flying in this room and another;
-the latter printing the seals and tints of cigar-stamps, gold-notes,
-etc., in hues as varied as the leaves in autumn. Standing in this door,
-looking down this long apartment, we see seventy-five presses flying at
-once. The air is quick with dangerous motion. Great shuttle-like fans
-flap above our heads. At every angle, presses, eager and accurate, seem
-ready to strike you, as well as the dollar, with unerring skill and
-execution. Beside each one stands a man, with face begrimed. Beside each
-man stands a woman, the helpmate of his toil. Between each flames a
-fiery little brazier, holding the gleaming plate to keen heat. The face
-printer runs his roller, wet with ink over the face of the absorbing
-plate. A cloth in his hand comes swiftly after, leaving only the fine
-lines of the plate traced with ink. The ready woman lays the moist paper
-on the warm ink-lined plate. The printer touches the wheel, turns it,
-the sheet flies up. Lo! at last, the beautiful new dollar! The girl
-takes it instantly, lays it, face down, on top of its new-born brethren.
-Already the roller is passing again over the polished plate, and her
-hands are outstretched to lay another sheet upon the waiting plate. In
-less than a minute another dollar is made.
-
-An automatic register is connected with each press; thus every sheet,
-note, or stamp printed, is recorded, and serves as a check on the
-counter and printer. The register is locked, and the key kept with the
-keeper of the registers, appointed by the Secretary.
-
-After leaving the press and being heaped a few moments by its side, the
-next thing that happens to our damp little dollar, is to be dried. The
-moist sheets, spread upon racks, are carried to the drying room until
-the next morning. The drying process leaves the sheets with a rough,
-wrinkled surface. The little dollar comes forth from its first bed,
-looking wizened and old, and is immediately sent to the “pressing
-division” to be rejuvenated. Here every thousand sheets, for six
-minutes, are subjected to a slow, steady pressure of two hundred and
-forty tons, from which every sheet issues smooth, soft, polished, and
-precious to the touch, as every soul will say who has been the first
-possessor of a virgin dollar.
-
-The pressing division is superintended by Mr. Rallon, the “Nestor” of
-the Bureau. Mr. Edgar, superintendent of the examining division,
-assisted by thirty young ladies, takes care of the face-printed work.
-Mr. Evans, the United States Sealer, examines all the seal and tint
-prints. All mutilated, are carried to the counting division before being
-sent to the Secretary for destruction. Each printer is allowed a small
-percentage for unavoidable mutilation. If at the end of the month his
-number of mutilated exceeds this allowance, he is obliged to pay for the
-excess. Each printer works by “the piece,” and pays the woman who helps
-him—the price being regulated by the Bureau—one dollar per day.
-
-After coming forth from the hydraulic presses, softly polished, every
-exquisite line and figure embossed in keen relief, the United States
-note sheets pass to the surface-sealing division. The process of
-seal-printing is the same as the first, and each sheet has to go through
-the same process the second time. Under the superintendence of Mr. Gray,
-six “Gordon” and six “Campbell” presses print the beautiful pink
-surface-seals. Here the small currencies, the national bank notes, the
-new special tax-paid stamps, receive the internal revenue seal. The
-“funded loan bond” alone is stamped with the aristocratic green seal.
-
-Having been sealed, the dollar must now be numbered, and for that
-purpose passes into the numbering division, where it receives the last
-touch of printing from machines attended solely by women and girls. This
-machine works on the same principle as the famous paging machine. The
-numbers are set on the surface of a small wheel, and with every stroke
-of the stamp the next consecutive number flies up into its place; with
-the same stroke, a small roller, taking the red ink from the plate and
-feeding it to the type. These machines are regulated to change the
-numbers for a whole series. Two red numbers on each bill are put on by
-these machines. Intense care is necessary in this work, to prevent
-mistakes, and each bill is critically examined to ascertain its
-correctness. If mistakes are discovered at once, they can be rectified;
-but the red ink soon hardens and becomes indelible. If the mistake is
-discovered too late to correct it, it is charged to the lady who made
-it. This has been found to be the only way to secure adequate care on
-the part of the numberers.
-
-The last line of printing is received in the red number set at top and
-bottom; all that remains for the dollar, before starting on its journey
-into the wide, wide world, is to be divided from its brethren, that it
-may start alone. Thus the United States note sheet is carried into the
-separating and trimming room. This used to be done by scissors, and gave
-to women, I believe, their first work in the Treasury. This room is one
-of the largest and busiest in the Bureau, and second only to the
-printing-room in interest. The wheels, straps and pulleys reaching to
-the ceiling, with which its air is perforated, give it, at first glance,
-a complicated atmosphere, till the eyes rest upon the many ladies
-sitting serenely at work below.
-
-[Illustration: AMONG THE GREENBACKS.—THE CUTTING AND SEPARATING ROOM IN
-THE TREASURY BUILDING.—WASHINGTON]
-
-This work being all clean, and some of it dainty in its character, the
-result is visible in the tasteful attire of the workers, whose snowy
-aprons and delicate ribbons are in direct contrast to the worn and
-soiled raiment of the weary sisterhood of the tubs, and the inky presses
-of the wetting and printing divisions. Part of the woman’s work of this
-room is to needle the sheets, which must be done so accurately, that
-when hundreds together are laid in the cutting machine, the glittering
-blade will strike through a single line, not wavering a hair’s width
-through two hundred sheets. The room is thronged with those little
-guillotines, whose gleaming blades are in constant execution. Each
-Treasury note sheet which passes under them is cut into four notes at
-once, each sliding down, correctly sorted, into its own little box
-waiting below. Excepting the fractional currency cutters, all these
-exquisite machines are worked by ladies, who manipulate them with
-unerring accuracy.
-
-In this Bureau but one more thing remains for our dollar, that it should
-be laid “in its little bed,” before it goes down to the Treasurer. This
-is speedily done, and its bed is a very dainty affair,—a pretty box,
-made in an adjoining room by pretty hands; and pretty hands lay our
-dollar away; indeed dollar on dollar, so many in a box, which shuts them
-in—fair, tempting, tantalizing—out of sight, to await the call of the
-Treasurer and the mandate of Uncle Samuel.
-
-There are fourteen divisions in the Printing and Engraving Bureau. Yet
-it is its unyielding rule that not a sheet of paper can pass from the
-hands of one superintendent to his operatives without a verified count
-and a written receipt, which is made a permanent record in a book kept
-for the purpose. At the close of each day’s labor, the operatives in
-every room report to its superintendent, before they leave the building,
-how much paper they have received, how much finished, returning the
-balance. The superintendent of each room makes a report, on a printed
-form, at the end of each day, showing the amount of paper received,
-delivered up to the morning, through the day, the amount delivered that
-day, the amount on hand. This report is delivered to the Chief of the
-Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and a duplicate sent to the Secretary.
-From these reports the Secretary compiles his report of the work of the
-entire Bureau, which must correspond with the report made by the Chief
-of the Bureau.
-
-When any given issue of notes or bonds is completed, the Secretary of
-the Treasury holds a report, which is a complete history of the issue
-through all its stages of growth, from beginning to end. The test of the
-utter thoroughness of this system, is that every note printed in this
-department from its beginning, if returned to superintendents, could be
-traced, through every stage, back to blank paper; the books showing the
-date of its arrival, and by whom it was printed, sealed, numbered,
-separated, and delivered to the Treasurer of the United States.
-
-The system of checks used by the Bureau of Printing and Engraving is so
-perfect that it is almost impossible for the Government to lose a
-fraction from it. The paper is registered at the mills—every sheet
-accounted for. Every sheet manufactured is accounted for every day. To
-perfect a fraudulent issue, there would have to be a universal collusion
-between all the superintendents of all the divisions and all the
-operatives, and between the superintendents and operatives. Several high
-officers of the Printing Bureau are appointed by the Secretary,
-independent of the Chief of the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, which
-is another security against danger. These are but a part of the
-safeguards within which the United States Treasury holds its dollars.
-
-Mr. McCartee, the present Chief of the Bureau of Printing and Engraving
-of the United States Treasury, is so utterly the master of the momentous
-machinery which he “runs,” that you cannot ask him a question concerning
-the labor in detail of his eleven hundred _employés_, that he cannot
-answer more perfectly than the person doing the work.
-
-Beside his own practical knowledge of the business committed to his
-charge in minutiæ, he employs only men trained from their youth up in
-the art of plate engraving, to perform the skilled labor, or to
-superintend the divisions of this most important Governmental Bureau.
-The responsibilities and mental anxieties of its chief are so
-inexorable, that he must be at his post by a little past seven in the
-morning, and remain till five P. M. He must return about seven P. M.,
-and remain until ten at night. Often the wheels and presses, and patient
-hands of this department, go from day to day to be able to meet the
-enormous demand of the country upon its resources. No added comment is
-necessary to prove how honorable is its lowliest toil, or how
-indispensable to its chief are the highest mental and moral qualities.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
- THE LAST DAYS OF A DOLLAR.
-
-The Division of Issues—Ready for the World—Starting Right—Forty
- Busy Maids and Matrons—Counting Out the Money—Human Machines—A
- Lady Counting for a Dozen Years—Fifty Thousand Notes in a
- Day—Counting Four Thousand Notes in Twenty Minutes—Travelling
- on Behalf of Uncle Sam—In Need of a Looking-Over—“Detailed”
- for the Work—What has Passed Through _Some_ Fingers—Big
- Figures—Packing Away the Dollars—The Cash Division—The Marble
- Cash-Room—The Great Iron Vault—Where Uncle Sam Keeps His
- Money—Some Nice Little Packages—Taking it Coolly—One Hundred
- Millions of Dollars in Hand—Some Little White Bags—The Gold
- Taken from the Banks of Richmond—Anxious to Get Their Money
- Back—A Little Difficulty—Not yet “Charged”—A Distinction
- without a Difference—Charming Variety—A Nice Little Hoard—Five
- Hundred Millions Stored Away—The Secret of the Locks—The
- Hydraulic Elevator—Sending the Money off—How the Money is
- Transported—Begrimed, Demoralized, and Despoiled—Where is our
- Pretty Dollar?—The Redemption Division—Counting Mutilated
- Currency—Women at Work—Sorting Old Greenbacks—Three Hundred
- Counterfeit Dollars Daily—Detecting Bad Notes—“Short,” “Over,”
- and “Counterfeit”—Difficulty of Counterfeiting Fresh
- Notes—Vast Amounts Sent for Redemption—Thirty-one Million
- Dollars in One Year—The Assistant Treasurer at New York—The
- Cancelling Room—The Counter’s Report—The Bundle in a
- Box—Awkward Responsibility—“Punching” Old Dollars—They are
- Chopped in Two—Paying for Mistakes—The Funeral of the
- Dollar—The Burning, Fiery Furnace—“The Burning Committee”—What
- They Burn Every Other Day—The End of the Dollar.
-
-
-Following our dollar, we come this soft summer morning to the Division
-of Issues. It is in the Treasurer’s Bureau, and here, crisp, new and
-ready for its adventures, our dollar has arrived. The fate that may
-await it out in the world, the wildest fancy cannot foretell; but before
-it starts on its long pilgrimage, it must be again manipulated by fair
-fingers, to see that it starts “all right.”
-
-We enter a long, light, airy room; and here at a table sit forty or more
-maids and matrons, counting the new notes. Pretty maidens! Pretty
-dollars! Our dollar among the rest. Crinkling, fluttering, flying, the
-dollars! Serene, silent, swift, the maidens! That anything can be
-counted so rapidly and yet so accurately, defies belief. It is the
-marvel of this counting, that it is as infallible as it is flying. The
-fingers of forty women play the part of perfected machinery, the
-numbered notes passing through them with the celerity and regularity of
-automatic action.
-
-This perfection of mathematical movement is acquired only by long
-practice and by one order of intellect. There are persons who can never
-acquire this unerring accuracy of mind and motion combined. There is a
-lady sitting here who has been in this division since it was organized,
-in 1862, who can, upon demand, count fifty thousand notes in one day. As
-the department hours of work are from nine to three o’clock, and half an
-hour is taken at noon for lunch, these fifty thousand notes must all be
-counted in the space of five and a half hours. This is at a rate of nine
-thousand and ninety notes each hour, one hundred and fifty each minute
-and two and a half each second. The same lady will count four thousand
-legal tender notes in twenty minutes. These lady counters, with a number
-of their sister peers from the Redemption Division, perform numerous
-journeys for Uncle Samuel whenever the Treasury Offices in other cities
-need a “looking over.” At such times they are “detailed” to go and count
-the Government funds there.
-
-Through the fingers of these ladies has passed every note—legal tender
-or fractional—which has been issued by the United States since the
-beginning of the war of the rebellion. Every note, ever touched or seen,
-with all the gold-notes and the millions of imperfect bonds and notes
-never put in circulation—every one has passed through these same deft
-fingers. The total value of this vast amount, up to July, 1872, was
-about two thousand nine hundred million dollars, more than two hundred
-and twenty-three millions of which was in postal and fractional
-currency.
-
-As soon as the new money is counted, it is again put away—the legal
-tenders in strong paper wrappers, the fractional currency in paper
-boxes. All are sealed, put on a hand-cart, and rolled off to the vaults
-of the cash division, whither we still, you and I, pursue our little
-dollar.
-
-Passing through the cashier’s office and the superb Marble Cash-room (to
-which we will soon return), at the opposite end we reach one almost
-exclusively occupied by the iron vault of the United States Treasury.
-The double iron doors swing slowly back, and we stand in the money vault
-of the nation. It looks light and airy as a china-closet. The sealed
-packages, lining the shelves to the ceiling, are full of money. I hold a
-small package in my hand of crisp, stamped paper, tied with common
-twine, and “take it coolly” when the keeper of these coffers tells me
-that the string ties in one hundred millions of dollars. It doesn’t seem
-much!
-
-On the shelf of a cosy closet are piled some little white bags which
-have done a deal of travelling. They hold the gold captured from
-Jefferson Davis’s fleeing trains, taken from the banks of Richmond. You
-know the banks of Richmond have been very anxious to get their money
-back, and have sent numerous messengers after it. A small obstacle, in
-the shape of a fact, separates them from the object of their desire.
-This gold was rifled from the mint in New Orleans, and before it came to
-the banks of Richmond belonged to the Treasury of the United States.
-
-In this vault is packed away all the money not needed for circulation. A
-large portion of the money which lines these shelves has never been
-charged to the Treasurer on the books of the department, therefore,
-technically, is not yet money, although all ready for use. Every kind of
-note which the ingenuity of Uncle Sam and his servants ever devised, is
-here packed and guarded. The compartments of the safe not affording
-sufficient space, the floor is piled—and as carelessly, apparently, as
-if with potato or apple bags; but not in fact. The value of every bag
-and package is known, and not one cent could be taken without being
-swiftly discovered and pursued. Piles on piles of little bags and
-packages! this is all, and yet they hold five hundred millions of
-dollars. Little bags and packages these are, all, and yet for them men
-toil, struggle, sin—sell their bodies and their souls!
-
-On each of the doors of this iron vault are two burglar-proof locks, of
-the most complicated construction, each on a combination different from
-the rest. But two or three persons know these combinations, and no
-person knows the combination to the locks on both doors. Thus it is
-impossible that they should be fraudulently opened, save by collusion
-between two persons who know the combination. This is but one of the
-safeguards which the Government sets about its treasures.
-
-A few paces from the door of this vault is the elevator communicating
-with the room of the agent of Adams’ Express Company, on the basement
-floor below. The motive power of this elevator is Potomac-water, from
-the water-mains. Two iron pistons, about eight inches in diameter,
-attached to the elevator platform, one on each side, move smoothly up
-and down in perpendicular iron cylinders. A turn of the handle admits
-the water into the cylinder beneath the pistons, which are forced up by
-the pressure, and with them the elevator. A reverse movement of the
-handle allows the water to escape from the cylinders, and the elevator
-descends. Its movements are noiseless, and it is managed with remarkable
-ease. Up and down, this servant, swift and silent, bears the moneys of
-the people. It is just descending, piled high with packages, some
-directed to banks, railroad and manufacturing companies. Others are
-addressed to assistant treasurers and depositors of the United States.
-Much is going to replace the old money already sent back to the Treasury
-for destruction. All will be carried away, as it was brought in its
-neophite state, by Adams’ Express Company, which is bound by contract to
-transact all the vast money transportation business of the Government.
-This contract confers mutual advantage, both on the Company and the
-Government. To the latter, because it obtains transportation at a much
-lower rate than it could otherwise do, paying but twenty-five cents for
-each thousand dollars transported; while, at even this per cent., the
-Company can grow rich on the monopoly of the vast money transportation
-business of the Government of the United States.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alas! for our dollar that went forth from the paternal door—as many
-another child has done—unsullied, only to return at a later day from its
-contact with the world, begrimed, demoralized, despoiled. Where is our
-pretty dollar, fresh and pure? Every delicate line defaced, tattered,
-filthy, worn out—this wretched little rag, surely, cannot be it! And yet
-it is. This is what the world’s hard hand has made our dollar.
-
-We have reached the Redemption Division of the Treasurer’s Bureau, and
-stand in one of the rooms devoted to the counting of mutilated currency
-and the detection of counterfeits. This difficult and responsible labor
-of the public service is performed solely by women.
-
-In the long rooms on either side of the marble hall, on the north ground
-floor of the Treasury Building, may be seen one hundred and fifty women,
-whose deft and delicate fingers are ceaselessly busy detecting
-counterfeits, identifying, restoring, counting and registering worn-out
-currency which has come home to be “redeemed.” Each lady sits at a table
-by herself, that the money committed to her may not become mixed with
-that to be counted by any other person.
-
-The fractional currency sent to the Treasury for redemption is usually
-assorted by denominations only. The work of assorting by issues remains
-to be done by the counters of the Treasury. As there are four distinct
-issues of most of the denominations, each of which must be assorted by
-itself, this labor alone is a vast one to the counters. Looking on their
-tables we see them heaped with little piles of currency, each made of a
-denomination or issue different from the rest. Thus every new issue
-increases the labor of currency-redemption. With clear eyes and patient
-hand, the lady bending over this table takes up slowly every bill and
-scrutinizes it, first, to see if it be genuine. Over three hundred
-dollars in counterfeit notes are found in the fractional currency,
-daily. This fact alone is sufficient to make the counting of the
-Redemption Division far less rapid than that of the Division of Issues.
-
-The first thing that a lady at a redemption table does with her money
-packages is, to compare their number with the inventory which
-accompanies them. If there is none, she makes one. If there is a
-discrepancy between the packages and the number claimed, she refers to a
-clerk, that there may be no mistake. She then proceeds to the
-examination of a single package. After she has placed all the rest in a
-box, so that no strap or stray scrip from another bundle may mix with
-the first; when she has scrutinized and counted every note in the
-package, she puts the strap on again, marking it with her initials, the
-date, the amount, the “shorts,” “overs,” and “counterfeits.” Thus she
-continues till every package has been counted. She then proceeds to
-assort the notes into packages, each containing one hundred notes, each
-of the same denomination and issue, which she binds with a “brand new”
-printed strap again, marked with her initials and date. All the notes
-over even hundreds she places by themselves. These in turn are given to
-distinct counters, whose sole business it is to make even hundreds out
-of these odd numbers.
-
-The first counter then enters in a book, having a blank form for the
-purpose, printed in duplicate on one side of each leaf, a statement of
-the result of her count, containing the net amount found due to the
-owner, the aggregate of the “shorts,” the “overs,” the “counterfeits”
-discovered and the amount claimed. One of these duplicates is retained
-in the book as her voucher; the other is attached to the letter which
-accompanied the money; all together are handed to the clerk, who draws
-the check which is to be sent in return; or, if new currency is to be
-sent from the cash division, the clerk writes the order on which it is
-to be forwarded.
-
-This is the story of but one package of mutilated money of the tens of
-thousands that are received at the Treasury every day. The Government
-has provided the most munificent facilities for the redemption of its
-currency and the maintenance of its credit in circulation. To what an
-extent the nation avails itself of these facilities no one can realize
-who has never visited the Treasury. Regular transportation, at the
-expense of the Government, is provided by express for the redemption of
-all currency. Everything demanded of its holders is, that they should
-send it in proper amounts; then its transportation is paid, and new
-currency sent back in its stead. This liberality in the Government is
-partly accounted for in the fact that fresh notes are a prevention of
-counterfeits. A fresh, new note cannot be counterfeited. Its exquisite
-tints and lines cannot be reproduced by any false hand. Only after its
-beauty has been obscured is the attempt made. Thus it is said that
-counterfeiters “soil and rumple their spurious notes, to give them the
-appearance of having been in circulation a long time.” Thus many banks
-never sort over or pay out any fractional currency which they receive,
-but put it into packages and send it to the Treasury at the close of
-each day’s business, so that nothing but clean notes are ever paid over
-their counters. By doing this they are saved the immense labor of
-reassorting old notes, and afford their applicants the happiness of
-always receiving new ones.
-
-Only the room in which the express messengers deliver their remittances
-can give any idea of the vast amounts sent daily to the Treasury for
-redemption. Here we find counters, tables, and the floor piled high with
-damaged money from every State in the Union. Two and three hundred
-packages are often received by express in a single day. The greater part
-of these contain postage and fractional currency. The Assistant
-Treasurer of New York forwards a remittance of fractional currency every
-ten or twelve days, never less than one hundred thousand dollars, and
-the amounts sent from other treasury officers are proportionately large.
-Over thirty-one million dollars in fractional currency were received and
-counted during the last fiscal year—about one hundred thousand dollars
-for each working day. Every note in this large sum has to be counted,
-studied, assorted with all others of the same denomination and issue;
-strapped, labelled, reported, delivered—all done by women.
-
-The last room to which the counter carries our dollar is the cancelling
-room. She has just reported to the chief of the Redemption Division the
-result of her count, in the following duplicate report on the broad
-paper strap which binds her bundle of soiled notes:
-
- AMOUNT, $5,000.00
- _From Fiftieth National Bank, New York City._
- Received July 9, 1873, by MARY JONES.
-
- ══════════════════════════╤══════════════════════════════════
- Legal, $4,000.00│Counterfeit, $20.00
- Full Currency, 900.00│Discount, 5.00
- Odds, 40.00│Rejected, 5.00
- Discounted, 20.00│Short by Inventory, 15.00 ———
- ————│Short by Strap, $45.00
- $4,960.00│Over by Strap, 5.00
- │ ———
- │Net Short, $40.00
- ══════════════════════════╧══════════════════════════════════
-
-The $4,960 is immediately sent to the bank in any denomination of new
-notes requested, or if no such request has been made, it is sent in
-exactly the denominations received. And now our lady-counter proceeds to
-attend the cancelling of the notes which she has counted, and which the
-Treasury has already redeemed. A messenger carries her precious bundle
-in a box, but she must keep messenger, box, and bundle in sight; for,
-from the moment that she receives it, till she places it in the last
-cash-account clerk’s hands, she is personally responsible for its
-contents. If, by any possibility, it could be spirited away, she would
-be obliged to pay for every ragged dollar out of her little stipend.
-
-This is a bustling sight. Messengers, each with a counter, are rushing
-in and out with their boxes full of strapped and labelled currency.
-Round a large table crowd many fair women, while every instant “thud!
-thud!” strike the precious packages. Each in turn is taken up by the
-canceller and set between the teeth of Uncle Sam’s cancelling machine.
-This is fashioned out of two heavy horizontal steel bars, five feet in
-length, working on pivots. To the shorter end of each is attached a
-punch, while the other is connected by a lever with a crank, in the
-sub-basement below, which is propelled by a turbine water-wheel
-furnished with Potomac-water from one of the pipes of the building.
-Under its grinding “punch” our poor little dollar goes, and with it a
-hundred dollars beside. With a savage accuracy it stabs two holes
-through every one. This is done for the purpose of absolute
-cancellation. Then each bundle is returned to its box, the messenger
-picks it up, the counter follows, and both hasten to the cash-account
-clerk of the division, whose business it is to see if all the money
-received and delivered to the counters, has been returned and accounted
-for. Not until she sees her box of cancelled notes safe in the hands of
-this clerk, does the counter’s personal responsibility end.
-
-Near the punches in the cancelling room is a ferocious-looking knife,
-set in an axle, which is consecrated to the purpose of cutting the
-cancelled bundles in two, through the middle of each note. These are
-made into packages of one hundred thousand dollars of fractional
-currency, and larger sums of legal tender notes; and are sent back to
-this office to be cut asunder by this knife. The duplicate paper and
-strap which our fair counter bound about this bundle, is so printed as
-to show, upon each half, the denomination, issue and amount of the notes
-enclosed. The counter’s initials and the date of counting are also
-recorded at each end, as well as a number or letter to identify the
-bundle. These sundered notes are now sent, one-half to counters in the
-Secretary’s office, the other half to counters in the Registrar’s
-office, where every little wretched rag is re-counted. This is done as a
-check on the Treasurer’s counters, and to secure absolute accuracy. If
-these second counters discover a “short” or a “counterfeit” passed over
-by the first fair fingers, the full amount is taken out of the wages of
-the counter whose initials the tell-tale package bears.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BURNT TO ASHES.—THE END OF UNCLE SAM’S GREENBACKS.
- The above is a graphic sketch of the destruction of the worn and
- defaced currency constantly being redeemed by the Government, which
- is here burned every day at 12 o’clock. On one occasion considerably
- more than one hundred million dollars’ worth of bonds and greenbacks
- were destroyed in this furnace, and the burning of from fifty to
- seventy-five millions at a time is a matter of ordinary occurrence.
-]
-
-The Treasury mills grind slowly; but in the slow fullness of time the
-separate “counts” of three offices—the Treasurer’s, the Register’s, the
-Secretary’s—are finally reconciled. The integrity of the Government,
-throughout the whole existence of its minutest fraction, has been
-maintained and demonstrated. In the process there is not much left of
-our poor little dollar, and nothing left for us but to go to its
-funeral. Like most of us, it has had rather a hard time in this world of
-ours. Where has it not lived—from a palace to “a pig’s stomach;” and
-what has it not endured—from the scarlet rash to the small-pox—and to
-think that nothing remains for it now but to be burned! Only through
-purgatorial flame can it be fully and finally “redeemed.”
-
-About a quarter of a mile from the Treasury Department, in what is
-called “White Lot,” stands the furnace which is to consume our dollar.
-The furnace, and the building in which it stands, was built expressly
-for this purpose for the sum of ten thousand dollars. The furnace is ten
-feet high, seven in diameter, circular and open at the top. With it is
-connected an air-blower, which is attached to an engine, the steam for
-which comes from a boiler some twenty rods distant. On the ground about
-lie piles of cinders—the metallic ashes of extinct dollars, compounded
-of pins, sulphur, printer’s ink and dirt.
-
-To this furnace, filled with shavings in advance, every other day comes
-“The Burning Committee,” bearing the boxes of doomed dollars, sealed
-finally in the Register’s and Secretary’s Bureaus. This Committee is
-formed of a person from each of these Bureaus, with a fourth not
-connected with the Departments. In their presence the final seals are
-broken—the complicated locks of the furnace opened. Then the packages
-are thrown into the flames, each “lot” being called and checked by the
-Committee, the amount averaging about one million five hundred thousand
-dollars every other day. At the same hour about one hundred thousand
-dollars in national bank notes are burned at another and smaller
-furnace. Beside cancelled money, internal revenue and postage stamps,
-checks and defective new money are all consumed in this furnace.
-
-Here the three official delegates, with a few spectators, stand to
-witness the sight. Worn out, used up, gone by—all pass into the furnace,
-our dollar with the rest. The furnace is locked, by official hands, with
-nine distinct locks. A match is set to the shavings; the smoke of the
-sacrifice begins to ascend—the Committee depart. The fire and the money
-are left alone together for the next twenty-four hours. To-morrow a
-smutty aerolite, smothered in ashes, will be the significant “finis” of
-the story of our dollar. It has had its day!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
- THE GREAT CASH-ROOM—THE WATCH-DOG OF THE TREASURY.
-
-No Need for Dirty Money—The Flowers of July—Money Affairs—The Great
- Cash-Room—Its Marble Glories—A Glance Inside—The Beautiful Walls—A
- Good Deal of Very Bad Taste—Only Made of Plaster—The Clerks of the
- Cash-Room—New Money for Old—The National Treasury—“The Watch-Dog” of
- the Treasury—The Custodian of the Cash—A Broken-nosed Pitcher—Ink
- for the Autographs—His Ancient Chair—“The General”—“Crooked,
- Crotchety and Great-hearted”—“Principles” and Pantaloons—Below the
- Surface—An Unpaintable Face—An Object of Personal Curiosity—Dick and
- Dolly pay the General a Visit—How the Thing is Done—“Pretty
- Thoroughly Wrought Up”—A Couple without any Claims—Gratified in the
- Very Jolliest Fashion—Getting his Autograph—A Specimen for the Folks
- at Home—Realizing a Responsibility—Where the Treasurer Sleeps—Going
- the Round at Night—Making Assurance Sure—Awakened by a Strong
- Impression—Sleepless—In the “Small Hours”—Finding the Door Open—A
- Careless Clerk—The Care of Eight Hundred Millions—On the Alert—The
- Secretary’s Room—Three at the Table—Doings and Duties—The Labors of
- the Secretary and Comptrollers—The Auditors—The Solicitor’s
- Office—The Light-House Board—The Coast Survey—Internal Revenue
- Department.
-
-
-Nobody need ever carry a smutty bit of money in Washington. Lay down the
-worst looking fraction you ever saw, upon the marble counter of the
-Cash-Room, and a virgin piece, without blemish, will be given you in its
-stead. Do you wish ten unsoiled “ones” for that ragged “ten” of yours?
-Take it to the Cash-Room, and the desire of your heart will be granted
-in a moment.
-
-To do this you turn out of Pennsylvania avenue towards the north front
-of the Treasury. On either side, spread away broad beds of flowers. In
-April, their hyacinths sent great drifts of fragrance, blocks away; in
-May, it was one great garden of roses, and now it has burst into a
-passion of bloom, a very carnival of color—the burning scarlet of the
-geraniums mocking the dazzling azure of the sky. On either side run
-these lavish hues. Before you, cooling the marble court beneath your
-feet, the great fountain tosses its spray. Toward you stretches the long
-restful shadow of the northern portico, inviting you to enter in.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE NEW MARBLE CASH ROOM, UNITED STATES TREASURY.—WASHINGTON.
- The most costly and magnificent room of its kind in the world.
-]
-
-If your visit means “money,” as it may, you pass directly through the
-portico to the Cash-Room, into which it opens. No other room in the
-world as magnificent is devoted to such a purpose. It is seventy-two
-feet long, thirty-two feet wide, and twenty-seven feet six inches high.
-Exclusive of the upper cornice, the walls are built entirely of marble.
-Seven varieties meet and merge into each other, to make the harmony of
-its blended hues. From the main floor it rises through two stories of
-the building. Thus it has upper and lower windows, between which a
-narrow bronze gallery runs, encircling the entire room. The base of the
-stylobate of the first story is black Vermont marble, the mouldings are
-Bardiglio Italian, the styles dove Vermont marble, the panels Sienna
-Italian, and the dies Tennessee. Above the stylobate, the styles are of
-Sienna marble. With these are contrasted the pale primrose tints of the
-Corinthian pilasters and a cornice of white-veined Italian marble.
-Opposite the windows, and in corresponding positions at the ends of the
-rooms, are panels of the dark-veined Bardiglio Italian marble, the exact
-size of the windows. The stylobate and the styles and pilasters of the
-second story show the same tints and variety of marbles which mark the
-first. But the panels are of Sarran Golum marble, from the Pyrenees. The
-latter is one of the rarest of marbles; at a distance, of a blood-red
-hue. Upon nearer inspection, it reveals undreamed-of beauties in veining
-and tint.
-
-The pilasters of the second story are not like those of the first story,
-pure—but complex. They support a cornice, not of wrought marble, as all
-the remainder of the room would promise, but of plaster of Paris,
-fantastically wrought and profusely gilded. This cornice is another blot
-of that meretricious ornamentation which in so many noble spaces
-disfigures the Capitol.
-
-Extending the length of the room is a costly counter, of various
-marbles, surmounted by a balustrade of mahogany and plate-glass. Within
-this are busy the clerks of the Cash-Room, and over this marble counter
-you, as one of its many proprietors, may receive, for the asking, ten
-“ones” for one “ten”—new money for old.
-
-From this superb room of the people we pass to that of the
-Treasurer,—“the watch-dog of the Treasury,”—the man who holds and guards
-the untold millions of the nation. It is a plain room, very. No thought
-of luxury, it is easy to see, has touched an article of its furniture,
-from his well-worn chair to the broken-nosed pitcher which holds the
-General’s ink; that ink, thick as mud and black as Egyptian night, out
-of which he constructs these marvellous hieroglyphics, which, on our
-legal-tender notes, has become one of the most baffling studies of the
-nation.
-
-“The General!” That’s his name, from the roof to the cellar of the vast
-Treasury; crooked, crotchety, great-hearted; nobody swears so loud, or
-is so generous, or just, as “the General.” Every afflicted soul, from
-the women, poor and old, who stand by the printing-presses under the
-scorching roof, to Mary Walker, whose devotion to “her principles,” in
-the form of a pair of hideous little pantaloons, causes her justly to
-shed tubs of tears,—all are sure of a hearing, and of redress, if
-possible, from “the General.” His face is as astonishing as his
-signature. It is a Lincolnian face in this, that its best expression can
-never be transferred to a picture. In life it is rugged, ugly at first
-glance, genial at the second. The eyes twinkle with humor and kindness;
-the wide mouth shuts tight with wilfulness and determination; the whole
-expression and presence of the man indicate energy, honesty, and power.
-
-General Spinner is an object of personal curiosity to all sight-seers
-who visit Washington. Dick and Dolly having puzzled their eyes for an
-hour, studying some fresh legal tender note, to discover by what process
-of evolution and convolution the remarkable signature which it bears is
-fashioned, when they came to the Capital, proceeded to the Treasury to
-see, not only the man who makes it, but how he makes it. Bluff, and even
-snappish at first approach, after a little wilful snarling, our General
-subsides into the most amiable of mastiffs. He is an exception to the
-official class, in his hate of exclusiveness and his never-failing
-accessibility. Indeed, he would have far less to irritate him, if he
-made himself more unapproachable and remote. As it is, all sorts of
-tormenting people, finding it perfectly easy to “get at him,” do not
-neglect the privilege, and altogether keep him pretty thoroughly
-“wrought up” with their never-ending and perpetually conflicting woes.
-Dicky and Dolly, fresh from their farm, who ask for no “place” in any
-“division” whatever, who have no alert grievance grumbling for redress,
-who wish for nothing but, “Please, sir, _will_ you just show us _how_
-you make it—that queer name?” are sure to be gratified in the very
-jolliest fashion. The General stabs the old pen with three points down
-into the pudding-like ink which sticks to the bottom of the broken-nosed
-pitcher, and proceeds to pile it up in ridiculous little heaps at cross
-angles on a bit of paper. The result of his “piling,” which Dick and
-Dolly watch with breathless interest, is his signature, which our happy
-friends bear off in triumph to show to the “folks at home.” “Yes, sir,
-the autograph of the Treasurer of the United States! and we saw him make
-it, we did! A queer lookin’ man, but good as pie, I can tell you; has a
-feelin’ for folks, as if he wasn’t no better than them, if he does take
-care of all the money of the United States Treasury, which, I tell you,
-is a heap!”
-
-The taking care of this money is a mighty responsibility, which General
-Spinner realizes to the utmost. From his small room in the Treasury, a
-door opens into a still smaller one. In this little room, beneath the
-mighty roof of the Treasury, the keeper of its millions sleeps. Before
-he essays to do this, twice every night the guardian of the people’s
-treasure goes himself to the money vault, and, with his own hand upon
-their handles, assures himself beyond doubt that the nation’s money
-safes are inviolably locked.
-
-In order that he may do this every night before he attempts to sleep,
-and that he may never be beyond call in case of accident or wrong doing,
-the Treasurer of the United States absolutely lives, by day and by
-night, in the Treasury. It is told of him that, “Once, before he began
-sleeping in the Treasury, he was awakened in the night by a strong
-impression that something was wrong at the Department. He lay for a long
-time, tossing uneasily upon his bed, and trying to close his eyes and
-convince himself that it was a mere freak of an over-taxed brain; but it
-would not be driven away. At last, about two o’clock in the morning, in
-order to assure himself that his impression was at fault, he arose,
-hastily dressed, and set out for the Treasury. On his way he met a
-watchman from the Department, hastening to arouse him, with the
-information that the door of one of the vaults had just been found
-standing wide open. A careless clerk, whose duty it was to close and
-lock the door, had failed to perform his duty that night, and the
-watchman, on going his rounds, had discovered the neglect.”
-
-Since that night the Treasurer has slept in the Treasury, and been
-night-inspector of its doors and locks himself.
-
-It is not difficult to appreciate his personal anxiety and consciousness
-of vast responsibility, when we remember that he is the hourly keeper of
-at least eight hundred million dollars which belong to the nation. There
-are very few officers of the Government who are called to bring to bear
-upon their daily duties the ceaseless vigilance, the sacrifice of
-personal ease and comfort in the service of the State, which
-characterizes the honest, tireless, invincible “watch-dog of the
-Treasury.”
-
-The room of the Secretary of the Treasury, in the Treasury building, has
-its outlook on the eastern side and grounds of the Executive Mansion. A
-wonderful fountain throws its million jets into the air at the foot of
-the great portico below, and another tosses its spray amid the green
-knolls opposite the President’s windows. These grounds, swelling
-everywhere into gentle hills, covered with mossy turf, filled with
-winding walks, and brightened with _parterres_ of flowers in summer
-months, are enchanting in their beauty.
-
-Thus, you see, the Secretary’s windows quite turn their backs on the
-noisy avenue. Their outlook is most serene. So is the aspect and
-atmosphere of the room. It is a nun of a room, folded in soft grays,
-with here and there a touch of blue and gold. The velvet carpet is gray;
-the furniture, oiled black walnut, upholstered with blue cloth, each
-chair and sofa bearing “U. S.” in a medallion on its back, while the
-carved window-cornices each hold in their centres the gilded scales of
-justice above the key of the Treasury. A full-length mirror is placed
-between these windows. On one side of the room is a book-case, in which
-the works of Webster, Calhoun, Washington, and Jefferson, are
-conspicuous. The walls are frescoed in neutral tints, and the only
-pictures on them are chromo portraits of Lincoln and Grant.
-
-In the centre of this room, at a cloth-covered table, sits the Secretary
-of the Treasury and his assistants, besides, usually, a third dejected
-mortal, on the “anxious seat” of expectancy for an office.
-
-The Secretary’s office is charged with the general supervision of the
-fiscal transactions of the Government, and of the execution of the laws
-concerning the commerce and navigation of the United States. He
-superintends the survey of the coast, the light-house establishment, the
-marine hospitals of the United States, and the construction of certain
-public buildings for custom-houses and other purposes.
-
-The First Comptroller’s office prescribes the mode of keeping and
-rendering accounts for the civil and diplomatic service, as well as the
-public lands, and revises and certifies the balances arising thereon.
-
-The Second Comptroller’s office prescribes the mode of keeping and
-rendering the accounts of the army, navy, and Indian departments of the
-public service, and revises and certifies the balances arising thereon.
-
-The office of Commissioner of Customs prescribes the mode of keeping and
-rendering the accounts of the customs revenue and disbursements, and for
-the building and repairing custom-houses, etc., and revises and
-certifies the balances arising thereon.
-
-The First Auditor’s office receives and adjusts the accounts of the
-customs revenue and disbursements, appropriations and expenditures on
-account of the civil list and under private acts of Congress, and
-reports the balances to the Commissioner of the Customs and the First
-Comptroller, respectively, for their decision thereon.
-
-The Second Auditor’s office receives and adjusts all accounts relating
-to the pay, clothing and recruiting of the army, as well as armories,
-arsenals, and ordnance, and all accounts relating to the Indian Bureau,
-and reports the balances to the Second Comptroller for his decision
-thereon.
-
-The Third Auditor’s office adjusts all accounts for subsistence of the
-army, fortifications, military academy, military roads, and the
-quarter-master’s department, as well as for pensions, claims arising
-from military services previous to 1816, and for horses and other
-property lost in the military service, under various acts of Congress,
-and reports the balances to the Second Comptroller for his decision
-thereon.
-
-The Fourth Auditor’s office adjusts all accounts for the service of the
-Navy Department, and reports the balances to the Second Comptroller for
-his decision thereon.
-
-The Fifth Auditor’s office adjusts all accounts for diplomatic and
-similar services, performed under the direction of the State Department,
-and reports the balances to the First Comptroller for his decision
-thereon.
-
-The Sixth Auditor’s office adjusts all accounts arising from the service
-of the Post-office Department. His decisions are final, unless an appeal
-be taken within twelve months to the First Comptroller. He superintends
-the collection of all debts due the Post-office Department, and all
-penalties and forfeitures imposed on postmasters and mail contractors
-for failing to do their duty; he directs suits and legal proceedings,
-civil and criminal, and takes all such measures as may be authorized by
-law to enforce the prompt payment of moneys due to the department,
-instructing United States attorneys, marshals, and clerks, on all
-matters relating thereto, and receives returns from each term of the
-United States courts of the condition and progress of such suits and
-legal proceedings; has charge of all lands and other property assigned
-to the United States in payment of debts due the Post-office Department,
-and has power to sell and dispose of the same for the benefit of the
-United States.
-
-The Treasurer’s office receives and keeps the moneys of the United
-States in his own office, and that of the depositories created by the
-Act of August 6th, 1846, and pays out the same upon warrants drawn by
-the Secretary of the Treasury, countersigned by the First Comptroller,
-and upon warrants drawn by the Postmaster-General and countersigned by
-the Sixth Auditor, and recorded by the Register. He also holds public
-moneys advanced by warrant to disbursing officers, and pays out the same
-upon their checks.
-
-The Registrar’s office keeps the accounts of public receipts and
-expenditures, receives the returns and makes out the official statement
-of commerce and navigation of the United States, and receives from the
-First Comptroller and Commissioner of Customs all accounts and vouchers
-decided by them, and is charged by law with their safe keeping.
-
-The Solicitor’s office superintends all civil suits commenced by the
-United States (except those arising in the post-office department), and
-instructs the United States attorneys, marshals and clerks in all
-matters relating to them and their results. He receives returns from
-each term of the United States courts, showing the progress and
-condition of such suits; has charge of all lands and other property
-assigned to the United States in payment of debts (except those assigned
-in payment of debts due the post-office department), and has power to
-sell and dispose of the same for the benefit of the United States.
-
-The Light-House Board, of which the Secretary of the Treasury is
-_ex-officio_ president, but in the deliberations of which he has the
-assistance of naval, military and scientific coadjutors.
-
-United States Coast Survey. The Superintendent, with numerous
-assistants, employed in the office and upon the survey of the coast, are
-under the control of this department. A statement of their duties will
-be found in a future chapter.
-
-The new rooms of the Internal Revenue Department are very beautiful.
-They run the entire length of the new wing of the Treasury, looking out
-on the magnificent marble court, with its central fountain below, the
-north entrance, the Presidential grounds and Pennsylvania avenue. They
-are covered with miles of Brussels carpeting, in green and gold. Their
-walls are set with elegant mirrors, hung with maps and pictures. There
-are globes, cases filled with books, cushioned furniture—all the
-accompaniments of elegant apartments, and one opening into the other,
-forming a perfect _suite_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
- WOMAN’S WORK IN THE DEPARTMENTS—WHAT THEY
- DO AND HOW THEY DO IT.
-
-Women Experts in the Treasury—General Spinner’s Opinion—A Woman’s
- Logic—The Gifts of Women—Their Superiority to Men—Money Burnt in the
- Chicago Fire—Cases of Valuable Rubbish—Identifying Burnt
- Greenbacks—The Treasure Saved—The Ashes of the Boston Fire—From the
- Bottom of the Mississippi—Mrs. Patterson Saves a “Pile” of
- Money—Money in the Toes of Stockings—In the Stomachs of Men and
- Beasts—From the Bodies of the Murdered and Drowned—Not Fairly
- Paid—One Hundred and Eighty Women at Work—“The Broom
- Brigade”—Scrubbing the Floors—The Soldier’s Widow—Stories which
- Might be Told—Meditating Suicide—The Struggle of Life—How a Thousand
- Women are Employed—Speaking of Their Characters—The Ill-paid
- Servants of the Country—Chief-Justice Taney’s Daughters—Colonel
- Albert Johnson’s Daughter—A Place Where Men are Not Employed—Writing
- “for the Press”—Miss Grundy of New York—The Internal Revenue
- Bureau—“Marvels of Mechanical Beauty”—Women of Business Capacity—A
- Lady as Big as Two Books!—In a Man’s Place—A Disgrace to the
- Nation—Working for Two, Paid for One—How “Retrenchment” is Carried
- Out—In the Departments—Beaten by a Woman—The Post Office
- Department—Folding “Dead Letters”—A Woman who has Worked
- Well—“Sorrow Does Not Kill”—The Patent Office—The Agricultural
- Department—Changes Which Should be Made.
-
-
-In several branches of the Treasury service, women have risen to the
-proficiency of experts. This is especially true of them as rapid and
-accurate counters, as restorers of mutilated currency and as counterfeit
-detectors.
-
-General Spinner says: “A man will examine a note systematically and
-deduce logically, from the imperfect engraving, blurred vignette or
-indistinct signature, that it is counterfeit, and be wrong four cases
-out of ten. A woman picks up a note, looks at it in a desultory fashion
-of her own, and says: ‘That’s counterfeit.’ ‘Why?’ ‘Because it is,’ she
-answers promptly, and she is right eleven cases out of twelve.” Yet this
-almost unerring accuracy is by no means the result of mere instinct, or
-of hap-hazard chance. It is the sequence of subtle perception, of fine,
-keen vision, and of exquisite sensitiveness of touch.
-
-All women do not excel as counterfeit-detectors; nor can all become
-experts as restorers and counters of currency. But wherever a woman
-possesses native quickness, combined with power of concentration, with
-training and experience, she in time commands an absolute skill in her
-work, which, it has been proved, it is impossible for men to attain. Her
-very fineness of touch, swiftness of movement, and subtlety of sight
-give her this advantage. Thus when notes are defaced or charred beyond
-ordinary recognition, they are placed in the hands of women for
-identification.
-
-After the great Chicago fire in 1871, cases of money to the value of one
-hundred and sixty-four thousand, nine hundred and ninety-seven dollars
-and ninety-eight cents, were sent to the United States Treasury for
-identification. They consisted of legal tenders, National State bank and
-fractional notes, bonds, certificates and coupons, internal revenue and
-postage stamps, all so shrivelled and burned, that they crumbled to the
-touch and defied unaided eyesight. All these charred treasures were
-placed in the hands of a committee of six ladies, for identification.
-What patience, practice, skill, were indispensable to the fulfilment of
-this task, it is not difficult to conjecture.
-
-“After unpacking the money from the raw cotton in which it travelled, as
-jealously swathed as the most precious jewellery, the ladies separated
-each small piece with thin knives made for the purpose, then laying the
-blackened fragments on sheets of blotting-paper, they decided by close
-scrutiny the value, genuineness and nature of the note. Magnifying
-glasses were provided, but seldom used, except for the deciphering of
-coupon-numbers or other minute details. The pieces were then pasted on
-thin paper, the bank-notes returned to their respective banks, and the
-United States money put in sealed envelopes and delivered to a committee
-of four, who superintended the final burning. The amount of one million,
-two hundred and twenty-six thousand, three hundred and forty-one dollars
-and thirty-three cents was identified—over seventy-six per cent. of the
-whole.”
-
-A year later, Boston, from the ruins of its great fire, gathered the
-ashes of its money and sent it to the United States Treasury, begging
-identification and aid in restoration. Eighty-three cases came from that
-city, and these were so carefully packed that the labor of
-identification was greatly lightened. Of the eighty-eight thousand,
-eight hundred and twelve dollars and ninety-nine cents, which they
-contained, over ninety per cent. of the whole was identified by the same
-six ladies, who saved so much to individuals and to the Government from
-the Chicago fire.
-
-Besides money, a large amount of checks, drafts, promissory notes,
-insurance policies, and other valuable papers were identified by these
-same clear eyes and patient hands, and restored to their owners. The
-entire responsibility of the whole amount rested on them. The money was
-delivered to them, when it came, and on their reports all remittances on
-it were made. It took over six months of constant labor to identify the
-money from these fires.
-
-The names of this committee of six are Mrs. M. J. Patterson, Miss Pearl,
-Mrs. Davis, Miss Schriner, Miss Wright, and Miss Powers. “Mrs. Patterson
-has been engaged for seven or eight years on what are called ‘affidavit
-cases’—cases where the money is too badly mutilated to be redeemed in
-the regular way, and the sender testifying under oath that the missing
-fragments are totally destroyed, receives whatever proportion of the
-original value allowed by the rules.”
-
-The most noted case that she ever worked on was that of a paymaster’s
-trunk that was sunk in the Mississippi, in the _Robert Carter_. After
-lying three years in the bottom of the river, the steamer was raised,
-and the money, soaked, rotten and obliterated, given to Mrs. Patterson
-for identification. She saved one hundred and eighty-five thousand out
-of two hundred thousand dollars, and the express company, which was
-responsible for the original amount, presented her with five hundred
-dollars, as a recognition of her services.
-
-All the money which she identifies passes from the hands of this lady to
-a committee of three—two gentlemen, one from the Treasurer’s and one
-from the Register’s office, and a lady from the Secretary’s office. The
-duties of these three persons are identical. They re-count the money,
-seal it with the official seal of the three offices, and for so doing
-receive, per year, the gentlemen each eighteen hundred dollars, the lady
-twelve hundred dollars—one more illustration of the sort of justice
-between the work of men and women, which prevails in the Treasury
-service!
-
-The identification and restoration of defaced and mutilated notes is a
-very difficult and important operation. From the toes of stockings, in
-which they have been washed and dissolved; from the stomachs of animals,
-and even of men; from the bodies of drowned and murdered human beings;
-from the holes of vice and of deadly disease, these fragments of money,
-whose lines are often utterly obliterated, whose tissues emit the
-foulest smells, come to the Treasury, and are committed wholly to the
-supervision and skill of women.
-
-Let any just mind decide whether such labor does not deserve to be
-recognized and rewarded absolutely on its own merits. Such is its
-acknowledged value, that these Government experts have been allowed to
-go to distant parts of the country, to restore burnt money belonging to
-Adams’ Express Company, because it was known that there was no one else
-in the land, who could perform this service.
-
-The whole basement floor of the north wing of the Treasury is occupied
-by the busy counters of mutilated money. Here sit one hundred and eighty
-women counters, restorers and detectors. Side by side, we see the faded
-and the blooming face. Here is the woman, worn and weary—born, more than
-likely, to ease and luxury—thankfully working to support herself and her
-children; and at the very next table, a maiden, whose fresh youth, care
-has not yet worn out—each working with equal thankfulness, to support
-herself, and besides, perhaps, father and mother, brother, sister or
-child.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- COUNTING WORN AND DEFACED GREENBACKS, AND DETECTING COUNTERFEITS.
- This room is in the Redemption Bureau, Treasury Building. Over One
- Hundred Thousand Dollars worth of Fractional Currency alone is here
- daily received for redemption; out of which about $350 dollars’
- worth of counterfeit money is detected, stamped and returned.
-]
-
-The time of toil, for one who must earn her living, is not long; indeed,
-the hours are fewer than the average hours of ordinary labor. She does
-not complain of them; she is grateful for her chance. Yet her
-working-day is as long as her brother’s. Her chance, alone, is less. For
-the same hours and the same toil, her stipend is one-fourth smaller than
-his smallest.
-
-At three o’clock P. M., hats and shawls come down from their pegs,
-lunch-baskets come forth from their hiding-places, the great corridors,
-and porticoes, and broad streets are thronged with homeward-wending
-workers. For the space of half an hour, the Treasury-offices and halls
-seem deserted, and then—Lo! the Broom Brigade! Cobwebs, dust and dirt,
-no longer dim the granite steps, the tessellated floors, the marble
-surfaces of the Treasury-building, as they used to do, years ago.
-Congress has provided a Broom Brigade, with fifteen dollars a month, to
-pay each member—and here they come, the sweepers, the dusters and the
-scrubbers—ninety women!
-
-Three years ago, was established the present efficient system of daily
-cleaning of the Treasury, exclusively under feminine control, with what
-perfect result, all who remember the Treasury as it was, and see it as
-it is, can bear witness.
-
-These ninety women-workers are under the exclusive control of a lady
-custodian. The organization, supervision, general control, payment,
-etc., of this small army of sweepers, brushers and scrubbers, all
-devolve on her. She is a fair and stately woman, wearing a crown of
-snow-white hair, her soul looking out of eyes clear and bright, yet of
-tender blue. Her face tells its own story of sorrow outlived, and of
-deep human sympathy. Did it tell any other, she would not be the right
-woman in the right place. No woman who has not suffered, who is not in
-profound sympathy with every form of human poverty and want, could of
-right reign over an army of women toilers, sweeping, scrubbing for
-bread. At 4 P. M., each day, ninety women enter a little room on the
-basement floor of the Treasury, there to exchange their decent street
-dress for the dusty garments of toil. As they ascend the broad stairs
-and disperse—broom, duster, or scrubbing-brush in hand—to make the
-beautiful offices and broad halls fresh and bright for the next coming
-day, the lady who guards and guides them all—who knows the history of
-each one—what stories she might tell!
-
-Here is a little woman whose husband was killed in the Union army,
-leaving her nothing but his memory, his small pension, and a pair of
-brave hands to support herself and three little ones. Here are two
-bright little colored girls. They are students in Howard’s University,
-and come every day after school, the long way to the Treasury, to earn a
-part of the money which is to insure their education. Here is a young
-woman whose keenly lined, sorrowful face is a history. “Months ago she
-came to the silver-haired lady in the custodian’s room, and asked for
-work of any kind. The possibility to grant her request did not then
-exist, and again and again, with little hope, she came. At last she
-applied when some necessitous vacancy in the ranks of workers rendered
-it possible for the lady to assign her at once to a place of employment;
-and gladly she gave it, for the petitioner was wan and despairing. After
-work and the departure of the throng, she again sought the lady, to
-thank her on her knees ‘for saving her life.’ She said, ‘I had made up
-my mind to take my life if you refused me; I had reached the end of
-every thing.’ Then followed the oft-repeated story—deception, desertion,
-desperation, and the one last struggle to live”—to live honestly by
-honest, albeit the lowliest toil.
-
-“Many a soldier’s widow, struggling with smallest fortune, has occasion
-to be thankful for the fifteen dollars earned here every month, although
-the walk and work seem insufferable at times. Many a soldier’s orphan is
-sustained by the stroke of brush and broom, making hall and stair and
-wall brightly clean to the step and sight of coming visitors from far
-and near, and the same shining polish which some strangers may admire,
-on the perspected marble floors and wrought pilasters, is a source and
-means of maintenance to humble homes when a death, desertion, and (O!
-sadly often) drunkenness has removed the head and protector, and in
-which life means only toil and sorrow. Every one of these ninety women
-has her own story of trouble, and want, and endurance, which made up her
-past, and won for her, her niche in this scheme of labor.”
-
-Near a thousand women, from the toilers of the tubs under its roof, to
-the Brush-and-Broom Brigade in its basement, are employed in the
-Treasury. Their labor ranges from the lowliest manual toil, to the
-highest intellectual employment. In the social scale they measure the
-entire gamut of society. In isolated instances, women of exceptional
-character may still hold positions in the Treasury, and in so large a
-number, and under an unjust system of appointment, it would be strange
-if no such case could be found. But so powerful is the public sentiment
-roused against such appointments, it is impossible that they should be
-longer permitted, if known. The deepest wrong which their presence ever
-inflicted, was the unjust suspicion which they brought upon a large body
-of intelligent, pure women. The truth is, there is not another company
-of women-workers in the land which numbers so many ladies of high
-character, intelligence, culture, and social position.
-
-The country is not aware to what an extent its most noble public
-servants have died poor, nor how many of their wives and daughters have
-sought the Government Civil Service as the means of honorable
-self-support.
-
-Until within a short time, when the friends of their father raised a
-fund for their support, the daughters of Chief-Justice Taney were
-employed in the Treasury. The fair young orphan daughter of Robert J.
-Walker, once Secretary of the Treasury, now supports herself by service
-in the Internal Revenue. Governor Fairchild, of Wisconsin, found his
-beautiful wife, the daughter of a distinguished public man, occupying a
-desk in the Treasury. Mrs. Mary Johnson, daughter of Colonel Albert, who
-for a long series of years was head of the Topographical Bureau, has
-been for ten years a clerk in the Treasury. Her husband was Consul at
-Florence, where he died. Her father passing away soon after, she found
-herself alone, with two young sons to rear and educate. She became a
-Government clerk, or, as that title is now officially denied to a woman,
-“a Government _employé_.” Her sons are growing up to honor her, one
-having entered the Naval School at Annapolis. Mrs. Tilton, sister of
-General Robert Ould, is an “_employé_” in the Internal Revenue. The
-widow of Captain Ringgold is also there.
-
-The Quarter-master-General’s Office, which is a division of the War
-Department, has been almost exclusively set apart for the widows,
-daughters, and sisters of officers of army or navy, killed or injured in
-the war. Almost without exception, the “_employés_” of this office are
-gentlewomen. It is filled with elegant and accomplished women, some of
-whom are remarkable for their literary and scientific attainments. These
-ladies now occupy offices provided in a plain building on Fifteenth
-street. Their rooms are smaller and much more private than those of the
-Treasury opposite. Their work is the copying, recording, and registering
-of the letters of the department. No men are employed in these offices.
-Their superintendent is a lady, who has entire supervision of the ladies
-and the labor of this division. She is the widow of a naval officer who
-died in the service, a descendant of Benjamin Franklin, and occupies
-now, as she has all her life, the highest social position. She has
-children to support, and carries heavy official responsibilities—her
-duties are identical with those of the head of any other bureau—she
-receives only the stipend of the lowest male clerk, twelve hundred
-dollars. Elizabeth Akers Allen (Florence Percy), whose deep and tender
-lyrics call forth such universal response, held a position in this
-office until her last marriage.
-
-Women of education and the finest intellectual gifts are to be found in
-every department. No inconsiderable number attempt to bring their meagre
-nine hundred dollar salary up to the most ignorant man _employé’s_
-twelve hundred, by writing for the press, or pursuing some artistic
-employment outside of office hours.
-
-The Treasury boasts of a number of more than ordinary women
-correspondents, whose letters have attracted wide attention by the
-really important information which they have imparted, concerning
-internal workings of Departmental life and service. Foremost among
-these, is Miss Austine Snead (Miss Grundy, of the New York World). Miss
-Snead is the only and fatherless daughter of an accomplished gentleman.
-She is a “Class-child” of Harvard College, a loyal Kentuckian whom, with
-her youthful and lovely mother, the vicissitudes of war drifted to the
-one work-shop of the Nation open to women. The loss of her position, by
-change of administration, forced her to turn to the chance of
-journalism, and in the branch of the profession which she entered, she
-rose at once to the foremost rank. Mrs. Snead, formerly a famous _belle_
-of Louisville, Kentucky, is one of the most patient, faithful, and
-accurate counters in the redemption division of the Treasury, and is
-beside, weekly correspondent of the _Louisville Courier Journal_. Both
-are women who wear industry, integrity, and honor as their jewels, far
-dearer to them than all the lost treasures of Fortune’s more prosperous
-days.
-
-The Internal Revenue Bureau, a branch of the Treasury Service, and
-occupying beautiful apartments in the Treasury Building, employs a large
-number of women. Copying, recording, filing of letters, and keeping
-accounts, make the chief work of this division. It demands a high order
-of clerical ability, and the books kept by these ladies are marvels of
-mechanical beauty.
-
-The complications and immensity of the Internal Revenue Service, make
-this one of the busiest offices in the entire Department. It contains
-from forty-five to fifty women—_employés_. Beside those who execute the
-exquisite copper-plate copying, there are many whose whole duty is “head
-work.” This consists of examining, sorting, and filing the different
-daily communications received at the office. These are of one hundred
-and fifty varieties, concerning internal revenue, taxes, etc., subjects
-usually supposed not to be particularly lucid to the average feminine
-mind. Many are employed in examining, approving, and recording reports
-of surveys of distilleries, and other important papers; and such is the
-estimate placed on their business capacity, as thus applied, that their
-opinions on the papers are accepted without question.
-
-At one of these desks sits a lovely sylph-like creature, whose bird-like
-hands always reminds me of Charlotte Bronté’s. She is scarcely bigger
-than the two big books which she handles and “keeps”—and to see her at
-them, perched upon a high stool, _is_ “a sight.” Born and reared in
-affluence, fragile in constitution, and exquisitely sensitive in
-organism, she is yet intellectually one of the best clerks—no
-“_employés_” in the Bureau. Years ago, she was placed at this eighteen
-hundred dollar desk, which a man-clerk had just vacated. She has filled
-it, performing its duties for seven or eight years, for the woman’s
-stipend of nine hundred dollars. When the new Civil Service Rules first
-went into operation, she was awarded twelve hundred dollars per annum,
-for her service from that date. To have awarded her the remaining six
-hundred dollars, which was paid the man at the same desk, for doing the
-same work, would have been an equality of justice, from which the
-average official masculine mind instinctively recoiled.
-
-_Apropos_ of the preponderance of favor with which this same official
-masculine mind is able to regard and reward itself, is the case of a
-lady in another division. She has mathematical genius, and is one of the
-best practical mathematicians in the Treasury Department. Many of the
-statistical tables, for reports to Congress, are made out by her.
-Members of Congress, on the most important committees, do not disdain to
-come to her for assistance in making out their reports. Near two years
-ago, a man-clerk, in the same room with this lady, (who received his
-appointment through political favoritism,) became so dissipated, that he
-was totally unfitted to fulfil the duties of his desk, and he was
-carried by his friends to an inebriate asylum. Since that time, this
-lady, in addition to the arduous duties of her own desk, has performed
-all the labor accruing to that of the absent inebriate. She whose
-official existence as a clerk is denied by the legislators who employ
-her, has performed steadily, for many months, the labor of two
-men-clerks. How much does she receive for so doing? Nine hundred dollars
-a year. The eighteen hundred dollars, which she earns at one desk, is
-paid to the drunkard in whose name she earns it!
-
-The Government, who support this man for being a drunkard, forces a
-woman to do his work for nothing, or lose the chance of earning the
-pittance paid to her in her own name. This lady, broken in health by her
-long-continued and overtaxing toil, sees what before her? Surely not
-recognition or justice from the Government which she serves and honors,
-while it, through selfishness and injustice, disgraces itself.
-
-Of the forty-five ladies in the Internal Revenue Bureau, there is but
-one, and she fifty years of age, who has not more than herself to
-support on the pittance which she is paid. Nevertheless, whenever a
-spasmodic cry of “retrenchment” is raised, three women are always
-dismissed from office, to one man, although the men so greatly outnumber
-the women, to say nothing of their being so much more expensive.
-
-“One of the greatest advocates of economy took work from a woman whose
-pay was the invariable nine hundred dollars per year, to give it to a
-man, who received for doing it, sixteen hundred dollars. No complaint
-was made of her manner of doing the work, but the head of the division
-said that she could count money, and he had not enough work for the men.
-Nothing was said of dismissing the superfluous male clerks. The work
-given the manly mind, in this instance, was the entering of dates of
-redemption opposite the numbers of redeemed notes. A child of ten years
-could scarcely have blundered at it. The same date was written sometimes
-for two weeks at a time.”
-
-The lady at the head of the woman’s division of the Internal Revenue
-Bureau, has filled the position, with marked efficiency, for ten years,
-and upon the adoption of the new Civil Service Rules, she was authorized
-to receive eighteen hundred dollars per annum.
-
-The lady who is one of the librarians of the library of the Treasury, is
-an accomplished linguist, a very intellectual woman. She was appointed
-by Mr. Boutwell, and received sixteen hundred dollars.
-
-There are some very important desks filled by ladies in the Fifth
-Auditor’s office. Into their hands come all consular reports. To fulfil
-their duties efficiently, they must possess a knowledge of banking, as
-well as of mathematics.
-
-Before the Civil Service Rules were vetoed, several ladies competed in
-one, two, and three examinations. Thus several won, by pure intellectual
-test, twelve hundred dollars, sixteen hundred dollars, eighteen hundred
-dollars, and one or two, I believe, a twenty-two hundred dollars
-position.
-
-In the office of the Comptroller of the Treasury, are some very
-important desks filled by ladies. One young lady in this office has
-charge of the correspondence with the national banks and engraving
-companies. This involves a complicated routine. The desk was formerly
-filled by a man who received fourteen hundred dollars. It was taken from
-him because he was two hundred letters behind date. The work which has
-been in charge of this lady for six or seven years, at nine hundred
-dollars per annum, is always even with the day.
-
-Another young lady, in this office, prepares an abstract of the
-circulation issued and returned by national banks, by means of which an
-immediate answer can be given, when information is asked, as to the
-outstanding circulation of any particular bank. Another laborious task,
-performed in this office by a lady, is the preparation of an abstract of
-the number of notes of each denomination and issue, work requiring great
-intellectual exactness and care.
-
-In the Post Office Department, there are forty-seven women who address
-“returned letters,” _i. e._, letters which have miscarried, and which
-are to be returned, if the signature, or anything inside the letter,
-gives a clue to whom it is to be sent. There are ten women who fold
-“dead letters,” and three who translate foreign letters.
-
-The lady in charge of the women clerks in the Dead-Letter Office, is the
-daughter of an officer high in rank in the army, now dead. Her
-grandfather was the President of a New England college. Mrs. Pettigru
-King, whose father was the Governor of South Carolina, and a member of
-the United States Senate, herself a woman of remarkable talents, was
-long employed in the Dead-Letter Office. Sitting among many younger
-women, her hands flying as swift as any of theirs—the daily task, that
-of re-directing two hundred letters, usually completed by her before
-that of any one else—we see a fair, round-faced, blue-eyed woman, whose
-sudden, bright glance and rapid movements at once fix our attention. She
-looks to be about fifty; she is in reality over seventy years of age.
-She and her history combined, probably make as remarkable a fact as the
-Dead-Letter Office contains. She is the widow of a clergyman. When the
-war broke out, her only son became hopelessly insane. “As he could not
-go to the war, I went myself,” she said. As the Assistant-Manager of the
-United States Sanitary Committee for an entire State, she raised, in
-money, ten thousand dollars, and collected and distributed ninety
-thousand hospital articles. She was in the field, in the hospital, and
-travelling between certain large cities, till the close of the war. Just
-as she finished her great work, she fell and broke one of her limbs.
-This confined her to her room for six months. In the meantime, her
-daughter’s husband died, leaving her with three little children, and no
-income. Soon after, the mother lost what little she had, and the entire
-family were left penniless. After an unsuccessful attempt at the widow’s
-forlorn hope, “keeping boarders,” mother and daughter came to
-Washington, and sought for positions in the Departments. “Friends tried
-to dissuade us,” said the old lady. “They told us that we must not come
-here, to mingle with such people as they thought were in the
-Departments. We have _not_ seen them. I have been three years in the
-Post Office Department, and my daughter in the Treasury, and we have met
-none but respectable women.”
-
-Three winters ago, by act of Congress, she was allowed to place her
-insane son in the Lunatic Asylum here, free of charge, leaving her at
-liberty to assist her daughter in the support of her young family.
-Notwithstanding her war services, and the names of twenty prominent men
-in her native State attached to her papers, it took her six months to
-obtain, for herself and daughter, the chances to labor which she sought.
-“Sorrow does not kill,” she says, and as we look into her beaming eyes,
-we say it does not even extinguish the brightness of a soul forever
-young,—and yet this lady, in a few eventful years, “lived through sorrow
-enough to break any heart less stout than hers.”
-
-In the Patent Office, fifty-two women clerks are allowed by law. A few
-women are employed in copying Pension Rolls in the Pension Office, who
-have a room provided for them in the Patent Office. Ten or twelve women
-have work given them from the Patent Office, which they do at their
-homes. This work, as well as that done in the Office, consists chiefly
-of the drawing of models. Every model of all the tens of thousands
-received in the Patent Office, from the beginning to the present day,
-has thus been re-produced and preserved. Glazed transparent linen is
-placed over the engraved lines, and through this, with ink and stencil,
-the most intricate and exquisite lines are drawn. To do this work
-perfectly, a lady must be something of an artist and draughtswoman.
-Magnifying glasses are used, and even with their aid, the work is most
-trying, and often destructive to the eyesight. The salary fixed for this
-work is ten hundred dollars per annum. Those who take their work home,
-and are paid by the piece, make as much as those who give the work will
-allow. Here, of course, is a large opportunity for favoritism and
-injustice. Thus favorites are often allowed to do twice their share,
-while others get barely work enough to subsist.
-
-The Agricultural Department affords temporary employment for numbers of
-women, for two or three months of the year, and two have permanent
-positions there. The temporary work is the putting up of seeds for
-universal distribution, and occasionally copying is given out. Of the
-two ladies who find constant employment there, one is the assistant of
-Professor Glover, in taking charge of the Museum. She is the widow of a
-western editor, and at one time had exclusive control of a public
-journal (an agricultural one,) herself. She is a woman of large
-intelligence, a proficient in botany and natural history, which fact
-gave her, her present position, and enabled her to fill it with credit
-to herself. The other lady _employé_ is a taxidermist, who prepares the
-birds and insects for the Museum. The officers of this Department regard
-her as a proficient in her profession. She is a German, has been
-connected with the Department over six years, and has a room provided
-for her in the beautiful agricultural building.
-
-Woman’s work in the Government Printing-Office, remains yet to be
-noticed, but enough has been mentioned, to prove its value in other
-branches of the Civil Service. It would be strange if so large a hive
-held no drones. It is doubtless true, that while many women are not only
-qualified, but actually perform the duties of the highest class desks,
-for an unjust pittance, many more do not even earn their nine hundred
-dollars per annum. There could be no more striking proof of the
-inequality and injustice which prevail in our Civil Service, than the
-fact that such persons, men and women, are appointed by men in power,
-really to be supported by the Government, and receive from that
-Government, for inefficiency and idleness, all, and more, than is paid
-often to the most intellectual, the most efficient, the most devoted of
-its servants.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
- WOMEN’S WORK IN THE TREASURY—HOW APPOINTMENTS
- ARE MADE.
-
-The Scales of Justitia—Where They Hang and Where They Do Not Hang—The
- Difference Between Men and Women—Reform a “Sham!”—The First
- Women-Clerks—A Shameful and Disgraceful Fraud—What Two Women
- Did—Cutting Down the Salaries of Women—The First Woman-Clerk in the
- Treasury—Taking Her Husband’s Place—Working “_in Her Brother’s
- Name_”—A Matter of Expediency—The Feminine Tea-Pot—The Secretary
- Growls at the Tea-Pots—The Hegira of the Tea-Pots—Thackeray’s
- Opinion of Nature’s Intentions—Blind on One Side—In War Days—General
- Spinner Visits Secretary Chase—“A Woman can Use Scissors Better than
- a Man”—Profound Discovery!—“She’ll do it _Cheaper_”—“Light
- Work”—“Recognized”—Besieged by Women—Scenes of Distress and
- Trouble—Hundreds of Homeless Women—After the War—How the
- Appointments were Made—Creating an Interest—The Advantages of the
- “Sinners”—Infamous Intrigues—The Baseness of Certain Senators—Virtue
- Spattered with Mud—A Disgrace to the Nation—Secret Doings in High
- Places—New Civil Service Rules—Sounding Magnanimous—Passing the
- Examination—The Irrepressible Masculine Tyrants—The New Rules a
- Perfect Failure—Up to the Mark, but not Winning—An Alarming
- Suggestion—Men _versus_ Women—Tampering with the Scales—How Much a
- Woman Ought to be Paid—Opinion of a Man in Power—Interesting
- Description of an Average Representative—“Keeping Women in Their
- Place”—Getting up a Speech on Women—The Man who Stayed at
- Home—Generosity of the “Back-Pay” Congress—What Women Believe Ought
- to be Done.
-
-
-On the carved cornices which surmount windows and mirrors in the
-spacious Office of the Secretary of the Treasury may be seen, equally
-balanced above its keys, the scales of Justitia. Would that they
-symbolized the equal justice reigning through the minutest division of
-the great departments of the Government service.
-
-Weighted with human selfishness, perhaps this is impossible. Majestic in
-aspect, great in magnitude, in energy and action, they will never be
-morally grand till they are established and perpetuated in absolute
-equity. In that hour the scales of Justitia will hang in equal balance
-above the head of the masculine and feminine worker. Whatever _their_
-difference, there will be no disparity in the equity which shall
-measure, weigh and reward equal toil. To-day the departments of
-Government teem with kindness and favoritism to individual women. What
-they lack is justice to woman. This they have lacked from the beginning.
-What a comment on human selfishness is the fact, that with all the
-legislation of successive Congresses, the employment of women in the
-departments of the Government is to-day as it was in the
-beginning—perpetuated in favoritism and injustice. Civil Service Reform,
-as carried on, is a mockery and a sham. Nowhere has its hollow pretence
-been so visible—so keenly felt—as in its utter failure of simple justice
-to the woman-worker in the public service.
-
-From the beginning, when her work has been tacitly recognized and
-rewarded as a man’s, her sex has been proscribed. The first work given
-to women from the Government was issued from the General Land Office, as
-early, if not earlier, than President Pierce’s administration, and
-consisted of the copying of land warrants. This work was sent to their
-homes. They received it in the name of some male relative, and for that
-reason were paid what he would have received for doing it, viz., twelve
-hundred dollars per annum. One lady supported a worthless husband (the
-nominal clerk) and her two children in this way, doing all his work for
-him. Another supported herself, her two nephews, and educated them out
-of the same salary.
-
-During Mr. Buchanan’s administration, this work was taken out of
-feminine hands, to a very large extent, and the few allowed to retain it
-were paid only six hundred dollars. Somewhere in this era the first
-woman clerk appeared in the Treasury. She was a wife who, during her
-husband’s illness, was allowed to take his desk and to do his work, for
-his support and their children’s. This she continued to do until her
-second marriage; but it was _in her brother’s name_. She copied and
-recorded, did both well, and was paid—not because she did well, but
-because she did her work in the name of a man—sixteen hundred dollars
-per annum. Thus, while this lady performed the work of a man, and
-performed it in his name, as a woman her presence at the desk was a
-subterfuge, and her official existence ignored.
-
-Without recognition or acknowledgment, the woman-clerk system in the
-Treasury Department is an outgrowth of expediency. Like many another
-fact born of the same parentage, it soon proved its own right to
-existence, and refused to be extinguished.
-
-By the time that Secretary McCulloch made his advent, the feminine
-tea-pot had invaded every window-ledge. The Secretary complained of the
-accumulation of tea-pots in the Treasury of the nation. They vanished,
-and ceased to distill the gentle beverage for the woman-worker at her
-noonday lunch. “Nature meant kindly by woman when it made her the
-tea-plant,” Thackeray says. The presence of her tea-pot was made a
-mental and moral sign, by political philosophers, that woman was unfit
-for Government service. Nobody ever heard that the costly cigars and
-tobacco which filled the man clerk’s “nooning,” to the exhilaration of
-his body and soul, was a like sign of his inability to perform prolonged
-service without the aid of stimulants.
-
-In war days, when tens of thousands of men were withdrawn from civil
-labor, and when one day’s expense to the Government equalled a whole
-year’s in the time of Washington, General Spinner went to Secretary
-Chase and said: “A woman can use scissors better than a man, and she
-will do it cheaper. I want to employ women to cut the Treasury notes.”
-Mr. Chase consented, and soon the great rooms of the Treasury witnessed
-the unwonted sight of hundreds of women, scissors in hand, cutting and
-trimming each Treasury-note sheet into four separate notes. This was
-“light work;” but if anybody supposes it easy, let him try it for hours
-without stopping, and the exquisite pain in his shoulder-joints and the
-blisters on his fingers will bear aching witness to his mistake.
-
-Washington was full of needy women, of women whom the exigencies of war
-had suddenly bereft of protection and home. In her appointment at that
-hour, political differences went for nothing. Every poor woman who
-applied to the good General was given work if he had it. A pair of
-scissors were placed in her hands, and she was told to go at it. She had
-no official appointment or existence. During 1862, these women were paid
-six hundred dollars per annum out of the fund provided by Congress for
-temporary clerks. A year or two later the working existence of these
-women was recognized in the annual appropriation bills.
-
-After that it did not take long to spread through the land that the
-Government Departments in Washington offered work to women. The land was
-full—fuller than ever before of women who needed work to live.
-Necessity, exaggeration, romance and sorrow, combined as propelling
-motives, and the Capital was soon overrun with women seeking Government
-employment. Then, more conspicuously than to-day, the supply far
-exceeded the demand. The disappointment, the suffering, the sin which
-grew out of this fact, can never be measured.
-
-The war had torn the whole social fabric like an earthquake. Society
-seemed upheaved from its foundations—shattered, and scattered in chaos.
-Nowhere was this so apparent as in Washington. Women seeking their
-husbands; women, whose husbands were dead, left penniless with dependent
-children. Young girls, orphaned and homeless, with women adventurers of
-every phase and sort, all, sooner or later, found their way to
-Washington. The male population was scarcely less chaotic. Men,
-restrained and harmonized through life by the holiest influences of
-home, found themselves suddenly homeless, herded together in masses,
-exposed to hardships, danger and undreamed-of temptations. “Let us eat
-and drink, for to-morrow we die,” seemed to be blazoned on the painted
-sign-boards of the dens of drink and sin, and on the debauched and
-brazen faces of the stranger men and women who jostled each other on the
-crowded thoroughfares.
-
-While thousands escaped unharmed the moral pestilence which brooded in
-the air, tens of thousands more were touched with its blight, and fell.
-Men and women who would have lived and died innocent, in the safe
-shelter of peace and home, grew demoralized and desperate amid the rack
-and ruin of war. In the hour when human nature needed every sacred
-safeguard, it found itself bereft of the sweetest and best that it had
-ever known. This was especially true of the hundreds of homeless women
-in the Capital seeking employment. Congressional appropriations made
-woman’s Government-employment at once a Congressional reward. Very soon,
-every woman’s appointment to work was at the mercy of some Member of
-Congress. Political or war-service might secure a man his, but what had
-the woman but her bereavements, or her personal influence? For the sake
-of the former, noble men, in many instances, sought and found honest
-employment for noble women, for women who had given their husbands, sons
-and fathers, their own heart’s blood, to their country, asking nothing
-in return but the chance to work for their own bread and their
-children’s.
-
-In order to secure any Government position, the first thing a woman had
-to do was to go and tell her story to a man—in all probability a
-stranger—who possessed the appointing power, her chance of getting her
-place depending utterly on the personal interest which she might be able
-to arouse in him. If he was sufficiently interested in her story, and in
-her, to make the official demand necessary, she obtained the coveted
-place, no matter what her qualifications for it, or her lack of them
-might be. If she failed to interest him, by no possibility could she
-secure that place, unless she could succeed in winning over to her cause
-another man of equal political power. If the men who held her chance for
-bread were good men, and she a good woman, well; if they were bad men,
-and she a weak woman, not so well. In either case, the principle
-underlying the appointment was equally wrong.
-
-It was this unjust mode of appointment which, in so many instances,
-especially through the years of the war, placed side by side, with pure
-and noble women, the women-adventurers and sinners, whose presence cast
-so much undeserved reproach upon the innocent, and who caused the only
-shadow of disrepute which has ever fallen upon woman’s Treasury-service.
-Even in the worst days this class formed the exceptions to a host of
-honorable and noble women, and yet the shameful fact cannot be wiped out
-that men, high in political power, because they had that power, made
-womanly virtue its price, and were meanly base enough to use the Civil
-Service of their country to pay for their own disgraceful sins. Because
-this was possible, pure women, working day by day to support themselves
-and their children, were covered with the shadow of unjust suspicion,
-while women, unworthy and profligate, were allowed the same positions,
-with equal honor and equal pay.
-
-There could be no greater moral injustice to woman than to place her
-employment under the Government on such a basis. It put the best under
-ban, while it drew those whose steps pointed downward swiftly along the
-inevitable descent. There was but one redress that the State could offer
-to its daughters, that of making their chance equal to that of its sons.
-Then, if they failed, the failure would be their own; if they succeeded,
-they would not be defrauded by the Government they served.
-
-The new Civil-Service Rules, whatever their impracticability in other
-ways, seemed to offer to the women-workers of the Government this
-redress. If education and fitness were to be made the standard of
-Departmental Service, alike for women as men, then the reign of
-favoritism and might must end. An idle woman, the pet of some man in
-power, would no longer receive all that was paid a woman filling the
-desks of two men. The woman who had proved, by years of efficient
-service at a man’s desk, that she was more than equal to the performing
-of his duties, would cease to receive for doing them the pittance of the
-veriest idler in the lobbies, and no more.
-
-It sounded well; magnanimous men and true women, yearning only for
-justice, and that it might be earned and won without ado, took heart.
-Educated women from North and South, East and West, flocked to the
-Capital to compete in impartial intellectual examination with men. Many
-of these were teachers—all women to whom self-support, or the support of
-others, were indispensable. The number of women who have passed the
-highest competitive examinations, is remarkable. Their life-long
-pursuits and intellectual training made it impossible that, in this
-regard, they should prove second to men. The number so great, that all
-could receive appointments was not probable.
-
-In the face of so many new professions of equality of chance in the
-public service for women, the astonishing fact is, that while women pass
-the highest examinations with honor, it is men, with scarcely an
-exception, who pass into the highest places. With a mocking outcry of
-“justice and equality,” uttered to appease the universal demand,
-selfishness and might still prevail in all departmental appointments.
-Political and personal influence appoint women to-day, just as they did
-before one woman was summoned to compete in intellectual examination
-with men.
-
-“You were fools to expect a twelve-hundred-dollar clerkship because you
-passed the examination of that class,” said a high appointing officer of
-the Treasury to two ladies, one who had come from a far Western, the
-other from a far Eastern State. Both ladies passed the highest
-competitive examination—both, after months of wearing anxiety and
-struggle, with the wolf at the door, received—a nine-hundred-dollar
-clerkship. Did they receive even that on the high merit of their
-competitive examination? Not at all; had their appointment depended on
-that, they would not have received one at all. Sick and worn out, they
-received it at last on the special plea of two men in office, each
-having political power in his respective State.
-
-With such results, I ask, what is a competitive examination to women but
-a shame to the power that treacherously offers it? The man who passes
-such an examination cannot receive less than a twelve-hundred-dollar
-clerkship; the woman who passes triumphantly the severest intellectual
-test offered by the Government, cannot receive more than a
-nine-hundred-dollar position. Why? So many women came to Washington and
-proved, by actual mental examination, that they were fully competent to
-fill the highest civil offices in the departments, its officials became
-alarmed. “Taken on their attainments, they will push out the men,” they
-exclaimed, in alarm. Then straightway they fell back, as men in power
-always do, to carry their own ends on unjust legislation. They based
-their decision on the Act of Congress of four years ago, which fixed the
-salary of all women employed in the Government Departments at nine
-hundred dollars per annum.
-
-The result of all the loud hypocritical outcry of civil equality to
-women is, that hereafter, no matter how high the competitive examination
-which she passes, no matter what the services which she renders, no
-woman is to receive more than nine hundred dollars per year for any
-appointment received after a certain date; and no man, no matter how low
-the labor which he performs, be it only as a messenger to run through
-the halls, is to receive less than twelve hundred dollars per annum.
-
-Cast down your scales, O, Justitia, let them shiver to atoms on its
-marble floor for hanging in equal balance above the keys of the Treasury
-of the United States. They are a mocking lie. Beneath these desecrated
-symbols sits the Secretary of the Treasury, and to him a few shrinking,
-yet daring, women have appealed. “Four hundred dollars a year is enough
-for any woman to be paid for her work,” replies this accidental
-potentate, borne from obscurity to power solely by the “boosting” of a
-friend, who lifted him from his unthought-of “bench” in Massachusetts,
-with no guarantee of fitness from his past, to the chiefship of the
-Treasury of the Nation. “Four hundred dollars is enough for any woman to
-receive for her work, and more than she could earn anywhere else,”
-replies this man.
-
-This one remark, pitted against the facts recorded in this chapter,
-proved the man who made it as too narrow-minded and unjust, too pervaded
-with the caste and selfishness of sex, to be fit to hold the appointing
-power over hundreds of women, in culture and intellectually more than
-his peers. No man whose spring of action is “might is right” has a right
-to rule.
-
-To-day nothing could be more humiliating to a high-spirited,
-intelligent, honorable woman, than to sit in the gallery of the Hall of
-Representatives and be compelled to listen to a debate on woman’s work
-and wages going on below. Yet if she never heard the words uttered by
-men who claim to be the representatives of the people, and who make the
-laws which define her rights and decide her rewards, she could never
-realize how selfish, ungenerous, and unjust is the average man who
-assumes to represent woman, and to legislate for her welfare. These men,
-on the average, are fairly good husbands and indulgent fathers. They are
-anything but tyrants, personally, to the women of their families. But
-their personal relations do not prevent them from placing a very low
-estimate upon the powers, performance, place and prospects of women in
-general. Their caste of sex infiltrates through every word they utter.
-
-The man who is “bound to keep woman in her place,” before he makes a
-speech to that effect, rushes into the Congressional Library, and asks
-Mr. Spofford to give him every book which will help him to prove that
-woman is a weak and inefficient creature. He then proceeds to “cram”
-himself with a crude mass of statements, which he extracts pell-mell out
-of a heap of books. This unassimilated and impracticable load he
-delivers, a few days later, to Congress, to the galleries, and to the
-_Globe_—to prove that—no matter what her qualities or qualifications,
-moral or mental—being a woman, for that fact alone, she must not be a
-clerk, but an “_employé_;” and no matter what she has done or is capable
-of doing in the service of the Government, for that service she must
-receive but nine hundred dollars, and the sum be fixed by law.
-
-There are honorable exceptions—a few men in Congress who, in the
-broadest and best sense, are the friends of woman. They form a small
-minority. The majority, after having made woman’s very existence as a
-Government-worker to depend on their own personal favoritism or caprice,
-stand up in Congress and cast stones at the very class which they have
-themselves created. In nine cases out of ten, these men staid at home
-while others fought their country’s battles. And now they reward the
-widows and orphans of soldiers and sailors by giving them a reluctant
-chance to earn their bread on half-pay. They do it under sufferance,
-while these legislators withhold just remuneration, sneer at their work,
-and defame their characters.
-
-The Forty-second Congress, which, in its most hurried moments, could
-take time to vote to its members an increase of salary from five
-thousand to eight thousand a year, rejected without debate a proposition
-to give women-clerks in the departments equal compensation with men, for
-the same labor. What added proof is required to show that the law-making
-power of our land is fast becoming a monied monopoly—a legislature for
-the rich—an ignorer of the poor. “Eight thousand dollars every twelve
-months, by dint of close economy, will keep my wife and daughters in
-silks and velvets; will give them a phæton by the sea, and make
-beautiful their paths upon the mountain tops! What to me are the wives
-and daughters of the poor? What care of mine the widows and orphans of
-men who perished in their country’s service, if they do support
-themselves and their children by working for this just Government, which
-I help to make, for nine hundred dollars a year! while I pay at least
-twelve hundred to the laziest masculine lout who dawdles with papers
-across the Treasury floors?”
-
-Yet there was scarcely a Member of that Congress that would not repel
-with jest or sneer the mere mention of woman’s demand, in the face of
-such injustice, to legislate for herself. If you would avert this
-catastrophe, gentlemen, show that you are capable of just legislation;
-prove that the power of franchise does not always beget oppression to
-the disfranchised. I point to the practical working of the new
-Civil-Service Rules, to your own greedy grasp of additional thousands,
-with the refusal to grant three meagre hundreds to working women, to
-prove that woman has no hope of justice in man’s representation.
-Represent her interests with half the eager avidity which marks your
-devotion to your own, and she will never ask to represent herself. But
-no matter what her individual distaste to public responsibility, nothing
-is more apparent to the wide-visioned, thoughtful woman than that, in a
-republic, the only possibility of obtaining personal justice lies in
-political equality.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
- GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL LIFE—HOW PLACE AND POWER ARE WON.
-
-Government Official Life—Its Effects on Human Nature—Keeping his Eye
- Open—The Sweet and Winning Ways of Mr. Parasite—In Office—The
- Fault of “the People” and “my Friends”—Shrinking from
- Responsibilities—Pulling the Wool over the Eyes of the
- Innocent—Writing Letters in a Big Way—The “Dark Ways” of Wicked
- Mr. P——— —A Suspicious Yearning for Private Life—The Sweets of
- Office—A Little Change of Opinion—A Man Afflicted with Too Many
- Friends—Forgetting Things that Were—John Jones is not
- Encouraged—Post-offices as Plentiful as Blackberries—Receiving
- Office-seekers—“The Worst Thing in the World for You”—Dismissing
- John—Over-crowded Pastures—John’s Own Private Opinion—The “Mighty
- Messenger”—Government-Servants—Peculiar Impartiality of the Man in
- Office—What the Successful Man Said—I Change My Opinion of Him—A
- Certain Kind of Man, and Where He can be Found.
-
-
-Governmental official life has one effect upon those whom it benefits,
-which is anything but creditable to human nature.
-
-Mr. Parasite wants a high place in the governmental service, and
-circumstances favor his getting it. While there is any doubt about it,
-he does not disdain to use any influence within his reach to make it
-certain. How lovely he is to everybody whose good word or ill word may
-“tell” for or against him. How affable he is to every mortal, from the
-lowliest outspoken man in his home town, to the influential writer,
-whose powerful pen he wishes to propitiate. Mr. Parasite glides into his
-place with grace and resignation. “The people, the people, you know, and
-my friends—_they_ forced it upon me. They quite overrate my fitness,
-quite. I shrink from such responsibilities, such arduous labors; but, if
-my country needs me, if my constituents _demand_ my services, I feel
-that I have no right to refuse, no right to consult my personal ease,
-although the desire of my heart is for the peaceful quiet of private
-life.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE LOBBY OF THE SENATE.
- INSIDE THE CAPITOL.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-Strange to tell, when an accommodating people are about to grant him the
-desire of his heart, Mr. Parasite suddenly starts up alert, and touches
-the springs of a most powerful enginery. He writes personal letters by
-thousands; he has his friends—i. e. agents—at work for him everywhere,
-whispering with this one, arguing with that one, and urging his claims
-incessantly upon the appointing power. But who, that did not know it,
-could believe it.
-
-Chance to light upon Mr. Parasite about this time, and mention the
-subject of his possible appointment or election to him as one in which
-he is naturally interested. Lo! amid all others, Mr. Parasite alone is
-indifferent. “Of course, it would be a compliment, a re-election or
-re-appointment. He would prize it much as a mark of confidence from the
-people, or the Government; but really, so far as personal desires go,
-private life.”
-
-_Private life_ still fills the measure of his yearning. “Retirement” is
-still the goal of his desire. This is but the weakness; the crime of Mr.
-Parasite is revealed further on. The long suspense over, safely
-ensconced in that official chair, while its cushions are a new delight,
-its honors are fresh, its powers unwonted, perhaps a consciousness of
-gratitude remains with Mr. Parasite. It’s a pleasant office, very.
-Carpeted, cushioned, curtained, pictured, secluded. It is pleasant,
-very. This ever-acknowledged honor of official state, messengers flying
-at your bid, doors swinging noiselessly at your approach, hats springing
-into air as you pass by, _lorgnettes_ lifted by fair hands in great
-assemblies, the crowd peering and shouting, “There goes the great Mr.
-Parasite!” Sweet, also, are the newly-found uses of official
-power—sweeter even than to die for one’s country. The privileges of
-patronage, the consciousness of power over the fate of others, the uses
-of power in ministering to self—first sought and last relinquished—of
-all the gifts of office.
-
-While all these retain the charm of newness, a sense of gratitude may
-remain with Mr. Parasite towards those who led and lifted him to his
-high estate. Rarely strong in any man, the sense of gratitude with
-continued office is sure to die out. When he first enters, and the
-memory of fresh services remains with him, he may feel, at least
-faintly, that he owes something to somebody besides himself; but the
-longer he remains, the surer he is that all is his by right, all due to
-his own exalted merit. There comes a time when it seems as if that
-cushioned chair, that luxurious office, those muffled doors, those
-cringing messengers, were all made especially for him and to do him
-service. With a growing sense of security in his position, comes,
-perhaps, an unconscious indifference toward those who, in the beginning,
-helped to lift him toward it. There is no intentional ingratitude, only
-it is so easy for some natures to forget others when they cease to need
-them.
-
-Then, too, official place, even in a republican government, hourly feeds
-in a man his love of power, and his sense of personal importance. It
-feeds the vanity and self-satisfaction of poor human nature, when its
-fellows are dependent upon it even for the smallest favors. Few meet
-this test and survive it their noblest selves. It is astonishing how
-soon Mr. Parasite forgets that, a short time since, he was a seeker of
-favors himself, and is sure to be again, before old age strands him amid
-things gone by in the long-deferred haven of private life.
-
-While a feeling of dependence on others survives, an emotion of
-gratitude lingers, Mr. Parasite will try to treat other applicants for
-office as he desired to be treated a few short months since himself. But
-these emotions were never known to live through a single stress of a
-single term of office.
-
-Poor Mr. Parasite is very much beset! Every hour in the day somebody
-wants something that somebody believes is in Mr. Parasite’s power to
-bestow. It may be flattering, but it is also wearing, tearing,
-exasperating, and even maddening, sometimes, to a man to be deemed the
-dispenser of so much power and patronage. He cannot give everybody all
-that everybody may ask—of course not. This is not all his sin. His sin
-is this: He comes in time (usually in a marvellously short time) to
-regard every one seeking the patronage of his office as a mendicant on
-his personal bounty, rather than as a member of one class with himself.
-Because he gained the highest honor, he forgets that he got it on the
-very same principle that John Jones, who, armed with credentials from
-his minister and doctor, so humbly sues for the post-office of Mudtown.
-He listens to the sister pleading for her brother, the wife for her
-husband, the father for his son, the poor man for himself, and because
-it is little each asks, despises each accordingly, lectures each on the
-folly of wanting any Government place whatever. The one thing that he
-cannot remember, and which it is most delightful to forget, is that he
-was ever in John Jones’ place himself.
-
-To be sure, he did not sue for the Mudtown post-office. He wanted a
-foreign ministry, a home secretaryship, to be a Senator, or, at least, a
-Governor. He begged or bartered for these Government-gifts precisely as
-John does for his post-office. Both are equally office-seekers; but
-there is such disparity between John’s little Alpha and the Omega of Mr.
-Parasite’s desires, the latter does not recognize in this seeker of
-small things his remotest cousin. Comparatively few dare demand
-ministries and secretaryships, while post-offices and their ilk are as
-plentiful as blackberries, and their pickers equally so—so plentiful
-that Mr. Parasite leans back in his cushioned chair, on his official
-tripod, and wonders _which_ John Jones it will be next, and what _he_
-will want; and, when one of the innumerable Johns, waiting outside, is
-admitted by a mighty messenger, whose official state is more
-overwhelming even than his master’s, the suppliant quakes to the bottom
-of his boots in the presence of the powerful potentate, Mr. Parasite.
-
-“What do _you_ want?” says the potentate, in a tone which implies in
-advance, “You can’t have it.”
-
-“Only the Mudtown post-office,” says John, “or—or anything that I can
-get.”
-
-“Impossible; I have nothing—nothing for you,” says the potentate, in a
-remote and superior tone, which indicates, as only a tone can, that he,
-the potentate, needs nothing at present himself. And who can imagine
-that he ever did? “Why on earth do so many of you come for Government
-employment? Don’t you know it is the worst thing in the world for you?
-You had better go to work. Do anything, rather than to hang upon the
-Government.”
-
-Thus _one_ John is dismissed, to go and browse in the closely-cropped
-and over-crowded pastures of the inefficient and ne’er-do-well
-mediocrity.
-
-Several days later, when John rebounds from the shock imparted by Mr.
-Parasite’s grandeur, its momentum sends him pat against a fact. “Why, he
-is a hanger-on to the Government himself.” Yes; and so, in one sense, is
-every office-holder, from the President down to the mighty messenger who
-condescends to shut and open doors. It implies no discredit to be a
-server of the Government; but it reveals a very ignoble side of human
-nature, when the favored holder rebuffs the lowliest seeker as a being
-from another race, in any essential quality the antipodes of himself.
-
-A man who has just been lifted by his friends from one high place to
-another, has long boasted, while in power, “that he would not help a
-friend sooner than an enemy.” I had a certain admiration for him till I
-knew that he said this, and proved it by his practice. There is
-something true and grateful and noble lacking in a man’s nature, when he
-turns from his friend as he would from an enemy, doing nothing for
-either; always taking, and never giving; always seeking, yet sneering at
-others who seek; always subsisting on Government bounty and place
-himself, while he wounds, ignores, and sometimes insults the
-unfortunates who wish to do likewise and can’t.
-
-This is Mr. Parasite, and he lives, reigns and flourishes, as parasites
-only can, in every department of governmental state.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
- THE DEAD LETTER OFFICE—ITS MARVELS AND MYSTERIES.
-
-The Post-Office—Its Architecture—The Monolithic Corinthian
- Columns—The Postal Service in Early Times—The Act of Queen
- Anne’s Reign—“Her Majesty’s Colonies”—After the Revolution—The
- First Postmaster-General—The Present Chief—A Cabinet
- Minister—The Subordinate Officers—Their Positions and Duties—The
- Ocean Mail Postal Service—The Contract Office—The Finance
- Office—The Inspection Office—Complaints and Misdoings—Benjamin
- Franklin’s Appointment—He Goes into Debt—One Hundred and Twenty
- Years Ago—Franklin Performs Wonderful Works—His Ideas of
- Speed—Between Boston and Philadelphia in Six Weeks—Dismissed
- from Office—The Congress of “The Confederation”—A New Post
- Office System—Franklin Comes In Again—The Inspector of Dead
- Letters—Not Allowed to Take Copies of Letters—Only Seventy-five
- Offices in the States—Primitive Regulations—Only One
- Clerk—Government Stages—The Office at Washington—Saved from the
- British Troops—Franklin’s Old Ledger—The Present Number of Post
- Offices—The Dead Letter Office—The Ladies Too Much Squeezed—Some
- of the Ladies “Packed”—Opening the Dead Letters—Why Certain
- Persons are Trusted—Three Thousand Thoughtless People—Valuable
- Letters—Ensuring Correctness—The Property Branch—The Touching
- Story of the Photographs—The Return Branch—What the Postmaster
- Says.
-
-
-Though injured in comparison by the higher site and loftier walls of the
-Patent-Office opposite, the Post-Office, in itself, is one of the most
-beautiful public buildings in Washington. It occupies the entire block
-situated on Seventh and Eighth streets west, and E and F streets north.
-Like the Treasury and Patent-Office, it incloses a grassy court-yard on
-which its inner offices look out.
-
-The architecture of the Post-Office is a modified Corinthian, and is
-regarded by critics as the best representation of the Italian palatial
-ever built upon this continent. It was designed chiefly by F. A. Walter,
-at that time architect of the Capitol, an artist who has left monuments
-of architectural beauty behind him in marble which, seemingly, can never
-perish. On the Seventh street side there is a vestibule, the ceiling of
-which is composed of richly ornamented marbles, supported by four marble
-columns; the walls, niches and floors are of marble, polished and
-tessellated. This is the grand entrance to the General Post-Office
-Department. The F street front affords accommodation to the city Post
-Office. It has a deeply recessed portico in the centre, consisting of
-eight columns grouped in pairs, and flanked by coupled pilasters
-supporting an entablature which girds the entire work. The portico is
-supported by an arcade which furnishes ample convenience for the
-delivery of letters, and the hurrying crowds which come after them. The
-Corinthian columns of this portico are each formed of a single block of
-marble, and each in itself is a marvel of architectural grace. The
-entrance for the mail wagons, on Eighth street, consists of a grand
-archway, the spandrels of which bear upon their face, sculpture
-representing Steam and Electricity, while a mask, representing Fidelity,
-forms the key-stone.
-
-The Postal Service of the country is the oldest branch of the
-Government. As early as the year 1792, a proposition was introduced into
-the General Assembly of Virginia, to establish the office of
-Postmaster-General of Virginia and other parts of America. The
-proposition became a law, but was never carried into effect. In 1710,
-during the reign of Queen Anne, the British Parliament established a
-General Post-Office for all Her Majesty’s dominions. By this act, the
-Postmaster-General was permitted to have one chief letter office in New
-York, and other chief letter offices at some convenient place or places
-in each of Her Majesty’s provinces or colonies in America. When the
-colonies threw off their allegiance to the Crown, especial care was
-given to preserving, as far as possible, the postal facilities of the
-country. When the Federal Constitution was adopted, the right was
-secured to Congress “to establish Post-Offices and Post-Roads.” In 1789,
-Congress created the office of Postmaster-General, and defined his
-duties. Other laws have since been passed, regulating the increased
-powers and duties of the Department, which is now, next to the Treasury,
-the most extensive in the country.
-
-The Postmaster-General, the head of the Department, is a member of the
-President’s Cabinet, and is in charge of the postal affairs of the
-United States. The business of the various branches of the Department is
-conducted in his name and by his authority. He has a general supervision
-of the whole Department, and issues all orders concerning the service
-rendered the Government through his subordinates. During the first
-administrations of the Government, the Postmaster-General was not
-regarded as a Cabinet Minister, but simply as the head of a Bureau. In
-1829, General Jackson invited Mr. Barry, the gentleman appointed by him
-to that office, to a seat in his Cabinet. Since that time, the
-Postmaster-General has been recognized, as _ex-officio_, a Cabinet
-Minister.
-
-The first Postmaster-General was Samuel Osgood, of Massachusetts. The
-present Postmaster is Marshall Jewell, of Hartford, Connecticut.
-
-The subordinate officers of the Department are three Assistant
-Postmaster-Generals, and the Chief of the Inspection Office.
-The Appointment Office is in charge of the First Assistant
-Postmaster-General. To this office are assigned all questions which
-relate to the establishment and discontinuance of post-offices, changes
-of sites and names, appointment and removal of postmasters, and _route_
-and local agents, as, also, the giving of instructions to postmasters.
-Postmasters are furnished with marking and rating-stamps and
-letter-balances by this Bureau, which is charged also with providing
-blanks and stationery for the use of the Department, and with the
-superintendence of the several agencies established for supplying
-postmasters with blanks. “To this Bureau is likewise assigned the
-supervision of the ocean-mail steamship-lines, and of the foreign and
-international postal arrangements.”
-
-The Contract-Office is in charge of the Second Assistant
-Postmaster-General. To this office is assigned the business of arranging
-the mail service of the United States, and placing the same under
-contract, embracing all correspondence and proceedings affecting the
-frequency of trips, mode of conveyance, and time of departures and
-arrivals on all the _routes_; the course of the mail between the
-different sections of the country; the points of mail distribution; and
-the regulations for the government of the domestic mail service of the
-United States. It prepares the advertisements for mail proposals,
-receives the bids, and takes charge of the annual and occasional mail
-lettings, and the adjustment and execution of the contracts. All
-applications for the establishment or alteration of mail arrangements,
-and the appointment of mail messengers, should be sent to this office.
-All claims should be submitted to it for transportation service not
-under contract, as the recognition of said service is first to be
-obtained through the Contract-Office as a necessary authority for the
-proper credits at the Auditor’s-Office.
-
-From this office all postmasters at the ends of _routes_ receive the
-statement of mail arrangements prescribed for the respective _routes_.
-It reports weekly to the Auditor all contracts executed and all orders
-affecting accounts for mail transportation; prepares the statistical
-exhibits of mail service, and the reports of the mail lettings, giving a
-statement of each bid; also of the contracts made, the new service
-originated, the curtailments ordered, and the additional allowances
-granted within the year.
-
-The Finance-Office is in charge of the Third Assistant
-Postmaster-General. To this office is assigned the supervision and
-management of the financial business of the Department not devolved by
-law upon the Auditor, embracing accounts with the draft offices and
-other depositories of the Department; the issuing of warrants and drafts
-in payment of balances, reported by the Auditor to be due mail
-contractors and other persons; the supervision of the accounts of
-offices under orders to deposit their quarterly balances at designated
-points; and the superintendence of the rendition by postmasters of their
-quarterly returns of postages. It has charge of the Dead-Letter Office,
-of the issuing of postage stamps and stamped envelopes for the
-prepayment of postage, and with the accounts connected therewith.
-
-To the Third Assistant Postmaster-General all postmasters should direct
-their quarterly returns; those at draft-offices, their letters reporting
-quarterly the net proceeds of their offices; and those at
-depositing-offices, their certificates of deposit. To him should also be
-directed the weekly and monthly returns of the depositories of the
-Department, as well as applications and receipts for postage stamps and
-stamped envelopes, and for dead letters.
-
-The Inspection-Office is in charge of a Chief Clerk. To this office is
-assigned the duty of receiving and examining the registers of the
-arrivals and departures of the mails, certificates of the service of
-_route_-agents, and reports of mail failures; noting the delinquencies
-of contractors, and preparing cases thereon for the action of the
-Postmaster-General; furnishing blanks for mail registers and reports of
-mail failures, providing and sending out mail bags and mail locks and
-keys, and doing all other things which may be necessary to secure a
-faithful and exact performance of all mail contracts.
-
-All cases of mail depredation, of violations of law by private
-expresses, or by the forging and illegal use of postage stamps, are
-under supervision of this office, and should be reported to it. All
-communications respecting lost money-letters, mail depredations, or
-other violations of law, or mail locks and keys, should be directed to
-“Chief Clerk, Post-Office Department.”
-
-All registers of the arrivals and departures of the mails, certificates
-of the service of _route_-agents, reports of mail failures, applications
-for mail registers, and all complaints against contractors for irregular
-or imperfect service, should be directed, “Inspection Office,
-Post-Office Department.”
-
-Benjamin Franklin was appointed General Deputy Postmaster of the
-Colonies, in the year 1753, with a salary between him and his
-confederates, of £600, if they could get it. This experiment brought him
-in debt £900, and his success in expediting the mails, which he dwells
-upon with so much satisfaction in his writings, will create a smile in
-these days of electricity, steam, and “young-American” speed. In the
-year 1754, he gave notice that the mail to New England, which used to
-start but once a fortnight, in winter, should start once a week, all the
-year, “whereby answers might be obtained to letters between Philadelphia
-and Boston in three weeks, which used to require six weeks!”
-
-Franklin was removed from his office by the British Ministry; but in the
-year 1775, the Congress of the Confederation having assumed the
-practical sovereignty of the Colonies, appointed a committee to devise a
-system of post-office communication, who made a report recommending a
-plan on the 26th of July, which on the same day was adopted, and Doctor
-Franklin unanimously appointed Postmaster-General, at a salary of $1,000
-per annum. The salary of the Postmaster-General was doubled on the 16th
-of April, 1779, and on the 27th day of December, of the same year,
-Congress increased the salary to $5,000 per annum.
-
-An Inspector of Dead Letters was also appointed, at a salary of $100 per
-annum, who was under oath faithfully and impartially to discharge the
-duties of his office, and enjoined to take no copies of letters, and not
-to divulge the contents to any but Congress, or to those who were
-appointed by Congress for that purpose. Dr. Franklin, on the 7th of
-November, 1776, was succeeded as Postmaster-General by his relative,
-Richard Bache, who remained in office till the 28th of January, 1782,
-when he was succeeded by Ebenezer Hazard, who was the last head of the
-General Post-Office under the Confederacy.
-
-In 1790, there were but seventy-five post-offices in the United States,
-and but eighteen hundred and seventy-five miles of post _routes_.
-
-The General Post-Office, in 1790, was located in New York, and Samuel
-Osgood, of Massachusetts, was the first Postmaster-General under the
-Federal Government. His conception of the duties of his office were,
-doubtless, very humble, as he recommended “that the Postmaster-General
-should not keep an office separate from the one in which the mail was
-opened and distributed; that he might, by his presence, prevent
-irregularities, and rectify any mistakes that might occur;” in fact, put
-the Postmaster-General, his assistant, and their one clerk, in the city
-post-office, to see that its mails were assorted and made up correctly.
-
-The salary of Mr. Osgood was $1,500 per annum. Timothy Pickering was
-appointed by Washington, August 12, 1791, at an increased salary of
-$2,000. Joseph Habersham was the last Postmaster-General appointed by
-Washington. He was commissioned April 22, 1795, at a salary of $2,400
-per annum. The office was located in Philadelphia, in the year 1796, and
-was established at Washington when the Federal Government was removed
-there. In 1802, the United States ran their own stages between
-Philadelphia and New York, finding coaches, drivers, horses, etc., and
-cleared in three years over $11,000, by carrying passengers.
-
-That sultry morning of August 25, 1814, when Admiral Cockburn and his
-drunken crew, eager for fresh destruction, marched from Capitol Hill to
-the War Office, which they burned, and from it down F street to treat
-the Post-Office to the same fate, they found it on the site where its
-marble successor now stands, and under the same roof the Patent-Office.
-Says Charles J. Ingersoll, in his rambling history:
-
- “Dr. Thornton, then Chief of the Patent-Office, accompanied the
- detachment to the locked door of the repository, the key having been
- taken away by another clerk watching out of night. Axes and other
- implements of force were used to break in; Thornton entreating,
- remonstrating, and finally prevailing on Major Waters, superintending
- the destruction, to postpone it till Thornton could see Colonel Jones,
- then engaged with Admiral Cockburn in destroying the office of the
- _National Intelligencer_, not far off on Pennsylvania avenue. Colonel
- Jones had declared that it was not designed to destroy private
- property, which Dr. Thornton assured Major Waters most of that in the
- Patent-Office was. A curious musical instrument, of his own
- construction, which he particularly strove to snatch from ruin, with a
- providential gust soon after, saved the seat of government from
- removal, for want of any building in which Congress could assemble,
- when they met in Washington three weeks afterwards. Hundreds of models
- of the useful arts, preserved in the office, were of no avail to save
- it; but music softened the rugged breasts of the least musical of
- civilized people. Major Waters agreed, at last, to respite the patents
- and the musical instrument till his return from Greenleaf’s Point,
- where other objects were to be laid in ruins.”
-
-But with the explosion of the magazine at Greenleaf’s Point, and the
-tornado, both of which made unexpected havoc with the lives of the
-British vandals, and their withdrawal under cover of night, they never
-came back to the Patent and Post-Office, to destroy it. It was, I
-believe, the only public building in the capital which escaped their
-torch. It was, however, destroyed by fire, December 15, 1836.
-
-One of the most precious treasures, now in the possession of the
-Post-Office Department, is the original ledger of Doctor Benjamin
-Franklin, Postmaster-General, 1776, which upon its title-page bears the
-following record:
-
- “This book was rescued from the flames, during the burning of the
- Post-Office Building, on Thursday morning, Dec. 15, 1836, by W. W.
- Cox, messenger of the office of the Auditor of the Treasury for the
- Post-Office Department.”
-
-This ledger is now on file in the office of the Auditor of the Treasury
-for the Post-Office Department. Scorched and worn, it tells the story of
-time and fate. It embraces all the accounts of all the post-offices of
-the United States for the years 1776-77-78. These are all recorded in
-the handwriting of Doctor Franklin, and do not cover one hundred and
-twenty pages. The growth in the postal service may be partly measured by
-the fact that its money record, kept by Benjamin Franklin, running
-through eleven years, is equalled, at the present time, by the accounts
-of two days. When the philosopher was at the head of the Post-Office
-Department, there were eighty post-offices in the Confederation; there
-are now thirty-two thousand post-offices in the United States, with the
-number constantly increasing.
-
-The Dead-Letter Office embodies more personal interest than any other in
-the Post-Office Department. It is a spacious room, unique in outline,
-many-windowed and well ventilated. It is surrounded by a wide gallery,
-supported by spiral columns. An open iron staircase connects it with the
-lower office. It is set apart for the woman’s work of this division.
-They are far out-numbered by the men below, and yet in this narrow
-gallery they are sadly crowded.
-
-Spacious as the Post-Office is, in going thereto, the same conclusion is
-forced upon one, which is apparent in every public building, that it is
-already too small for the vast and rapidly increasing demands of the
-public service. The gentlemen which you see at work below have nothing
-to complain of in lack of light or air, but the ladies above say that
-their little gallery is the escape valve to all the poisoned air below;
-that their heads are so near the roof there is no chance for
-ventilation, and that sudden death, among their number, has been caused
-by the air-poison which pervades this gallery. The ladies need more room
-for a new office; indeed, already they have overflowed the gallery and
-are packed closely in the halls.
-
-Meanwhile, in an imposing-looking apartment beneath them, sit their
-brethren, on either side of the long table, opening the “dead-letters”
-which they are to re-direct. I believe there are fourteen clergymen,
-sitting at a single table, opening these letters. Preference is given to
-gentlemen of this profession, broken in health or fortune, as it is
-taken for granted that if they have lived to that age and fate, without
-ever having committed a dishonest act, it is most unlikely that they
-ever will—and that the treasure-letters are perfectly safe in their
-keeping. Moreover, their profession is also in their favor. They must
-have been unworldly-minded, says the reasoner, or they would never have
-chosen to be clergymen. Nearly all are elderly men, and among the number
-are a few old ones,—one, who has been in this office over fifty years, a
-brother of its one time Postmaster-General, Amos Kendall—hair white as
-snow—back bent over the table—hands trembling as he uses his knife—it is
-his life to go on opening his quota of daily letters, for the pittance
-of $1,200 per year. “If he were refused the privilege,” said an officer,
-“he would die at once.”
-
-[Illustration: DEAD LETTER OFFICE, U. S. GENERAL POST
-OFFICE.—WASHINGTON]
-
-In this office, from the thirty thousand post-offices in the United
-States are received, annually, about three million five hundred thousand
-dead-letters; unmailable letters, three hundred and sixty thousand;
-blank letters, three thousand.
-
-It seems impossible that three thousand persons, in a single year,
-should post letters without a single letter traced on their envelopes;
-nevertheless, this is true.
-
-In one corner of this office stand two men, by an open door, whose
-business it is to receive the dead-letters as they ascend to the office.
-They come up on an elevator—tied up in immense bags. As they are tossed
-out on the floor, one would suppose that they contained coffee for
-merchandise, rather than heart-messages and treasures gone astray. The
-bags are immediately opened and the letters transferred to the assorting
-table, where they are classified by clerks. The foreign letters are
-separated from the domestic, and any irregularity in their transmission
-is noted. They are then counted, numbered and tied up into packages of
-one hundred each, and thrown into bins, whence they are withdrawn in the
-order of the date of their reception, and transferred to the opening
-table to be _hari-karied_ by our clergymen.
-
-Letters containing nothing, if possible, are returned to their writers.
-If they cannot be, they are thrown into the waste-basket. This
-waste-paper is not burned but sold—and averages to the Government a
-revenue of about $4,000 per year. With all his extravagances, this is
-but one of numerous ways by which Uncle Sam manages to turn an
-economical penny out of the carelessness and misfortunes of nephews and
-nieces.
-
-Letters containing anything, of the smallest value, are saved and
-registered under their different heads. Money, jewels, drafts,
-money-orders, receipts, hair, seeds, deeds, military-papers,
-pension-papers, etc., are all recorded and returned, if possible. A
-“money letter” has five different records before it leaves the
-Dead-Letter Office, and is so checked and counter-checked as to make
-collusion or abstraction almost impossible, in case any soul who
-surveyed it were fatally tempted.
-
-When the opener of a letter finds money, he immediately makes a record
-of it. The next morning, the head of “the Opening Table” records in a
-book each letter found and recorded by each opener the day before. The
-letters are then taken from a safe, in which they were locked the night
-previous, and their contents recounted, to make sure of absolute
-correctness, before leaving the Opening Table. The money-letters, with
-the record of that day, are then handed over to the head of the Money
-Branch, where the letters recorded by the head of the Opening Table are
-certified and receipted. They are next indexed and delivered to the
-several clerks of the Money Branch, each receipting every letter he has
-recorded on the Index Book. He then records the letter and sends it to
-the writer, through the postmaster of the place where the party lives.
-The owner, on receiving the money, receipts for the same on a blank
-accompanying the letter, which he sends back to the Dead-Letter Office.
-The letters are again re-examined by two clerks, to see if the amounts
-are correct, who conjointly scrutinize and seal the letters. They are
-then registered to the different distributing offices, with all the
-precautionary checks of a registered letter. In time, the letter or a
-receipt from the owner, through the postmaster, is returned. If a
-receipt is received, it is recorded, with date, as a final disposition
-of the letter. If the money is returned, it is so noted and recorded on
-a separate record kept for the purpose, that record showing,
-perpetually, how much money is on hand. If not claimed at the end of
-three months, the money is deposited in the Treasury of the United
-States, subject to the application of the owner. By this minute and
-exhaustive routine, every money-letter, and every cent which they
-contain, is absolutely accounted for—traced, refunded, and held.
-
-Drafts, deeds, checks, power-of-attorney and wills are recorded, and
-sent through postmasters to their owners, they returning receipts for
-the same.
-
-Foreign letters are assorted, the amounts due this and other countries
-recorded, and a system of accounts kept, showing, by a list returned
-with the letters, a correct statement. Foreign letters are returned
-weekly, to England, Germany and the Netherlands. The liberal postage
-recently adopted by these countries has opened so large a
-correspondence, it involves more frequent returns.
-
-The Property-Branch is of a most miscellaneous character. It involves
-the recording and returning of jewellery, and of almost every other
-article under the sun. Many of these it is impossible to return. These
-accumulate in such vast piles, it is necessary to dispose of them at
-auction, at least, as often as once in four years.
-
-At each sale, a complete catalogue of the articles is presented, and the
-proceeds are deposited in the United States Treasury.
-
-A room, leading from the Dead-Letter Office, lined with closed closets
-to its lofty ceiling, is the receptacle of all these stranded treasures.
-When the custodian unlocks their doors and you behold what is shut
-within, you are lost in wonder as to what must be the conceived capacity
-of the Post-Office in the minds of your compatriots. Before your eyes,
-crammed into shelves, you see patchwork quilts, under garments, and
-outer garments; hats, caps, and bonnets; shoes and stockings; with no
-end of nicknacks and keepsakes; “sets” of embroidery, baby-wardrobes,
-watches, and jewels of every description—though the greater proportion
-is of the “fire-gilt,” “dollar-store” description. Many really beautiful
-pictures are retained, because not sufficiently prepaid. Some of these,
-sent as gifts, are left by the chosen recipients to be sold at
-auction—the postage often amounting to far more than the value of the
-picture. Many motley articles peer forth from their hiding-places
-ignominiously “franked,” yet retained, the frank not being sufficient
-legal-tender to insure their triumphal passage to the place of final
-destination. Among these is an iron apple-parer.
-
-Many of these cheap treasures were precious keepsakes from the hearts
-which fondly sent them—under very unintelligible superscriptions—to
-sweethearts whom they never reached. Some are tokens from beyond the
-seas, which came from a far-off land only to find the one sought—dead or
-living—gone, without a clue.
-
-During the war, tens of thousands of photographs were thus sent astray.
-The husband, the father, the brother, the son, under whose name they
-came—alas! when they reached his regiment, he was not—the heaped-up
-trench, the unknown grave, the unburied dead—somewhere amid them all—he
-slept, and the memento of the love that lived for him, came back to this
-receptacle of the nation, and here it is! On a stand near the window, is
-an immense open book lined with photographs, all the photographs of
-soldiers. With a tender hand, the Government gathered these pictures of
-its lost and unknown sons and garnered them here, for the sake of the
-living, who might seek their lost. Turning over the pages, we see many
-empty spaces, and find that friends coming here and turning over the
-pages of this book have identified the faces of loved ones who perished
-in the war. Many of these are photographs of a poor character, (whose
-transient chemicals are already fading out,) which were taken on the
-field, and sent, by soldiers, home to mothers, wives, sisters and
-sweethearts. The chances of war are sufficient to account for their
-going astray of their objects and for their return here—where more than
-one tear-blinded woman has sought and found them, at last.
-
-To return to the dryer details of the Dead-Letter Office, we find that
-all letters held for postage, all blank, unmailable, and hotel letters
-pass through a like process with the dead-letter, with the exception of
-the unmailable letters, which come directly from the office with written
-lists, which are checked to see if the letters are all with the lists.
-These the opener counter-checks, marking the contents both on letter and
-list, to show that it was received and doubly opened. These lists, with
-their letters, are sent to the Return Branch. Here they are returned to
-their writers, and their lists are made to show the disposition of every
-letter. These lists are carefully filed and subject to re-perusal. The
-Return Branch, which is composed entirely of ladies, sends average
-dead-letters back to their writers at the rate of seven thousand a day.
-In this branch we find the application-clerk whose duty it is to trace
-letters, and to send such information to persons applying for letters as
-the records may show. In case of the loss of a valuable letter, the
-Department spares no pains in its efforts to trace and find it.
-
-The Postmaster-General, in one of his recent reports, says of this
-branch of the Postal Service:
-
- “In the examination of domestic dead-letters, for disposition,
- 1,736,867 were found to be either not susceptible of being returned,
- or of no importance, circulars, etc., and were destroyed after an
- effort to return them—making about 51 per cent. destroyed. The
- remainder were classified and returned to the owners as far as
- practicable. The whole number sent from the office was 2,258,199, of
- which about 84 per cent. were delivered to owners, and 16 per cent.
- were returned to the Department; 18,340 letters, containing
- $95,169.52, in sums of $1 and upward, of which 16,061 letters,
- containing $86,638.66, were delivered to owners, and 2,124, containing
- $7,862.36, were filed or held for disposition; 14,082 contained
- $3,436.68, in sums of less than $1, of which 12,513, containing
- $3,120.70, were delivered to owners; 17,750 contained drafts, deeds,
- and other papers of value, representing the value of $3,609,271.80—of
- these 16,809 were restored to the owners, and 821 were returned and
- filed; 13,964 contained books, jewellery, and other articles of
- property, of the estimated value of $8,500—of these 11,489 were
- forwarded for delivery and 9,911 were delivered to their owners;
- 125,221 contained photographs, postage-stamps, and articles of small
- value, of which 114,666 were delivered to owners; 2,068,842 without
- inclosures. Thus of the ordinary dead-letters forwarded from this
- office, about 84 per cent. were delivered, and of the valuable
- dead-letters (classed as money and minor) about 89 per cent. were
- delivered. The decrease of money-letters received (about 3,000) is
- probably owing to the growing use of money-orders for the transmission
- of small sums.”
-
-In August, 1864, Hon. Montgomery Blair appointed Dr. C. F. Macdonald,
-now the Superintendent of the Money-Order Department, and J. M. McGrew,
-now Chief Clerk of the Sixth Auditor’s office, commissioners to visit
-Quebec and examine the workings of the Money-Order System which has been
-in operation in Great Britain and Canada for several years.
-
-The system, as used by the British Government, was modified and
-simplified by the commissioners, and on the 8th of November, 1864, the
-Money-Order System of the United States was inaugurated, with 138
-offices authorized to issue and pay.
-
-During the part of the fiscal year commencing November 8, 1864, and
-ending June 30, 1865, there were 74,277 money-orders issued, amounting
-to $1,360,122.52; during next fiscal year ending June 30, 1866—138,297,
-amounting to $3,977,259.28; during next fiscal year ending June 30,
-1867—474,496, amounting to $9,229,327.72; during next fiscal year ending
-June 30, 1868—831,937, amounting to $16,197,858.47; during next fiscal
-year ending June 30, 1869—1,264,143, amounting to $24,848,058.93; during
-next fiscal year ending June 30, 1870—1,675,228, amounting to
-$33,658,740.27; during the next fiscal year ending June 30,
-1871—2,151,794, amounting to $42,164,118.03; during next fiscal year
-ending June 30, 1872—2,573,349, amounting to $48,515,532.72.
-
-During the present fiscal year, which expired June 30, 1873, the number
-of orders issued will reach 3,000,000, and the amount will be over
-$50,000,000.
-
-The above figures, in themselves, contain the history of the money-order
-system from its beginning to the present time. During the war one letter
-was received at the Dead-Letter Office which contained $12,000. Rarely
-now does any sum inside of an envelope amount to $50. As a rule, any sum
-over $5 is sent by money-order—at least by all persons who have any
-reasonable idea of what is absolutely safe.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR—UNCLE SAM’S
- DOMESTIC ARRANGEMENTS.
-
-Inadequate Accommodation in Heaven—Defects of our Great Public
- Buildings—The Public Archives—Valuable Documents in Jeopardy—Talk of
- Moving the Capital—A Dissension of a Hundred Years—Concerning
- Certain Idiots—A Day in the Patent Office—The Inventive Genius of
- the Country—Aggressions of the Home Department—A Comprehensive Act
- of Congress—Seven Divisions of the Department of the Interior—The
- Disbursing Division—Division of Indian Affairs—Lands and
- Railroads—Pensions and Patents—Public Documents—Division of
- Appointments—The Superintendent of the Building—The Secretary of the
- Interior and his Subordinates—Pensions and their Recipients—Indian
- Affairs—How the Savages are Treated—Over Twenty-one Million of
- Dollars Credited to their Little Account—The Census Bureau—A Rather
- Big Work—The Bureau of Patents—What is a Patent?—A Self-supporting
- Institution—A Few Dollars Over—The Use Made of a Certain Brick
- Building—Secretary Delano—An Objection Against Him—How Wickedly he
- Acted to the Women Clerks—“The Accustomed Tyranny of Men”—Cutting
- Down the Ladies’ Salaries—Making Places for Useful Voters—A Sweet
- Prayer for Delano’s Welfare—Something about Delano’s Face.
-
-
-It has always been a mystery to me how Heaven could continue large
-enough for all the people who are trying to get into it, that is, if the
-human race is to keep on being born.
-
-I am equally puzzled about the internal spaces of our great public
-buildings. When designed, they were supposed to be ample for centuries
-to come; but with the constant creation of new bureaus, and even of
-departments, with the fast and never-ceasing accumulations of records in
-every branch of the Government service, not a public building in
-Washington is now large enough to hold the archives, or even the
-_employés_ belonging to its own department. Already the city is filled
-with temporary buildings, in which the overflow of the various
-departments have taken refuge. Even now, every public building needs a
-duplicate as large as itself to hold its treasures, and to carry on
-fitly the intricate machinery of its routine service. The constant cry
-of “Capital moving” has not only prevented this, but has caused the
-precious records of the departments to be packed into precarious and
-insufficient store-houses.
-
-The public archives should all be stored in fire-proof buildings. The
-destruction of the titles to all the lands in the country sold by the
-Government would involve a loss greater than the cost of all Washington
-city. And yet, as they are stored at present, any morning you may hear
-that there is nothing left of them but ashes.
-
-What madness to talk of moving the Capital! What idiots to breed another
-dissension of a hundred years as to where another Capital shall be,
-instead of making the most and best of the majestic one, bought at such
-cost, that already is!
-
-Well, a day in the Patent-Office has caused this outburst. This building
-was built for the protection and display of the inventive genius of the
-country. But that genius finds itself fearfully “cabined and confined,”
-and almost crowded out by the elephantine proportions of the Home
-Department, which needs, almost beyond any other, a vast building of its
-own, all to itself. At first a single room was demanded for the
-Secretary of the Interior. The needs of his department were such, he has
-gone on annexing room after room of the noble Patent-Office, till its
-“inventive genius” finds itself crowded into a very small corner of the
-majestic building built with the proceeds of its own industry.
-
-March 3, 1849, Congress passed an act to establish the Home Department,
-and enacted that said new executive branch of the Government of the
-United States should be called the Department of the Interior, and that
-the head of said Department should be called Secretary of the Interior,
-and that the Secretary should be placed upon the same plane with other
-Cabinet officers.
-
-This act transferred to the Secretary of the Interior the supervisory
-power over the office of the Commissioner of Patents, exercised before
-by the Secretary of State; the same power, over the Commissioner of the
-General Land-Office, held previously by the Secretary of the Treasury;
-the same over the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which had been under the
-supervision of the Secretary of War; the same over the acts of the
-Commissioner of Pensions, who had previously reported to the Secretary
-of the Navy; also over the marshals and orders of taking and returning
-the census, previously managed by the Secretary of State; the same over
-accounts of marshals, clerks and officers of courts of the United
-States, previously exercised by the Secretary of the Treasury. The same
-act relieved the President of the duty of supervising the acts of the
-Commissioner of Public Buildings, placing that gentleman under the
-directions of the Interior Department; giving the Secretary control over
-the Board of Inspectors and the Warden of the Penitentiary of the
-District of Columbia.
-
-Thus, you see, the Department of the Interior was made up, at the
-beginning, of slices cut from each one of the other departments of the
-Government. Subsequent acts of legislation have added new duties to the
-Home Department. The Department of Justice; the Department of
-Metropolitan Police; the accounts of marshals and clerks of the United
-States Courts, and of matters pertaining to the judiciary; the
-discontinuance of the office of Commissioner of Public Buildings, and
-the assignment of his duties to the Chief Engineer of the Army, with the
-duties and powers heretofore exercised by the Secretary of State over
-the Governors and Secretaries of the various territories. All have been
-transferred to the Department of the Interior. Admission of indigent
-insane persons, resident in the District of Columbia, to the Insane
-Asylum, also to the Columbia Institution for the deaf and dumb, and to
-the National Deaf-mute College, and of blind children to the Columbia
-Institution, all are only obtained through the Secretary of the
-Interior.
-
-The office of the Secretary of the Interior is divided into seven
-divisions, as follows:
-
-The “Disbursing Division,” through which all moneys, appropriated for
-the entire service of the department, pass.
-
-The Division of the Indian Affairs; having charge of matters pertaining
-to the Indian office, and the various Indian tribes.
-
-The Division of Lands and Railroads; having charge of matters pertaining
-to the General Land-Office, and the construction, &c., of land-grant
-railroads.
-
-The Division of Pensions and Patents; having charge of matters
-pertaining to those offices.
-
-The Division of Public Documents; having charge of the distribution of
-the public documents and the Department Library.
-
-The Division of Appointments; having charge of all matters pertaining to
-the force of the department, the preparing, recording, etc., of
-Presidential appointments under the Interior Department.
-
-The Superintendent of the building; having charge of all repairs, the
-oversight of the laboring force, heating apparatus, etc.
-
-The head of the Department is the Secretary of the Interior. His
-subordinates are the Commissioners of the Public Lands, Patents, Indian
-Affairs, and Pensions, and the Superintendent of the Census. The
-Secretary is charged with the general supervision of matters relating to
-the public lands, the pensions granted by the Government, the management
-of the Indian tribes, the granting patents, the management of the
-Agricultural Bureau, of the lead and other mines of the United States,
-the affairs of the Penitentiary of the District of Columbia, the
-overland-_routes_ to the Pacific, including the great Pacific Railways,
-the taking of the Census, and the direction of the acts of the
-Commissioner of Public Buildings, the Insane Hospital for the District
-of Columbia, and the Army and Navy, is also under his control.
-
-The first Secretary of the Interior was Thomas Ewing, of Ohio, appointed
-by President Taylor; and Columbus Delano, of Ohio, is the present
-Secretary.
-
-The General Land-Office was established as a branch of the Treasury
-Department by act of Congress, approved April 25, 1812, which authorized
-the appointment of a Commissioner, at a salary of $3,000 per annum, and
-the employment of a Chief Clerk, and such other clerks as might be
-necessary to perform the work, at an annual compensation not to exceed,
-in the whole, $7,000.
-
-By the act of July 4, 1836, the office was reorganized and the force
-increased. The number of clerks now employed is one hundred and
-fifty-four; and even this force is not sufficient to meet the
-requirements of a constantly growing business. Upon the creation of the
-Interior Department, in 1849, the Land-Office was placed under its
-jurisdiction.
-
-The Commissioner of the General Land-Office is charged with the duty of
-supervising the surveys of private land claims, and also the survey and
-sale of the public lands of the United States. At present this
-supervision extends to seventeen surveying districts and ninety-two
-local land-offices.
-
-The following table exhibits the progress of surveys and the disposal of
-public lands since the fiscal year, ending June 30, 1861:
-
- ═══════════╤═══════════╤═════════╤════════════╤══════════╤═════════════
- Fiscal Year│ Surveying │ Land │ Cost of │Number of │ Number of
- ending │districts. │Offices. │ Survey. │ Acres │ Acres
- June 30. │ │ │ │Surveyed. │Disposed of.
- ───────────┼───────────┼─────────┼────────────┼──────────┼─────────────
- 1862 │ 9 │ 58 │ $219,000 00│ 2,673,132│ 1,337,922.00
- 1863 │ 11 │ 54 │ 151,840 00│ 2,147,981│ 2,966,698.00
- 1864 │ 10 │ 53 │ 172,906 00│ 4,315,954│ 3,238,865.00
- 1865 │ 10 │ 53 │ 170,721 00│ 4,161,778│ 4,513,738.00
- 1866 │ 10 │ 61 │ 186,389 88│ 4,267,037│ 4,629,312.00
- 1867 │ 12 │ 62 │ 423,416 22│10,808,314│ 7,041,114.00
- 1868 │ 13 │ 68 │ 325,779 50│10,170,656│ 6,665,742.00
- 1869 │ 12 │ 66 │ 497,471 00│10,822,812│ 7,666,151.00
- 1870 │ 17 │ 81 │ 560,210 00│18,165,278│ 8,095,413.00
- 1871 │ 17 │ 83 │ 683,910 00│22,016,607│10,765,705.00
- 1872 │ 17 │ 92 │1,019,378 66│29,450,939│11,864,975.64
- ═══════════╧═══════════╧═════════╧════════════╧══════════╧═════════════
-
-This shows an increase of the number of surveyors’ general from nine to
-seventeen, and land-offices from fifty-eight to ninety-two, and an
-increase in the annual survey from 2,673,132 acres to 29,458,939 acres,
-and an increase in the number of acres disposed of from 1,337,932 to
-11,864,975.64, for the year ending June 30, 1872.
-
-The Land-Office audits its own accounts. It is also charged with laying
-off land-grants made to the various railroad schemes by Congress. The
-mines belonging to the Government are also in charge of this office.
-
-The Commissioner of Pensions examines and adjudicates all claims arising
-under the various and numerous laws passed by Congress, granting
-bounty-lands or pensions for military and naval services rendered the
-United States at various times. The Rebellion greatly increased the
-pension list.
-
-The Commissioner of Indian Affairs has charge of all the matters
-relating to the Indian tribes of the frontier. The Government has at
-sundry times purchased the lands of various tribes residing east of the
-Mississippi River, and has settled the Indians upon reservations in the
-extreme West. For some of these lands a perpetual annuity was granted
-the tribes; for others, an annuity for a certain specified time; and for
-others still, a temporary annuity, payable during the pleasure of the
-President or Congress. The total sum thus pledged to these tribes
-amounts to nearly twenty-one and a half millions. It is funded at five
-per cent., the interest alone being paid to the tribes; this interest
-amounts to over two hundred thousand dollars. It is paid in various
-ways—in money, in provisions, and in clothing. The Commissioner has
-charge of all these dealings with the savages.
-
-Prior to Act of Congress of June 30, 1834, organizing the “Department of
-Indian Affairs,” Indian matters were managed by a Bureau, with a
-superintendent in charge, under the direction and control of the War
-Department, and under the organization, the department or office
-continued with the War Department, until March 3, 1849, when Congress
-created the Department of the Interior, and gave the supervisory and
-appellate power, exercised by the Secretary of War in relation to the
-acts of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, to the Secretary of the new
-department.
-
-A “Commissioner of Indian Affairs” was first authorized by Act of
-Congress, dated July 9, 1832, and the same law required the Secretary of
-War to prescribe a new set of regulations as to the mode in which the
-business of the Commissioner should be performed.
-
-E. Herring was the first Commissioner, and his successors have been as
-follows: C. A. Harris, appointed in 1836; T. H. Crawford, 1838; Wm.
-Medell, 1845; O. Brown, 1849; L. Lee, 1850; G. W. Monypenny, 1853; J. W.
-Denver, 1857; C. E. Mix, 1858; A. B. Greenwood, 1859; W. P. Dole, 1861;
-D. N. Cooley, 1865; L. V. Bogy, 1866; N. G. Taylor, 1867; E. S. Parker,
-1869; F. E. Walker, 1871; and E. P. Smith, 1873.
-
-The Indian Department comprehended, under the new regulations provided
-for by the law of July 9, 1832, four superintendencies, thirteen
-agencies, and thirteen sub-agencies, having charge of about two hundred
-and fifty thousand Indians, inhabiting some of the States west of the
-Mississippi, and also what was then held to be “Indian Country,” defined
-by the first section of the law of June 30, 1834, regulating trade and
-intercourse with Indian tribes, to be “all that part of the United
-States west of the Mississippi and not within the State of Missouri and
-Louisiana, or the Territory of Arkansas, and, also, that part of the
-United States east of the Mississippi River and not within any State to
-which the Indian title has not been extinguished.”
-
-By subsequent acquisition of territory from Mexico, the area of Indian
-country became greatly extended, with a consequent large addition to the
-Indian population within the jurisdiction of the Indian Department. In
-the beginning of the current year, the Department consisted of eight
-superintendencies, seventy agencies and special agencies, and three
-sub-agencies. At present there are four superintendencies, four having
-been abolished by act of Congress, February 14, 1873, providing in lieu
-thereof five Indian Inspectors, whose duty it is to visit every
-superintendency and agency, and examine into the affairs of the same, as
-often as once or twice a year, and to report their proceedings;
-sixty-eight agencies, nine special agencies and three sub-agencies, with
-an Indian population, approximately, of 300,000, exclusive of those in
-Alaska, estimated at between 50,000 and 75,000.
-
-In the Indian service there is also a Board of “Indian Commissioners,”
-nine in number, authorized by act of Congress, approved April 10, 1869,
-men eminent for their intelligence and philanthropy, who serve without
-compensation, the object of the Commission being to co-operate with the
-President in efforts to maintain peace among the Indians, bring them
-upon reservations, relieve their necessities, and to encourage them in
-attempts at self-support.
-
-The Census Bureau is now a permanent branch of the Department of the
-Interior. It is in charge of a superintendent, and is assigned the duty
-of compiling the statistics which constitute the Census of the Republic.
-This enumeration is made every ten years. Some idea of the magnitude of
-the task may be gained from the fact that the tabulation and publication
-of the census of 1870 were not completed in January, 1873.
-
-The Bureau of Patents is a part of the Department of the Interior, but
-is in all its proportions and features so vast and imposing, that it is
-almost a separate department, as, indeed, it must become erelong. It is
-in charge of a Commissioner of Patents, who is appointed by the
-President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of
-the Senate. It is intrusted with the duty of granting letters patent,
-securing to the inventor the control of and the reward from articles
-beneficial to civilization. It was formerly a part of the Treasury
-Department, and is one of the best known branches of the Government.
-
-Patents are not, as some persons suppose, monopolies, but are
-protections granted to individuals as rewards for, and incentives to
-discoveries and inventions of all kinds pertaining to the useful arts.
-This Bureau is allowed to charge for these letters of protection only
-the cost of investigating and registering the invention. It is a
-self-supporting institution, its receipts being largely in excess of its
-expenditures.
-
-If you have traced the many Bureaus of the Interior Department thus far,
-you have come to the conclusion that it needs a public building all to
-itself, and that it should be an immense one. A large brick building
-opposite the Patent-Office, on G street, is already exclusively occupied
-by the Bureau of Education.
-
-The present Secretary of the Interior is Hon. Columbus Delano, of Ohio,
-a man who has been long in public life, first as Member of Congress from
-Ohio, then as Commissioner of Internal Revenue, now as Secretary of the
-Interior. I have but one objection to make to Mr. Delano in the position
-which he now holds. He found twelve-hundred-dollar-positions in his
-department filled, as they had been from the beginning, by women. He
-degrades them to nine-hundred-dollar-clerkships, to make place for his
-voters. Judging by the course he pursues, we may believe that he is of
-the same opinion as the Secretary of the Treasury, that “four hundred
-dollars per year are enough for any woman to earn,” unless she should be
-a Delano! I hope that Ohio will reward him by not giving him the desire
-of his heart and making him Senator, till he practices justice as the
-supreme virtue of a public servant.
-
-Columbus Delano has a face which nature never weakened by cutting it
-down to absolute fineness, but added to its power by leaving it a little
-in the rough. Iron-gray hair, shaggy eyebrows beetling over a pair of
-straight-forward, out-looking gray eyes, make the more prominent
-features of a face which you willingly believe in as that of a strong
-and honorable man.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
- THE PENSION BUREAU—HOW GOVERNMENT PAYS ITS
- SERVANTS.
-
-The Generosity of Congress to Itself—How Four Hundred Acts of Congress
- were Passed—How Pensions have Increased and Multiplied—Sneering at
- Red-Tape—The Division of Labor—Scrutinizing Petitions—A Heavy
- Paper Jacket—The Judicial Division—Invalids, Widows, and
- Minors—The Examiner of Pensions—The Difficulties of his
- Position—Unsatisfactory Work—How Claims are Entertained and
- Tested—What is Recorded in the Thirty Enormous Volumes—How many
- Genuine Cases are Refused—One of the Inconveniences of
- Ignorance—The Claim-Agent Gobbles up the Lion’s Share—An Extensive
- Correspondence—How Claims are Mystified, and Money is Wasted—The
- “Reviewer’s” Work—The “Rejected Files”—The “Admitted
- Files”—Seventy-Five Thousand Claims Pending—Very Ancient
- Claimants—The Bounty Land Division—The Reward of Fourteen Days’
- Service—The Sum Total of what the Government has Paid in
- Pensions—How the Pensions are Paid—The Finance Division—The
- Largest and the Smallest Pension Office—The Miscellaneous
- Branch—Investigating Frauds—A Poor “Dependent” Woman with Forty
- Thousand Dollars—How “Honest and Respectable” People Defraud the
- Government—The Medical Division—Examining Invalids—The
- Restoration-Desk—The Appeal-Desk—The Final-Desk—The Work that Has
- Been Done—One Hundred and Fifty Thousand People Grumbling—Letter
- of an Ancient Claimant—The Wrath of a Pugnacious Captain.
-
-
-Compared to the generosity with which it rewards itself, Congress doles
-out most scanty recompense even to the Government’s most faithful and
-long-suffering servants. Nevertheless, that it does not neglect or
-ignore them altogether, the annals of the Pension Bureau accurately
-attest.
-
-The first Act promising pensions to those disabled by war, was passed in
-the next month after the Declaration of Independence, August 26, 1776.
-On September 16, 1776, specified grants of land were promised to those
-who should enter the service, and continue to its close; and in case of
-their death, to their heirs.
-
-Under these early enactments, the mode prescribed by law, to decide who
-were entitled to pensions, was to leave the State Legislatures to decide
-who should justly receive pensions. Having decided, the State
-Legislatures paid the pensioners, and were reimbursed by the general
-Government.
-
-Afterward, this method gave way to another, requiring the Judges of
-district, and circuit-courts, to decide the equity of the demand, and to
-pay it, as had formerly been done, by the Legislatures of the several
-States. These payments were not made, however, until after the lists
-reported by the Judges had been verified by comparison with the rolls on
-file in the War Department, when they were reported by the Secretary of
-War to Congress, and placed on the pension-lists, by a resolution of
-that body. This mode was found to be too slow in detecting frauds, and
-February 25, 1793, an Act was passed, prescribing rules to be observed
-by the courts in the investigation of claims, and providing that the
-evidence upon which the decision was based should accompany the report.
-This Act prevailed, with slight modifications, until March 3, 1819, when
-an Act was passed, authorizing the Secretary of War to place on the
-pension-rolls, without reporting the lists to Congress.
-
-This authority was exercised by the Secretary of War, until March 2,
-1833, when a distinct Bureau of the Government was established for the
-adjustment of pension claims. It was provided for in the section of a
-bill, which made an appropriation for the civil and diplomatic expense
-of the Government, for the year. This section said: “A Commissioner of
-Pensions shall be appointed by the President and the Senate, who shall
-receive a salary of twenty-five hundred dollars, which is hereby
-appropriated.” This office was perpetuated for many years by biennial
-enactments, the last providing that it should continue until further
-legislation on the subject.
-
-Since the passage of the first Act, by the old Congress in 1776, there
-have been over four hundred distinct Acts relating to pensions for
-military and naval services, and for bounty-land rewarding such
-services, enacted by Congress. Instead of the small pension-lists
-transmitted by the courts of the country, through the Secretary of War
-to Congress, the tens of thousands of pension-claims, presented to the
-Government, under the various laws which relate to them, now require the
-constant services of more than three hundred clerks in the Pension
-Bureau, supervised by the Commissioner of Pensions.
-
-It is the dual duty of this Bureau, to protect private interests, and to
-secure the enforcement of the law. The claims are infinite and often
-conflicting; the provisions of law manifold; and people unfamiliar with
-the immense demand upon such an office, sneer or smile, or weep over the
-length of the “red-tape” routine, through which its cases are so often
-“long drawn out.” Persons waiting outside the Bureau, can not comprehend
-the requirements or exigencies of a business demanding the employment of
-so large a force of actors, or touching the springs of so many public
-and private interests. Says one who knows: “Far better the delays of red
-tape, than the inextricable confusion, and total inability to transact
-business, which would be the inevitable result of a business system less
-minute and stringent.”
-
-The Pension Bureau is divided into four divisions, viz: the Mail
-Division, the Judicial, the Financial, and the Miscellaneous.
-
-The Mail Division is charged with the receiving, reading, distributing
-to the proper desks, all the mail. Every original application, every
-piece of additional evidence, every communication, of whatever nature,
-is stamped with the date of receipt, and, with the exception of letters
-of inquiry, they are entered on the records, which show from whom
-received, when received, and to whom delivered.
-
-“It requires careful examination of the papers, a thorough knowledge of
-the office, and the closest analysis, to determine the proper
-destination of each communication. Many writers are obscure, many
-misstate their business, through ignorance or carelessness, and to
-quickly comprehend the import of all papers, requires a keen eye and a
-ready mind.
-
-“Persons communicating with the Office, should remember this, and to
-insure a correct distribution of their mail, should, in all cases,
-indorse upon the outside of the envelope, the number of the claim
-referred to, the name of the claimant, and the nature of the claim.
-
-“In this Division, claims are also prepared for the files, by having a
-heavy paper jacket placed round them, upon which is indorsed the Act
-under which it is filed, the description of the party claiming, their
-address, also the address of the attorney, if one appears in the claim.”
-
-The Judicial Division is charged with an application of the law to the
-evidence, and the determining of the right of the applicant to the
-pension. This office is divided into three grand divisions—invalid,
-widows, and minors. The first embraces all claims preferred by surviving
-soldiers; the second, all claims based upon the service and death of
-soldiers and sailors; the third, those of minors.
-
-An Examiner of Pensions does not sit upon a bed of roses—or, if he does,
-it is full of thorns. So various and minute are the provisions of law,
-applicable to the cases under his consideration, so numerous are the
-rulings of the office, and the decisions of the Heads of Departments,
-and of the Bureau, with the opinion of the Attorney-General added, all
-bearing upon this claim, it demands the most exhaustive examination, the
-keenest discrimination, and the most wise judgment, to reach a final
-just conclusion. And when his conclusion is reached, it is not final.
-
-In the Judicial Division, are filed all pending claims. These files are
-arranged with reference to the initial letter of the soldier’s surname,
-and are divided into sections proportioned to the magnitude of the
-letter of the alphabet. Upon the receipt of jacketed claims from the
-mail division, the first step is to see if the party, making
-application, ever filed a claim before, and this is ascertained by
-examining the “original records.”
-
-These records fill thirty enormous volumes, and contain three hundred
-and eighty-three thousand applications that have been filed under the
-act of July 14, 1862. All entries are made therein with reference to the
-first three letters of the soldier’s surname, and only by this
-subdivision of names, affording two thousand eight hundred combinations,
-can convenient reference to any given claim be had; and even when so
-divided, the examination of the greater combination requires
-considerable labor. For instance, in two hundred thousand entries under
-W. I. L., there will be three thousand two hundred and fifty entries;
-and under S. M. I. you will find two thousand seven hundred and fifty
-Smiths. If the result of this examination affords no evidence of a prior
-application by the same person, after noting all other applications
-based upon the service of the same soldier, the claims are numbered in
-numerical order and placed upon the record, which includes a full
-description thereof, and the recorded claims are then placed in the
-files, to await examination in the order of their receipt.
-
-When they are reached, the examiner’s duties begin. He first searches
-for such recorded evidence as can be found in any of the Departments of
-the Government. From these he notes all omissions, and points
-unsupported, and calls upon the claimant, or his attorney, for
-corroborative evidence of the statements made in the declaration. He is
-guided in his requirements by the hundreds of rulings applicable to the
-smallest details of the various kinds of claims. All the evidence
-furnished in response must comply with the minutest demand of the law;
-the law of evidence as applied in courts, and the express requirements
-of the law under which the pension is claimed, are both brought to bear
-in the consideration of the points to be met, and the testimony offered
-in proof.
-
-You will not be astonished to be told that very often they are not met,
-or that in thousands of just cases the testimony is unequal to the
-gradgrind requirements of the law. A want of a knowledge of the
-provisions of the law—more than of willful knavery—is the great
-acknowledged difficulty with which the Office has to contend. Many a
-poor sinner, who lost his leg or arm, or carries a bullet in him,
-received in his country’s battles, knows all about the minus members,
-the battles, and the bullet, and not an atom about “the provisions of
-the law,” or the inextricable windings of official red-tape. Because his
-knowledge is of so one-sided a character, he finds it no easy matter to
-get the governmental reward for that buried leg or arm; and by the time
-all “the requirements of the law” have been slowly beaten into his
-brains, the greater portion of his pension is pocketed by the
-claim-agent who showed him how to get it.
-
-All these provisions and safeguards of the law are said to be necessary,
-to protect the Government against fraudulent claims. Perhaps they are;
-but that makes them no less hard, or ofttimes unjust “to the soldier and
-widow” who, in writing a letter, are as ignorant as babies of “the
-requirements of the law.” Under these requirements, and with the utter
-ignorance of common people of technical terms, and judicial statements,
-it is not strange that “a large percentage of the evidence offered, is
-imperfectly prepared.” A great deal more is deficient in substance, or
-suspected of fraud.
-
-The correspondence from this Division, stating objections, requiring
-further proof, and elucidating doubtful points, amounts to hundreds of
-letters a day. The long delay inevitable, is said to be the fault of the
-system. “_Ex-parte_ evidence is the criminal.” “Were means afforded for
-a cross-examination of all applicants and witnesses, these difficulties
-and delays would disappear. One-half of the amount now taken from the
-pockets of pensioners, to compensate agents for procuring their
-pensions, would pay the entire cost of such a system, to say nothing of
-the thousands of dollars paid from the Treasury upon fraudulent claims,
-that would be saved.”
-
-When the examiner has ended his researches, he prepares a brief of the
-evidence, on which he bases his admission, or rejection, of the claim.
-He closes it with a statement of his decision, showing from what date,
-and at what rate admitted, or, if rejected, the cause therefor, and
-signs his name, as examiner.
-
-This action is entered in a record. The case is taken from out the file
-of pending claims, and is placed in the hands of a clerk, who is called
-the “Reviewer.” He is selected for this task, for his superior judgment,
-and for his familiarity with the law, and the rules of office. He
-“begins again,” goes over the entire action of the examiner, goes
-through the entire evidence, in order to be able to approve, or
-disprove, the examiner’s decision. If he approves, the case passes on to
-the Chief of the Division, for _his_ approval, which, except in unusual
-cases, is _pro forma_. From his desk the case goes to the Certificate
-Section, for issue. There it receives its certificate and approved
-brief, decorated with which it departs to the Commissioner’s desk, there
-to receive his final and crowning signature, and the grand seal of the
-Department. If the claim is a rejected one, and its rejection receives
-the approval of the receiver, it is cast into the outer darkness of the
-“rejected files.” Here it is subject to an appeal to the Secretary, and
-may be borne forth again to the light, upon the presentation of new and
-material evidence.
-
-After the triumphant claim has received its certificate, it is treated
-to a new coat of a wrapper, upon whose back a certificate-number, and
-its history, is endorsed. It is then entered upon the admitted records.
-After it has been reported to the Pension Agent, Finance Division, to
-the Third Auditor of the Treasury, and to the Second Comptroller, it is
-placed on the “admitted files.”
-
-Seventy-five thousand pending claims are now on file in these two
-divisions. They are slowly reduced in number, and the receipt of new
-claims equals the disposal of the old ones. This statement does not
-include the adjustment of claims filed under the act of February 14,
-1871, granting pensions to survivors of the war of 1812, who served
-sixty days, and to their widows. Their claims have been organized into a
-separate division, in which a force of fifty clerks has been constantly
-employed since its organization, May, 1871. This division is known as
-the “1812 Division,” and strenuous efforts are made to reach very early
-decisions in all its cases, the extreme age of the applicants making it
-necessary—if their pension is to reach them “this side of Jordan.”
-
-In this division, the claims are carried through their entire process,
-from the application to the placing of the pensioner’s name on the
-rolls.
-
-The Bounty-Land Division forms a part of the Judicial branch. Herein all
-claims for bounty-land, filed under the act of March 3, 1855, which is
-the latest general provision, are adjusted. The _modus operandi_ of
-obtaining land-grants is nearly identical with the process of obtaining
-a pension.
-
-Under the act of 1855, all persons who served fourteen days, either in
-the army or navy, are entitled to one hundred and sixty acres, and those
-who were actually engaged in battle, though their services were less
-than fourteen days, are entitled to the same.
-
-Under the various laws governing these land grants, warrants
-representing 73,932,451 acres have been issued, which, estimated at
-$1.25 per acre, amounts to $92,415,563.75, which, added to
-$313,170,412.77 that has been paid since the beginning of the
-Government, as pension, makes a total expenditure of $405,585,976.52,
-which has been paid in gratuities to the defenders of the Republic.
-
-Where the Judicial Branch ends in the certificate of a pension, the
-Financial Branch begins. The rolls reported by those divisions are
-entered in the agency registers, which are arranged to show payments for
-several years, and the agents’ quarterly accounts of disbursements are
-compared with these registers, and errors noted.
-
-There are now upon the United States pension rolls the names of 232,229
-pensioners, who are paid quarterly through fifty-seven pension agents.
-When we remember that the accounts of all these agents, for these tens
-of thousands of names, are adjusted and reported within the short space
-of three months, it is not difficult to realize the amount of labor
-involved.
-
-The Finance Division is charged with all correspondence with the pension
-agents, to suspend and resume payments, to drop from the rolls (in which
-case the auditor and controller must also be notified), the payment of
-accrued pensions to heirs and legal representatives; restorations, under
-the act of July 27, 1868, where a pension has been unclaimed for three
-years; the transfer of payments from one agency to another; the issue of
-duplicate certificates in lieu of those lost or destroyed. All these,
-and many, many other things are required at the hands of the gentlemen
-employed therein. The act of June 8, 1872, granted increase to
-pensioners of the first, second and third grades; and this Division,
-after the passage of the Act and before the quarterly payment of
-September 4, following, received, examined and issued 9,237 certificates
-granting the increase. Of the agencies disbursing pension-money, there
-are ten whose payments exceed $100,000,000 per annum. Of these, Boston
-is the largest, paying out more than $1,800,000. The smallest amount
-paid by any agency is that at Vancouver, Washington Territory, which
-disburses less than $2,500 per annum.
-
-The Miscellaneous Branch covers many features too minute to be brought
-into this sketch. Among the more important is its Special Service
-Division. This is occupied with the investigation of all claims in which
-fraud is suspected. It prosecutes and convicts all persons whose guilt
-is proved. Congress annually appropriates a considerable sum to pay the
-expenses of such investigations, which tends largely to lessen
-fraudulent practices against the Government. By means of this fund the
-Office is enabled to keep a large number of special agents employed, who
-are charged with the investigation of all suspected frauds perpetrated
-within their respective districts.
-
-This division requires clerks who are thoroughly familiar with all laws
-which the Office is called upon to execute, as well as a general
-knowledge of the criminal laws of each State. Its efforts are: first, to
-secure the pensioner in all his rights; second, to prosecute all persons
-where it is thought a conviction can be had; and third, to secure a
-return to the Government of all money unlawfully obtained. The amount
-saved in reducing pensions illegally rated, in dropping from the rolls
-those found not to be entitled, and in sums refunded, largely exceed the
-cost of the work, while the effect upon the public is beneficial in
-deterring others from criminal practices. Cases have been found which
-were allowed on the clearest proof of dependence upon the part of
-mothers of soldiers, where an investigation proved that that same
-dependent mother owned property in her own right to the amount of forty
-thousand dollars!
-
-Such cases are not confined to the classes usually engaged in unlawful
-acts. Nothing is more remarkable than the number of persons—in the
-average transactions of life deemed honest and honorable—who are ready
-and eager, under one pretext or another, to “gouge” and defraud the
-revenues of the Government; and these persons are by no means confined
-to the seekers of pensions, but may be found every day in the highest
-class that can reach the hard-earned treasure of the National Treasury.
-
-The Medical Division of the Pension Bureau acts conjointly with the
-Invalid Division in deciding the degree of disability of claimants for
-original, and the increase of invalid pensions. This division is
-supervised by medical gentlemen thoroughly trained in their profession.
-All invalid claims, after having been briefed by the examiner, and
-before passing into the reviewer’s hands, are referred to this division.
-The Examining Surgeon makes a personal examination of the applicant, and
-from his medical testimony, endorsed by the Chief of the Medical
-Division, the Chief of the Invalid Division bases his final opinion and
-action.
-
-The Restoration Desk is devoted to all claims, which are to be restored
-to the rolls, of parties who have been dropped for cause—principally
-those who were residents of the States in rebellion at the beginning of
-the late war. These are only placed upon the rolls upon incontestible
-proof of loyalty.
-
-The Appeal Desk is the recipient of all cases in preparation for
-reference to the Secretary, where an appeal from the action of the
-Office is taken.
-
-The Final Desk is the extensive one of the Commissioner of Pensions.
-
-From the beginning to the end of this busy Bureau, charged with the
-comfort, the very subsistence of so many bereaved and disabled
-fellow-creatures, the Commissioner must see all things, anticipate all
-wants, supply all needs; upon him rests the entire administration of
-this vast and potent Bureau. His position is not easy or his burden
-light.
-
-To fill so important a trust with honor, a Commissioner needs not only
-clear judgment and business training, but should also be a man of
-positive administrative talents, large information, thorough education,
-and broad, comprehensive mind.
-
-These qualities are all possessed in a pre-eminent degree by the present
-Commissioner of Pensions.
-
-General J. H. Baker was born in Lebanon, Ohio, 1829. He is the son of a
-Methodist clergyman, and was graduated from the Wesleyan University,
-Delaware, Ohio, taking the Latin honors of a large class in 1852. He was
-Secretary of the State of Ohio during Chief-Justice Chase’s term as
-Governor of that State. He moved to Minnesota, and was Secretary of the
-State when he resigned to take command of the Tenth Minnesota
-Volunteers. He served with distinction in the Indian expedition under
-General Sibley, and, on his return, was ordered South. At St. Louis he
-was placed in command of the post, and soon after was made
-Provost-Marshal General of the Department of Missouri. At the close of
-the war he became Register of Public Lands in Missouri, and, resigning
-this position, in 1868 he returned to Minnesota, was candidate for the
-United States Senate, and defeated by a very small majority. In 1871 be
-was appointed Commissioner of Pensions.
-
-General Baker is a tall, commanding looking gentleman, with dark hair,
-complexion and eyes. He is of nervo-motive temperament, quick, prompt,
-energetic in action, yet courteous and genial in his bearing to a very
-marked degree.
-
-Since the passage of the Act of July 4, 1862, nearly 400,000 claims for
-pensions have been filed in and considered by the Pension Office. Of
-course, in the examination of so vast a number of cases, errors have
-been committed, matters of fact misinterpreted, and in many instances,
-through carelessness, ignorance and neglect, injustice has been done.
-
-The clerks of this office have always compared favorably, both in
-industry and capacity, with those of other Bureaus; but, among so large
-a number, worthless and inefficient ones will be found, and the still
-greater evil of employing men who, though capable, take no interest in
-their official duties, and, through the want of that spur to well-doing,
-fail to make themselves of value to the Government, and render aid to
-those whom the Office was organized to protect and assist. The
-percentage of claims affected by these causes, small though it may have
-been, would amount to thousands in the aggregate, and these, distributed
-throughout the country, would give an enlarged color to their
-complaints, and lead the people to believe that the evil was general and
-unusual in its extent. When we add to this class of complainants the
-150,000 who, in some shape, have had claims before the office for
-increase, arrears, etc., and which, not coming within the law under
-which they filed, were rejected, and who, not understanding what the law
-did provide, but deriving their information from unscrupulous agents who
-would not or could not instruct them in the matter, they feel seriously
-aggrieved, and loudly complain. Two dependent mothers, equally poor, and
-who were alike aided by their respective sons, reside in the same
-village. They apply for a pension for the services and deaths of their
-sons. The records of the War Department show that one of the soldiers
-died of a disease contracted in the service and in the line of duty, and
-that the other soldier died of a disease, though contracted in the
-service, yet it _did not_ originate while he was in the line of duty.
-These are distinctions which neither this poor woman nor the community
-can understand. Yet the claim last described must be rejected, as it is
-barred by the law. The whole community cries out about the great
-injustice practiced by the Pension Office, while, in fact, the _law_ is
-responsible, and _not_ the office.
-
-Again, invalid pensioners, suffering from a partial or total disability,
-are strongly urged, by their _pecuniary interests_, to believe that they
-are entitled to a total or special rating. They apply for increase, and
-are referred to an examining surgeon for a personal examination, and a
-report as to nature and degree of disability. The surgeon fails to
-conform to the applicant’s estimate as to the extent of his disability,
-and the claim for increase is rejected, and here is another case of
-“great injustice.”
-
-Biennial examinations of all invalid pensioners are required, except in
-cases of permanent disability. At such times the surgeon finds they are
-partially or entirely recovered from the disability that existed at the
-date of last examination, and notwithstanding the firm conviction of the
-pensioner that he is just as much disabled as ever, he is reduced or
-dropped. He at once joins the army of grumblers, and complains of
-injustice.
-
-The office acknowledges its imperfections, but respectfully declines to
-admit the correctness of a tithe of the grievances reported. There is
-some show of injustice in the delay frequently experienced in the
-settlement of claims, and yet the Office is responsible to a slight
-degree only. As heretofore intimated, the _system_ is largely
-accountable for this. The suspicion, warranted by experience, attaching
-to every piece of testimony received, and necessitating a close scrutiny
-and reconciliation of the slightest discrepancies before final action
-can be had. The hundreds of points going to make up a case must be found
-in proofs, and the affidavits offered, three times out of five, fail to
-cover the point.
-
-Here is another cause for complaint. “The Pension Office called three
-times for the same evidence.” It must be admitted that, some years ago,
-there was an entire neglect of correspondence. “Letters of inquiry,”
-asking condition of claim and countless questions, arrived by thousands.
-Examiners were ambitious to pass (admit or reject) a large number of
-claims, during the month, and these letters proved nothing, and required
-time and labor to answer them, and were cast aside. This has all been
-changed by the present Commissioner, and these letters are confided to
-clerks who engage in nothing but correspondence, and who are required to
-keep their desks up to date; and in this connection it is proper to add
-that a magical change has been made in the style and completeness of the
-letters. Some years ago, a fac-simile of the Commissioner’s signature
-was stamped upon the out-going mail. Now, each letter is subjected to a
-careful review by the Chiefs of Divisions, and goes thence to the
-Commissioner’s room for his signature and a frequent review by him; and
-the occasional return of a letter, with a sharp reminder, suffices to
-keep the letter writers on the alert. And this idea of a careful
-surveillance is not confined to correspondents, but it has been
-carefully impressed upon the whole force by frequent illustrations. By
-judicious, yet not burdensome reports, and by frequent reference thereto
-by the Commissioner, which is forcibly brought to the knowledge of a
-careless clerk, the _employés_ have been taught that no trifling will be
-allowed.
-
-It has also been realized by the _employés_ of this Bureau that merit
-_is_ noted, and _de_merit will insure dismissal. It is the policy of
-General Baker to hold his subordinates strictly responsible for the
-proper performance of their individual duties, and to look to those
-having charge of others to secure the desired results, or to report the
-delinquent. The result of two years’ growth in this direction has been
-gratifying. The increased industry of the Office, the improvement
-resulting from a thoughtful and careful performance of its duties, and
-the elevation of the standard which all seeking appointments must come
-up to, and a careful weeding-out of the inefficient ones, are rapidly
-tending to secure commendation from those having business with the
-Bureau, rather than censure.
-
-An aged claimant for a pension, who served in the war of 1812, residing
-in Illinois in December, 1871, wrote to the Office as follows: “Oh! can
-it be true that I am going to get $100? That news is too good! I’m so
-hungry, and I love coffee so, but I can’t get any! All I have to eat is
-corn-bread and sour milk. I can’t believe that I am to get so much
-money, but I pray God it may be true.” It is needless to say that this
-claim was made “special,” and the octogenarian had “coffee” for his
-Christmas breakfast.
-
-A Captain B., of Havre-de-Grace, Maryland, a claimant for pension under
-Act of 1871, for services in the War of 1812, had his claim rejected, it
-appearing that he served less than sixty days, as required by that Act;
-whereupon the Captain grew wrathy, and wrote as follows:
-
- “N. B.—Any man that will say that I was not a Private soldier in Capt.
- Paca Smith’s company before the attack of the British on the City of
- Baltimore, and during the attack on said City in Sept., 1814, and
- after the British dropped down to Cape Henry, I say he is a dastard, a
- liar, and a coward, and no gentleman, or any man that will say that I
- got my Land-warrant from the Hon. Geo. C. Whiting, for 160 acres of
- Land, for 14 days’ services in Capt. Paca Smith’s company, is the
- same, as stated above, and I hold myself responsible for the contents
- of this letter; and if their dignity should be touched, a note of
- honor directed to Capt. Wm. B——, Havre-de-Grace, Harford Co., Md.,
- shall be punctually attended to.
-
- “WM. B——.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL.
- TREASURES AND CURIOSITIES OF THE PATENT OFFICE—THE
- MODEL ROOM—ITS RELICS AND INVENTIONS.
-
-The Patent Office Building—Grace and Beauty of its Architecture—Four
- “Sublime” Porticoes—A Pretty Large Passage—The Model Room—“The
- Exhibition of the Nation”—A Room two hundred and seventy Feet in
- Length—The Models—Recording our Name—Wonders and Treasures of the
- Room—Benjamin Franklin’s Press—Model Fire-Escapes—Wonderful
- Fire-Extinguishers—The Efforts of Genius—Sheep-Stalls, Rat-Traps,
- and Gutta Percha—An Ancient Mariner’s Compass—Captain Cook’s
- Razor—The Atlantic Cable—Original Treaties—The Signatures of
- Emperors—An Extraordinary Turkish Treaty—Treasures of the
- Orient—Rare Medals—The Reward of Major Andre’s Captors—The
- Washington Relics—His Old Tent—His Blankets and Bed-Curtain—His
- Chairs and Looking-Glass—His Primitive Mess-Chess and old Tin
- Plates—The Old Clothes of the “Father of His Country”—Military
- Relics of Well-known Men—Original Draft of the Declaration of
- Independence—Washington’s Commission—Model of an Extraordinary
- Boat—Abraham Lincoln as an Inventor—The Hat Worn on the Fatal
- Night—The Gift of the Tycoon—The Efforts of Genius—A Machine to
- Force Hens to Lay Eggs—A Hook for Fishing Worms out of the Human
- Stomach—The Library of the Patent Office.
-
-
-The lawful fees for issuing patents having accumulated into a
-considerable fund, Congress added an appropriation, and directed that
-the whole amount should be invested in a new building to be called the
-Patent Office.
-
-From that double fund has arisen the majestic structure which, next to
-the Capitol, is the most august building in Washington. The southern
-front of the Treasury is of superlative beauty, and from several other
-points its architectural grace cannot be surpassed; but its whole effect
-is marred by the dingy, unbroken outline of its Fifteenth-street side.
-The advantage of the Patent-Office is, that from any point which you
-choose to survey it, it impresses you as supremely grand. Occupying two
-blocks, or an entire public square, standing upon a prominence, it
-spreads and towers into space incomparable in mass and majesty. You may
-approach it from four opposite directions, and on each side you lift
-your eyes to four sublime porticoes towering before you. They are
-supported by double rows of Doric columns, eighteen feet in
-circumference, made of gleaming crystallized marble. The entire building
-is of pure Doric architecture, strong, simple and majestic. Its southern
-front is an exact copy of the Pantheon at Rome, and the eastern portico
-is modelled after that of the Parthenon at Athens.
-
-The length of the building, from Seventh to Ninth streets, is 410 feet,
-and its width, from F to G streets, 275 feet. Its original design was
-made by Mr. William P. Elliot, at that time surveyor of the City of
-Washington. The plan was largely executed by Mr. Mills, architect of
-Public Buildings; while the grand northern portico has been consummated
-under the superintendence of Mr. Edward Clark, the present architect of
-the Capitol.
-
-We enter the eastern door of the basement-story, into a spacious passage
-running from east to west, the whole length of the building. Through it,
-large-wheeled machines can be drawn. On each side of this hall are rooms
-for the deposit of fuel, large and heavy models and department offices.
-In the centre springs a semi-circular stone staircase, with three
-flights of steps, which ascend to the second, third and last story. The
-corridor in the first story is like the one that we entered below, and
-on each side of the hall, doors open into commodious apartments for the
-accommodation of the commissioners, examiners, clerks, etc.
-
-Ascending the stone staircase, we come to the Model Room—_par
-excellence_, the Exhibition Room of the nation. For architectural
-simplicity and space, and the purpose for which it was designed, it is
-unsurpassed in the whole world. Standing here, we look down a vista two
-hundred and seventy-four feet in length, and its perspective is
-enchanting to the sight. A double row of stone columns supports a
-succession of brick arches, finely proportioned, and corresponding in
-depth with the rooms below. The floor is paved with tessellated stone,
-and the light streams in from numerous windows on each side.
-
-The models and other articles are arranged in glass cases on each side
-of the room, leaving ample space in the centre for promenading. There
-are two rows of cases, one above the other—the upper row being placed
-within a light gallery of iron, reached by iron stairways, and extending
-entirely round the east, north and west halls. The ceiling is supported
-by a double row of pillars, which also act as supports to the galleries,
-and both the walls and ceiling are finished in marble and frescoes.
-
-Entering, we find a large register, with pens and ink, at the right of
-the door, in which we may record our name and the date of our visit, if
-we please.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE MODEL ROOM, PATENT OFFICE.—WASHINGTON.
- This room contains the fruits of the inventive genius of the whole
- nation. More than 160,000 models are here deposited.
-]
-
-The first case on the right of the entrance contains Benjamin Franklin’s
-press, at which he worked when a journeyman-printer in London. It is old
-and worm-eaten, and is only held together by means of bolts and iron
-plates, and bears but little resemblance to the mighty machines by which
-the printing of to-day is done. Then come models of “fire-escapes,” some
-of which are curiosities and well worth studying. The impression left by
-the majority, however, is that if they constitute one’s only hope of
-escape, in case of fire, an old-fashioned headlong leap from a window
-may just as well be attempted at once.
-
-Near by are the models of those inventive geniuses who have attempted to
-extinguish conflagrations by discharging a patent cartridge into the
-burning mass. The guns, from which the cartridges are thrown, are most
-remarkable in design.
-
-Then follow tobacco-cutting machines, of various kinds, all sorts of
-skates, billiard-table models, ice-cutters, billiard-registers, improved
-fire-arms, and toys, of different designs, among which is a most
-ingenious model of a walking-horse. Having reached the end of this row
-of cases, we cross over to the south side of the hall. The first cases
-contain models of cattle and sheep-stalls, vermin and rat-traps, and are
-followed by a handsome display of articles in gutta percha, manufactured
-by the Goodyear Company.
-
-In the bottom of one of the cases is an old mariner’s compass of the
-year 1604, presented by Ex-Governor Wise, of Virginia, then United
-States Minister to Brazil, in the name of Lieutenant Sheppard, U. S. N.
-The ticket attached to the compass is written in the bold, running hand
-of the ex-rebel statesman. Near by is a razor which belonged to the
-celebrated navigator, Captain Cook. It was recovered from the natives of
-the island upon which he was murdered, and is hardly such an instrument
-any of those who behold it would care to use. A piece of the Atlantic
-cable is just below it.
-
-Several of the cases following contain the original treaties of the
-United States with foreign powers. They are written upon heavy sheets of
-vellum, in wretchedly bad hands, and are worn and faded. All, save the
-treaties with England and the Eastern nations, are written in French,
-and are all furnished with a multiplicity of red and green seals; the
-first is the treaty with Austria, and bears the weak, hesitating
-signature of Francis I. The signature of Alexander I., attached to the
-first Russian treaty, has more character in it. The treaty of peace with
-England, in 1814, which ended our second war with that power, bears the
-signature of the Regent, afterwards George IV. The treaty of 1803, with
-the Republic of France, is signed “Bonaparte,” in a nervous, sprawling
-hand. Bernadotte’s smooth and flowing hand adorns the first treaty with
-Sweden.
-
-The original treaty with Turkey is a curious document. It consists of a
-number of long slips of parchment, covered with columns of Turkish
-characters. Near by it hangs a bag, in which it was conveyed to this
-country. The bag is its legal covering, or case, and is provided with a
-huge ball of red wax, by way of a seal. Next to it is the first treaty
-of alliance with France—the famous one of 1778—which gave the aid of the
-French king to the cause of the suffering and struggling States of the
-new republic. It is signed by the unfortunate Louis XVI. The “Louis” is
-written in a round, phlegmatic hand; but the lines are delicate, as if
-the pen did not press the paper with the firmness of a strong will. The
-French treaty, of 1822, bears the autograph of Louis XVIII.; and that of
-1831, the signature of Louis Phillippe. Don Pedro I., Emperor of Brazil,
-has affixed his hand to the Brazilian treaty, and the name of Ferdinand
-(the last, and least) is affixed to that of Spain.
-
-In the glass cases with the treaties are several Oriental articles,—a
-Persian carpet and horse-cover, presented to President Van Buren, by the
-Imän of Muscat; and two magnificent rifles, presented to President
-Jefferson, by the Emperor of Morocco. These rifles are finished in the
-highest style of Eastern art, and are really beautiful. In the same
-cases are collections of medals, some of European sovereigns, and others
-of American celebrities. Among them is a copy of the medal, awarded by
-Congress, to the captors of Major André. Near these are several splendid
-Eastern sabres, presented by the great Ali Pacha, the Bey of Egypt, to
-Captain Perry and the officers of the U. S. ship-of-war, _Concord_, at
-Alexandria, (Egypt,) in 1832.
-
-The next cases contain the Washington relics, which are amongst the
-greatest treasures of the nation. They consist of the camp-equipage, and
-other articles used by General Washington, during the Revolution. They
-are just as he left them at the close of the war, and were given to the
-Government, for safe keeping, after his death. Here are the tents which
-constituted the head-quarters, in the field, of the great soldier. They
-are wrapped tightly round the poles, just as they were tied when they
-were struck for the last time, when victory had crowned his country’s
-arms, and the long war was over. Every cord, every button and tent-pin
-is in its place, for he was careful of little things. His blankets and
-the bed-curtain, worked for him by his wife, and his window-curtains,
-are all well preserved. His chairs are perfect, not a round being
-broken; and the little square mirror in his dressing-case is not even
-cracked. The wash-stand and table are also well kept. His knife-case is
-filled with plain horn-handle knives and forks, which were deemed “good
-enough for him,” and his mess-chest is a curiosity. It is a plain wooden
-trunk, covered with leather, with a common lock, the hasp of which is
-broken. It is divided by small partitions of thin wood, and the
-compartments are provided with bottles, still stained with the liquids,
-tin plates, common knives and forks, and other articles pertaining to
-such an establishment.
-
-In these days of luxury, an ordinary sergeant would not be satisfied
-with so simple and plain an establishment. His cooking utensils,
-bellows, andirons, and iron money-chest, all of which went with him from
-Boston to Yorktown, are in the same case, from the side of which hangs
-the suit of clothes worn by him upon the occasion of his resignation of
-his commission as Commander-in-Chief, at Annapolis, in 1783. A hall
-lantern, and several articles from Mount Vernon, a “travelling
-secretary,” Washington’s sword and cane, and a surveyor’s compass,
-presented by him to Captain Samuel Duvall, the surveyor of Frederick
-county, Maryland, are in the same case, as are also a number of articles
-taken from Arlington House, and belonging formerly to the Washington
-family.
-
-A coat worn by Andrew Jackson, at the battle of New Orleans, and the
-war-saddle of the Baron De Kalb, a bayonet used by one of Braddock’s
-soldiers, and found on the fatal field upon which that commander met his
-death-wound, together with the panels from the state-coach of President
-Washington, make up the collection. The original draft of the
-Declaration of Independence, with the signatures of the Continental
-Congress attached, is framed and placed near the Washington case. It is
-old and yellow, and the ink is fading from the paper. Near it hangs
-Washington’s Commission as Commander-in-Chief of the American army,
-bearing the characteristic signature of John Hancock, President of the
-Continental Congress.
-
-In the same case is a plain model, roughly executed, representing the
-frame-work of the hull of a Western steamboat. Beneath the keel is a
-false bottom, provided with bellows and air-bags. The ticket upon it
-bears the memorandum, “Model of sinking and raising boats by bellows
-below. A. Lincoln, May 30, 1849.”
-
-By means of this arrangement, Mr. Lincoln hoped to solve the difficulty
-of passing boats over sand-bars in the Western rivers. The success of
-his scheme would have made him independently wealthy, but it failed,
-and, twelve years later, he became President of the United States.
-During the interval, the model lay forgotten in the Patent Office, but,
-after his inauguration, Mr. Lincoln got one of the _employés_ to find it
-for him. After his death, it was placed in the Washington case.
-
-The opposite case contains another memento of him—the hat worn by him on
-the night of his assassination.
-
-In a couple of cases, filled with machinery for making shoes, we see a
-number of handsome silk robes and Japanese articles, of various kinds,
-presented to Presidents Buchanan and Lincoln, by the Tycoon of Japan.
-The remainder of the hall is filled with models of machines for making
-leather harness and trunks, models of gas and kerosene oil apparatuses,
-liquor distilleries, machines for making confectionery, and for trying
-out lard and fat. Also, methods of curing fish and meat, and embalming
-the dead. A splendid model of a steel revolving tower, for harbor
-defence, stands near the door, and is one of the most conspicuous
-ornaments of the room. The other halls are devoted exclusively to models
-of patented machinery, and other inventions. The cases above and below
-are well filled; models of bridges span the spaces between the other
-cases, and those of the larger machines are laid on the floor of the
-hall.
-
-Models of improved arms, clocks, telegraphs, burglar and fire alarms,
-musical instruments, light-houses, street cars, lamps, stoves, ranges,
-furnaces, peat and fuel-machines, brick and tile-machines,
-sewing-machines, power-looms, paper-making machinery, knitting-machines,
-machines for making cloth, hats, spool cotton, for working up hemp,
-harbor cleaners, patent hooks-and-eyes, buttons, umbrella and
-cane-handles, fluting-machines, trusses, medical instruments of gutta
-percha, corsets, ambulances and other military establishments,
-arrangements for excluding the dust and smoke from railroad cars,
-railroad and steamboat machinery, agricultural and domestic machinery of
-all kinds, and hundreds of other inventions, line these three immense
-halls. Among the most remarkable is a machine to force a hen to lay
-eggs, and a silver worm hook, invented to fish worms out of the human
-stomach.
-
-A large library, of great value, is attached to the Patent Office,
-containing many volumes of the highest scientific value. Under judicious
-arrangement, a collection already rich and ample is forming, of every
-work of interest to the inventors, and that new, increasing, important
-class of professional men—the attorneys in patent cases. Upon its
-shelves may be found a complete set of the reports of the British Patent
-Commissioners, of which there are only six copies in the United States.
-The reports of French patents are also complete, and those of various
-other countries are being obtained as rapidly as possible. A system of
-exchanges has been established, which employs three agents abroad; and,
-in addition to various and arduous duties, the librarian annually
-dispatches several hundred copies of the reports.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI.
- THE BUREAU OF PATENTS—CRAZY INVENTORS AND
- WONDERFUL INVENTIONS.
-
-Patent-Rights in Steamboats—Origin of Copyright and Patent-Laws—Congress
- Settles the Matter—A Board of “Disinterested, Competent”
- Persons—Destruction of the Patent-Office by Fire—The New
- Building—The Corps of Examiners—The Commissioner’s Speech—Twenty
- Thousand Applications _per annum_—Fourteen Thousand Patents Granted
- in One Year—Wonderful Expansion of Inventive Genius—“The Universal
- Yankee”—Second-hand Inventions—Where the Inventions Come from—Taking
- Out a Patent for the Lord’s Prayer—A Patent for a Cow’s Tail—A
- Lady’s Patent—Hesitating to Accept a Million Dollars—How Patentees
- are Protected—The American System—What American Inventors Have Done,
- and What They Haven’t—The First Superintendent—The Present
- Commissioner—Exploits of General Legett—His Efficiency in Office—The
- Inventor Always a Dreamer—Perpetual Motion—The Invention of a D.
- D.—His Little Machine—“Original with Me”—Silencing the Doctor—A New
- Process of Embalming—A Dead Body Sent to the Office—Utilizing
- Niagara—A _Generous_ Offer—An Englishman’s Invention—Inventors in
- Paris—How to Kill Lions and Tigers in the United States with
- Catmint—A Fearful Bomb-shell—Eccentric Letters—Amusing Specimens of
- Correspondence.
-
-
-With the settlement of the English colonies in America came a great many
-English customs and laws, and among those adhered to was that of
-granting patents or passing special Acts for the protection of
-inventors.
-
-In 1728, the Legislature of Connecticut granted the exclusive right of
-practicing the business or trade of steel-making, provided the
-petitioners improved the art to any good and reasonable perfection
-within two years. In 1785, the State of Maryland passed an act giving to
-one James Rumsey the exclusive right to construct, employ and navigate
-boats of an improved construction, to run against the current of rapid
-rivers. In 1787, an act was passed vesting the exclusive right of
-propelling boats by steam and water for a limited time. In this year a
-number of acts were passed to protect inventions of machines for
-ruff-carding-belts, grinding flour, &c., and in 1789, one for the
-protection of a hand fire-engine in New Hampshire was enacted.
-
-The founders of the Constitution saw the advantages to be derived from
-protecting the useful arts and sciences, and we find in Article 1,
-Section 8, the authority and power given Congress “to promote the
-progress of science and the useful arts by securing, for a limited time,
-to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their respective
-writings and discoveries,” etc.; “to make all laws which shall be
-necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers.”
-Accordingly, Congress, in 1790, immediately after the ratification of
-the Constitution, found it necessary and thought it beneficial to enact
-a statute which authorized the issue of a patent to inventors and
-discoverers of any useful manufacture, engine, machine, and those who
-should devise any improvement thereon not before known or used.
-
-The application, consisting of a clear description of the invention, was
-at that time made to the Secretary-of-State, and the Attorney-General of
-the United States. If such application was found to be new, a patent was
-issued by authority of any two persons enumerated, attested by the
-signature of the President of the United States, who granted to the
-inventor the exclusive right of making, constructing, using, or vending
-to others to be used, the invention or discovery, for the term of
-fourteen years.
-
-As the nation increased in power and talent, this Act was modified as
-the necessities of the time required. Abuses crept in, the most noted of
-which was the granting and issuing of a great many patents without any
-record being kept to indicate that such patents were ever granted. This
-was caused by lack of organization and want of proper assistance. The
-Executive and Members of the Cabinet, having other duties to perform,
-neglected the proper examination of applications, and the system
-degenerated into as bad a one as the English.
-
-This Act, with the amendment, was, in 1836, swept from the statute
-books, and the Patent-Office was established on a surer basis, with an
-organization of a Commissioner, Chief Clerk, an Examiner, a Draughtsman,
-and some five clerks to conduct the examination and issues of
-applications. As the decisions of the Commissioner, who was then
-presumed to examine all applications, was not always impartial and
-right, an appeal was allowed to a Board composed of three disinterested
-and competent persons, who were appointed by the Secretary of State, as
-occasion required.
-
-The Patent-Office Building, which was at that time situated on the
-present site of the General Post-Office, was completely destroyed by
-fire in December, 1836, and all models, drawings and records were
-consumed. Congress appropriated money, and issued circulars directed to
-all who were thought to be interested in the restoration.
-
-The majority of the patentees sent in duplicates of their papers and
-models, but many were never heard from, and for this reason the office
-is unable to present a complete record of the grants. After the fire,
-the business of the Office was conducted in the City Hall building until
-the present building was erected for the Patent-Office, a few years
-later. In 1849, the Office was placed under the supervision of the
-Secretary of the Interior or Home Department, where it now remains.
-
-The fostering of invention encouraged home manufactures, one of the
-results most eagerly sought, after the war with Great Britain. So active
-became the inventive genius and so prolific of results, that Congress
-was compelled, from time to time, to increase the examining corps, and
-the little band of seven persons, who occupied the contracted rooms in
-the City Hall, has expanded into a corps of eighty examiners and
-assistants, more than two hundred clerks and other officials, all under
-the control of a Commissioner and an Assistant-Commissioner.
-
-The grant of one thousand patents in 1836, when the office was first
-regularly organized, has enlarged into one hundred and sixty thousand at
-the present time. And the latter number is scarcely two-thirds of the
-number of applications. With this enormous increase followed a
-corresponding labor and intricacy in examining so large a number of
-applications, but so perfectly has the system been developed, that very
-few mistakes are made in the way of wrongfully granting patents.
-
-Hon. S. S. Fisher, United States Commissioner of Patents, before the
-American Institute, New York City, September 28, 1869, made an eloquent
-address concerning the American system of granting patents, from which I
-make the following extracts:
-
- “The great Patent Act of 1836 established what is now distinctively
- the American system in regard to the grant of letters-patent.
-
- “In the Patent-office, under the act of 1836, the Commissioner and one
- examining-clerk were thought to be sufficient to do the work of
- examining into the patentability of the two or three hundred that were
- offered; now sixty-two examiners are over-crowded with work, a force
- of over three hundred _employes_ is maintained, and the applications
- have swelled to over twenty thousand per annum. This year the number
- of patents granted will average two hundred and seventy-five per week,
- or fourteen thousand a year.
-
- “In England and on the Continent all applications are patented without
- examination into the novelty of the inventions claimed. In some
- instances the instrument is scanned to see if it cover a patentable
- subject matter, and in Prussia some examination is made into the
- character of the new idea; but in no case are such appliances
- provided, such a corps of skilled examiners, such a provision of
- drawings, models, and books, such a collection of foreign patents, and
- such checks to prevent and review error, as with us. As a result, an
- American patent has in our courts a value that no foreign patent can
- acquire in the courts of its own country.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “The foreign patents of American inventors, that have been copies of
- patents previously granted in this country, are the best that are
- granted abroad. Many an English or French invention, that has been
- patented without difficulty there, has been stopped in its passage
- through our office by a reference to some patent previously granted in
- this country. In spite of our examination, which rejects over
- one-third of all the applications that are made, invention has been
- stimulated by the hope of protection; and nearly as many patents will
- issue in the United States this year as in the whole of Europe put
- together, including the British Isles. But a few days ago I took up a
- volume of Italian patents, when I was amused and gratified to find on
- every page the name of the universal Yankee, re-patenting there his
- American invention. He is, I suspect, much the best customer in the
- Patent Office of United Italy.
-
- “We are an inventive people. Invention is by no means confined to our
- mechanics. Our merchants invent, our soldiers and our sailors invent,
- our school-masters invent, our professional men invent, aye, our women
- and children invent. One man, lately, wished to patent the application
- of the Lord’s Prayer, repeated in a loud tone of voice, to prevent
- stammering; another claimed the new and useful attachment of a weight
- to a cow’s tail, to prevent her from switching it while milking;
- another proposed to cure worms by extracting by a delicate line and
- tiny hook, baited with a seductive pill; while a lady patented a
- crimping-pin, which she declared might also be used as a paper-cutter,
- as a skirt-supporter, as a paper-file, as a child’s pin, as a
- bouquet-holder, as a shawl-fastener, or as a book-mark. Do not suppose
- that this is the highest flight that the gentle sex has achieved. It
- has obtained many other patents, some of which have no relation to
- wearing apparel, and are of considerable value.
-
- “Every inventor supposes that he has a fortune in every conception
- that he puts into wood and iron. Stealing tremblingly and furtively up
- the steps of the Patent Office, with his model concealed under his
- coat, lest some sharper shall see it and rob him of his darling
- thought, he hopes to come down those steps with the precious parchment
- that shall insure him a present competency and enrich his children. If
- he were offered a million in the first flush of his triumph, he would
- hesitate about touching it without sleeping over it for a night. Yet
- fourteen thousand millions would be a pretty heavy bill to pay from a
- treasury not over full. No commission could satisfy the inventor, and
- no price that we could afford to pay would take the place of the hope
- of unlimited wealth, which now lightens his toil.... We say, we cannot
- pay you in money, we will pay you in time. A new thought developed,
- explained, described, put on record for the use of the nation—this is
- the one side. The right to the exclusive benefit of this new thought,
- for a limited time, and protection in that right, this on the other.
- This is the patent system. A fair contract between the inventor and
- the public.
-
- “The inventor’s best security is to take out a patent.
-
- “To secure this fair dealing, we have on the one side the Patent
- Office, with its examiners, its drawings, its models, its books and
- its foreign patents, to scan and test the invention.
-
- “On the other side we have the courts of law to protect the inventor
- and punish the thief. It is impossible that these instrumentalities
- should do their work imperfectly. This is the American system. Under
- its protection great inventions have been born, and have thriven. It
- has given to the world the steamboat, the telegraph, the
- sewing-machine, the hard and soft rubber. It has reconstructed the
- loom, the reaping-machine, and the locomotive. It has won from the
- older homes of the mechanic arts their richest trophies, and like
- Columbus, who found a new world for Castile and Leon, it has created
- new arts in which our nation has neither competitive or peer.”
-
-The first Superintendent of the Patent Office was Doctor W. Thornton, a
-gentleman of great attainments, who held his position for many years.
-The present Commissioner of Patents is General Mortimer D. Leggett, born
-of Quaker parents, in the State of New York, fifty years ago. At an
-early age, he went with his parents to the Western Reserve, Ohio. He
-received an academical education, studied law, was admitted to the bar,
-and at twenty-eight, was established in a flourishing business in
-Warren, Ohio. Jacob D. Cox, late Secretary of the Interior, studied law
-with General Leggett, and ultimately became his partner under the firm
-name of Leggett & Cox. General Leggett afterwards filled the position of
-Professor of Pleadings and Equity Jurisprudence, in the Ohio Law
-College, which he occupied till 1857, and later was called to become the
-Superintendent of Public Schools in the city of Zanesville, which his
-management made pre-eminent among the schools of the West. At the
-beginning of the war, he entered the field at the head of the
-Seventy-eighth Ohio. This regiment received its first baptism in the
-snow and sleet of Fort Donelson, and was under fire there.
-
-The executive and administrative ability of Colonel Leggett, as shown in
-the discipline and condition of his regiment, attracted the attention of
-General Grant, who made him Provost-Marshal of the post. He did his work
-so well, that he was repeatedly chosen again, and by the warm
-commendation of his chief, was made Brigadier-General. At the battle of
-Shiloh, and the siege of Corinth, General Leggett held advanced posts.
-In the siege of Vicksburg, General Leggett commanded the first brigade
-of Logan’s Division—the brigade which, for its gallant service, was
-honored by being designated for the coveted distinction of marching
-first into the captured works. Soon after, he received command of this
-division, and was made Major-General, and with it, made with Sherman,
-the famous “march to the sea.”
-
-There are many young men who live to say—that the most genial,
-beneficent, and valuable influence, exerted upon them during the
-toilsome campaign, and the dangerous periods of idleness in camp-life,
-was that of General Leggett, who ever inspired patience by his unfailing
-good humor, persistent fidelity to temperance, both by precept and lofty
-example. He made many a dreary march seem like a picnic excursion; and
-his quick, fearless, yet sympathetic glance, often inspired the sinking
-heart at the moment of danger. Beyond this, he was a true soldier, in
-caring anxiously for the comfort of his soldiers, in enforcing rigid
-discipline, and in stimulating officers and men to excel in drill and
-all service.
-
-At the close of the war, General Leggett became Superintendent and
-Business Manager of the engine works at Zanesville and Newark, Ohio, the
-largest establishment of the kind in the West, where he remained, till
-he was called by the friend who remembered his brave services in the
-peril of war,—to the administration of one of the most important
-branches of the Government service in time of peace. He has already
-inaugurated one of the most potent movements toward the encouragement of
-the useful arts, ever made in this country—viz.: the publication in
-popular form, and at low rates, of the Patent Office drawings and
-specifications.
-
-General Leggett has a clear red-and-white complexion, wide, open
-laughing blue eyes, and an aspect of fresh health which amounts to
-youth. His frame and brain are cast in herculean mould. He is a man of
-muscle, as well as mind—the former having been toughened by long
-geological foot-tramps through the mountains of Virginia, as well as by
-the exposures of war, and of an all-time active life.
-
-The official chair of General Leggett has not proved too much for his
-better self, as it does for so many. He meets all who approach him with
-a smile and kind word, apparently not forgetting that in a republic the
-potentate of to-day may be the suppliant of to-morrow, and that at any
-rate, but one man at a time can be a Commissioner of Patents. He brings
-to his official administration and decisions the same untiring industry,
-intelligence and integrity; the same broad views, clear insight and
-devotion to duty, which in every previous sphere that he has filled have
-made his whole life an honorable success.
-
-With all its comprehensive cares, one side of the Commissioner’s
-official life tends to jollity, good digestion, and long life. In no
-other position in the world, probably, could a man discover how many
-crazy people there are outside of the lunatic asylum. The born inventor
-is always a dreamer. For the sake of his darling thought, he is willing
-to sacrifice himself, his wife and children, every thing but the
-“machine” growing in his brain and quickening under his eager hand. How
-often they fail! How often the precious thought, developed into form, is
-only a mistake—a failure.
-
-Sometimes this is sad—quite as often it is funny. The procession which
-started, far back in the ages, with its machine of “Perpetual Motion,”
-long ago reached the doors of the American Patent Office. The persons
-found in that procession are sometimes astonishing. A doctor of
-divinity, well-known at the Capital, and not suspected of studying any
-machinery but that of the moral law, appeared one day in the office of
-the Commissioner.
-
-“I know I’ve got it,” he said.
-
-“What, sir?”
-
-“PERPETUAL MOTION, sir. Look!” and he set down a little machine. “If the
-floor were not in the way, if the earth were not in the way, that weight
-would never stop, and my machine would go on forever. I know this is
-original with me—that it never dawned before upon any other human mind.”
-
-So enthusiastic was the doctor, it was with difficulty he could be
-restrained from depositing his ten dollars and leaving his experiment to
-be patented. The Commissioner, quietly, sent to the library for a book—a
-history of attempts to create Perpetual Motion. Opening at a certain
-page, he pointed out to the astonished would-be inventor, where his own
-machine had been attempted and failed, more than a hundred years before.
-The reverend doctor took the book home, read, digested, and meditated
-thereon—to bring it back and lay it down before the Commissioner, in
-silence. No one has ever heard him speak of Perpetual Motion since.
-
-It would take a large volume, to record all the preposterous letters and
-inventions received at this office. A very short time since, a man sent
-a letter to the Patent Bureau describing a new process of embalming
-which he had originated. It was accompanied by a dead baby—“the model”
-which he requested should be placed in one of the glass cases of the
-Exhibition Room. He considered himself deeply injured when his request
-was refused.
-
-A letter was recently received by the Commissioner of Patents, from a
-man in Portsmouth, England, offering this Government the benefit of an
-invention of his own for utilizing water-power, so as to force the water
-to a great height when confined in reservoirs constructed for the
-purpose. He offers the invention free of all charge, because, he states,
-that it pains him to see “such mighty power as there is at the Niagara
-wasted.” In addition, he offers his own services at the _low_ rate of
-£1,000 per annum, to build and operate the invention. He says in his
-letter, that “if the mighty great power in Niagara was accumulated, it
-would move a great deal.” He also states that he “has a good plan for a
-velocipede and a bicicle, that he thinks would be a good thing for this
-country,” but admits that “people in England don’t like it.”
-
-Referring again to his water-power, he claims that if this Government
-would build the road, he can take ships across the isthmus of Panama “in
-a box, water and all.”
-
-The Commissioner recently received the following communication from the
-Legation of the United States:
-
- PARIS, Dec. 3, 1872.
-
- “SIR:—A very large number of inventions and discoveries are submitted
- to this Legation, with the request that we shall transmit them to
- Washington. Most of them are, as you may suppose, worthless. We have
- had, for instance, serious plans proposed for the extermination of all
- the lions and tigers in the United States by the use of catmint, the
- _modus operandi_ being to dig an immense pit, and fill it with this
- herb. The well-known love of the feline race for catmint will
- naturally induce the lions and tigers to jump into the pit and roll
- themselves upon it; whereupon concealed hunters are to appear and
- slaughter the ferocious animals.
-
- “Another plan is for the destruction of grasshoppers upon the plains
- by the use of artillery; it being perfectly well known that concussion
- kills insects.
-
- “A third is for the capture of a besieged city by the use of a bomb
- which, upon exploding, shall emit so foul a smell that the besieged
- will rush headlong from the walls, and fall an easy prey to the
- besiegers.”
-
-The President of the United States receives many letters of like
-character, which are by him transmitted to the Bureau of Patents. I
-append verbatim copies (including orthography) of three which represent
-many thousands more of equal intelligence received at this Department of
-the Government.
-
- AUGUST 31st 1872
-
- MR. U. S. GRANT Sir it is with pleasure I take this opportunity Of
- writing to You I Am well at Present Hoping those few lines will find
- you enjoying Good health And prosperity I am doing all I can for you
- in this locality and I hope and expect you will be our next President
- Of the United States I would like to have an Office of Siveliseing the
- Indians What Salary will you give me per Annum please Write to me and
- let me no in fact I am in need of A little money at present Will you
- please send me 600 or 1000 dolors to —— —— Sumthing Aught to be done
- for the poor Indean And I beleave that I can sivelise them. If you
- will give me 200 or 300 per month it will doo.
-
- MARCH 13 1873
-
- HON. SIR PRESEDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA I announce to you
- that I am inventing Perpetual Motion I have once had my paterns stolen
- or I should had the machine in running order before this and I have
- altered my plan so that it carrys a shaft and wheel and when
- constructed on a large plan it will move machinery, And being on a new
- plan and different from all others and I am sure of success which I
- hope to place before the world soon. Though in consequence of poor
- health and not having the means to work with it will take some months
- longer to accomplish it I might write you the plan but I am not sure
- that you will receive this And now I wish to ask a few questions which
- I hope you will answer by writing as soon as you receive this
-
- 1st has there been a patent granted or applied for on perpetual motion
-
- 2nd has the Government a bounty offered to the inventor
-
- 3d when the Machine is in perfect running order and shure that it will
- go without stoping will you and a man from the Patent Office come on
- and grant me a patent and fetch me the bounty if there is one.
-
- 4th is there eney way that I can have time to get the machine
- completed before others can apply for a Patent
-
- Please write soon and address ——
-
- MAY 1872
-
- HON FRIEND—_Solicitor of Patents_ I have invented a secret form of
- writing expressly for the use of our gov in time of warfare the
- publick demands it, It is different from any other invention known to
- the publick in this or any gov. It consists simply of the English
- alphabet and can be changed to any form that the safety of our gov.
- demands it no higherglyphicks are employed but it is practicable and
- safe I propose to sell it to our gov for the sum of one million
- dollars I will meet any committee appointed to investigate the matter.
- If you will give me your influence in Congress and aid in bringing a
- sale of the invention about to our gov or any other I will reward you
- with the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) It is no illusion or a
- whim of the brain but is what I represent it to be scientific
- practicable and safe, Wishing to hear from you on the subject I remain
-
- Yours most truly ——
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII.
- THE WAR DEPARTMENT.
-
-The Secretary-of-War—His Duties—The Department of the Navy—Efficiency of
- the Army—The Custody of the Flags—Patriotic Trophies—The War of the
- Rebellion—Captured Flags—An Ugly Flag and a Strange Motto—“Crown for
- the Brave”—_Sic Semper Tyrannis_—The Stars and Stripes—The Black
- Flag—No Quarter—The Military Establishment—The Adjutant-General’s
- Office—The Quartermaster-General’s Office—The Commissary-General’s
- Office—The Paymaster-General—The Surveyor-General—The Engineer’s
- Office—The Washington Aqueduct—Topographical Engineers—The Ordnance
- Bureau—The War Department Building—During the War—Lincoln’s Solitary
- Walk—Secretary Stanton—The Exigencies of War—The Medical History of
- the War—Dr. Hammond—Dr. J. H. Baxter—Collecting Physiological
- Data—The Inspection of Over Half a Million Persons—Who is Unfit for
- Military Service—Various Nationalities Compared—Curious Calculations
- Respecting Height, Health, and Color—Healthy Emigrants—Remarkable
- Statistical Results—The Physical _Status_ of the Nation.
-
-
-The first recorded legislation of importance upon the military affairs
-of the nation, is the Act of Congress, of the twenty-seventh day of
-January, 1785, entitled “An Ordinance for ascertaining the Powers and
-Duties of the Secretary of War.”
-
-By this Act the duties of the Secretary are defined; and amongst them is
-a provision requiring him to visit, “at least once a year,” “all the
-magazines and deposits of public stores, and report the state of them,
-with proper arrangements, to Congress.”
-
-Immediately after the confederation of the States, by the adoption of
-the Constitution, this legislation was superseded by an Act of Congress,
-approved on the seventh day of August, 1789, defining the duties of the
-department, which was again modified by the fifth Congress, in the Act
-of the thirtieth day of April, 1798, “To establish an Executive
-Department, to be denominated the Department of the Navy.” Of the
-efficiency of this department, and its services to the Republic, there
-can be no better testimony than that which has been extorted from
-history, in the following words: “The United States, from the peace of
-Independence, in 1783, achieved by war, and merely acknowledged by
-treaty, have always (?) lost by treaty, but never by war.”
-
-This sentiment, which is not as true now of our relations with Great
-Britain as in 1814, contains within it a compliment to the Department
-which, with limited means, and encountering the natural jealousy of
-civism, has so administered its scanty finances that the army has been
-made not only a defence for the frontiers, but a recognized national
-force, equal to the direst emergency, a nucleus around which, in any
-peril, the strength and bravery of the Republic may safely rally.
-
-By the Act of the fourteenth of April, 1814, the Secretaries of War and
-of the Navy were placed in custody of the flags, trophies of war, etc.,
-to deliver the same for presentation and display in such public places
-as the President may deem proper. Although many trophies, which a
-monarchical power would have jealously preserved, have been lost, or at
-least detached from their proper resting-place, there are still enough
-in both departments to stir the patriotic emotions of all who take the
-trouble to inquire for them.
-
-The war of the Rebellion greatly increased these trophies. The Rebel
-flags taken in battle, and in surrender, and the Union flags,
-re-captured from the Confederates, now occupy large apartments in two
-buildings belonging to the War Department; and are all placed under the
-supervision of the Adjutant-General. In “Winder’s Buildings” hundreds of
-these flags are deposited, and many hundreds more in the
-Adjutant-General’s office on Seventeenth street. The front and back
-rooms on the lower floor of the latter house are exclusively devoted to
-their preservation. A polite “orderly” is in waiting, with a
-record-book, which gives the name and history of every flag in the
-building. The front room is devoted to the Union colors which were
-re-taken from the rebels. The back room is filled with Confederate flags
-of every device and hue. Here is the first Confederate flag adopted—an
-ugly rag, thirteen stars on a blue field, with white and red bars. Its
-motto: “We will collect our own revenues. We choose our own
-institutions.”
-
-The colors of the Benjamin Infantry, organized April 24, 1861, bear the
-inscriptions: “Crown for the brave.” “Strike for your altars and your
-fires.”
-
-An Alabama flag, of white bunting, with broad cross-bars of blue, sewed
-on by women’s hands, is inscribed: “Our Homes, our Rights, we entrust to
-your keeping, brave Sons of Alabama.”
-
-“_Sic Semper Tyrannis_,” says a tattered banner of fine silk, presented
-in the first flush of rebellion-fever, with the confidence of assured
-victory, “by the ladies of Norfolk, to the N. L. A. Blues.” Again, says
-Virginia: “Our Rights we will maintain.” “Death to Invaders covered with
-blood.” “Death or Victory,” cries the Zachary Rangers—and again:
-“Tyranny is hateful to the gods.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BLOOD-STAINED CONFEDERATE BATTLE FLAGS, CAPTURED DURING THE WAR.
- Sketched by permission of the Government from the large collection in
- possession of the War Department, at Washington.
-
- 1. Black Flag. 4. State and Regiment unknown. [Captured at the
- Battle of Gettysburg, by the 60th Regiment of
- New York Volunteers]
- 2. Alabama Flag.
- 3. Palmetto Flag. 5. State Colors of North Carolina.
-
-]
-
-With the exception of the State colors, the Union flags bear fewer
-mottoes. Many are fashioned of the finest fabrics, touched with the most
-exquisite tints. They need no florid and sensational sentence. Enough,
-that they bear the potent and silent stars of indissoluble union:
-
- “When Freedom, from her mountain height,
- Unfurled her standard to the air,
- She tore the azure robe of night,
- And set the stars of glory there;
- She mingled with the gorgeous dyes
- The milky baldrick of the skies,
- And striped its pure celestial white
- With streakings of the morning light;
- Then, from his mansion in the sun,
- She called her eagle-bearer down,
- And gave into his mighty hand,
- The symbols of her chosen land.”
-
-Beside this Flag of the Republic, the Black Flag, borne at Winchester,
-with its hideous yellow stripe, and hellish sentence, “No Quarter,”
-needs no comment. From floor to nave, they droop everywhere, faded,
-tattered, bullet-riddled, the flags of Freedom, and the ensigns of
-Slavery, defiant, yet doomed. On one side of the apartment, cases,
-divided into minute boxes, rise to the ceiling. Each one is large enough
-to take a flag tightly rolled. Over all hangs a curtain; and here these
-rags, which have outlasted the wasting march, the sore defeat, wait to
-tell their story in silence to coming generations.
-
-The War Department is now divided into the following Bureaus:
-
-Secretary’s Office: The Secretary of War is charged, under the direction
-of the President, with the general control of the military
-establishment, and the execution of the laws relating thereto. The
-functions of the several Bureaus are performed under his supervision and
-authority. In the duties of his immediate office he is assisted by a
-chief clerk, claims-and-disbursing clerk, requisition-clerk,
-registering-clerk, and three recording-clerks.
-
-The Adjutant-General’s Office is the medium of communication to the army
-of all general and special orders of the Secretary-of-War relating to
-matters of military detail. The rolls of the army, and the records of
-service are kept, and all military commissions prepared in this office.
-
-The Quartermaster-General’s Office has charge of all matters pertaining
-to barracks and quarters for the troops, transportation, camp and
-garrison-equipage, clothing, fuel, forage, and the incidental expenses
-of the military establishment.
-
-The Commissary-General’s Office has charge of all matters relating to
-the procurement and issue of subsistence-stores in the army.
-
-The Paymaster-General’s Office has the general direction of matters
-relating to the pay of the army.
-
-The Surgeon-General’s Office has charge of all matters relating to the
-medical and hospital service.
-
-The Engineer’s Office, at the head of which is the Chief Engineer of the
-army, has charge of all matters relating to the construction of the
-fortifications, and to the Military Academy. At present, the Washington
-Aqueduct is being built under its direction. The Bureau of Topographical
-Engineers, at the head of which is the Chief of the Corps, has charge of
-all matters relating to river and harbor improvements, the survey of the
-lakes, the construction of military works, and generally of all military
-surveys.
-
-The Ordnance Bureau, at the head of which is the chief of ordnance, has
-charge of all matters relating to the manufacture, purchase, storage,
-and issue of all ordnance, arms, and munitions of war. The management of
-the arsenals and armories is conducted under its orders.
-
-The present building, still used for the War Department, is utterly
-inadequate to its necessities. Already its Bureaus are scattered in
-several transient resting-places. In a few years they will be again
-concentrated in the magnificent structure now going up, for the combined
-use of the State, War and Navy Departments.
-
-With the present War Department building will be obliterated one of the
-oldest land-marks of the Capital. All through the war of the Rebellion,
-it seemed to be the temple of the people, to which the whole nation came
-up, as they did to the temple at Jerusalem. What fates hung upon the
-fiats which issued from its walls! Hither came mother, wife, and
-daughter, to seek their dead, and to supplicate the furlough for their
-living soldier. What times those were, when the very life of the nation
-seemed suspended upon the will of the great War Secretary. I cannot look
-at the trees which arch the avenue between the War Department and the
-President’s house, without thinking of those days when Lincoln took his
-solitary walk to and fro to consult with Stanton, his step slow, his
-eyes sad, over-weighted with responsibility and sorrow. And going down
-Seventeenth street, who that ever saw him can fail to recall the image
-of Stanton as he paced up and down before the door of the War Department
-for his half-hour’s exercise, when he held himself a prisoner within its
-walls.
-
-All will soon be gone—the old familiar places as well as the old
-familiar faces. The grating of the trowel, cementing stone on stone, the
-ceaseless click of the hammer foretell how speedily the august stone
-structure, with graceful monoliths and turreted roof stretching over the
-vast square, will take the place of the old War Department.
-
-The exigencies of war not only augmented the business of the War
-Department to gigantic proportions, but they created important Bureaus
-which have survived to flourish in times of peace; of these, none are so
-interesting, both to scientists and to citizens, as those connected with
-the medical history of the war. It may not be universally known to the
-public, but the medical profession has long been aware that the immense
-collection of cases and treatment, recorded in the field and hospital
-experiences of the late war, was being examined, condensed, tabulated,
-and the valuable conclusion, deducible therefrom, prepared for
-publication, under the direction of the Surgeon General of the army.
-
-During the past few years “circulars” or detached portions of the work,
-of special interest, have been issued, and this spring two quarto
-volumes, being the first parts of the first two volumes of the entire
-work, have been given to the world.
-
-[Illustration: THE NEW BUILDING NOW BEING CONSTRUCTED FOR DEPARTMENTS OF
-STATE, ARMY, AND NAVY.—WASHINGTON.]
-
-Part I. of Volume I. is devoted to _medical_ history, and has been
-compiled by Dr. Woodward, an assistant-surgeon of the army. This is a
-volume of eleven hundred pages, and is divided into two parts and an
-appendix. The parts give the statistics of disease and death,
-respectively, of white and colored troops. The appendix consists of
-reports and statements of medical officers and their superiors.
-
-Part I. of Volume II. commences the _surgical_ history, and is the work
-of Dr. Otis, also an assistant-surgeon of the army, and well known as
-the curator of the Army Medical Museum. It contains nearly eight hundred
-pages, and is illustrated by numerous photo-lithographs of gunshot
-wounds, stumps of amputated limbs, and various other injuries of the
-human body—all evidences of the cruelties of war.
-
-The merit of the conception of this vast undertaking, is due to the
-former Surgeon-General, Dr. Hammond, now the distinguished physician of
-New York city.
-
-In 1862 he devised the form and routine for copious and precise returns
-of hospital treatment, and under his energetic supervision, Dr. Brinton
-of the volunteer corps, and Doctors Woodward and Otis, commenced the
-“Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion.”
-
-The work was ably continued by Dr. Barnes, the former Surgeon-General,
-and the result of all these labors is, so far, seen in the two volumes
-described, for the publication of which an appropriation was made by
-Congress in June, 1868. It is supposed that the entire work will reach
-six, and perhaps eight, such parts, and it certainly will be, when
-completed, a noble evidence of the liberality with which the Government
-provided for its sick and wounded soldiers, who fought for its
-preservation, and of the patriotism of the men who suffered in
-supporting such Government.
-
-Brevet Major-General Joseph K. Barnes, Surgeon-General of the United
-States Army, was born in Pennsylvania, and appointed Assistant-Surgeon
-United States Army from that State, June, 1840, and stationed at the
-United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y., until November of
-that year. He served in the Florida war against the Seminole Indians to
-1842; at Fort Jesup, La., to 1846; in the war with Mexico to 1848; at
-Baton Rouge, La., and in Texas the same year, at Baltimore, Md., to
-1851; in Missouri, to 1854; again at the United States Military Academy,
-West Point, N. Y., to 1857; in California and at Fort Vancouver, W. T.,
-to 1861; at the head-quarters of General Hunter, Western Department and
-Department of Kansas to 1862.
-
-He was promoted to be surgeon in the United States Army, August, 1856;
-Lieutenant Colonel and Medical Inspector, February, 1863; Colonel and
-Medical Inspector-General, August, 1863; and was assigned duty as
-Acting-Surgeon-General, United States Army, in the same month; appointed
-Brigadier-General and Surgeon-General, United States Army, August, 1864;
-Brevetted Major-General, United States Army, for faithful and
-meritorious services during the war.
-
-Another medical report, perhaps equal in value to the Surgeon General’s,
-has issued from the medical branch of the Provost-Marshal-General’s
-Bureau, under the supervision of Dr. J. H. Baxter.
-
-Dr. Jedediah H. Baxter, Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief Medical-Purveyor,
-United States Army, was born in Strafford, Orange County, Vt., May 11,
-1837. He was graduated at the University of Vermont, both in the
-academical and medical departments, and in 1860 served as assistant
-professor of anatomy and surgery in that University. He was house
-surgeon in “Bellevue Hospital” at the “Seamen’s Retreat,” Staten Island,
-and on “Blackwell’s Island.”
-
-He entered the Twelfth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers in April,
-1861, was commissioned assistant-surgeon of the Regiment, May 13, 1861,
-and promoted to be surgeon, June 19, 1861. Served as post surgeon at
-Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, until July 26, 1861, when, with his
-regiment, he was mustered into the United States service and ordered to
-join the forces then forming under Gen. N. P. Banks at Sandy Hook, Md.,
-opposite Harper’s Ferry. He was Acting-Brigade-Surgeon, until April 4,
-1862, when, promoted to Brigade-Surgeon of Volunteers, he was ordered to
-report for duty to Gen. Geo. B. McClellan, and served on the staff of
-that officer during the Peninsular campaign, as Medical Director of
-Field-Hospitals and the transportation of sick and wounded of the Army
-of the Potomac.
-
-Disabled from field service by the “peninsular fever,” he was ordered to
-hospital duty in Washington, D. C., August 1, 1862, and was in charge of
-Judiciary Square United States General Hospital until September, 1862,
-when he was ordered to superintend the building of Campbell United
-States General Hospital, Washington, D. C., of which Hospital, when
-completed, he was placed in charge, where he remained until January 5,
-1864, when he was relieved and ordered to report for special duty to the
-Provost-Marshal-General of the United States, who assigned him to duty
-as “Chief Medical Officer of the Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau.” In
-this capacity he served, having the management of all medical matters
-pertaining to the recruitment of the army, until the close of the war,
-having been Brevetted Lieutenant-Colonel of the United States Volunteers
-in March, 1865, and Colonel of the United States Volunteers in January,
-1866.
-
-When the Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau was abolished, he was placed
-on special duty by an Act of Congress, in preparing a report of the
-medical statistics of the Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau. On July 20,
-1866, he was commissioned Assistant-Medical-Purveyor, United States
-Army, with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel and was Brevetted Colonel “for
-faithful and meritorious services during the war.” He was promoted to
-the position of Chief Medical Purveyor of the United States Army, March
-12, 1872, in which position he has supervision of the purchase and
-distribution of all hospital and medical supplies required for the use
-of the army.
-
-On being called to the charge of the medical branch of the
-Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau, Dr. Baxter soon perceived that, in the
-several Acts of Congress devolving upon the Provost-Marshal-General the
-duty of recruiting by voluntary enlistment, conscription and
-substitution, the vast armies called out to suppress the rebellion, lay
-the means of obtaining such a view of the physical state and military
-capacity of the nation as had never before and might never again be
-obtained. After an examination of such material as had already
-accumulated under the limited operation of the draft and recruiting
-Acts, he prepared and issued to the surgeons of the enrolling boards, in
-the several congressional districts, blank forms and instructions
-designed to afford the means of tabulating from the reports of
-individual examinations of recruits, drafted men and substitutes, the
-statistics illustrating the relations between disease and nativity,
-residence, age, complexion, height, and size, social condition and
-occupation in the sex on which the principal physical burdens of life
-fall.
-
-The accumulating records of the medical department of the army could be
-utilized for the benefit of military surgery and hygiene by showing the
-varying facts of disease and wounds among soldiers, and the records of
-pension applications and the regularly recurring examinations of invalid
-pensioners would give the results of non-fatal wounds and disease upon
-the disabled soldier returned to civil life. But Dr. Baxter saw that a
-separate and important field of study and action was left to his own
-bureau, if its current records could be reduced to a system of fulness,
-accuracy and uniformity. This was successfully done, and the results
-will soon be before the public. From advance sheets of the volume, many
-interesting facts have been drawn for this article. The work is based on
-the reports made of the medical inspection of about 605,000 persons
-subject to draft, and minuter descriptions of the fuller examination of
-508,735 recruits, substitutes and drafted men.
-
-Of the whole number examined, a little over 257 in each thousand were
-found unfit for military service. The largest number found disqualified
-through any specific class of diseases were those affected by diseases
-of the digestive organs, the ratio of unfitness to the whole number
-examined being a little more than sixty in a thousand. Fifty nativities
-are embraced in the report, the ratio of unfitness in each thousand
-being, for American whites, 323; American colored, 225; Canadians, 258;
-Irish, 337; Germans, 400; Scandinavians, 294; English, 325; and Scotch,
-308.
-
-From these ratios it will be seen that the Negroes, Canadians and
-Scandinavians were the healthiest, and the Germans and Irish the
-unhealthiest. The relative position assigned to the negro by these
-figures is not in accord with the general opinion upon the subject, but
-the healthiness of unskilled occupations and his simple method of life
-in the South accounts for the fact. The report also shows that a larger
-proportion of civilians are fit for military duty in this country than
-in Great Britain or France, and probably Germany, though the figures to
-prove the proposition in the latter case are not at hand.
-
-Of the recruits, conscripts and substitutes under twenty years of age,
-the ratio of rejection and exemption was 268 in the thousand, including
-those too young for service; between twenty and twenty-five years, the
-ratio was 245; between twenty-five and thirty, the ratio was 330; it was
-411 between thirty and thirty-five; between thirty-five and forty it was
-462, and over forty years it was 607 in a thousand, including all
-rejected for dotage.
-
-This table bears out the common experience that infirmities grow with
-age. Of the native whites, 663 in a thousand were of light complexion;
-of Canadians, 661 in a thousand; of English, 705; of Irish, 702; and of
-German, 694—indicating, by the lower ratio of fair complexion, a greater
-admixture of races in this country than in the parent countries. Of
-persons of light complexion, 385 in the thousand were unfit for service,
-while the dark complexions show the healthier ratio of 332 in each
-thousand. The average height of Americans is found to be 5 feet 7½
-inches, of Canadians 5.5, 5.1, of Irish and Germans 5.5, 5.4, of
-Scandinavians and English 5.6, 0, and of French one-fifth of an inch
-lower than the last named. All under five feet were rejected or
-exempted, as the case might be; and the rejections under 5 feet 1 inch
-were 582 in the thousand, between 5.1 and 5.3 they were 443, between 5.3
-and 5.5 they were 322, between 5.5 and 5.7 they were 303, between 5.7
-and 5.9 they were 313, between 5.9 and 5.11 they were 326, between 5.11
-and 6.1 they were 350, and they were 358 in all over 6 feet 1 inch. The
-healthiest persons were those of the average height of 5 feet 7 inches.
-
-The chest measurements, at moment of respiration, averaged 33.11 inches
-for Americans, 32.84 for Irish, 33.56 for Germans, 33.01 for Canadians
-and 32.93 for English. The detailed statistics of height and size bear
-out the statement that, as a rule, only healthy foreigners migrate from
-the Old to the New World and healthy natives from the old to the new
-States; both conclusions are quite reasonable, when the anticipated and
-real hardships of migration are considered.
-
-Considering the figures relating to occupation, it is found that the
-ratio of unfitness for army life was 409 in a thousand among persons
-engaged in in-door pursuits, and only 349 in a thousand, in persons of
-out-door callings.
-
-Taken by trades and professions, it appears that of journalists 740 in a
-thousand were disqualified, physicians 670, clergymen and preachers 654,
-dentists 549, lawyers 544, tailors 473, teachers 455, photographers 451,
-mercantile clerks 416, painters 392, carpenters 383, stone-cutters 376,
-shoe-makers 362, laborers 358, farmers 350, printers 335, tanners 216,
-iron-workers 189. The average ratio of disability among professional men
-was 520 in a thousand, merchants 480, artisans 484, and unskilled
-laborers 348 only.
-
-The journalists, doctors and clergymen were the unhealthiest
-professional men, and teachers and musicians the healthiest. Brokers
-were the unhealthiest of the mercantile class, and shop-keepers and
-peddlers the healthiest. Iron and leather-workers were the healthiest of
-the artisans; in the first occupation, partly, because only robust men
-can follow it. Paper-makers, tailors and upholsterers appear to have
-been the unhealthiest trades. Of unskilled occupations, so-called, for
-the purposes of this work, miners and mariners were the healthiest, and
-watchmen, bar-keepers and fishermen the unhealthiest. Explanation is
-found in the case of watchmen, in the number of old and broken-down men
-following that vocation. The ratio of single men found disqualified was
-393 in a thousand, and of married men 447 in a thousand; the difference,
-however, being no argument against marriage, as the latter class
-embraces a larger proportion of men beyond middle age.
-
-Congress has provided liberally for the publication of Dr. Baxter’s
-medical statistics of drafts and recruitments, and the volume will
-contain shaded maps and diagrams, to aid in exhibiting and contrasting
-the results of his unique studies of the physical status of the nation.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIII.
- THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM—ITS CURIOSITIES AND WONDERS.
-
-Ford’s Theatre—Its Interesting Memories—The Last
- Festivities—Assassination of President Lincoln—Two Years
- Later—Effects of “War, Disease, and Human Skill”—Collection of
- Pathological Specimens—The Army Medical Museum Opened—Purchase of
- Ford’s Theatre—Its Present Aspect—Ghastly Specimens—Medical and
- Surgical Histories of the War—The Library—A Book Four Centuries
- Old—Rare Old Volumes—The Most Interesting of the National
- Institutions—Various Opinions—Effects on Visitors—An Extraordinary
- Withered Arm—A Dried Sioux Baby!—Its Poor Little Nose—A Well-dressed
- Child—Its Buttons and Beads—Casts of Soldier-Martyrs—Making a New
- Nose—Vassear’s Mounted Craniums—Model Skeletons—A Giant, Seven Feet
- High—Skeleton of a Child—All that Remains of Wilkes Booth, the
- Assassin—Fractures by Shot and Shell—General Sickles Contributes His
- Quota—A Case of Skulls—Arrow-head Wounds—Nine Savage
- Sabre-Cuts—Seven Bullets in One Head—Phenomenal Skulls—A Powerful
- Nose—An Attempted Suicide—A Proverb Corrected—Specimen from the
- Paris Catacombs—An “Interesting Case”—Typical Heads of the Human
- Race—Remarkable Indian Relics—“Flatheads”—The Work of Indian
- Arrows—An Extraordinary Story—A “Pet” Curiosity—A Japanese
- Manikin—Tattooed Heads—Representatives of Animated Nature—Adventure
- of Captain John Smith—A “Stingaree”—The Microscopical
- Division—Medical Records of the War—Preparing Specimens.
-
-
-The building in which Abraham Lincoln was assassinated will always
-retain a deep and sad interest in the mind of the American people. It
-was well that it should be consecrated to a national purpose. None could
-be more fit than to make it the repository of the Pathological and
-Surgical results of the war.
-
-From the dark hour of the great martyr’s death, the light and music of
-amusement never again animated these dark halls. But in two years from
-the day of the tragedy, its doors were opened to the people, to come in
-and behold what war, disease, death, and human skill had wrought.
-
-In obedience to an order from the War Department, issued in 1862,
-thousands of pathological specimens had accumulated in the office of the
-Surgeon-General. An ample and fit receptacle was needed for their proper
-care and display. And April 13, 1867, the old Ford Theatre, on Tenth
-street, between E and F, was opened as the Army Medical Museum.
-
-Congress had already purchased the building of Mr. Ford, and used it for
-a time as the receptacle for the captured archives of the Confederate
-Government. Before it was opened as the Army Museum, its interior had
-been entirely remodeled, retaining nothing of the original building but
-the outside walls. It has been made fire-proof, and is exclusively
-devoted to the uses of the Museum. The third story is the Museum hall,
-lined on its four sides with pictures and glass cases filled with
-ghastly specimens, beside many more in the interior of the room.
-
-Over a square railing, in the centre of the hall, you look down upon the
-second story, and through that to the first. The lower floor is filled
-with busy clerks, sitting at tables, writing out the medical and
-surgical histories of the war.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE MAIN HALL OF THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM.—WASHINGTON.
-
- This Museum occupies the scene of the assassination of President
- Lincoln, in Ford’s Theatre, which after that date became the
- property of the Government. It contains a collection of upwards of
- twenty thousand rare, curious and interesting objects, surpassing
- any similar collection in the world. It is visited annually by
- upwards of twenty-five thousand persons.
-]
-
-The second floor, which is reached by light spiral stairs from the
-first, is largely devoted to the very valuable Medical and Surgical
-Library, which has been collected since the opening of the Museum. It
-now numbers thirty-eight thousand volumes, some of which are rare books
-of extreme value. One of these was among the earliest of printed
-volumes. The art of printing was first used to give to the world
-religious and medical books. This treasure of the Medical Museum was
-published at Venice, in 1480, and is the work of Petrus de Argelata. It
-is bound and illuminated in vellum. Another choice book, is a copy of
-Galen, which once belonged to the Dutch anatomist, Vierodt, and
-copiously annotated by him. These, and many other valuable books, have
-been bought by the agents of the Museum, abroad, while many others have
-been received as contributions from physicians, and scientific societies
-interested in the growth of this national institution.
-
-Louis Bagger, in a late number of _Appleton’s Journal_, speaks of the
-Army Medical Museum as one of the most interesting, but least visited,
-of all the national institutions in Washington. It cannot fail to be one
-of the most absorbing spots on earth to the student of surgery or
-medicine; but to the unscientific mind, especially to one still aching
-with the memories of war, it must ever remain a museum of horrors. Its
-many bones, which never ached, and which have survived their painful
-sheaths of mortal flesh, all cool and clean, and rehung on golden
-threads, are not unpleasant to behold. But those faces in frames, eaten
-by cancer or lost in tumors, which you look up to as you enter, are
-horrible enough to haunt one forever (if you are not scientific) with
-the thought of what human flesh is heir to.
-
-No! the Museum is a very interesting, but can never be a popular place
-to visit. I doubt if a sight at the Sioux pappoose, and a bit of John
-Wilkes Booth’s spinal marrow, or a piece of General Sickles’ leg, will
-be sufficient compensation to the average unscientific mind, to go twice
-to look at those terrible tumors and elephantiasis in gilt frames and
-glass jars. It is enough to make one feel as if the like were starting
-out all over you. But that’s because you are not scientific.
-
-The first “specimen” which confronts you on entering is a withered human
-arm, with contracted hand and clinched fingers, mounted on wires in a
-glass case on the window-ledge. The sharp bone protrudes where it was
-shot off near the shoulder joint; every muscle is defined; the skin
-looks like tanned leather. It is not pleasant to look at. A thrilling
-story has been printed about this arm. I am sorry it is not wholly true.
-The one I have to tell will not please you as well, for it is not nearly
-as exciting.
-
-We were told that the shock of the cannon-shot, which took off this arm,
-carried it up into a high tree, where, a year or two after, its owner, a
-Gettysburg hero, revisiting the battle-field, discovered his lost member
-lodged in the branches, brought it down and bore it hither as a trophy.
-The soldier _did_ find his arm (I am telling the true story); but he
-found it in a corn-field. By what mark he knew it I am not informed, but
-he declared it to be his arm and brought it to the Museum as a
-first-class “sensational specimen.”
-
-In the next window we find another one—the Sioux baby. Poor little baby!
-It is not a Modoc—though not much better—it did not live to slay our
-brethren, so we are sorry as we look at it—for its once black locks are
-bleached red, and its nose is gone. It was found in a tree near Fort
-Laramie. I have seen Sioux babies alive upon their native soil, and can
-testify from personal observation that this little pappoose-mummy is
-extraordinarily well dressed. Hannah of old did not sew more buttons on
-the coat of her little Samuel in the Temple, than this poor savage
-mother did on the plains of Wyoming. It is of blue flannel, profusely
-ornamented with round tin buttons, and many beads on its broad collar.
-On its neck it wears a string of white delf beads, and there is
-something cunning and dainty in the tiny embroidered moccasins upon its
-feet. In a case there is another pappoose still less agreeable to
-contemplate. It is a little Flat-head Indian. Its head is so very flat
-no doubt it died in the process of compression. This melancholy child
-also wears a white necklace, and was found _buried_ in a tree.
-
-Passing on, we are arrested by a table surrounded on its outer edge by
-plaster casts of soldiers who have undergone famous and difficult
-surgical operations. It is gratifying to know that, if you lose your
-nose by some other collision beside that of a cannon ball, you can have
-a new one set on made out of your cheek. The new nose will grow to the
-root of the old one, and the hole in your cheek will fill up and the
-scar heal. To be sure it will hurt you frightfully; but you _can_ have a
-new nose made, and you yourself supply the material. If you don’t
-believe it, come to the Army Medical Museum and see! Here is the head of
-the poor fellow with his nose shot off—and here is another with the new
-nose grown on.
-
-In the centre of the table are some of Vassear’s mounted craniums,
-purchased for the museum by order of the Surgeon-General. These
-craniums, with the skeletons in the cases, are mounted after Blanchêne’s
-method, which allows every portion to be taken apart and put together
-again. This cranium on the table is as white as crystal; it is mounted
-on gold, and tiny blue and crimson threads of silk trace from chin to
-head-top the entire nerve system. It is a work of exquisite art as well
-as of science, and in no sense repulsive. The glass cases just in the
-rear contain skeletons mounted by the same method. One is the skeleton
-of a giant, in life seven feet high, prepared by Auzoax and mounted by
-Blanchêne’s method. It is as white as snow, and its brass or gold joints
-(we will call them gold) are bright and flexile. Another, of a child of
-some six years, shows the entire double sets of first and second teeth.
-The first, not one tooth gone, and above, in the jaw, the entire row of
-second teeth ready to push the first ones out.
-
-Amid the thousands of mounted specimens in glass cases, which reveal the
-freaks of bullets and cannon-shot, we come to one which would scarcely
-arrest the attention of a casual observer. It is simply three human
-vertebræ mounted on a stand and numbered 4,086. Beside it hangs a glass
-phial, marked 4,087, filled with alcohol, in which floats a nebulæ of
-white matter. The official catalogue contains the following records of
-these apparently uninteresting specimens:
-
- “No. 4,086.—The third, fourth and fifth cervical vertebræ. A conoidal
- carbine ball entered the right side, comminuting the base of the right
- lamina of the fourth vertebræ, fracturing it longitudinally and
- separating it from the spinous process, at the same time fracturing
- the fifth through its pedicles, and involving that transverse process.
- The missile passed directly through the canal, with a slight
- inclination downward and to the rear, emerging through the left bases
- of the fourth and fifth laminæ, which are comminuted, and from which
- fragments were embedded in the muscles of the neck. The bullet, in its
- course, avoided the large cervical vessels. From a case where death
- occurred in a few hours after injury, April 26, 1865.”
-
- “No. 4,087.—A portion of the spinal-cord from the cervical region,
- transversely perforated from right to left by a carbine-bullet, which
- fractured the laminæ of the fourth and fifth vertebræ. The cord is
- much torn and is discolored by blood. From a case where death occurred
- a few hours after injury, April 26, 1865.”
-
-Such are the colorless scientific records of the death wounds of John
-Wilkes Booth. All that remains of him above the grave finds its
-perpetual place a few feet above the spot where he shot down his
-illustrious victim.
-
-It has been recorded elsewhere that the fatal wounds of Wilkes Booth and
-his victim were strikingly alike. “The balls entered the skull of each
-at nearly the same spot, but the trifling difference made an
-immeasurable difference in the sufferings of the two. Mr. Lincoln was
-unconscious of all pain, while his assassin suffered as exquisite agony
-as if he had been broken on a wheel.”
-
-In the surgical division which contains the above specimens we find
-illustrations from living and dead subjects of almost every conceivable
-fracture by shot and shell.
-
-On a black stand, bearing the number 1,335, we see a strong white bone
-shattered in the middle. The official statement concerning it is: “The
-right tibia and fibula comminuted in three shafts by a round shell.
-Major-General D. E. S., United States Volunteers, Gettysburg, July 2,
-amputated in the lower third of the thigh by Surgeon T. Sim, United
-States Volunteers, on the field. Stump healed rapidly, and subject was
-able to ride in carriage July 16; completely healed, so that he mounted
-his horse, in September, 1863. Contributed by the subject”—who is
-General Daniel E. Sickles.
-
-One of the cases in this division is filled with skulls which show
-gunshot wounds from arrow-heads and thrusts from tomahawks and sabres.
-One of the latter, No. 970, shows nine savage sabre cuts. It is the
-skull of an Araucanian Indian, killed by Chilian troops. Near it is the
-skull of another Indian, riddled by six or seven bullet-shots received
-from American troops or trappers.
-
-The Museum contains eight craniums, which illustrate the wonderful fact
-of an unbroken external skull, while the vitreous table is perforated or
-dented. One of these shows slight discoloration on the outside of the
-head without fracture or depression, while inside, the bone is broken.
-The seven other specimens illustrate the same phenomena. In this case we
-see craniums in which bullets are imbedded and broken. We see one where
-a conical bullet split in two in entering the head at the temple, one
-half going inside, caused instant death, while the other half struck the
-face outside. Here we see a minié-bullet split on the bones of the nose.
-Another case is of an attempted suicide—who died a natural death. He
-fired a pistol in his mouth, whose bullet passed through the jugular
-vein, but not through the head. It stopped short, embedded in the bone,
-where it remained as a stopper to the blood from the perforated artery,
-and the man who tried to kill himself, lived seventeen years to be sorry
-for doing so.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A WITHERED ARM
- Skin, flesh and bones complete. Amputated by a cannon shot on the
- battle field of Gettysburg. The shot carried the severed limb up
- into the high branches of a tree, where it was subsequently found
- completely air and sun dried.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- All that remains Above Ground of
- JOHN WILKES BOOTH.
- Being part of the Vertebræ penetrated [A] by the bullet of Boston
- Corbett. Strange freak of fate that these remains of Booth should
- find a resting place under the same roof, and but a few feet from
- the spot where the fatal shot was fired.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A SIOUX PAPPOOSE
- Or Indian infant, found in a tree near Fort Laramie, where it had
- been buried (?) according to the custom of the tribe.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKULL OF LITTLE BEAR’S SQUAW,
- Perforated by seven bullet holes. Killed in Wyoming
- Territory.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKULL OF AN INDIAN,
- Showing nine distinct sabre wounds.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKULL OF A MAN
- Who received an arrow wound on the head, three gun-shot flesh
- wounds, one in the arm, another in the breast, and a third in the
- leg. Seven days afterwards he was admitted to the hospital at Fort
- Concho, Texas [where he subsequently died], after having traveled
- above 160 miles on the barren plains—mostly on foot.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKULL OF A SOLDIER
- Wounded at Spotsylvania—showing the splitting of a Rifle ball, one
- portion being buried deep in the brain, and the other between the
- scalp and the skull. He lived twenty-three days.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- APACHE INDIAN ARROW-HEAD
- Of soft hoop-iron. These arrows will perforate a bone without
- causing the slightest fracture, where a rifle or musket ball will
- flatten; and will make a cut as clean as the finest surgical
- instrument.
-]
-
- CURIOSITIES
-
- FROM THE ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM, WASHINGTON.
-
-Two specimens in this collection deny the assertion that “when a man
-breaks his neck that is the last of him.” One of these is a skull taken
-from the Catacombs in Paris. It has a few vertebræ attached to the neck.
-One of these shows a distinct dislocation where it was broken from the
-head, and where it had grown closely together again. The other is a home
-specimen, which shows no less distinctly where the broken neck again
-formed the connection with the head. There is also in this section of
-the museum a piece of human cranium, about the size of a silver dollar,
-cut from the head of a soldier wounded at Petersburgh, Va., June 14,
-1864. The following is the official history of this “interesting case:”
-
-“The subject was admitted to Mount Pleasant General Hospital,
-Washington, D. C., on June 24, with the report that the progress of the
-case had been so far eminently satisfactory. After admission he was
-found to be insensible, and a few hours subsequently convulsions
-supervened in rapidly recurring paroxysms. Twelve ounces of blood were
-taken from the temporal artery without apparent benefit. A trephine was
-then applied to the seat of fracture, and upon the removal of a bottom
-of bone, a portion of the inner table was found slightly depressed. This
-was elevated, and the patient, soon after, regained consciousness. On
-the 28th of June, the wound in the scalp became erysipelatous, and
-before the inflammation subsided there was extensive loss of substance
-of the integuments and pericranium denuding a large portion of the
-parietal bone. Necrosis ensued, and embraced the whole thickness of the
-bone. In September, 1864, a portion of the parietal, three inches by
-four, had become so much loosened that it was readily removed. After
-this, cicatrization went on rapidly; and at the date of the last report,
-December 2, 1864, the wound had contracted to an ulcer less than an inch
-in diameter. The patient’s mental faculties were impaired somewhat, the
-ward-physician thought, but not to a great extent.”
-
-This specimen was contributed by Assistant-Surgeon E. A. McCall, United
-States Army. A colored drawing was made representing the parts prior to
-the separation of the exfoliation, (No. 74, surgical series of drawings,
-Surgeon General’s office.)
-
-We see suspended in a case the bone of an arm from the shoulder to the
-elbow. A musket ball having shattered it, it was necessary to take it
-out or amputate the arm. The surgeon chose the former. The bone with all
-its splinters was removed. The photograph of its owner is set up under
-it, while the living original may come and look at it any moment he
-chooses, he being one of the _attachés_ to the Museum. He says that he
-can use the injured arm as readily as the other. The muscles and
-integuments have taken the place of the lost bone, and are strong enough
-to enable him to lift a two-hundred-pounds’ weight without difficulty.
-
-Another case of great interest to the medical profession, is that of a
-soldier of Company C, Eighth New Jersey Volunteers, who was wounded in
-the battle of the Wilderness, May 5, 1864. The specimen on exhibition is
-a piece of the hip-bone, about four or five inches long. This shattered
-bone was excised, May 27, 1864, and the patient was discharged from the
-hospital, April 17, 1865, perfectly cured, and able to use the mutilated
-limb without its portion of thigh-bone. In 1868, he was well, could walk
-without a cane, and was employed as a hod-carrier. He now receives a
-Government pension of fifteen dollars a month.
-
-At the right of the main entrance, stands the Craniological Cabinet. It
-contains a thousand or more specimens of the craniæ of different human
-races. Beside the skull of the Caucasian, we see that of the African,
-each of the highest order of its kind. The long line contains a “sample”
-of nearly all the typical heads of the human race.
-
-The collection contains a large number of Indian skulls of opposite
-tribes, taken from tumuli, and gathered from other sources. There are
-none to which the scientific man points with more interest, than to the
-skulls of the Flat-head Indians. These are perfectly flat on the top,
-forming a right angle with the forehead. Here is the head of a baby, who
-probably died in the process. Boards are tightly bound to infants’
-heads, from birth, till they cease to grow. One would suppose that this
-would lessen the brain-capacity. But as it can not grow in front, it
-avenges itself by pushing far out on the sides. Thus the Flat-head
-Indian’s head is as wide as it is flat, and in defiance of phrenology,
-he is not only as bright, but brighter in his wits, than many of his
-neighbors.
-
-Here are Indian arrows, taken from the dead bodies of our soldiers on
-the plains. The arrowheads are made of barrel-hoops, and so sharp, they
-can pierce any skull. One is shown, still sticking through a portion of
-the shoulder-blade of a buffalo. The point of the arrow is outside of
-the bone, the arrow-tip having passed through the body of the buffalo,
-and through the bone, opposite the side that it entered. A rifle-ball
-would be flattened where an Indian arrowhead penetrates without
-hindrance. The cut of an arrowhead is as clear and clean as if made by
-the most acute surgical instrument. The fatal force with which an arrow
-is driven from an Indian bow, is illustrated in the following fact:
-Here, in the Museum, is the piece of a door of a stage which was
-attacked by Comanches near Bellos River, Texas, September 1, 1870. The
-wood, about an inch and a half thick, is pierced by an Indian arrowhead,
-the point appearing on the outside.
-
-Of the two passengers in the stage at the time of the occurrence, one
-was killed and the other escaped. The stage guard consisted of three
-soldiers—one was killed instantly, another escaped, the third was
-wounded. He received an arrow wound in the head, and three gunshot
-flesh-wounds, one in the arm, another in the leg and one in the breast.
-In this condition he travelled one hundred and sixty miles across the
-plains, on foot. Seven long days it took him to reach the post-hospital
-at Fort Concho, Texas. When admitted, mentally, he was clear and bright.
-But on September 19, he died.
-
-The skull of this unfortunate man, preserved in the Army Museum, shows
-an arrowhead firmly embedded in the petrous portion of the right
-temporal bone—a wound in itself, it would seem, sufficient to prove
-instantly fatal.
-
-One of the pet curiosities of the Museum is a Japanese manikin—ess—we
-will call it, as it is supposed to represent the creature feminine. The
-heart is a red apple and the liver (very properly) a yellow one. The
-stomach looks like a lean pomegranate. The lungs are represented by five
-green oak leaves. These organs are lumped together, the lungs being
-below all the rest. The Japanese idea of anatomy seems to be quite as
-muddled as its powers of perspective.
-
-A case near the front window, contains three Maori heads from New
-Zealand. They are all tattooed with the black juice of the betel-nut.
-Any thing more hideous than their empty eye-sockets, their striped cheek
-bones and ghastly white teeth cannot be imagined.
-
-Along the windows at the opposite end of the great hall, may be seen
-skeletons of all kinds of animals, birds, fishes and reptiles. Here are
-skeletons of the horse, the buffalo, the grizzly bear, the elk, the
-walrus, and the ray. One of these last, caught in James river, has been
-presented to the Museum.
-
-Those who have read the early history of Virginia may remember that it
-chronicles the fact that once when Captain John Smith, of wonderful
-memory, was one day bathing in the James River, he received a sudden
-shock, and many days elapsed before he recovered from it. It was
-supposed that he was struck by a ‘stingaree.’
-
-The ‘stingaree’ is a corruption of the stinging ray—and such a specimen
-is shown in the Museum. The ray is a fish of the cartilaginous species,
-not having the vertebrated form. It has wings, each measuring about
-fourteen inches across the widest part; and it has a very long tail, in
-which is implanted a sting, which resembles in its effects a shock of
-electricity, and produces temporary paralysis. The ray darts in among a
-shoal of fishes, electrifies them, and then proceeds to devour them.
-
-The microscopical division of the Museum on the library floor is of
-great value. It affords facilities for the study of natural history and
-comparative anatomy equal to the medical schools of Paris. This
-department contains a series of photographical publications of enlarged
-photographic pictures of the specimens, mounted on cardboard and bound
-in Russia leather. A set of this series, also a complete set of bound
-photographs of all the specimens contained in the surgical department of
-the Museum, with a sketch of the case attached, has been presented to
-all the governments and large public libraries of Europe. In return,
-these European governments and libraries have sent complete sets of like
-publications of their own. Several hundred volumes, handsomely bound,
-include these foreign gifts to the Army Medical Museum at Washington.
-
-The primary object of the Army Medical Museum is to illustrate minutely
-the wounds and diseases of our late war, while the medical and surgical
-histories of the war, now being written under the supervision of the
-Surgeon-General, will show the processes of treatment and their results.
-Dr. J. J. Woodward, assisted by Dr. Otis, both of Pennsylvania, are
-charged with the writing of this history. Doctor Woodward is writing the
-medical history, and Doctor Otis the surgical history of this important
-national report. Five thousand copies of each will be issued by
-Congress. The first volumes of both histories have already come from the
-bindery of the Public Printer in handsome form. The first of the medical
-volumes is chiefly occupied with tabular statements of the diseases
-which prevailed, and the numbers dying of each, during the entire period
-of our civil war. The coming volumes will treat of these diseases, the
-treatment pursued, and will give photographs of the organs affected in
-each disease.
-
-The Museum proper is divided into four departments, Surgery, Medicine,
-Anatomy, and Comparative Anatomy. These are all placed in the hall of
-the third story. We reach this by an outer iron stair-case, whose walls
-on either side are lined with sketches and plans of the battle-fields of
-Gettysburg and Antietam, in black walnut frames. Entering the long hall,
-we are confronted at once by the ghastly victims in the frames opposite,
-and the eyes are quickly withdrawn to glance up and down along the
-polished glass cases which line the walls. Above some of these cases
-droop the flags and standards, the swords and sabres which have survived
-the war. Models of ambulances, stretchers, and hospital tents, also have
-a place on the top of these cases.
-
-More than four-fifths of the specimens in the Museum have been presented
-to it, or exchanged for duplicate objects, quantities of which are
-stored in the attic, ready for exchange. The Army Medical Museum belongs
-to the nation, and as its existence and object have been widely
-published, it is in daily receipt of new specimens. It has become an
-object of personal interest and pride to the medical fraternity of the
-country, each one of whom is invited to become a contributor to its
-pathological treasures. In a late official report, the Surgeon-General
-thus refers to the subject, which is of interest to all medical persons:
-
-“It is not intended to impose upon medical officers the labor of
-dissecting and preparing the specimens they may contribute to the
-Museum. This will be done under the superintendence of the curator. In
-forwarding such pathological objects as compound fractures, bony
-specimens, and wet preparations generally, obtained after amputation,
-operation, or cadaveric examination, all unnecessary soft parts should
-first be roughly removed. Every specimen should then be wrapped
-separately in a cloth, so as to preserve all spiculæ and fragments. A
-small block of wood should be attached, with the number of the specimen
-and the name of the medical officer sending it inscribed in lead-pencil;
-or a strip of sheet-lead, properly marked with the point of an awl, may
-be employed for this purpose. In either case, the inscription will be
-uninjured by the contact of fluids. The preparation should be then
-immersed in diluted alcohol or whisky, contained in a keg or small cask.
-When a sufficient number of objects shall have accumulated, the cask
-should be forwarded to the Army Medical Museum, in Washington, D. C. The
-expenses of expressage will be defrayed in Washington. The receipt of
-the keg or package will be duly acknowledged by the curator of the
-Museum.”
-
-When the first Army Medical Museum report was issued, January 1, 1863,
-the collection begun in August, 1862, numbered over thirteen hundred in
-all. Since then the collection has grown to the following proportions.
-In 1873 it contains over sixteen thousand objects. In the surgical
-department alone, there are over six thousand. In the medical department
-over eleven hundred. In the anatomical department over nine hundred. In
-the department of comparative anatomy over one thousand. In the
-microscopical department over six thousand. A library and
-photograph-gallery belong exclusively to the Museum. The side rooms and
-lower stories are used as the laboratories and work-rooms for preparing
-and mounting the specimens for exhibition. The Army Medical Museum is a
-great beginning—and yet only a beginning of one of the most unique,
-precious and important, pathological collections in the world.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIV.
- “OLD PROBABILITIES’” WORKSHOP—HOW WEATHER CALCULATIONS
- ARE MADE.
-
-“Old Probabilities”—An Interesting Subject—The Weather Bureau—The
- Experience of Fifty Centuries—Value of Scientific
- Knowledge—Meteorological Observations—Brigadier-General Albert J.
- Meyer—His Life and Career—He Introduces System and Order—Foreseeing
- the Approach of Storms—The Fate of the _Metis_—Quicker than the
- Storm—The First Warning by Telegraph—Exchanging Reports with
- Canada—The “Observing Stations”—Protecting the River Commerce—The
- Signal Corps—The Examinations—The Sergeant’s Duties—The
- Signal-Stations—The Work of the Observers—Preparing Bulletins at
- Washington—Professor Maury’s Account—Safeguards Against
- Mistakes—Deducing Probabilities—Despatching Bulletins—Preparing
- Meteorological Maps—Recording Observations—Watching the Storm—The
- Storm at San Francisco—Prophetic Preparations—Perfect
- Arrangements—Training the Sergeants—General Meyer’s Work—“Away up G
- Street”—The Home of Old and Young “Probabilities”—An Extraordinary
- Mansion—The “Kites and Windmills”—Inside the Mansion—The
- Apparatus—“The Unerring Weather-Man”—“Old Probabilities” Himself—How
- Calculations are Made—“Young Probabilities”—Interesting Facts.
-
-
-There is no theme, not excepting marriage, birth, and death, that is
-more absorbing than “the weather.” It has made and unmade kingdoms, it
-has brought triumph in battle, and terrible defeat, it has brought woe
-and death; but that was before the day of “Old Probabilities,” or the
-Weather Bureau.
-
-It is your own fault now, if your wedding-day is wet and gloomy, or if
-the rain pours into the open grave of the best-beloved. If you follow
-the weather report, you will know days before what the weather, in all
-probability, will be, and the report seldom fails. Even ten years ago,
-who would have thought that he could so soon find in the newspaper the
-almost unfailing prophecy of the skies of the coming day! Think of the
-millions of anxious faces which have turned sky-ward since the earth
-began! What eager and ignorant eyes have peered upward, to descry the
-portents of the unseen, yet brooding storm. Ignorance has already given
-place to knowledge, to a scientific forecasting of the elements, to a
-forestatement of the conditions of earth and air.
-
-This wonderful fact, in its influence, penetrates not only to the finest
-fibre of social happiness, but influences all the civilizations of the
-earth. Although the changes of the atmosphere have seemed the most
-apparent of all the workings of nature, and have been more closely
-watched, and more constantly commented on by mankind, than all others
-taken together, after the lapse of fifty centuries, the desultory
-observer is unable to predict certainly the weather of a single day.
-
-The value of accurate scientific knowledge on a subject which affects
-vitally the agricultural and commercial interests of the world, as well
-as the physical health and spiritual happiness of mankind, cannot be
-overestimated.
-
-By a joint resolution of Congress, approved February 9, 1870, the
-Secretary-of-War was authorized and required to provide for taking
-meteorological observations at the military stations in the interior of
-the continent, and at other points in the States and Territories of the
-United States, and for giving notice on the northern lakes, and on the
-sea-coast, by magnetic telegraph and marine signals, of the approach and
-force of storms.
-
-This special service was intrusted to the immediate supervision and
-control of General Albert J. Meyer. The following record of his
-services, in the United States Army, can but slightly indicate his
-peculiar fitness for the position which he now holds.
-
-Brevet Brigadier-General Albert J. Meyer, Colonel and Chief Signal
-Officer, United States Army, was born in New York, and appointed
-Assistant-Surgeon, United States Army, from that State, September, 1854.
-He served on the Texas frontier, in the Rio Grande Valley, and at Fort
-Davis, Texas, to 1857; on special duty, signal service, 1858 to 1860. He
-was appointed Major and Chief Signal Officer, United States Army, July,
-1860. In the Department of New Mexico to May, 1861; on staff of General
-Butler, Fort Monroe, Va., June, 1861; organized and commanded Signal
-Camp, Fort Monroe, Va.; _Aide-de-Camp_ to General McDowell at first
-battle of Bull Run, Va.; Chief Signal Officer on staff of General
-McClellan, and commanded Signal Corps, Army of the Potomac, to October,
-1862; charge of Signal Office, Washington, D. C., to November, 1863.
-
-He was appointed Colonel and Chief Signal Officer, United States Army,
-March, 1863; member of Central Board of Examination for admission to
-Signal Corps from April, 1863; on _reconnoissance_ of the Mississippi
-River, between Cairo, Ill., and Memphis, Tenn., December, 1863, to May,
-1864; Chief Signal Officer, Military Division of West Mississippi, May,
-1864; Colonel and Chief Signal Officer, United States Army, July, 1866.
-He was brevetted Lieutenant-Colonel, United States Army, for gallant and
-meritorious services at the battle of Hanover Courthouse, Va.; Colonel,
-United States Army, for gallant and meritorious services at the battle
-of Malvern Hill, Va.; and Brigadier General, United States Army, for
-distinguished services in organizing, instructing, and commanding Signal
-Corps of the army, and for its especial service at Allatoona, Ga.,
-October 5, 1864.
-
-General Meyer graduated at Geneva College, New York, 1847, A. B. and A.
-M., and took the degree of M. D., at the University of Buffalo, in 1851.
-He is the author of a manual of signals for the United States Army and
-Navy.
-
-Upon his appointment as Chief of the Signal Service, of the United
-States Army, General Meyer at once inaugurated a systematic plan; he
-established stations at all points, decided by competent authorities to
-be important and practicable. These he provided with plain, efficient
-instruments, and keen, trained observers, whose duty it was to report
-three times daily, at intervals of eight hours. These reports, made in
-abbreviated cypher, were conveyed by telegraph. With the delivery of the
-reports at Washington, and at other important posts to which they were
-sent, began the practical workings of the “Weather Bureau” in the Signal
-Service of the United States. January 15, 1871, the stations on the
-Atlantic Coast, with others, were added to the list reporting.
-
-One of the most important practical functions of the Bureau, is that of
-giving warning of approaching storms to vessels at the ports on the
-lakes. The unfortunate _Metis_ received such a warning before it started
-on its last disastrous voyage. It gave no heed, and in consequence went
-to wreck, and scattered its victims thick as snow-flakes on the
-engulfing waters of the Sound. The velocity of a storm being accurately
-observed at any one of the stations, it was easy to predict with
-accuracy the time of its arrival at any given point lying in its path;
-while the lightning wing of the telegraph bore this knowledge
-instantaneously to the threatened point.
-
-The first telegraphic warning given thus was sent and bulletined at the
-several ports along the lakes, November 8, 1870.
-
-The system was soon carried still nearer perfection by the adoption of
-cautionary signals. The first of these was displayed at Oswego, N. Y.,
-October 26, 1871. Near this time, without any cost to the United States,
-the Bureau obtained a considerable extension to its area of observation.
-
-In time the Canadian Government made a considerable appropriation to
-establish a similar system in the Dominion. Professor Kingston, chief of
-the Meteorological Bureau of Canada, requested of General Meyer an
-exchange of reports. Arrangements for such an exchange were duly made,
-and the first reports from Toronto were forwarded to the United States,
-November 13, 1871. Reports were also exchanged with the director of the
-Observatory at Montreal. The Canadian reports are made synchronously
-with those of the United States and in the same cypher. The stations of
-the Dominion are van-posts to the United States, giving warning of
-storms moving downward from the north.
-
-By the Act of Congress, approved June 10, 1872, it was made the duty of
-the Secretary-of-War to provide such stations, signals and reports as
-might be found necessary for the benefit of the commercial and
-agricultural interests throughout the country. In response to an
-invitation made by the Chief Signal Officer, eighty-nine agricultural
-societies and thirty-eight boards of trade and chambers of commerce have
-appointed meteorological committees to coöperate and correspond with the
-Signal Bureau. The observing stations now number eighty-five. New
-stations are constantly being added. The station at Mount Washington is
-six thousand two hundred and ninety feet above the level of the sea.
-Other mountain-stations are to be established for the purpose of making
-observations upon the varying meteorological phenomena of different
-altitudes. These observations are sometimes made in a balloon.
-
-To obtain reports of observations at sea, to some extent, the
-coöperation of ship-captains and of officers at the head of exploring
-expeditions has been obtained. A constant interchange of correspondence
-is also maintained with foreign meteorological societies. Five hundred
-tri-daily reports are constantly sent abroad. The same exchange with
-foreign governments will be arranged as soon as possible.
-
-Besides weather-reports, a system of observation on the changes in the
-depth of waters in the principal Western rivers is already established.
-Great pains are taken with the reports on this subject, which are made
-to protect the river commerce from ice and freshets, and the lower river
-_levées_ from breakage and overflow. The observations on the weather
-embrace those on atmospheric pressure, temperature, humidity of the air,
-force, direction and velocity of the wind, and the amount of rain-fall.
-For these purposes each station is carefully provided with appropriate
-instruments by the central office.
-
-The Signal Corps is composed of a commanding officer with the rank of
-brigadier-general, several commissioned officers, and a certain number
-of sergeants and enlisted men. The sergeants are required to be
-proficient in spelling, the ground-rules of arithmetic, including
-decimal fractions, and the geography of the United States, and are
-required to write a legible hand. They are examined in these branches
-before being admitted into the service. They are also subjected to a
-medical examination, and only men of sound physical condition are
-accepted. They are regularly enlisted into the military service of the
-United States, and are subject to the regulations for the government of
-the army.
-
-Immediately upon admission to the corps, each sergeant is sent to Fort
-Whipple, in Virginia, opposite Washington, where he is taught the duties
-of his profession, which are “chiefly those pertaining to the
-observation, record and proper publication and report, at such times as
-may be required, of the state of the barometer, thermometer, hygrometer,
-and rain-gauge, or other instruments, and the report by telegraph or
-signal, at such times as indicated, and to such places as may be
-designated by the chief signal officer, of the observations as made, or
-such other information as may be required.” The text-books used in the
-school at Fort Whipple, are Loomis’s “Text Book of Meteorology,”
-Buchan’s “Hand Book of Meteorology,” Pape’s “Practical Telegraphy,” and
-the “Manual of Signals for the United States Army.” Instruction in the
-use of the instruments is also given, and the sergeant is taught to
-operate the telegraph. He is required to make daily recitations, and
-when he is considered prepared, by his instructor, he is ordered before
-an examining board, and is subjected to a rigid examination. If he is
-found properly qualified, he is assigned to a signal station in some
-part of the country, and is allowed an enlisted man to assist him in his
-duties.
-
-There are eighty-five signal stations, located in various parts of the
-Union, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from British America to the
-Gulf of Mexico. Each of these is supplied with a full set of the
-instruments necessary for ascertaining the condition of the weather,
-etc., and is in charge of an observer-sergeant, who is required to make
-observations three times a day, by means of his instruments, which are
-adjusted to a standard at Washington. These observations are made at 8
-A. M., at 4 P. M., and at midnight. Each post of observation is
-furnished with a clock which is regulated by the standard of Washington
-time, so that the observations are taken precisely at the same moment
-all over the United States.
-
-The result of each observation is immediately telegraphed to the Signal
-Office at Washington, the Government having made arrangements with the
-telegraph companies to secure the instant transmission of these
-messages. The reports are limited to a fixed number of words, and the
-time of their transmission to a fixed number of seconds.
-
-The signal stations, as at present located throughout the country, have
-been chosen or located at points from which reports of observations will
-be most useful as indicating the general barometric pressure, or the
-approach and force of storms, and from which storm warnings, as the
-atmospheric indications arise, may be forwarded, with greatest dispatch,
-to imperilled ports.
-
-The work of the observers at the stations is simple. It is limited to a
-reading of their instruments at stated times, the transmission to
-Washington of the results of these observations, and of information of
-any meteorological facts existing at the station, when their tri-daily
-report is telegraphed to Washington. The work of the officers on duty at
-the Signal Office in Washington, is of a higher character, and demands
-of them the highest skill and perfect accuracy. The reports from the
-various stations are read and recorded as they come in, and from them,
-the officer charged with this duty prepares a statement of the condition
-of the weather during the _past_ twenty-four hours, and indicates the
-changes most likely to occur within the _next_ twenty-four hours. These
-statements are prepared shortly after midnight, and are at once
-telegraphed to the various cities and important ports of the Union, in
-time for their publication in the newspapers the next morning.
-
-Professor Maury, of the Signal Office, thus sums up the working of the
-service:
-
- “Each observer at the station writes his report on manifold paper. One
- copy he preserves, another he gives to the telegraph-operator, who
- telegraphs the contents to Washington. The preserved copy is a voucher
- for the report actually sent by the observer; and, if the operator is
- careless, and makes a mistake, he cannot lay the blame on the
- observer, who has a copy of his report, which must be a _fac-simile_
- of the one he has handed to the operator. The preserved copy is
- afterward forwarded by the Observer-Sergeant to the office in
- Washington, where it is filed, and finally bound up in a volume for
- future reference.
-
- “When all the reports from the various stations have been received,
- they are tabulated and handed to the officer, (Professor Abbe,) whose
- duty it is to write out the synopsis and deduce the ‘probabilities,’
- which in a few minutes are to be telegraphed to the press all over the
- country. This is a work of thirty minutes. The bulletin of
- ‘probabilities,’ which at present is all that is undertaken, is made
- out thrice daily, in the forenoon, afternoon, and after the midnight
- reports have been received, inspected, and studied out by the
- accomplished gentleman and able meteorologist, who is at the head of
- this work. The ‘probabilities’ for the weather for the ensuing day, so
- soon as written out by the Professor, are immediately telegraphed to
- all newspapers in the country who are willing to publish them for the
- benefit of their readers.”
-
-Copies of the telegrams of “Probabilities” are also instantly sent to
-all boards of trade, chambers of commerce, merchants’ exchanges,
-scientific societies, etc., and to conspicuous places, especially
-sea-ports, all over the country.
-
-While the professor is preparing his bulletins from the reports just
-furnished him by telegraph, the sergeants are preparing maps which shall
-show, by arrows and numbers, exactly what was the meteorologic condition
-of the whole country when the last reports were sent in. These maps are
-printed in quantities, and give all the signal stations. A dozen copies
-are laid on the table with sheets of carbon paper between them, and
-arrow-stamps strike in them (by the manifold process) the direction of
-the window at each station. The other observations as to temperature,
-barometric pressure, etc., etc., are also in the same way put on them.
-These maps are displayed at various conspicuous points in Washington,
-_e. g._, at the War Department, Capitol, Observatory, Smithsonian
-Institute, and the office of the chief signal-officer. They serve also
-as perfect records of the weather for the day and hour indicated on
-them, and are bound up in a book for future use.
-
-Every report and paper that reaches the Signal Office is carefully
-preserved on a file, so that, at the end of each year, the office
-possesses a complete history of the meteorology of every day in the
-year, or nearly 50,000 observations, besides the countless and
-continuous records from all of its self-registering instruments.
-
-When momentous storms are moving, observers send extra telegrams, which
-are dispatched, received, acted upon, filed, etc., precisely as are the
-tri-daily reports. One invaluable feature of the system, as now
-organized by General Meyer, is that the phenomena of any particular
-storm are not studied some days or weeks after the occurrence, but while
-the occurrence is fresh in mind. To the study of every such storm, and
-of all the “probabilities” issued from the office, the chief
-signal-officer gives his personal and unremitting attention. As the
-observations are made at so many stations, and forwarded every eight
-hours, or oftener, by special telegram from all quarters of the country,
-the movements and behavior of every decided storm can be precisely
-noted; and the terrible meteor can be tracked and “raced down” in a few
-hours or minutes.
-
-An instance of this occurred on the 22d of February, 1871, just after
-the great storm which had fallen upon San Francisco. While it was still
-revolving round that city, its probable arrival at Corinne, Utah, was
-telegraphed there, and also at Cheyenne. Thousands of miles from its
-roar, the officers at the Signal Office in Washington indicated its
-track, velocity, and force. In twenty-four hours, as they had
-fore-warned Cheyenne and Omaha, it reached those cities. Chicago was
-warned twenty-four hours before it came. It arrived there with great
-violence, unroofing houses and causing much destruction. Its course was
-telegraphed to Cleveland and Buffalo, both of which places, a day after,
-it duly visited. The President of the Pacific Railroad has not more
-perfectly under his eye and control the train that left San Francisco,
-to-day, than General Meyer had the storm just described.
-
-While the observers now in the field are perfecting themselves in their
-work, the chief signal-officer is training other sergeants at the camp
-of instruction (Fort Whipple, Virginia), who will go forth hereafter as
-valued auxiliaries. It has been fully demonstrated by the signal-officer
-that the army of the United States is the best medium through which to
-conduct most efficiently and economically the operations of the Storm
-Signal-Service. Through the army organization the vast system of
-telegraphy for meteorological purposes can be, and is now being most
-successfully handled. “Whatever else General Meyer has not done,” says
-the New York _World_, “he has demonstrated that there can be, and now
-is, a perfect net-work of telegraphic communication extending over the
-whole country, working in perfect order, by the signal-men, and capable
-of furnishing almost instantaneous messages from every point to the
-central office at Washington.”
-
-Away up on G street we see the scientific home of both old and young
-“Probabilities.” We see it from afar, for its high Mansard seems to be
-stuck full of boys’ kites and wind-mills, playing and flying with the
-winds. It looks like a gigantic play-house. Any mortal, scientific or
-otherwise, would pause before this ancient house with an infantile roof,
-and wonder what child of larger growth amused himself playing with all
-the vanes and anemometers on its roof. It is painted a pearly drab.
-Fresh and fair, it has the effect of a youthful wig on an old man’s
-head, or a girl’s spring hat perched upon the head of a wintry old lady.
-Inside, the house looks less like a Skimpole in brick, and really takes
-on a cheerfully serious air.
-
-On the first floor, we find two large offices, and a cozy little
-library, which stows away one thousand books, or more, on Meteorology,
-and its kindred themes. In its eastern hall, hang three great
-weather-maps, on which the state and changes of the weather at all the
-stations, for the past twenty-four hours, are indicated by established
-symbols. The second and third stories are occupied by the telegraphic
-corps. To this the station-work proper is assigned. In one room is the
-telegraphic apparatus, connecting with the many lines over which
-weather-reports are received from all over the country. After
-translation from the cypher into every-day speech, the reports are
-combined, and the weather-bulletin prepared. On this floor, also, the
-weekly mail-reports, from the widely-scattered stations, are received,
-examined, corrected, and filed for future use. Here, tucked away in a
-little room, we find “Acting Probabilities”—Professor Abbe, the unerring
-“weather-man,” who makes ready the synopsis each day prepared for the
-Associate Press Agents, Postmasters, etc.
-
-We are sure, also, somewhere, to come in contact with “Old
-Probabilities” himself, supervising all. Like Professor Abbe, strange to
-say, he is a young man. General Meyer looks soldierly, and trig. He has
-fair face and hair, closely-cut whiskers, a rather small head, and a
-pair of inquiring, wise-looking eyes. The entire top floor is devoted to
-“local observations, and the gentlemen who play with the wind-mills and
-high-flying kites, upon the roof.” Among the instruments used here, are
-Hough’s barograph, a self-registering tide gauge; Addie’s London
-barometer, which is acknowledged as the standard barometer; Gibbon’s
-electric self-recording anemometer and anemoscope, the inventions of
-Lieutenant Gibbon, of the Signal-Service. The working force of the
-office is divided into three reliefs, each of which is on duty eight
-hours out of the twenty-four.
-
-Any night, one sitting by this window, at a late hour, may see a slender
-youth shooting past toward the Signal-Service Bureau. This is “Young
-Probabilities,” and he is dressed in white. He is going to forecast the
-midnight portents for the next day.
-
-The positive advantage of the midnight probabilities is that they relate
-to the weather of the coming day, and appear at the breakfast table to
-tell Dick and Dolly what, and what _not_ to do. The number of
-weather-maps issued daily from the central office is 600; from St. Louis
-200; from New York 200; from Philadelphia, Chicago and Cincinnati 100
-each, making a daily issue of 1,300. All of these are lithographed and
-printed at the central office.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- “OLD PROBABILITIES’” INSTRUMENT ROOM.
- Storm and Weather Signal Service Bureau.—Washington.
-]
-
-“During the year 1872, 16,064 weather bulletins and 107,888 maps were
-issued from the office, and 2,920 reports furnished to the press. The
-work of the office has been recently extended by the publication of the
-probabilities based upon the midnight reports, which are widely
-distributed through the joint agency of the Signal Bureau and the
-Post-Office Department. Four hundred copies are issued from the
-Washington office, 1,000 from New York, 1,500 from Cincinnati, 800 from
-Detroit, 1,500 from Chicago, and 1,000 from St. Louis, and it is
-expected that the number will be still further increased during the
-year. The printed copies are sent by mail to each post-office within a
-radius of one hundred miles of the several points of distribution, to
-which the matter is telegraphed from the central office.”
-
-“The practical value of the observations on our western rivers is
-strikingly illustrated by the report of the observer at Memphis, Tenn.,
-who states that captains and pilots of boats generally decide by the
-reports of the Signal Bureau, on the board on the _levée_ at that port,
-whether the depth of the water above is sufficient to permit them to
-ascend the upper Mississippi or the Ohio. Before these reports were
-published, boats arriving during the night lost from six to ten hours in
-waiting for the telegraphic reports in the morning papers.
-
-“A curious illustration of the legal value of the reports is furnished
-by the observer at Shreveport, La., who was summoned as a witness in a
-murder case, as to the condition of the river and the direction of the
-wind at the time of the supposed murder. These circumstances formed an
-essential part of the proof in the case.
-
-“Perhaps few people would have supposed that the reports of the Bureau
-could have any relation to the practice of medicine, yet it is said to
-be a fact that many intelligent physicians avail themselves of the
-records of the stations in recommending to their patient an equable and
-agreeable climate. An observer at Indianapolis reports that several are
-accustomed to note the readings of the barometer every morning and
-evening, and one of them assured him that he modified his prescriptions
-according to barometric changes, believing that such changes have a
-direct effect upon the condition of his patients.
-
-“Among the most important of the advantages connected with operations of
-the Weather Bureau are those arising from the continuous registering of
-atmospheric conditions, which will enable the scientific inquirer to
-determine, from the records of the office, the degree of temperature,
-barometric pressure, moisture of the air, the amount of rainfalls, the
-direction of the wind at various points for long periods of time. Having
-these data for various sections, agriculturists, microscopists, and
-mycologists will be enabled to determine in advance the probabilities as
-to the prevalence of particular classes of fungi in any district, and
-thus to indicate the adaptation of such districts for the cultivation of
-the grains, vegetables, or fruits which are liable to be affected by
-fungoid diseases.
-
-“The signal service is not without its humorous side, an instance of
-which is furnished by the observer at Fort Gibson, Indian Territory. The
-establishment of the station at that point, early last spring, chanced
-to be followed by a long-continued period of unusually wet and stormy
-weather. This the Indians attributed to the observer, whom some person
-of waggish propensities had represented to them as the man that
-regulated the weather. After bearing their supposed persecution with
-exemplary fortitude for some weeks, their patience finally gave way, and
-they held an indignation meeting, at which it was seriously proposed to
-tear down the station. It was ultimately determined, however, to consult
-their agent; and upon his representing to them the true state of
-affairs, they reconciled themselves to the ‘weather-witch,’ and wisely
-resolved to wait peacefully for better times.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLV.
-THE NAVY DEPARTMENT—THE UNITED STATES OBSERVATORY—THE STATE DEPARTMENT.
-
-Primitive Arrangements—The Navy in Early Days—The Department of the Navy
- Established—The Secretary’s Office—The Navy-Yards and Docks—The
- Bureau of Construction—The Bureau of Provisions and
- Clothing—Equipment of Vessels—Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography—The
- Naval Observatory—The Bureau of Medicine—Interesting Statistics—The
- Navy Seventy Years Ago—The “Day of Small Things”—Instructions of the
- Great Napoleon—Keeping Pace with England—The Glories of Foote,
- Ferry, Porter and Farragut—Scene from the Observatory—Peeping
- Through the Telescope—The Mountains in the Moon—The Largest
- Telescope in the World—Making Mathematical Notes—A Passion for
- Star-gazing—Casting Horoscopes—Gazing for Pastime—“For the Sake of
- Science”—The Chronometers of the Government—Comparing Notes—The Test
- of Time—Chronometers on Trial—The Wind and Current Charts—The Good
- Deeds of Lieutenant Maury—“The Habits of the Whale”—The Equatorial—A
- Self-acting Telescope—The Transit Instrument—The Great Astronomical
- Clock—Telling Time by Telegraph—Hearing the Clock Tick Miles
- Away—The Transit of Venus—Great Preparations—A Trifle of
- Half-a-Million of Miles—The Department of Foreign Affairs—The
- Secretary of State—A Little Secret Suggestion—The Diplomatic
- Bureau—The Consular Bureau—The Disbursing-Agent—The
- Translator—The Clerk-of-Appointments—Clerk-of-the-Rolls—The
- Clerk-of-Authentications—Pardons and Passports—The Superintendent of
- Statistics.
-
-
-The first intention of the fathers of the American Republic was to
-provide for a chief clerk, under whose direction contracts might be made
-for munitions of war, and the inspection of provisions necessary for
-carrying on war by land or sea.
-
-As the maritime warfare of the United States increased in the brilliancy
-of its victories, the necessity for a separate organization to control
-its officers, and to provide for the feeding, equipment, and payment of
-its sea-faring warriors gradually became apparent; but it was not until
-the thirtieth day of April, 1798, that Congress was sufficiently
-apprised of this necessity to pass and secure the approval of an “Act to
-establish an Executive Department, to be denominated the Department of
-the Navy,” and on the twenty-second day of June of the same year an Act
-was passed granting the franking privilege to the Secretary of the Navy.
-
-Subsequent legislation has dealt more with the _morale_ of the navy than
-with the functions of the department; reference to various other Acts is
-therefore omitted.
-
-As organized in 1860, the department consists of the following
-officials: The Secretary; Chief-Clerk; Bureau of Navy-yards and Docks;
-Bureau of Provisions and Clothing; Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography;
-and the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.
-
-The division of labor is as follows:
-
-Secretary’s Office: The Secretary has charge of everything connected
-with the naval establishment, and the execution of all laws relating
-thereto is intrusted to him, under the general direction of the
-President of the United States, who, by the Constitution, is
-Commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy. All instructions to commanders
-of squadrons and commanders of vessels, all orders of officers,
-commissions of officers, both in the navy and marine corps, appointments
-of commissioned and warrant-officers, orders for the enlistment and
-discharge of seamen, emanate from the Secretary’s office. All the duties
-of the different Bureaus are performed under the authority of the
-Secretary, and their orders are considered as emanating from him. The
-general superintendence of the marine corps forms also a part of the
-duties of the Secretary, and all the orders of the commandant of that
-corps should be approved by him.
-
-Bureau of Navy-yards and Docks: Chief-of-the-Bureau, four clerks, one
-civil-engineer and one draughtsman. All the navy-yards, docks and
-wharves, buildings and machinery in navy-yards, and everything
-immediately connected with them, are under the superintendence of this
-Bureau. It is also charged with the management of the Naval Asylum.
-
-Bureau of Construction, Equipment, and Repair: Chief-of-the Bureau,
-eight clerks, and one draughtsman. The office of the Engineer-in-chief
-of the Navy, who is assisted by three assistant-engineers, is attached
-to this Bureau. This Bureau has charge of the building and repairs of
-all vessels-of-war, purchase of materials, and the providing of all
-vessels with their equipments, as sails, anchors, water-tanks, etc. The
-Engineer-in-chief superintends the construction of all marine
-steam-engines for the navy, and, with the approval of the Secretary,
-decides upon plans for their construction.
-
-Bureau of Provisions and Clothing: Chief-of-Bureau and four clerks. All
-provisions for the use of the navy, and clothing, together with the
-making of contracts for furnishing the same, come under the charge of
-this Bureau.
-
-Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography: Chief-of-Bureau, four clerks, and
-one draughtsman. This Bureau has charge of all ordnance and ordnance
-stores, the manufacture or purchase of cannon, guns, powder, shot,
-shells, etc., and the equipment of vessels-of-war, with everything
-connected therewith. It also provides them with maps, charts,
-chronometers, barometers, etc., together, with such books as are
-furnished to ships-of-war. The United States Naval Observatory and
-Hydrographical Office at Washington, and the Naval Academy at Annapolis,
-are also under the general superintendence of the Chief of this Bureau.
-
-Bureau of Medicine and Surgery: Chief-of-Bureau, one
-Passed-Assistant-Surgeon United States Navy, and two clerks. Everything
-relating to medicines and medical stores, treatment of sick and wounded,
-and management of hospitals, comes within the superintendence of this
-Bureau.
-
-The following statistics may be interesting to some of our readers: In
-1806, the number of seamen authorized by law was 925, to which number
-3,600 were added in 1809. In 1812, Congress authorized the President to
-employ as many as would be necessary to equip the vessels to be put in
-service, and to build as many vessels for the lakes as the public
-service required. In January, 1814, there were in actual service seven
-frigates, two corvettes, seven sloops-of-war, two block-ships, four
-brigs, and three schooners, for sea, besides the several lake-squadrons,
-gunboats, and harbor-barges, three ships-of-the-line, and three frigates
-on the stocks. The whole number of men and officers employed was 13,339,
-of which 3,729 were able seamen, and 6,721 ordinary. The marine corps,
-as enlarged in 1814, was 2,700 men and officers. The commissioned naval
-officers combatant were 22 captains, 18 commanders, 107 lieutenants, 450
-midshipmen.
-
-In 1814, Secretary Jones reported to the Senate that there were three
-74-gun and three 44-gun ships building, six new sloops-of-war built,
-twenty barges and one hundred and twenty gun-boats employed in the
-Atlantic waters, thirty-three vessels of all sizes for sea, afloat or
-building, and thirty-one on the lakes. Even in 1813, the energy of this
-department had led the first Napoleon to issue the following
-instructions to his Minister of Marine:
-
- “You will receive a decree by which I order the building, at Toulon,
- at Rochefort, and at Cherburg, of a frigate of American construction.
- I am certain that the English have had built a considerable number of
- frigates on that model. They go better, and they adopt them; we must
- not be behindhand. Those which you will have built at Toulon, at
- Rochefort, and at Cherburg, will manœuvre in the roads, and give us to
- understand what to think of the model.”
-
-Since then, in defence of the nation, the American Navy has won
-victories which placed it in the front rank of the navies of the world.
-Mobile, with the names of Foote, Terry, Porter and Farragut, do not pale
-before any victories or names of earth.
-
-A soft midsummer night, we stood upon the roof of the United States
-Observatory. Beneath us was Braddock’s Hill, where, generations gone,
-the young surveyor dreamed; and stretching far on to its guardian
-Capitol, the city which he foresaw—a verity now—its myriad lights
-twinkling through the misty distance. To our right was Georgetown;
-beyond Arlington Heights, and House; before us the Potomac, winding on
-to Alexandria; above us the fathomless heavens, the waxing moon and
-silent stars. Professor Harkness moved an axle; the great revolving dome
-turned round and parted; the great telescope was pointed to the opening,
-and the broad seam of sky visible between. We mounted the perch, and
-there were the mountains in the moon! their jagged edges, their yawning
-craters, yet only for a moment; for earth and moon are swift travellers.
-In a moment Madame Moon had outstripped our point of vision, and we had
-to pursue her.
-
-Just before us was the unfinished dome of another observatory, wherein
-will soon be placed the largest telescope in the world. Beside us two
-other open domes, and upward pointed telescopes, told of other
-star-gazers below. We descended. There, in a dimly-lighted room, stood a
-solitary man peering through a telescope, its divining face uplifted to
-the narrow field of stars visible through the open dome. Hush! An
-observation! The solitary man whose face we now see is aged, and his
-hair white, with swift and silent step turns from his telescope to his
-desk, to make his mathematical notes.
-
-“He need not do this unless he chooses,” says Professor H. “He was long
-ago promoted above this work. But a man who has formed a passion for
-star-gazing and observation never gets over it.” The room was dim and
-silent enough to have been given up to the presence of death. One felt
-as if some momentous operation were going on. The stars and the
-star-gazer both were felt. I shrank silent, into a corner, till that
-horoscope was cast, and the path of that far-away world measured to its
-minutest fraction. In the opposite wing we found another star-gazer. Was
-he gazing for pastime? Not at all. He was gazing for the Government and
-the sake of science.
-
-Thus, while the nation sleeps, its servants keep watch not only of the
-weather, but of remotest worlds.
-
-The chronometers belonging to the Government are kept in a room set
-apart for that purpose. These instruments are purchased by the Navy
-Department, with the understanding that they are to be tested in the
-Observatory for one year. They are placed in the chronometer room, and
-are carefully wound and regulated. They are examined daily, and compared
-with the great Astronomical Clock of the Observatory, and an accurate
-record of the movements of each one is kept in a book prepared for that
-purpose.
-
-The temperature of the room is also examined daily, and recorded. These
-minute records enable the officers of the Observatory to point out the
-exact fault of each imperfect chronometer. Thanks to this, the maker is
-enabled to remedy the defect, and the instrument is made perfect. At the
-end of the year, the instruments found to be unsatisfactory are returned
-to their makers, and those which pass the test are paid for. The
-returned instruments are usually overhauled by the makers, and the
-defects remedied. They are then sent back for a trial of another year,
-at the end of which time they rarely fail to pass.
-
-There are usually from sixty to one hundred chronometers on trial at the
-Observatory, and the apartment in which they are kept is one of the most
-interesting in the establishment.
-
-The researches connected with the famous “Wind-and-Current-Charts,”
-begun and prosecuted so successfully by Lieutenant Matthew F. Maury,
-whose services were lost to the country by his participation in the
-Rebellion, are conducted here, and also those connected with “The Habits
-of the Whale,” and other ocean phenomena.
-
-The Equatorial, which is the largest telescope in the Observatory, is
-mounted in the revolving dome which rises above the main building. It
-has a fourteen-feet refractor, and an object-glass nine inches in
-diameter. Its movements are most ingenious, being regulated by machinery
-and clock-work. Its powers are so great, that it renders stars visible
-at midday, and, if directed at a given star in the morning, its
-machinery will work so accurately, that it will follow with perfect
-exactness the path of the star, which will be visible through it as long
-as the star is above the horizon. The Meridian and Mural Circles are in
-one of the rooms below.
-
-The Transit-Instrument is placed in the west wing of the building, under
-a slit twenty inches wide, extending across the roofs, and down the wall
-of the apartment on each side, to within four or five feet of the floor.
-It was made by Estel & Son, Munich, and is a seven-foot achromatic, with
-a clear aperture of 5.3 inches. The mounting consists of two granite
-piers, seven feet high, each formed of a solid block of that stone, let
-down below the floor and imbedded in a stone foundation eight feet deep,
-and completely isolated from the building. Midway between the piers, and
-running north and south, is the artificial horizon composed of a slab of
-granite ten feet long, nineteen inches deep, and thirteen inches broad;
-it rests on the foundation, and is isolated from the floor, with the
-level of which the top of it is even, with a space all round it of half
-an inch. In the middle of this slab, and in the nadir of the telescope,
-there is a mortise, nine inches square and ten inches deep, in which the
-artificial horizon is placed to protect it from the wind during the
-adjustment for collimation, or the determination of the error of
-collimation of level, and the adjustment for stellar focus, verticality
-of wires, and the other uses of the collimating eye-piece.
-
-The great Astronomical Clock, or “Electro-Chronograph” is placed in the
-same room with the Transit-Instrument, and is used in connection with it
-to denote sidereal time. It was invented by Professor John Locke, of
-Cincinnati, and is one of the most remarkable instruments in the world.
-By means of an electrical battery in the building, the movements of this
-clock can be repeated by telegraph in any city or town in the land to
-which the wires extend. With the wires connected with it, its ticks may
-be heard in any part of the country, and it will record the time so
-accurately that an astronomer in Portland or New Orleans can tell with
-exactness the time of day by this clock. It also regulates the time for
-the city. There is a flag-staff on top of the dome, upon which a black
-ball is hoisted at ten minutes before noon, every day. This is to warn
-persons desiring to know the exact time to examine their watches and
-clocks. Just as the clock records the hour of twelve, the ball drops,
-and thus informs the city that it is high noon.
-
-The officials of the Naval Observatory have nearly completed the plan of
-operation for observing the transit of Venus, which will occur in
-December, 1874. Eight parties of five persons each will be dispatched;
-four to stations in the Southern Hemisphere, and the others to the
-Northern. Those going south of the Equator will leave New York next
-spring in a naval vessel, specially prepared and fitted for their
-accommodation, while others will probably proceed to their stations by
-mail-steamer. The posts in the Southern Hemisphere will be on the
-Kerguelen Islands, Auckland and Van Diemen’s Land. In the northern
-station they will be located at Yokohama, Nangasaki, Shanghai, and near
-the Siberian border.
-
-After the transit, the observers in the Southern Hemisphere will be
-collected by a Government ship, transported to Japan, and sent home by
-mail-steamer. The whole expedition will probably occupy a year at least.
-Each party will include astronomers and photographer, with a complete
-equipment and apparatus for obtaining perfect observations and a record
-of the transit. Prof. Harkness will have charge of the parties and
-observations in the Southern Hemisphere, and Prof. Newcomb of those in
-the Northern. The object of the observation, for which Congress has
-appropriated $150,000, is to determine more accurately the distance
-between the earth and the sun, and the Professors at the head of the
-expedition expect to be able to settle the distance within half a
-million of miles.
-
-In July, 1789, Congress organized a “Department of Foreign Affairs,” and
-placed it in charge of a secretary, who was called the “Secretary of the
-Department of Foreign Affairs.” He was required to discharge his duties
-“conformably to the instructions of the President,” but as his powers
-were derived from Congress, he was required to hold himself amenable to
-that body, to attend its sessions, and to “explain all matters
-pertaining to his province.” In September, 1779, Congress changed the
-title of the department to the “Department of State,” and made a
-definite enumeration of the duties of the Secretary.
-
-The head of the Department is the Secretary-of-State. His subordinates
-are: an Assistant Secretary-of-State, a Chief-Clerk, a Superintendent of
-Statistics, a Translator, a Librarian, and as many clerks as are needed.
-The Secretary receives a salary of $8,000 per annum. He conducts all the
-intercourse of this Government with the governments of foreign
-countries, and is frequently required to take a prominent part in the
-administration of domestic affairs. He countersigns all proclamations
-and official documents issued by the President. If popular rumor be
-correct, the Secretaries-of-State have frequently written the messages
-and inaugurals of the Presidents, and thus have kept those august
-personages from making laughing-stocks of themselves.
-
-The duties of the office require the exercise of the highest ability,
-and the Secretaries-of-State have usually been among the first statesmen
-of our country. The first incumbent of the office was Thomas Jefferson,
-and the present Secretary is the Hon. Hamilton Fish, of New York.
-
-The Diplomatic-Bureau is in charge of, and conducts all the official
-correspondence between the Department and the ministers and other agents
-of the United States residing abroad, and the representatives of foreign
-powers accredited to this Government. It is in this Bureau that all
-instructions sent from the Department, and communications to
-commissioners under treaties of boundaries, etc., are prepared, copied,
-and recorded; all similar communications received by the Department are
-registered and filed in this Bureau, and their contents are entered in
-an analytical table or index.
-
-The Consular-Bureau has charge of all correspondence and other business
-between the Department and the consuls and commercial agents of the
-United States. Applications for such positions are received and attended
-to in this Bureau. A concise record of all its transactions is kept by
-the clerk in charge of it.
-
-The Disbursing-Agent has charge of all correspondence and other business
-relating to any and all expenditures of money with which the Department
-is charged.
-
-The Translator is required to furnish translations of such documents as
-may be submitted to him by the proper officers of the Department. He
-also records the commissions of the consuls and the vice-consuls, when
-not in English, upon which exequaturs are based.
-
-The Clerk of Appointments and Commissions makes out and keeps a record
-of all commissions, letters of appointment, and nominations to the
-Senate; makes out and keeps a record of all exequaturs, and when in
-English, the commissions on which they are issued. He also has charge of
-the Library of the Department, which is large and valuable.
-
-The Clerk of the Rolls and Archives has charge of the “rolls,” by which
-are meant the enrolled acts and resolutions of Congress, as they are
-received by the Department by the President. When authenticated copies
-thereof are called for, he prepares them. He also prepares these acts
-and resolutions, and the various treaties negotiated, for publication in
-the newspapers and in book form, and superintends their passage through
-the press. He distributes through the United States the various
-publications of the Department, and receives and answers all letters
-relating thereto. He has charge of all treaties with the Indian tribes,
-and all business relating to them.
-
-The Clerk of Authentications is in charge of the Seals of the United
-States and of the Department, and prepares and attaches certificates to
-papers presented for authentication; receives and accounts for the fees;
-and records the correspondence of the Department, except the diplomatic
-and consular letters. He also has charge of all correspondence relating
-to territorial affairs.
-
-The Clerk of Pardons and Passports prepares and records pardons and
-remissions of sentences by the President; and registers and files the
-papers and petitions upon which they are founded. He makes out and
-records passports, and keeps a daily register of letters received, other
-than diplomatic and consular, and the disposition made of them. He also
-has charge of the correspondence relating to his business.
-
-The Superintendent of Statistics prepares the “Annual Report of the
-Secretary of State and Foreign commerce,” as required by the acts of
-1842 and 1856.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVI.
- INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE—THE STORY OF A “PUB. DOC.”—WOMEN
- WORKERS.
-
-
-Another Government Hive—The Largest Printing Establishment in the
- World—Judge Douglass’s Villa—The Celebrated “Pub. Doc.”—“Making Many
- Books”—The Convenience of a “Frank”—The Omnipresent “Doc.”—A
- Weariness to the Flesh—An Average “Doc.”—A Personal Experience—What
- the Nation’s Printing Costs—“Not Worth the Paper”—A Melancholy
- Fact—Two Sides of the Question—Invaluable “Pub. Docs.”—Printing a
- Million Money-Orders—The Stereotype Foundry—A Few Figures—The
- Government Printing-Office—A Model Office—Aiding Human Labor—Working
- by Machinery—The Ink-Room—The Private Offices—Mr. Clapp’s
- Comfortable Office—The Proof-Reading Room—The Workers There—The
- Compositors’ Room—The Women-Workers—Setting Up Her Daily Task—A
- Quiet Spot for the Executive Printing—The Tricks and Stratagems of
- Correspondents—A Private Press in the White House—The Supreme Pride
- of a Congressional Printer—Rule-and-Figure Work—The Executive
- Binding-Room—Acres of Paper—Specimens of Binding—The “Most Beautiful
- Binding in the World”—Specimen Copies—Binding the Surgical History
- of the War—The Ladies Require a Little More Air—Delicate Gold-Leaf
- Work—The Folding-Room—An Army of Maidens—The Stitching-Room—The
- Needles of Women—A Busy Girl at Work—“Thirty Cents Apiece” Getting
- Used to it—The Girl Over Yonder—The Manual Labor System—The Story of
- a “Pub. Doc.”—Preparing “Copy”—“Setting Up”—Making-Up
- “Forms”—Reading “Proof”—The Press-Room—Going to Press—Folding,
- Stitching, and Binding—Sent Out to “the Wide, Wide World.”
-
-
-Getting into the airy little Boundary car at Fifteenth street, it soon
-brings us far out on H street to another busy Government hive—the
-largest printing establishment in the world.
-
-As late as 1859, the Government Printing-Office stood upon the suburbs.
-“Judge Douglass’s Villa” was then one of the mile-stones which marked
-the road thither, leading through grassy fields to the youngest
-_faubourg_ of the capital. Closely-built metropolitan blocks already
-stretch far beyond it, and the great Public Printing-Office no longer
-stands on the “edge” of the city.
-
-There is nothing so plenty in Washington, not even Congressmen, as the
-“Pub. Doc.” We see it everywhere, and in every shape. Piles on piles of
-huge unbound pamphlets, cumber and crowd the narrow lodgings of the
-average Congressman, waiting the superscription, and formerly the
-“frank,” which was to convey each one to ten thousand dear constituents.
-They cram every available nook, “up stairs, down stairs, and in my
-lady’s chamber.” They are patent receptacles for the dust, which defies
-extermination. They overflow every public archive, and, falling down and
-running over, demand that greater shall be builded. Thousands on
-thousands have no covers, and tens of thousands more are clad in purple
-and fine linen. The average Public Doc. is a weariness to flesh and
-spirit. You get tired of the sight—so many, so many! And as for the
-knowledge which it contains, it may be of infinite value to mankind, but
-the pursuit of it through endless tables, reports, briefs and statements
-is a weariness to the soul. I have tried it and know. If I had not, you
-might never have known how many of these “Pub. Doc’s” are printed by the
-Government, what for, and at what cost.
-
-Well, I will give you a few items in figures, as they appear on the
-books of the office. Of all executive and miscellaneous documents and
-reports of Committees, there were printed in the Government
-Printing-Office, last year, one thousand six hundred and twenty-five
-copies for the Senate, and one thousand six hundred and fifty for the
-House, also eight hundred and twenty-five copies of bills and
-resolutions for the Senate and House each.
-
-Statement showing the cost of Public Printing done in the Government
-Printing-Office in the year 1872:
-
- ══════════════════════╤═════════════════════╤══════════╤══════════╤════════════
- │ Printing and Paper │Total cost│ Blank │ Aggregate
- Department. │ for same. │ of │ books, │ cost of
- │ ─────────│──────────│ printing │ binding, │ printing,
- │ Printing │ Paper. │ and │ ruling, │ paper
- │ │ │ paper. │ etc. │and binding.
- ──────────────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼────────────
- State Department │ $8,445 45│ $4,244 40│$12,689 85│$11,416 55│ $24,106 40
- Treasury Department │141,933 17│ 65,809 27│207,742 44│115,119 06│ 322,861 50
- Interior Department │128,414 53│ 37,593 76│166,008 29│ 59,789 71│ 225,798 00
- War Department │ 45,171 69│ 29,049 83│ 74,221 52│ 68,184 57│ 142,406 09
- Navy Department │ 52,156 77│ 12,302 95│ 64,459 72│ 23,541 68│ 88,001 40
- Judiciary Department │ 38,303 02│ 1,219 37│ 39,522 39│ 2,951 02│ 42,473 41
- Post-Office Department│ 81,301 63│ 46,817 28│128,118 91│ 39,247 44│ 167,366 35
- Department of Agri- │ 9,828 29│ 7,59 77│ 17,428 06│ 4,362 39│ 21,790 45
- culture │ │ │ │ │
- Office of Congres- │ 1,077 43│ 135 54│ 1,212 97│ 290 45│ 1,503 42
- sional Printer │ │ │ │ │
- ──────────────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼────────────
- Total │506,631 98│204,772 17│711,404 15│324,902 87│1,036,307 02
- ══════════════════════╧══════════╧══════════╧══════════╧══════════╧════════════
-
-Tens of thousands of public documents are published here whose intrinsic
-value is not worth the paper they are printed on. After witnessing the
-manual labor expended on them, it is melancholy to reflect that, with it
-all, they are often less valuable than the unsullied paper would be.
-
-While this is true of an immense number of “bills” and documents, and
-reports of contested election cases printed in this building, it is
-equally true that thousands of others are published here which are of
-extreme value not only to the Government but the world.
-
-It is through the presses of the Government Printing-House that the
-public is informed what the Government is doing for science and for
-philanthropy. It prints all the reports of the Smithsonian Institution;
-Professor Hayden’s reports of yearly United States Geological Surveys,
-including his very interesting and valuable reports on Wyoming, Montana,
-Nebraska, and the famous Yellowstone Valley. The Medical Reports of the
-War; Surgeon-General Barnes’ Medical and Surgical History of the War;
-and Chief-Medical-Purveyor Baxter’s Report of the Medical Statistics of
-the Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau; Reports on the Diseases of Cattle
-in the United States; on Mines and Mining; Postal Code and Coast-Survey
-Reports; Reports of Commission of Education; of the Commissioner of the
-United States to the International Penitentiary Congress at London;
-Reports of the Government Institution for Deaf and Dumb and the Insane,
-etc.
-
-These make a very small proportion of the really interesting and
-valuable reports issued yearly by the Government.
-
-When we remember that many of these works are accompanied by copious
-maps and illustrations, and that the processes of photolithographing,
-lithographing and engraving are all executed within these walls, you can
-form some estimate of the value of its services to the country.
-
-The demands made upon it by each single department of the Government is
-immense. The Post-Office will send in a single order for the printing of
-one million money-orders; and the other departments cry out to have
-their wants supplied in the same proportion.
-
-The Stereotype Foundry, under the same roof, long ago vindicated itself
-in the facts of convenience and economy. The following is a correct
-exhibit of the product of its labor for the year ending September 30,
-1872:
-
- Value of plates, &c., manufactured, at trade-prices, $35,371 08
- Amount expended for labor and material consumed, 16,516 80
- —————
- Net saving to the Government, $18,854 28
-
-The Government Printing-Office, from an external view, is a large, long,
-plain brick building of four stories, with a cupola in the centre, and
-flag-staffs at either end, from which the National banner floats on gala
-days. If we enter from H street, a large open door on the side reveals
-to us at once the power-press room, with its wheels and belts; its
-women-workers and its mighty engine. This engine of eighty-horse power,
-swings its giant lever to and fro, with the accuracy of a chronometer.
-The boiler which supplies its steam-power is placed in a separate
-building, so that in case of explosion the danger to human life would be
-lessened. This boiler also supplies steam for heating the entire main
-building, and for propelling a “donkey engine,” which performs the more
-menial labor of pumping water.
-
-This is not only the largest, but is one of the model printing-houses of
-the world. Its typographical arrangements are perfect, and in each
-department it is supplied with every appliance of ingenious and
-exquisite mechanism to save human muscle and to aid human labor. In the
-press-room, stretching before and on either side of the majestic engine,
-we see scores of ponderous presses, their swiftly-flying rollers moving
-with the perfect time of a watch—at each revolution clinching the
-unsullied sheet of paper which, in an instant more, it tosses forth a
-printed page.
-
-When Benjamin Franklin tugged away at the little printing-press now
-exhibited at the Patent-Office, an enormous amount of human muscle was
-needed to perform press-work; but now, without effort and without
-fatigue, the tireless engine supplies the material power, while women do
-the work. On the lower floor of the main building we find the wetting
-room, filled with troughs and all the liquids for dampening the immense
-supply of paper, beside the hydraulic presses for smoothing it. On this
-floor also is the “ink room,” with its vast supplies of “lamp-black and
-oil” always ready for the rollers.
-
-Ascending to the second story we come to the business and private
-offices of the Government Printer—his clerks, telegraph-operators,
-copy-holders, and proof-readers. Mr. A. M. Clapp, a man of clear
-intellectual out-look, of benign expression and venerable years,
-occupies a pleasant parlor for an office, furnished with plain desk,
-chairs, a mirror, engravings and a Brussels’ carpet; it opens into a
-_suite_ of rooms occupied by the Chief-Clerk, the Paymaster and the
-Telegraph-Operator.
-
-On the other side of the hall, we pass the open door of the
-proof-reading room. This is comfortably filled with men, young and old.
-The copy-holder and the proof-reader sit side by side, before a table or
-desk. The copy-holder has in his hands the original manuscript, from
-which he slowly reads, while the proof-reader listens, proof-sheets and
-pencil in hand, erasing each error in print as he detects it, from the
-lips of the copy-holder. The proof-reader is paid $26, the copy-holder
-$24 per week.
-
-Ascending a few steps, we come into the composition room, occupying the
-central and larger portion of the second story. It contains sixty or
-more windows, is spacious and well-lighted, and yet, especially in the
-winter, when the windows are closed and the heat necessarily intense,
-the fumes from the chemicals render the work very unhealthy, especially
-to some constitutions. Long rows of double stands reach the entire
-length of the apartment.
-
-At every one of these stands a patient worker—he must be patient if he
-is a faithful type-setter. Here are men past their prime, young men,
-boys and one woman. There have been three. One left her stand for a
-husband, another—Miss Mary Green—left hers to become the editor of a
-real-estate journal in Indianapolis, Indiana. The third, in neat calico
-dress and apron, stands beside a window, “setting up” her daily task.
-The pay of women in this room is the same as that of the men, viz., $24
-per week.
-
-A portion of this floor is shut in for the executive printing. This was
-made necessary by the fact that before it was done, the country found
-out what was in the president’s message before it was published. Such
-tricks and stratagems were used by “correspondents” to discover in
-advance what was in the president’s message, that one president had a
-press, types and workmen brought into the White House, that he might
-have his message confidentially printed, and “keep it to himself” till
-he was ready to give it to the world.
-
-The supreme pride of these congressional printers is their
-“rule-and-figure work.” Confused tables of Commercial statistics,
-astronomical calculations, and abstracts of Government estimates, are
-marshalled into columns with the precision of a well-trained brigade.
-
-The executive binding-room is fitted up with powerful machines for
-trimming the edges of books, shears for cutting pasteboard, etc. Here
-stands a man who does nothing, from the beginning to the end of the
-year, but cut book-covers. In another room are “ruling machines,”
-exquisite pieces of mechanism, which trace, in a year, acres of paper
-with the delicate red, blue or black lines which rule with mathematical
-accuracy the blank-books of the Government.
-
-The third floor is almost exclusively devoted to binding. Some of the
-most beautifully bound books in the world here issue from the hands of
-the Government bindery. There are always specimen-copies of scientific
-and other important reports, which are bound in Turkey morocco, finely
-marbled and exquisitely gilded. The first volume of the
-Surgeon-General’s Medical and Surgical History of the War, on the day of
-our visit, was receiving this artistic finish, of delicate gold leaf,
-stamped upon the rich, dark-green morocco.
-
-The furnaces for heating the stamps, for gilding, are heated by gas,
-which is considered safer, cleaner and healthier than charcoal. Still
-the ladies employed in this gold-leaf work suffer for want of air. The
-hottest summer day the windows have to remain closed, as the lightest
-zephyr may ruffle fatally the mimosa edges of the tremulous foil.
-
-In the folding-room, on this floor, we find an army of maidens, whose
-deft and flying fingers fold the sheets, and make them ready for the
-binder. In the new wing beyond we come into the “stitching-room.” Here
-also the busy fingers and needles of women fly. Long rows of women,
-chiefly young girls, sit at tables beside wire frames, which hold down
-and mark the piled-up folios.
-
-Standing beside a young slender girl, she seemed to have the St. Vitus’
-dance. Every muscle and nerve in her body flew. The very nerves in her
-face twitched with the quick intensity of her movement; while her
-fingers stuck the needle and drew the thread with the persistency of a
-perpetual motion.
-
-“You should be paid good wages to work like this,” I said.
-
-“It is because I am paid so little that I have to work like this,” she
-answered, not relaxing an atom.
-
-“How much?”
-
-“Thirty cents a-piece.”
-
-“How many can you stitch a day?”
-
-“Well, if I work like this all day, nine.”
-
-“But I should think it would kill you to work like this all the time.”
-
-“I’ve been doing it for four years, and I’m not dead yet.”
-
-I did not inform her that she looked as if she soon would be, but asked,
-“Doesn’t such constant, quick action give you pain?”
-
-“Yes, in my shoulders, but I’ve got used to it.”
-
-“Does any one else in this room stitch as fast as you do?”
-
-“Only one,” said a smiling girl who rested with her needle in her mouth
-to admire her dextrous companion. “There is only one other who can work
-as fast as she; it is that girl, over yonder.”
-
-There are no drones in this busy hive. The whole routine is based upon
-the manual labor system. The Government _employé_, man or woman, in the
-Government Printing-Office, instead of from 9 A. M to 3 P. M., as in all
-other departments, works from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M., and for smaller pay,
-proportionally, than is received in any other public Bureau.
-
-Having told you the story of a Dollar, I will now tell that of a “Pub.
-Doc.”—hoping that the next time you feel inclined to kick it for the
-dust it gathers, and the room it takes up, you will forgive it these
-misfortunes, for the sake of the many busy and patient human hands which
-fashioned it.
-
-First, it appears in the room of the Government Printer in the shape of
-a huge pile of manuscript. Perhaps it is in copper-plate hand, “plain as
-print;” perhaps, as is more likely, it is a bundle of unsightly
-hieroglyphics written on “rags and tags” of paper of all sorts and
-sizes. However it looks, in due time it appears in the composing-room,
-accompanied with the directions of the Government Printer. It is
-received by the foreman, who divides it into portions, or “takes,” and
-it is now “copy.”
-
-This copy is put in the hands of compositors, who place it, every word
-and figure, into what is called a “composing stick.” When these are
-filled with the set-up type, they are emptied on wooden boards called
-“galleys.” Here the type is divided into pages, each one of which is
-tied round with twine so that it can be carried away by a practiced
-hand. These pages are now arranged on the imposing-stones, either by
-fours or by eights, or by twelves, as the work is to be printed in
-quarto, in octavo, or in duodecimo form. The pages are so regulated that
-when the printed sheet is folded, they will read consecutively, and they
-are then wedged tightly in a “chase,” or frame of iron. These pages of
-type thus placed are called “forms.”
-
-A rough impression of a form having been printed, it is given to the
-proof-reader, who, with the copy-holder, notes all errors with printers’
-marks. The compositor next receives these corrected pages; re-sets all
-wrong letters with the right ones. When he has finished, he takes a
-second proof impression, called a revise, which the proof-reader
-compares with the first one, to see if all the errors have been
-accurately corrected. This process of revising is repeated four times,
-when the form is at last ready for the press.
-
-It is then lowered by steam-power into the press-room. The form is laid
-upon a smooth iron table, called “the bed of the press,” where it is
-treated to a good beating. It is levelled by a block of wood called a
-planer, and pounded with a mallet, that no aspiring type may stick its
-nose above its fellows, and mar the perfect level of the printed page.
-
-Meanwhile, a sufficient quantity of paper has been taken from the public
-store-house to the wetting-room. There it has been dampened, quire by
-quire, turned and laid in piles under the crushing pressure of an
-hydraulic-pump, worked by steam-power. When taken out the paper is ready
-for the press.
-
-The rollers are brought from the room in which they are cleaned and
-kept, and set in the press. The ink fountain is filled. Sheet on sheet
-of spotless paper is placed aloft. The young woman who is to “tend”
-mounts to her perch. The steam-power is applied, and the printing
-begins.
-
-The maiden takes in her hand a single snowy sheet, and spreads it on the
-inclined plane before her. It is caught by steel fingers and clutched
-into the abyss beneath. There it passes swiftly over the pages of type
-just moistened with ink from the rollers, which were previously coated
-by revolving cylinders. When the sheet is directly above the type, its
-flight is for an instant stayed, and by a potent mechanical movement the
-impression is given, and the sheet is printed. Onward it moves
-transfigured, till, by the puff of a pair of bellows, it is thrown upon
-a frame-work which throws it, smooth and fresh, upon a table on the
-opposite side of the table, and by this time another is on its way.
-Swiftly almost as thought it is tossed above it. In a briefer time than
-the process is traced, the unsullied sheets above have been transmuted
-into printed pages piled upon the table below.
-
-Only one side of a sheet is printed at a time; thus each one goes
-through the press twice before it leaves the press-room. Each sheet has
-its own special care. It is carried into the drying-room with a pile.
-Each one takes its place on a large frame which is pulled out on hanging
-rollers. When one of these frames is covered with damp sheets it is
-pushed into the drying-machine, which is made of ranges of steam tubes,
-which keep a high temperature, while the vapor is carried off by a
-system of ventilation.
-
-When the sheets are dried, the frames are pulled out, and the printed
-sheets are taken from them to be pressed. Each printed sheet is put
-between two sheets of hard, smooth pasteboard, and its high piles of
-alternate layers are subjected again to the intense power of the
-hydraulic-press. It comes forth from that embrace smooth, clear,
-complete.
-
-From the pressing-room the sheets are taken to the folding-room in the
-third story, conveyed thither by an elevator lifted by steam. Here they
-are folded by the swift hands of girls. Hundreds are busy at it. Looking
-down the long room and seeing them work is a sight worth quite a journey
-to see. The folded pages then pass to the fingers of the eager
-stitchers. These pages are now a book in need of a binding. Thus it
-comes into the bindery for its black cotton cloak, or its coat of cloth
-of gold, according to its station and lot in life.
-
-This, good friends, is the story of a Pub. Doc. from its birth to the
-hour when it starts on its first journey out into “the wide, wide
-world.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVII.
-INSIDE THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—ITS TREASURES OF ART AND SCIENCE—THE
- LARGEST COLLECTION IN THE WORLD.
-
-A Singular Bequest—Strange Story of James Smithson—A Good Use of
- Money—Seeking the Diffusion of Knowledge—Catching a Tear from a
- Lady’s Cheek—Analysis of the Same Tear—The Attainments of a
- Philosopher—A brief Tract on Coffee-Making—James Smithson’s
- Will—A Genealogical Declaration—Announcing a Bequest to
- Congress—Discussions and Reports—Praiseworthy Efforts of Robert
- Dale Owen—The Bequest Accepted—The Board of Regents—The Plan of
- the Institution—Its Intent and Object—Changes Made by the
- Regents—_Ex-Officio_ Members of the Institution—“The Power
- Behind the Throne”—The Secretary—The Smithsonian Reservation—The
- Smithsonian Building—Its Style of Architecture—Inside the
- Building—Injuries Received by Fire—Loss of Works of Art—The
- Museum—Treasures of Art and Science—The Results of Thirty
- Government Expeditions—The Largest Collection in the
- World—Valuable Mineral Specimens—All the Vertebrated Animals of
- North America—Classified Curiosities—The Smithsonian
- Contributions—Comprehensive Character of the Institution—Its
- Advantages and Operations—Results—The Agricultural Bureau—Its
- Plan and Object—Collecting Valuable Agricultural Facts—Helping
- the Purchaser of a Farm—The Expenses of the Bureau—The
- Library—Nature-Printing—In the Museum—The Great California
- Plank—Vegetable Specimens—International Exchanges.
-
-
-An Englishman, of the name of James Smithson, gave all his property to
-the United States of America, to found at Washington, under the name of
-the Smithsonian Institution, “an establishment for the increase and
-diffusion of knowledge among men.”
-
-But few are aware of the singularity of the bequest. Such a donation,
-from a citizen of Europe, would be remarkable under any circumstances;
-but it was much more singular coming from an Englishman, endued with no
-small degree of pride of country and lineage, if we may judge from the
-pains he takes, in the caption of his will, to detail his descent from
-the nobility. He is not known to have ever visited the United States, or
-to have had any friends residing here. Mr. Rush informs us that he was a
-natural son of the Duke of Northumberland, his mother being Mrs. Macie,
-of an ancient family in Wiltshire, of the name of Hungerford; he was
-educated at Oxford, where he took an honorary degree. In 1786, he took
-the name of James Lewis Macie, until a few years after he left the
-University, when he changed it to Smithson. He does not appear to have
-had any fixed home, living in lodgings when in London, and occasionally,
-a year or two at a time, in the cities on the continent, as Paris,
-Berlin, Florence, and Genoa; at which last place he died. The ample
-provision made for him by the Duke of Northumberland, with retired and
-simple habits, enabled him to accumulate the fortune which passed to the
-United States. He interested himself little in questions of government,
-being devoted to science, and chiefly to chemistry. This had introduced
-him to the society of Cavendish, Wollaston, and others, advantageously
-known to the Royal Society in London, of which he was a member.
-
-In a paper relative to one of the publications of the Smithsonian
-Institution, read before a scientific society at Dublin, it is stated,
-on the authority of Chambers’ Journal, that he had gained a name by the
-analysis of minute quantities, and that “it was he who caught a tear as
-it fell from a lady’s cheek, and detected the salts and other substances
-which it held in solution.”
-
-In a notice of his scientific pursuits, by Professor Johnson, of
-Philadelphia, there are enumerated twenty-four papers, or treatises by
-Smithson, published in the Transactions of the Royal Society, and other
-scientific journals of the day, containing articles on mineralogy,
-geology, and more especially mineral chemistry. In the Annals of
-Philosophy (Vol. 22, page 30) he has a brief tract on the method of
-making coffee. The small case of his personal effects, which is to be
-preserved in a separate apartment of the Institution, consists chiefly
-of minerals and chemical apparatus.
-
-The will indicates a degree of sensitiveness on the subject of his
-illegitimacy. He starts with a declaration of pedigree:
-
- I, James Smithson, son of Hough, first Duke of Northumberland, and
- Elizabeth, heiress of the Hungerfords of Audley, and niece of Charles
- the Proud, Duke of Somerset, now residing in Bentinck street,
- Cavendish Square, do make this my last will and testament,....
-
- “To found at Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian
- Institution, an establishment FOR THE INCREASE AND DIFFUSION OF
- KNOWLEDGE AMONG MEN.”
-
-The bequest was first announced to Congress by President Jackson, in
-1835. Long discussions and reports followed; first, upon the propriety
-of accepting the trust; and next, upon the kind of institution to be
-established; in the course of which the ablest minds in the country, in
-and out of Congress, gave expression to their views. The report of Mr.
-Adams was particularly eloquent. The objection to receiving the bequest
-was based mainly upon the alleged absence of constitutional power, but
-partly upon policy.
-
-The discussion as to the kind of institution which would best fulfil the
-testator’s intention, extended through a series of years, and led to
-almost every possible proposition. I shall not attempt to give even an
-outline of these debates, which finally culminated in the adoption of a
-somewhat mixed scheme, allowing of almost anything. To Robert Dale Owen,
-of Indiana, is mainly due the credit of finally pressing the bill to a
-vote. The Act required that there be provided a hall or halls for a
-library, a museum, a chemical laboratory, necessary lecture-rooms, and a
-gallery of art.
-
-The Board of Regents, in whose hands the control of the institution is
-vested, drew up the following general plan, upon which the operations of
-the institution have been conducted, this plan being, in their judgment,
-best calculated to carry into effect the wishes of the founder:
-
- To Increase Knowledge: It is proposed—first, to stimulate men of
- talent to make original researches, by offering suitable rewards for
- memoirs containing new truths; and, second, to appropriate annually a
- portion of the income for particular researches, under the direction
- of suitable persons.
-
- To Diffuse Knowledge: It is proposed—first, to publish a series of
- periodical reports on the progress of the different branches of
- knowledge; and, second, to publish occasionally separate treatises on
- subjects of general interest.
-
- Details of Plan to Increase Knowledge by Stimulating Researches:
- First, facilities to be afforded for the production of original
- memoirs on all branches of knowledge. Second, the memoirs thus
- obtained to be published in a series of volumes, in a quarto form, and
- entitled Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge. Third, no memoir, on
- subjects of physical science, to be accepted for publication, which
- does not furnish a positive addition to human knowledge, resting on
- original research; and all unverified speculations to be rejected.
- Fourth, each memoir presented to the institution to be submitted for
- examination to a commission of persons of reputation for learning in
- the branch to which the memoir pertains, and to be accepted for
- publication only in case the report of this commission is favorable.
- Fifth, the Commission to be chosen by officers of the Institution, and
- the name of the author, as far as practicable, concealed, unless a
- favorable decision be made. Sixth, the volumes of the memoirs to be
- changed for the transactions of literary and scientific societies, and
- copies to be given to all the colleges and principal libraries in this
- country. One part of the remaining copies may be offered for sale, and
- the other carefully preserved, to form complete sets of the work to
- supply the demand for new institutions. Seventh, an abstract, or
- popular account, of the contents of these memoirs, to be given to the
- public through the annual reports of the Regents to Congress.
-
- By Appropriating a Part of the Income, Annually, to Special Objects of
- Research, under the Direction of Suitable Persons: First, the objects,
- and the amount appropriated, to be recommended by Councillors of the
- Institution. Second, appropriations in different years to different
- objects; so that, in course of time, each branch of knowledge may
- receive a share. Third, the results obtained from these appropriations
- to be published, with the memoirs before mentioned, in the volumes of
- the Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge. Fourth, examples of
- objects for which appropriations may be made: 1. System of extended
- meteorological observations for solving the problem of American
- storms; 2. Explorations in descriptive natural history, and
- geological, magnetical, and topographical surveys, to collect
- materials for the formation of a physical atlas of the United States;
- 3. Solution of experimental problems, such as a new determination of
- the weight of the earth, of the velocity of electricity and of light;
- chemical analyses of soils and plants; collection and publication of
- scientific facts accumulated in the offices of Government; 4.
- Institution of statistical inquiries with reference to physical,
- moral, and political subjects; 5. Historical researches, and accurate
- surveys of places celebrated in American history; 6. Ethnological
- researches, particularly with reference to the different races of men
- in North America; also, explorations and accurate surveys of the
- mounds and other remains of the ancient people of our country.
-
- Details of the Plan for Diffusing Knowledge: First, by the publication
- of a series of reports, giving an account of the new discoveries in
- science, and of the changes made from year to year in all branches of
- knowledge, not strictly professional. These reports will diffuse a
- kind of knowledge generally interesting, but which, at present, is
- inaccessible to the public. Some reports may be published annually,
- others at longer intervals, as the income of the Institution or the
- changes in the branches of knowledge may indicate. Second, the reports
- are to be prepared by collaborators eminent in the different branches
- of knowledge. Third, each collaborator to be furnished with the
- journals and publications, domestic and foreign, necessary to the
- compilation of his report; to be paid a certain sum for his labors,
- and to be named on the title-page of the report. Fourth, the reports
- to be published in separate parts, so that persons interested in a
- particular branch can procure the parts relating to it without
- purchasing the whole. Fifth, these reports may be presented to
- Congress for partial distribution, the remaining copies to be given to
- literary and scientific institutions, and sold to individuals for a
- moderate price.
-
- By the Publication of Separate Treatises on Subjects of General
- Interest: First, these treatises may occasionally consist of valuable
- memoirs translated from foreign languages, or of articles prepared
- under the direction of the Institution, or procured by offering
- premiums for the best exposition of a given subject. Second, the
- treatises should, in all cases, be submitted to a commission of
- competent judges, previous to their publication.
-
-“The only changes made in the policy above indicated have been the
-passage of resolutions, by the Regents, repealing the equal division of
-the income between the active operations and the museum and library, and
-further providing that the annual appropriations are to be apportioned
-specifically among the different objects and operations of the
-Institution, in such manner as may, in the judgment of the Regents, be
-necessary and proper for each, according to its intrinsic importance,
-and a compliance in good faith with the law.”
-
-The Act of Congress, organizing the Institution, makes the President and
-Vice-President of the United States, the Cabinet Ministers, the
-Chief-Justice of the United States, the Cabinet Ministers and the Mayor
-of Washington, members _ex officio_ of the Institution. The Board of
-Regents charged with the control of the Institution, consists of the
-President of the United States, the Mayor of Washington, three Senators
-of the United States, three members of the House of Representatives, who
-are _ex officio_ Regents, six persons, not members of Congress, two of
-whom must be citizens of Washington, and members of the National
-Institute of that city, and the other four citizens of any of the states
-of the Union, no two of whom are to be chosen from the same state. The
-Board of Regents make annual reports of their conduct of the Institution
-to Congress.
-
-The real “power behind the throne” is the Secretary of the Institution,
-who is executive officer. He has charge of the edifice, its contents,
-and the grounds, and is given as many assistants, as are necessary to
-enable him to conduct the varied operations of the Institution. The
-property of the Institution is placed under the protection of the laws
-for the preservation and safe keeping of the public buildings and
-grounds of the City of Washington.
-
-Upon the organization of the Institution, Congress set apart for its use
-a portion of the public ground lying westward of the Capitol, and
-between it and the Potomac River. Fifty-two acres comprised the grant,
-which was known as the “Smithsonian Reservation.” They were laid out
-under the supervision of Andrew Jackson Downing. He died while engaged
-in this work, and his memory is perpetuated by a memorial erected in the
-grounds in 1852, by the American Pomological Society, and consisting of
-a massive vase resting on a handsome pedestal, with appropriate
-inscriptions, the whole being of the finest Italian marble.
-
-The building is situated near the centre of the grounds as they
-originally existed, the centre of the edifice being immediately opposite
-Tenth Street west. It is constructed of a fine quality of lilac-gray
-freestone, found in the new red sandstone formation, where it crosses
-the Potomac, near the mouth of Seneca Creek, one of the tributaries of
-that river, and about twenty-three miles above Washington. The stone is
-very soft at first, and is quarried with comparative ease. In its fresh
-state, it may be worked with the chisel and mallet; but it hardens
-rapidly upon exposure to the air and weather, and will withstand, after
-a time, the severest usage.
-
-The structure is in the style of architecture belonging to the last half
-of the twelfth century, the latest variety of rounded style, as it is
-found immediately anterior to its merging into the early Gothic, and is
-known as the Norman, the Lombard, or Romanesque. The semi-circular arch,
-stilted, is employed throughout, in door, windows, and other openings.
-
-The main building is 205 feet long by 57 feet wide, and to the top of
-the corbel course, 58 feet high. The east wing is 82 by 52 feet, and to
-the top of its battlement, 42½ feet high. The west wing, including its
-projecting apsis, is 84 by 40 feet, and 38 feet high. Each of the wings
-is connected with the main building by a range which, including its
-cloisters, is 60 feet long by 49 feet wide. This makes the length of the
-entire building, from east to west, 447 feet. Its greatest breadth is
-160 feet.
-
-The north front of the main building has two central towers, the
-loftiest of which is 150 feet high. It has also a broad, covered
-carriage-way, upon which opens the main entrance to the building. The
-south central tower is 37 feet square, 91 feet high, and massively
-constructed. A double campanile tower, 17 feet square, 117 feet high,
-rises from the north-east corner of the main building; and the
-south-west corner has an imposing octagonal tower, in which is a spiral
-stair-way, leading to the summit. There are four other smaller towers of
-lesser hights, making nine in all, the effect of which is very
-beautiful, and which once caused a wit to remark that it seemed to him
-as if a “collection of church steeples had gotten lost, and were
-consulting together as to the best means of getting home to their
-respective churches.”
-
-The building was much injured by fire in January, 1865. The flames
-destroyed the upper part of the main buildings, and the towers. Although
-the lower story was saved, the valuable official, scientific, and
-miscellaneous correspondence, record-books, and manuscripts in the
-Secretary’s office, the large collection of scientific apparatus, the
-personal effects of James Smithson, Stanley’s Collection of Indian
-Portraits, and much other valuable property were destroyed. Fortunately,
-the Library, Museum, and Laboratory were uninjured. The fire made no
-interruption in the practical workings of the Institution, and in a
-comparatively short space of time the burned portions were restored.
-
-The museum occupies the ground-floor, and is the principal attraction to
-a large portion of the visitors. It is a spacious hall, containing two
-tiers of cases, in which are placed the specimens on exhibition. Access
-to the upper tier of cases is had by means of a light iron gallery,
-which is reached by stair-ways of the same material. The Official Guide
-to the Institution, thus describes the Museum:
-
-Under these provisions, the Institution has received and taken charge of
-such Government collections in mineralogy, geology and natural history,
-as have been made since its organization. The amount of these has been
-very great, as all the United States geological, boundary, and railroad
-surveys, with the various topographical, military, and naval
-explorations, have been, to a greater or less extent, ordered to make
-such collections as would illustrate the physical and natural history
-features of the regions traversed.
-
-Of the collections made by thirty Government expeditions, those of
-twenty-five are now deposited with the Smithsonian Institution,
-embracing more than five-sixths of the whole amount of materials
-collected. The principle expeditions thus furnishing collections are the
-United States Geological Surveys of Doctors Owen, Jackson, and Evans,
-and Messrs Foster and Whitney; the United States and Mexican boundary
-survey; the Pacific Railroad survey; the exploration of the Yellowstone,
-by Lieutenant Warren; the survey of Lieutenant Bryant; The United States
-naval astronomical expedition; the North Pacific Behring’s Strait
-expedition; the Japan expedition, and Paraguay expedition.
-
-The Institution has also received, from other sources, collections of
-greater or less extent, from various portions of North America, tending
-to complete the Government series.
-
-The collections thus made, taken as a whole, constitute the largest and
-best series of the minerals, fossils, rocks, animals, and plants of the
-entire continent of North America, in the world. Many tons of geological
-and mineralogical specimens, illustrating the surveys throughout the
-West, are embraced therein. There is also a very large collection of
-minerals of the mining regions of Northern Mexico, and of New Mexico,
-made by a practical Mexican geologist, during a period of twenty-five
-years, and furnishing indications of many rich mining localities within
-our own borders, yet unknown to the American people.
-
-It includes also, with scarcely an exception, all the vertebrate animals
-of North America. The greater part of the mammalia have been arranged in
-walnut drawers, made proof against dust and insects. The birds have been
-similarly treated, while the reptiles and fish have been classified, as,
-to some extent, have also been the shells, minerals, fossils, and
-plants.
-
-The Museum hall is quite large enough to contain all the collections
-hitherto made, as well as such others as may be assigned to it. No
-single room in the country is, perhaps, equal to it in capacity or
-adaptation to its purposes, as, by the arrangements now being perfected,
-and denoted in the illustration, it is capable of receiving twice as
-large a surface of cases as the old Patent-Office hall, and three times
-that of the Academy of Sciences of Philadelphia.
-
-The Smithsonian Contributions are the work of men residing in every part
-of the United States. Does an individual think he has the data upon
-which to base an important discovery, he communicates his plans to the
-Institution. His suggestions are referred to men in other places, who
-have made that branch an especial subject of study, and who are not
-advised of the author’s name. If they report favorably upon it, the
-author is furnished with facilities for pursuing and describing his
-investigations. Does he want some book not to be found in the library
-nearest his home? The Institution purchases it and loans it to him, to
-be returned to the library. His work, when finished, may be invaluable
-to a scientific man, but is not in sufficient demand to warrant any
-publisher in issuing it. The Institution prints it, with the proper
-illustrations, and gives the author the privilege of using the plates in
-order to print a copyright for sale. Those published by the Institution
-are sent to every great library and to every scientific body in the
-world; and those bodies, in return, send back all their publications.
-Thus, already, a most valuable library has been collected, containing
-books hardly to be found collected together anywhere else in the United
-States.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thirty years ago, the merely nominal sum of $1,000 was, at the instance
-of the Commissioner of Patents, Hon. H. L. Ellsworth, devoted by
-Congress for the purposes of Agriculture. For two years before, this
-patriotic gentleman had been distributing seeds and plants gratuitously,
-and for nine years, during his entire term of office, he continued his
-good work. His successors in the Patent-Office kept up the practice; but
-it was not until 1862 that the Department of Agriculture was formally
-organized.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- TROPICAL FRUITS.
- INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT CONSERVATORY.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-It now nominally belongs to the Department of the Interior, but in every
-essential is a distinct department in itself.
-
-The beautiful building built expressly for it, and dedicated exclusively
-to its uses, terminates one of the finest vistas running out from
-Pennsylvania avenue. It stands within the grounds of the Smithsonian
-Institution, surrounded by spacious conservatories and wide blooming
-gardens—every plant and tree indigenous to our country—from the
-luxuriant tropical vegetation of the Southern States, to the dwarfed and
-hardy foliage of our northern borders, may be found in its grounds. A
-division is devoted to horticulture, and the propagation and
-acclimatization of new and foreign species. Studies in ornamentation, in
-the best means of hybridizing, budding, pruning and grafting, in
-treating diseases of plants and trees, are thoroughly pursued in the
-experimental gardens. Seeds of new varieties and of superior quality, as
-soon as they are obtained, are freely distributed throughout the
-country, on application to the Commissioner of Agriculture.
-
-The Department maintains, at least, one correspondent in every county of
-the United States, through whom statistics of quality and quantity of
-crops, and other facts, are forwarded to Washington, to be there
-distributed by means of the monthly and yearly reports. Specialists are
-also employed to prepare for these reports instructive articles on
-suitable topics. Questions from agriculturists are freely answered and
-the fullest possible information afforded. The purchaser of a farm
-situated in a region with which he is unacquainted, has only to inquire,
-and the department will tell him the crops likely to prove remunerative
-in the special locality, advise him regarding cultivation, and warn him
-of obstacles to be surmounted, and the best means of overcoming them. A
-chemist will analyze the soil, report as to its properties and the value
-of fertilizers to be used thereon; a botanist will give every particular
-regarding the natures and diseases of plants, and will point out in what
-families to seek needed products, and what effect a change of soil will
-have upon them. An entomologist will give advice regarding the insects
-which destroy vegetation, and as to the best mode for their
-extermination.
-
-As compared with the other national bureaux, the expense of this
-department is remarkably small. The cost of the library and museum was
-$140,000, and the conservatories were built at an expense of but $52,000
-more. The library contains a valuable collection of agricultural
-literature in several languages. Volumes of rare pictures are arranged
-on long tables; one work, a present from Francis Joseph I., Emperor of
-Austria, entitled “Nature-Printing,” containing representations of ferns
-so exquisitely printed that it is difficult to believe them unreal.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE DOME AND SPIRAL STAIR CASE, RARE PLANTS AND FLOWERS.
-
- INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT CONSERVATORY.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-In the museum are specimens of fibrous products, cereals of this and
-other countries, stuffed birds and plaster-casts of fruits from all the
-different sections of the United States, arranged so as to show at a
-glance the products of each region and the specific changes caused by
-transportation. On the walls of the fruit-cabinet are hung diagrams
-showing the character and habits of the different insects that prey upon
-fruit and fruit trees; and in glass cases are preserved the native birds
-that feed upon destructive insects, and should be protected by the kind
-treatment of the agriculturist.
-
-The halls of this beautiful building are laid with imported tiles, its
-ceilings are exquisitely frescoed, and many of its walls hung with
-wood-paper in rich blending tints. The museum filling the main hall of
-the second floor is furnished with lofty, air-tight walnut cases.
-
-The great California plank which once stood in one of the underground
-halls of the Patent-Office, has been wrought into a massive table which
-stands in the Museum. It is seven feet by twelve, and looks like a
-billiard-table without the cloth, and is finely polished. The legs and
-frame are made of Florida cedar. The top of the table is composed of the
-plank; it looks like solid mahogany without knot or blemish. Much
-attention has been given to the cultivation of the fibrous grasses
-which, in China, are woven into fine and durable cloth. Specimens of
-these grasses, and of the cloth which they make, in its various stages
-of manufacture, are on exhibition in the cases of the museum. A number
-of acres have been set apart in the grounds for the cultivation of these
-grasses. The shade-trees of our entire country are to be represented in
-these grounds. Already over one thousand four hundred native varieties
-have been planted.
-
-Through the Smithsonian Institute the Department has been put into
-communication with leading foreign agricultural societies, and the
-result has been, not only an exchange of reports, but of almost every
-known specimen of flower-seeds, seeds of shrubs, vegetables and fruits.
-The display of flowers in the agricultural grounds is already something
-wonderful, and soon will equal any like display in the world.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- TROPICAL PLANTS AND FLOWERS.
- INSIDE THE GOVERNMENT CONSERVATORY.—WASHINGTON.
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII.
- OLD HOMES AND HAUNTS OF WASHINGTON—MEMORIES OF OTHER DAYS.
-
-The Oldest Home in Washington—The Cottage of David Burns—David Burns’s
- Daughter—Singing a Lady’s Praises—The Attractions of a Cottage—“Tom
- Moore” the Poet Pays Homage to Fair Marcia—The Favored Suitor—How
- the Lady was Wooed and Won—Mother and Daughter—The Offering to
- God—The City Orphan Asylum—A Costly Mausoleum—The Assassination
- Conspiracy—Persecuting the Innocent—A Suggestion for the Board of
- Works—The Octagon House—A Comfortable Income—The Pleasures of
- Property—A Haunted House—Apple-Stealing—“Departed Joys and
- Stomach-Aches”—The Jackson Monument—The Tragedy of the Decatur
- House—A Fatal Duel—The Stockton-Sickles House—A Spot of Frightful
- Interest—The Club-House—Assassination of Mr. Seward—Scenes of
- Festivity—The Madison House—Mrs. Madison’s Popularity—Her Turbans
- and Her Snuff—The Exploit of Commodore Welkes—Arlington Hotel—The
- House of Charles Sumner—Corcoran Castle—The Finest Picture-Gallery
- in America—Powers’ Greek Slave—“Maggie Beck”—Kalaroma—During the
- War—Rock Creek—The Romantic Story of Mr. Barlow’s Niece—Francis P.
- Blair—Doddington House—The Brother of Lord Ellenborough—Forgetting
- His Own Name—Locking Up a Wife—The “Ten Buildings”—The Retreat of
- Louis Phillippe—Old Capitol Prison—The Temporary Capitol—The Deeds
- of Ann Royal and Sally Brass—“Paul Pry”—Blackmailing—Feared by all
- Mankind—An Unpleasant Sort of Woman—Arrested on Suspicion—A Small
- American Bastile—Where Wirz was Hung.
-
-
-The oldest home in Washington is the cottage of David Burns.
-
-You remember _him_, he was Washington’s “obstinate Mr. Burns.” Well, he
-owned nearly the entire site of the future Federal city, an estate which
-had descended to him, through several generations of Scottish ancestors.
-It was perfectly human and right that he should make the most and best
-of his precious paternal acres. Long before quarrelling Congresses had
-even thought of the District of Columbia as a site to contend over as
-the future Capitol, the cottage of David Burns had gathered on its lowly
-roof the moss of time.
-
-After the lapse of nearly a century it stands to-day as it stood then,
-only the moss on its roof is deeper, and the trees which arch above it,
-cast a longer and deeper shadow. It was a mansion in that day of small
-beginnings. Yet it is but a low, sharp-roofed cottage, one story high,
-with a garret; its doors facing north and south, one opening upon the
-river, with no steps, but one broad flag-stone, now settled deep within
-its grassy borders. Besides the garret, there cannot be more than four
-rooms in the house; a dining-room, sitting-room, and two sleeping-rooms;
-the kitchen, after the Maryland and Virginia fashion of the present day,
-was probably a detached building. The farm-house no doubt equalled its
-average neighbors, scattered miles apart across the wide domain of open
-country.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE NATIONAL CAPITOL,
- As seen from Pennsylvania Avenue.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE VAN NESS MANSION, AND DAVY BURNS’ COTTAGE.
- At the time of the sale of his estate to President Washington.
-]
-
-Before Washington came to negotiate for the future site of the Federal
-city, the society of Davy Burns was probably composed of plain farmer
-folk like himself. It was at a later time, when the farmer was
-transformed into a millionaire, and his only daughter had grown into the
-fairest _belle_ and richest heiress in all the country round, that the
-long, low rooms of the one-story farm-house were filled with the most
-illustrious men of their generation. David Burns’ only daughter was not
-more than twelve or thirteen years of age.
-
-With a prescience of her future lot, he proceeded to give her every
-advantage of education and society at that period accessible to a
-gentlewoman of fortune. The Rector of St. John’s Church, who preached
-her funeral sermon in 1832, said: “She was placed by her parents in the
-family of Luther Martin, Esq., of Baltimore, who was then at the height
-of his fame as the most distinguished jurist and advocate in the State
-of Maryland, and with his daughters and family she had the best
-opportunity of education and society.”
-
-At eighteen, Marcia Burns returned to the home of her parents—the lowly
-farm-house on the banks of the Potomac. Then, and at a later day, when
-the flush and enchantment of youth had fled, the vision of Marcia Burns
-is altogether lovely. Beside the attractions of fortune, she seemed to
-possess in an eminent degree the highest qualities of the feminine
-nature. It was of Marcia Burns that Horatio Greenough wrote:
-
- “’Mid rank and wealth and worldly pride,
- From every snare she turned aside.
- · · · · · · · · · · · ·
- She sought the low, the humble shed,
- Where gaunt disease and famine tread;
- And from that time, in youthful pride,
- She stood Van Ness’s blooming bride,
- No day her blameless head o’erpast,
- But saw her dearer than the last.”
-
-The return of the only child and heiress of David Burns, in the first
-beauty of young womanhood, soon filled the paternal cottage with
-illustrious society, and with many suitors for her hand and heart. The
-Keys, the Lloyds, the Peters, the Lows, the Tayloes, the Calverts, the
-Carrols, all visited here. Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Burr, with
-many other famous then, not forgotten now, were guests at the Burns
-cottage. Thomas Moore was entertained beneath its roof, and slept in one
-of the little rooms “off” the large one on the ground floor.
-
-The favored suitor was John P. Van Ness, the son of Judge Peter Van Ness
-of New York, celebrated as an anti-Federalist, a Revolutionary officer,
-and a supporter of Aaron Burr against the Clinton and Livingston feud.
-
-When John Van Ness wooed and won Marcia Burns, he was thirty years of
-age, a Member of Congress from New York, “well-fed, well-bred,
-well-read,” elegant, popular and handsome enough to win his way to any
-maiden’s heart, unassisted by the accessories of fortune, which, in
-addition, were bountifully his. In Gilbert Stuart’s picture we see him
-with powdered wig and _toupee_, light-brown hair and side whiskers,
-perceptive forehead, aquiline nose, finely-curved lips and chin, a small
-mouth, with clear, hazel eyes, which could look their way straight to
-many hearts.
-
-The portrait of the heiress of David Burns may be seen to-day in
-Washington, not in any hall of wealth or fashion, but in the Orphan
-Asylum, which she founded and endowed, to whose children she was a
-mother. It looks down upon us, a Madonna face, with intellectual,
-spiritual brow, dewy eyes, and a tender mouth.
-
-Marcia Burns married John P. Van Ness at the age of twenty. Her only
-brother dying in early youth, she inherited the whole of her father’s
-vast estate. For a few years after her marriage she lived at the old
-cottage. Her husband then built a two-story house on the corner of
-Twelfth and D streets. Later, he began the house, which, still standing
-in the centre of Mansion Square, is one of the most unique of all the
-historic houses of Washington. It was designed, as were so many famous
-Washington houses, by Latrobe, and cost between $50,000 and $60,000 more
-than half a century ago. Its marble mantel-pieces, wrought in Italy,
-with their sculptured Loves and Vestas, still remain, models of
-exquisite art. It is finished with costly woods, and about its
-door-knobs are set tiles inlaid with Mosaics. Its great portico, facing
-north, is modelled after that of the President’s house. This stately
-brick mansion, amid the trees, standing a few rods back from the Burns’
-cottage, presents to it an absolute contrast.
-
-This costly home was ready for the family when the only daughter and
-child of General and Mrs. Van Ness returned, in 1820, from school in
-Philadelphia. Thither Marcia Burns brought _her_ daughter. The bond
-between the two is said to have been more intimate and profound than
-that of simply mother and daughter. The daughter was the cherished
-companion of the mother, who cultivated an intelligent interest in
-public affairs, who loved poetry, and wrote it, and who, amid all the
-pomp of wealth and state, never forgot, or allowed her child to forget,
-that the fashion of this world passeth away.
-
-Ann Elbertina Van Ness married Arthur Middleton of South Carolina, son
-of a signer of the Declaration of Independence. But, in November, 1822,
-in less than two years from her return from school, this only child,
-this youthful bride, this heiress of untold wealth, with her babe in her
-arms, was carried to the grave.
-
-From that hour, her mother, Marcia Burns, who, in the world, had never
-been of it, renounced its vanities entirely. The cottage in which she
-was born, in which her parents lived and died, nestling under the
-patriarchal trees, just outside the windows of her stately home, had
-ever remained the object of her veneration and affection. In this humble
-dwelling, over whose venerable roof waved the branches of trees planted
-by her dear parents, she selected a secluded apartment, with appropriate
-arrangements for solemn meditation, to which she often retired, and
-spent hours in quiet solitude and holy communion.
-
-The offering to God which she made beside the grave of her daughter, was
-the City Orphan Asylum of Washington. She became a mother to the
-children, saved, sheltered, and trained for heaven beneath its roof. She
-did not wait for these orphans to come to her door. Night and day she
-sought them out. In her portrait, still hanging in this asylum, she is
-sitting with three little girls, clinging to her for protection, one
-with its head in her lap.
-
-Her last sickness was long and painful. A few days before her death,
-with a few Christian friends gathered about her bed, she celebrated the
-holy Sacrament; then, with perfect serenity, awaited the final call. Her
-last words to her husband, placing her hand upon his head, were: “Heaven
-bless and protect you. Never mind me.” She died September 9, 1832, aged
-fifty years.
-
-She was the first American woman buried with public honors. At the time
-of her death, General Van Ness was Mayor of Washington. Meetings of
-condolence were held by citizens in different places. As the funeral
-procession began to move, a committee of citizens placed a second silver
-plate upon her coffin, inscribed:—
-
- “The Citizens of Washington, in testimony of their veneration for
- departed worth, dedicate this plate to the memory of Marcia Van Ness,
- the excellent consort of D. P. Van Ness. If piety, charity, high
- principle and exalted worth could have averted the shafts of fate, she
- would still have remained among us, a bright example of every virtue.
- The hand of death has removed her to a purer and happier state of
- existence; and, while we lament her loss, let us endeavor to emulate
- her virtues.”
-
-The procession passed between the little girls of the Orphan Asylum, who
-stood in lines, till the coffin was placed at the door of the vault,
-when they came forward, strewing the bier with branches of
-weeping-willows, and singing a farewell hymn.
-
-The last earthly house which received the body of Marcia Burns was more
-magnificent than any she had ever inhabited. Years before, General Van
-Ness had reared a Mausoleum, which still remains, one of the purest
-examples of monumental art on this continent. It is a copy of the Temple
-of Vesta, and could not be built at the present time for a sum less than
-thirty-four or thirty-five thousand dollars. In the vault, beneath its
-open dome, Marcia Burns was laid beside her child. This magnificent
-temple of the dead was recently removed and rebuilt, precisely as it was
-in the Oak Hill Cemetery, Georgetown. The cells of its deep vault now
-hold nearly all of the dust left of the Burns and Van Ness alliance.
-
-General Van Ness lived to the period of the Mexican war, passing away at
-the age of seventy-six, after having enjoyed every honor which the
-citizens of Washington could bestow upon him. He sued the Government of
-the United States for violating its contract with the original
-proprietors of Washington in selling to private purchasers lots near the
-Mall. Roger B. Taney was his lawyer, and yet he lost his suit. He gave
-an entertainment to Congress every year up to the time of his death, and
-wonder-heads declare that his six horses, headless, still gallop around
-the Van Ness Mansion, in Mansion square, annually, on the anniversary of
-that event.
-
-Some twenty-five years ago, this old mansion and estate was bought by
-its present proprietor, Thomas Green, Esq., a Virginia gentleman. The
-last time that it came prominently before the public, was during the
-assassination conspiracy, when an irresponsible newspaper sent the
-report flying, that its great wine-vault was to have been used as a
-place of incarceration for Mr. Lincoln, before he was conveyed across
-the river. In those mad days no magnate waited for proof, and the result
-was that Mr. Green and his gentle wife, who,—as her husband
-remarked—“was as innocent as an angel,” were shut up in our small
-bastile, the old Capitol prison. Here both were held for more than
-thirty days, when after having vindicated their honor beyond the
-possibility of reproach, the Government somewhat ashamed of itself, let
-them depart to the shelter of their patriarchal home.
-
-On buying the estate, Mr. Green with that veneration for old, sacred
-associations which pre-eminently marks the Virginian,—instead of tearing
-down the old Burns’ cottage as “nothing to him” or as a blot upon his
-fair estate, went immediately to work to preserve it. Without changing
-it in any way, he re-roofed it, made it rain-proof, whitewashed it, and
-left it with its trees and memories. What Mr. Green has preserved, let
-not the Board of Public Works destroy! In this case, gentlemen, let your
-“grade” go—and the cottage of “the obstinate Mr. Burns,” the first owner
-of this great Capital, and the oldest house in it—remain.
-
-It was a June evening that we last passed the gate and the lodge of the
-old Van Ness estate, at the foot of Seventeenth street. The high
-brick-wall which shut in this historic garden, is mantled with ivy and
-honeysuckle. Old fruit trees, apple, pear, peach, apricot, plum, cherry,
-nectarine, and fig trees, all in their season, lift their crowns of
-fruitage to the sun within these old walls. Following a winding avenue,
-we pass through grounds above which gigantic aspen, maple, walnut,
-holly, and yew trees cast deep, cool shadows in the hottest summer days.
-As we approach the house we see that the drive before the northern
-portico is encircled with an immense growth of box. Before the low
-windows of the eastern drawing-room, stretch wide _parterres_ of roses
-of every known variety. In June it is literally a garden of roses—and
-the early snow falls upon them, budding and blooming still in the
-delicious air. Oranges ripen on the sunshiny lawn which surrounds the
-house, and masses of honeysuckle which climb the balustrades of the
-southern portico pervade the air with sweetness, acres away.
-
-This southern portico used as a conservatory in the winter, is a
-counterpart, on a smaller plan, of the south veranda of the President’s
-house. It has the same outlook only nearer the river. To the right, the
-dome of the observatory swells into the blue air, and, before it, the
-Potomac runs up and kisses the grasses at its feet. Lovers’ walk, shaded
-by murmuring pines, as such a walk should be, runs on through the grove
-down to a mimic lake, where, in mid-water, is a tiny island with shadowy
-trees and restful seats.
-
-I stray down this walk with Alice,—golden-haired and poet-eyed. We
-wander across under the patriarchal trees and come out on the river-side
-of the old Burns cottage. Its sunken door-stone, its antique door-latch,
-its minute window-panes, all are just the same as when Marcia Burns,
-beautiful and young, received within its walls her courtly worshippers;
-just the same as when Marcia Burns, smitten and childless, knelt alone
-by its desolate hearth, to commune with the God and Father of her
-spirit, and to dedicate herself to His service for ever.
-
-Beside us, eight lofty Kentucky coffee-trees soar palm-like towards the
-sky. Through their clustering crowns the full moon peers down upon us;
-upon the cottage, so fraught with the memories of buried generations;
-upon the white walls of the mansion, so rich in recollections of the
-illustrious dead of a later past,—and she transfigures both cottage and
-hall in her hallowing radiance, as, with lingering steps, I say to
-gentle host and hostess, and to Alice,—golden-haired and
-poet-eyed,—“Farewell.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Octagon House, now used as an office by the Navy Department, stands
-on the corner of Eighteenth street and New York avenue. It was built
-near the close of the last century by Colonel John Tayloe, one of the
-most famous men of his time, and is still owned by his descendents.
-Colonel Tayloe was a friend of Washington, who persuaded him to invest
-some of his immense fortune in the new Federal city. He was educated at
-Cambridge, England, and during his life in Washington, four of his
-former class-mates were sent as Ministers to the United States.
-
-Colonel Tayloe had an income of seventy-five thousand dollars a year. He
-had an immense country estate at Mount Airy, Virginia, and both there
-and in Octagon House, entertained his friends in princely state. He kept
-race-horses, and expended about thirty-three thousand dollars every year
-in new purchases. He owned five hundred slaves, built brigs and
-schooners, worked iron-mines, converted the iron into ploughshares,—and
-all was done by the hands of his own subjects. After the burning of the
-White House, Mr. and Mrs. Madison lived in the Octagon House for a year,
-and held these elegant drawing-rooms and gave costly dinners. The
-Octagon House has long had the reputation of being haunted. “It is an
-authenticated fact, that every night, at the same hour, all the bells
-would ring at once. One gentleman, dining with Colonel Tayloe, when this
-mysterious ringing began, being an unbeliever in mysteries, and a very
-powerful man, jumped up and caught the bell wires in his hand, but only
-to be lifted bodily from the floor, while he was unsuccessful in
-stopping the ringing. Some declare that it was discovered, after a time,
-that rats were the ghosts who rung the bells; others, that the cause was
-never discovered, and that finally the family, to secure peace, were
-compelled to take the bells down and hang them in different fashion.
-Among other remedies, had been previously tried that of exorcism, but
-the prayers of the priest who was summoned availed nought.”
-
-In 1805, Washington city was an old field, covered everywhere with green
-grass and many original trees of the forest. There were no streets made.
-The President’s house was unfinished, and Lafayette square, opposite,
-was still called the “Burns Orchard.” One corner of it was used as a
-burial-ground of St. John’s Church. Where General Jackson’s statue is
-now rearing in the air on a frantic horse, then stood a clump of cherry
-trees, under which John Gardner’s school-boys used to make themselves
-sick eating green cherries. As the boys of this school never allowed the
-green apples or any other fruit in this orchard to ripen, and for that
-reason were in a perpetually griped condition all summer, their
-school-master, much against their wishes, and that of the militia who
-paraded under the trees, obtained permission of President Jefferson to
-cut the orchard down.
-
-As an open “reservation,” the square was long a landmark of the departed
-joys and stomachaches of the boys of a former generation. In course of
-time Dowing laid out the graceful walks and grassy plats which make it
-now a perfect _bijou_ of beauty. He planted the trees which to-day arch
-high in mid-air, and spread so deep and grateful a shade above the weary
-multitudes who seek rest and a touch of nature’s healing upon its
-wayside seats. It is altogether beautiful and soul and sense-reviving,
-in the spring, when its many-flowering shrubs pervade the air with
-fragrance, and no less delicious in the autumn, when it flames a mosaic
-of gorgeous landscape set in the dusty square, its many tinted leaves
-warm and red as gems raining, about your feet.
-
-August 11, 1848, a resolution of Congress authorized the Jackson
-Monument Committee to receive the brass guns captured by Jackson at
-Pensacola, to be used as material for the construction of a monument to
-that distinguished patriot. Clark Mills was appointed to execute the
-statue. President Fillmore chose its site in the centre of the square,
-opposite the President’s House, where it was inaugurated January 8,
-1853, the anniversary of Jackson’s victory at New Orleans, in 1815. As I
-am inadequate to describe such a work of art, I give the guide-book
-description:—
-
- “General Jackson is represented in the exact military costume worn by
- him, with cocked-hat in hand, saluting his troops. The charger, a
- noble specimen of the animal, with all the fire and spirit of a
- Bucephalus, is in a rearing posture, poised upon his hind feet, with
- no other stay than the balance of gravity, and the bolts pinning the
- feet to the pedestal. The work is colossal, the figure of Jackson
- being eight feet in height, and that of the horse in proportion. The
- whole stands upon a pyramidal pedestal of white marble, seven feet in
- height, at the base of which are planted four brass six-pound guns,
- taken by the hero at New Orleans. The cost of the statue to the
- Government, including the pedestal and iron railing, was $28,500.”
-
-Around this peaceful spot, where the militia beat their _reveille_, and
-the school-boys munched green apples and cherries, and gathered nuts in
-days of yore, human life in all its passion of pleasure, tragedy and
-pain, now pressed close. One of the saddest tragedies of the square is
-associated with the Decatur House. It is said that three powers rule the
-world—Intellect, Wealth, and Fame. Wearing this triple crown, Stephen
-Decatur came home to the wife whom he worshipped, saying: “I have gained
-a small sprig of laurel, which I hasten to lay at your feet.” He bought
-the lot on the corner of Sixteenth and H streets, and employed Latrobe
-to design a commodious and elegant mansion. In this house the home-life
-of Decatur begun with the most dazzling auguries. Its walls were hung
-with the trophies of his glory: the sword presented by Congress for
-burning the _Philadelphia_; another from Congress for the attack on
-Tripoli; a medal from Congress for the capture of the _Macedonian_; a
-box containing the freedom of New York; the medal of the Order of
-Cincinnati; swords from the States of Pennsylvania and Virginia, and the
-City of Philadelphia; and services of plate from the cities of Baltimore
-and Philadelphia. All these were but leaves on the sprig of laurel which
-he laid at the feet of the beloved one.
-
-Mrs. Decatur was accomplished, intellectual, and passionately devoted to
-her heroic husband. Not yet forty-two years of age, he had scaled the
-very summit of fame, and already rested after the toilsome ascent. His
-mornings were given to the fulfilment of his duties as Navy
-Commissioner, and his leisure was spent with the best in the society of
-Washington, made up of the highest in the land for station, character,
-and intelligence.
-
-The _salon_ of Mrs. Decatur, which, to-day, is larger than can be found
-in any other private house in Washington, was a focal point for all that
-was dazzling in the social life of the capital. There are those still
-living who remember the brilliant assembly gathered here only the night
-before his death. Mrs. Decatur, who had no prescience of the anguish
-awaiting her, at the request of friends, played on the harp, on which
-she was a skilful performer. Commodore Decatur, conscious of the
-portentous appointment which awaited him the coming morning, abated not
-one jot of the wonted charm of his manner, staying in the parlors till
-the last guest had gone.
-
-At dawn of the next day he arose, left the sleeping wife and household,
-crossed Lafayette Square, walked to Beale’s Tavern, near the Capitol,
-breakfasted, proceeded to Bladensburg, where the duel was fought at nine
-o’clock. Mortally wounded, he was brought back to his happy home, where
-he died the night of the same day. He tried to avert the duel, saying to
-Commodore Barron: “I have not challenged you, nor do I intend to
-challenge you; your life depends on yourself.”
-
-He was followed to the grave by the President of the United States and
-the most illustrious men of his time. “The same cannon which had so
-often announced the splendid achievements of Decatur now marked the
-periods in bearing him to the tomb. Their reverberating thunder
-mournfully echoed through the metropolis, and also vibrated through a
-heart tortured to agony.” A vast concourse of citizens, marching to a
-funeral dirge, followed the dead hero to Kalorama.
-
-Mrs. Decatur, within the walls of her home, for three years shut herself
-away from all the world. Afterwards the Decatur house was rented to
-Edward Livingston, then Secretary-of-State. Here Cora Livingston was
-married to Dr. Barton, who is remembered not only as a diplomat, but as
-the editor of an extensive and valuable collection of Shakespeare’s
-works. Here Sir Charles Vaughan, the British Ambassador, lived, and by
-his wit and affable manners and hospitality, made the house again a
-centre of elegant society. Martin Van Buren, while Secretary-of-State,
-occupied the Decatur House. The brothers King, both Members of Congress
-from New York, lived here. One was the father of the much-admired Mrs.
-Bancroft Davis, a portion of whose girlhood was passed under its roof.
-Mr. Orr, while Speaker of the House, was its tenant, and dispensed
-hospitalities to thousands in its grand _salon_. From Madison to Grant,
-every President has been entertained within its walls.
-
-Madame de Staël says: “The homes and haunts of the great ever bear
-impress of their individuality.” Jean Paul Richter declares: “No thought
-is lost.” If this be true, how affluent of eloquence, wit and mirth
-these historic halls must be! They are ready to revive more than the
-splendor of past days. For a number of years the house, rented to the
-Government, has been used for offices. But within twelve months it has
-been purchased by General Edward Fitzgerald Beale, who has rehabilitated
-it, without remodelling it, for his own family residence. The ample
-halls and grand _salon_ remain unchanged in proportions, while fresh
-frescoes, historic devices, French windows and marble vestibule, give to
-the antique mansion the aspect of modern elegance.
-
-General Beale is the grandson of Commodore Thomas Truxton, one of the
-first six captains appointed by General Washington in the early navy to
-guard the commerce of the United States. Commodore Decatur was a
-favorite midshipman and lieutenant under Truxton; and the grandson of
-his early commander, in this home of Decatur’s heart, is now preserving
-every possible souvenir of the sea. The Decatur mansion has passed into
-fitting hands. Its present owner made his gallant record under Commodore
-Stockton, and, in imperilling his life for others, has maintained the
-illustrious escutcheon transmitted him by his ancestors. When the gay
-season begins, light and music, warmth and cheer, wisdom, beauty and
-grace will again make these old halls glad. “Memnon-like, the old walls
-will again give forth sweet sounds.” A new generation will repeat the
-festivities of the generation gone to dust.
-
-A few rods further on we came to the famous Stockton-Sickles House. Just
-now it shrinks, shabby and small, below its lofty modern neighbors. It
-is a white stuccoed house, two stories, with basement and attic, with
-high steps and square central hall, after the fashion of old times. It
-was called the Stockton House because Purser Stockton, who married a
-relative of Commodore Decatur, owned and lived in it. Afterwards, it was
-occupied by Levi Woodbury, the father of Mrs. Montgomery Blair, who
-lived here both while Secretary of the Treasury and of the Navy. It was
-also rented by Mr. Southard, of Georgia, the father of Mrs. Ogden
-Hoffman. When Mr. and Mrs. Sickles lived in it, it is said that the
-trees in Lafayette square were so small that the waving of a
-handkerchief from one of the windows could be distinctly seen at the
-club house opposite, on the other side of the square. This was the
-signal used between the first betrayed, then tempted and ruined wife,
-and the man of the world, to whom seduction was at once a pastime and a
-profession.
-
-The trunk of the tree against which Key fell when shot by Sickles, may
-still be seen near the corner of Madison place and Pennsylvania avenue.
-
-A few steps further on, in the middle of the block, stands the famous
-club-house which has witnessed more of the vicissitudes and tragedy of
-human life than any other house on the square, excepting, perhaps, the
-White House. The Club-House is a large, square, three-storied red brick
-house, built for his own use by Commodore Rogers, of the Navy. After his
-death, it became a fashionable boarding-house, then a club-house. To one
-of its rooms Barton Key was borne after being wounded by Sickles. While
-Secretary-of-State, Mr. Seward occupied the house for eight years, and
-during that time it was the centre of most elegant hospitality. In the
-assassination of Mr. Seward, it witnessed its crowning tragedy. In its
-rooms Mr. Seward and his son languished for months, while slowly
-recovering from the almost death-blows dealt by Payne.
-
-After their recovery, the lovely and only daughter of Mr. Seward here
-slowly faded from earth. This young lady was, in a very remarkable
-degree, the chosen companion and confidante of her father. She not only
-sympathized profoundly in his pursuits, she shared them with him. I
-believe she witnessed, with unavailing cries, the attempted
-assassination of her father. At least, she never recovered from the
-shock received at that time. With her, passed from earth one of the
-loveliest spirits which ever shed its pure light upon the social life of
-the Capital. Her death left Mr. Seward wifeless and daughterless. With
-everything to live for, she met death with perfect faith and
-resignation. Her beautiful life, with her triumphant passage through
-death to a life still more perfect, remained with him to his last moment
-the most precious memory of her illustrious father.
-
-With all its burden of tragedy and pathetic death, with the departure of
-the Sewards, the old house did not take on the shadow of gloom. Its
-parlors never witnessed gayer or more crowded assemblies than thronged
-them the next winter, when occupied by General Belknap, the
-Secretary-of-War. This was but for a single season. Another winter
-dropped its earliest snows on the new-made grave of the young wife and
-mother, the memory of whose gentle face and graceful presence and tender
-spirit, will only fade from the Capital with the present generation. It
-was the last flaming up of festivity in the old house. It has never been
-gay since Mrs. Belknap died.
-
-The next year it waned into a boarding-house. Even that was not
-successful. People of sensibility do not wish even to board in a house
-so haunted with tragic memories of human lives. The house is now used
-for Government purposes. Its site is so superlative; central to the most
-interesting objects of Washington, and facing the waving sea of
-summer-green in Lafayette square. In the march of change its place will
-soon be filled by some soaring Mansard mansion of the future. But when
-every brick has vanished, the memories of the old club-house and Seward
-mansion will survive while any chronicle of Washington endures.
-
-Next to it stands the house of Mr. Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, a descendant of
-Mr. Tayloe, of Octagon House memory. Mr. and Mrs. Tayloe have occupied
-this stately house for many years. The reminiscences of Washington
-published by Mr. Tayloe for private circulation are among the most
-entertaining records ever written of the Capital.
-
-Next to the Tayloe House, on the corner of Fifteenth and H street,
-stands the Madison House, in which, as a widow, Mrs. Madison so long
-held her court. No eminent man retired from service of the state ever
-had more public recognition and honor bestowed upon him by the
-Government he had served than did this popular and ever-beloved woman.
-On New Year’s day, after paying their respects to the President, all the
-high officers of the Government always adjourned to the house of Mrs.
-Madison, to pay their respects to _her_. In her drawing-room political
-foes met on equal ground, and for the time, public and private
-animosities were forgotten or ignored.
-
-“Never” says “Uncle Paul” her colored servant, who had lived with her
-from boyhood, and who still lives, “never was a more gracefuller lady in
-a drawing-room. We always had our Wednesday-evening receptions in the
-old Madison House, and we had them in style.” Mrs. Madison’s turbans are
-as famous in Washington to-day as her snuff box. It is said that she
-expended $1,000 a year in turbans. She wore one as long as she
-lived—long after it had ceased to be fashionable. “These turbans were
-made of the finest materials and trimmed to match her various dresses.”
-Uncle Paul tells of one of her dresses of purple velvet with a long
-train trimmed with wide gold-lace with which she wore a turban trimmed
-with gold-lace and a pair of gold shoes. With a white satin dress, she
-wore a turban spangled with silver, and silver shoes. She sent to Paris
-for all her grand costumes. Her tea-parties and her “loo” parties are
-still dwelt upon with loving accents by her admiring contemporaries who
-still linger on the borders of a later generation.
-
-After the death of Mrs. Madison, her house was purchased and occupied
-for many years by Commodore Wilkes, who captured Mason and Slidell. It
-still stands in perfect preservation and is rented year by year to
-chance tenants. Two years ago, it was occupied by the Secretary-of-War
-and its drawing-rooms again thronged with brilliant crowds.
-
-On an opposite corner facing Vermont avenue we see the brown walls,
-floating flag and gay equipages of Arlington Hotel. Beside it, on the
-corner, is the red-brick house with white shades, and Mansard roof,
-where, amid rare pictures, books, works of art, and choice friends,
-lives Charles Sumner.
-
-A few rods further on, on the corner of H and Sixteenth streets, facing
-Lafayette square and peering out toward the old Decatur mansion, we came
-to “Corcoran Castle.” It is an imposing house, built of red-brick with
-brown facings, divided from the street by an iron railing, painted
-green, tipped with gilt, with an immense garden at the back, covering an
-entire square. The house is now owned and has been greatly beautified by
-W. W. Corcoran, the famous Washington banker, but has had many other
-occupants. It was once owned by Daniel Webster to whom it was presented
-by leaders of the party whom he had served. Great astonishment was
-expressed when he afterwards sold it. But as Daniel Webster was ever an
-impecunious man, he probably was compelled to part with his palace as
-Sheridan was so often compelled to part with his.
-
-Before and during the Mexican war, the British Minister, Mr. Packingham
-resided in it, kept open house and made his parlors the rendezvous of
-the young people. A lady tells “of the young officers she saw taking
-part in those brilliant life-pictures, who in a few short weeks were
-lying with rigid, upturned faces, on Mexican battle-fields.” The house
-was at one time occupied by General Gratios, whose daughter married
-Count Montholon. During the war, when Mr. Corcoran resided abroad, he
-gave his house in charge of the successive French Ministers. During that
-time Madame de Montholon came back to the former home of her father.
-Within, the house is a delight to the eyes. Its picture-gallery is one
-of the finest in America, and holds amid many other treasures of art,
-Powers’ Greek Slave. The whole house is a gallery of costly furniture
-and works of art.
-
-In this home of grace, “Maggie Beck” a Kentucky _belle_ of three seasons
-ago, who married a nephew of Mr. Corcoran, “received” her friends for
-the last time. The bride of a month, she was already the bride of death,
-and in her marriage robe, and veil and gleaming jewels, white, cold, and
-silent, she received the tears and lamentations poured upon her by
-agonized hearts. After an absence of years, hither Mr. Corcoran bore the
-dead body of his only child, and here, widowed and childless, shut
-himself in alone with his dead. The children of this daughter now make
-music in these stately halls. Age and childhood make the family life of
-Corcoran Castle.
-
-A high brick wall shuts in this garden from the city. Its inner side is
-completely hung with ivy. Immense _parterres_ of roses and flowers of
-every tint, conservatories, a _croquet_-ground, rustic summer-houses,
-fountains, a fish-pond, forest trees shading a closely-shorn lawn, all
-these make a garden perfect in seclusion and beauty in the very heart of
-the Capital.
-
-One of the most famous of suburban Washington haunts is Kalorama,
-literally like Bellevue—“beautiful view.” The ruins of Kalorama stand on
-a forest-shaded slope, a little more than a mile, perhaps, from the
-President’s house. From Twenty-first street it is approached by an
-avenue planted closely on either side by locust trees. Under their green
-arch the titled and famous of an earlier generation passed; but in our
-own memory it is associated with the pestilence-laden ambulance, for
-during the war beautiful Kalorama was a small-pox hospital.
-
-Below Kalorama, Rock Creek winds its shining thread between the hills.
-Looking up the creek, we see grassy glades, along which cattle feed, and
-a picturesque valley walled by embowering woods. Climbing a green,
-tree-shaded slope, we reach a _plateau_ from which we look down upon two
-cities, Rock Creek still winding its silvery thread between. Opposite is
-Analoston Island, beyond the Virginia shore, and Arlington House peering
-through the trees of its crowning hill.
-
-To the left lies Washington, guarded by the Capitol; before us,
-crumbling amid its guardian oaks, the ruins of Kalorama. It was built by
-Joel Barlow, once of “Columbiad” fame, in 1805. After spending several
-years abroad, where he espoused the cause of the French Republic, he
-returned to his own country and built a castle for himself overlooking
-its Capital. Before this, his “Columbiad” had been published with fine
-engravings, whose execution was superintended by Robert Fulton. On this
-poem he had spent the labor of the best years of his life. He believed
-without a doubt that it would be the national poem of the future. A copy
-of it graced every drawing-room. In what drawing-room is it visible now!
-Alas! for “Fame!”
-
-Joel Barlow and Robert Fulton were intimate friends. In 1810 Fulton
-visited Kalorama, and it is declared that some of his first ventures in
-navigation were launched upon Rock Creek. History records that Fulton
-tested his torpedoes during this visit to Washington, and persuaded
-Congress to consider his navigation schemes. Mr. Barlow went to France
-as American Minister in 1812. He was taken ill while on his way to meet
-Napoleon, who had invited the American Minister to an interview with him
-at Wilna. Mr. Barlow died at Cracow, in Poland, where he solaced his
-death-bed by dictating a poem full of withering expression of resentment
-toward Napoleon for the hopes he had disappointed.
-
-Mr. Barlow bequeathed Kalorama to his niece Mrs. Bomford. A romantic
-story is told of this lady. While with her first husband (whose name has
-deservedly perished) on the frontier, he being an officer in the United
-States Army, she was captured by Indians. For some reason known only to
-himself, her husband did not take the trouble to pursue her; but
-Lieutenant Bomford did. He organized a force of citizens and soldiers,
-and sallied forth in quest of the lady. He found her, and she rewarded
-him by marrying him after she had obtained a divorce from her
-indifferent lord.
-
-Colonel and Mrs. Bomford resided at Kalorama for many years. During
-their residence here the Decatur-Barron duel took place, and the body of
-Decatur found a temporary resting-place in the tomb of the Barlows. This
-vault is still visible at the top of a small hill near the main entrance
-to the Kalorama grounds. With its low sharp roof and its plastered
-walls, it looks like an old spring-house. It bears an inscription to the
-memory of Joel Barlow, “poet, patriot, and philosopher,” although he was
-buried, when he died, at Cracow, Poland.
-
-When Mrs. Decatur left the Decatur mansion, she retired to Kalorama. And
-years after her husband’s death she made it famous by the elegant
-entertainments which she gave there. There are gentlemen still in public
-life in Washington, who recall the elegant and costly dinners given by
-this lady at Kalorama.
-
-This beautiful historic spot is now owned by a family named Lovett, who,
-it is said, intend in time to rebuild it.
-
-Following Seventh street a mile or two beyond the city limits, we come
-to an unpretending country house, at some distance back from the road,
-surrounded by lawns, gardens and groves. It is a long, low house, before
-which runs a piazza, and behind which bubbles a famous spring. If it is
-morning, a pair of saddle-horses stand waiting their riders before the
-door. Presently they come out together, an ancient knight and lady,
-ready for a ten-mile ride on horseback. Eighty years and more have set
-their seal on the brows of each. The gentleman’s frame bears the marks
-of extreme age; it is attenuated, yet shows few signs of decrepitude.
-His skin may look like parchment, but the eyes burn with unabated fires.
-The lady is tall, straight, and stately, with dark, keen eyes, and head
-erect, as befits the mother of the Blairs. She has a son more than sixty
-years of age, and yet she seems not to have lived so many years herself.
-More than fifty years ago, this couple, by wagons and on horseback, came
-through the woods from far Kentucky to seek their fortune in the new
-capital city. The struggling village has grown into a metropolis; sons
-and daughters to the fourth generation have blessed them; they have done
-their share in the making and unmaking of presidents and men in power;
-they have received their full meed of honor as well as of blame; their
-name has grown to fame; they have long outstripped the allotted years of
-man, and here they are, ready for their eight or ten miles’ horseback
-ride this morning. This is Francis P. Blair, Senior, and his wife, and
-this their country home. Honored among suburban Washington haunts is
-“Silver Spring.”
-
-Almost any sunny day this ancient knight and lady; mounted on their two
-solid steeds, with a green bough in their hands in lieu of riding whips,
-she with a stately calash upon her head, may be seen jogging along
-Pennsylvania avenue toward the stately home of Montgomery Blair, which
-faces the War-Department. For more than two generations Mr. Blair has
-been a power in the land. He has had more or less to do with the making
-and unmaking of every president since the days of Jackson. The Nestor of
-the Washington Press, he was a powerful supporter of “old Hickory,” and
-to-day retains, undiminished, the living love now bestowed upon the
-friend so long buried in the past. Mr. Blair, leaning on his long staff,
-may often be seen wandering through the unbowered ways of Lafayette
-square, which he so well remembers as the Burns’ orchard. Here he never
-fails to gaze upon the bronze equestrian statue of his friend. Others
-may laugh at the pivoted horse, but “old Frank Blair” pronounces the
-statue to be the best likeness of Jackson now extant.
-
-With the exception of the Burns’ house, the oldest houses in the city
-are found on Capitol Hill. Here are houses whose antiquity alone make
-them remarkable amid the houses of America. For example, here is the old
-Duddington house, built by Daniel Carroll, who you may remember was so
-angry with Major L’Enfant for tearing down his first abode, in the way
-of a beloved street. The present house, built at that time, stands just
-in front of the old site. Going south-east from the Capitol, the tall
-forest trees of Duddington are soon visible. So completely do they
-screen the house, nothing is seen of it until the visitor comes to the
-large entrance gate, directly in front of the dwelling. It is a double
-house, built of red brick, with wings stretching out on either side. The
-grounds are beautiful in their very wildness, presenting all the
-attributes of a primitive forest. Outside is a spring with an ancient
-covering of brick. “This spring was once a well-known resort, on the
-Duddington farm, for the school-boys of the neighborhood, one of whom,
-an aged man now, told me how pleasantly he used to pass his noon recess
-there.”
-
-Nearly all the buildings in this part of the city can lay claim to
-antiquity. Many of them were built by Thomas Low, of brick brought from
-England. Thomas Low is an historic name in Washington. The brother of
-Lord Ellenborough, he belonged to one of the most distinguished families
-in England. He amassed a large fortune in India, at the time that Warren
-Hastings was Governor-General. He was a friend of Hastings, and warmly
-defended him. Low brought with him to this country five hundred thousand
-dollars in gold. Soon after his arrival he became acquainted with
-General Washington, who induced him to invest largely in the wilderness
-which was to be transformed into the capital of the nation. The
-investment was not profitable to Mr. Low. The high price set upon
-property caused the city to go up far in the rear of his many new
-buildings. He married Miss Custis, the granddaughter of Mrs. Washington,
-and sister of George W. Parke Custis. His matrimonial venture was not
-more satisfactory than his landed one. He parted from his wife, and at
-his death his five hundred thousand dollars had dwindled down to one
-hundred thousand. Mr. Low was so absent-minded, it is said he would
-forget his name when inquiring for letters at the post-office, and once
-locked his wife in a room, and not knowing what he had done, half a day
-passed before she obtained her liberty.
-
-There is a row of two-story brick dwellings near Duddington which were
-built by Mr. Low, in one of which he lived. These houses bear the name
-of the “Ten Buildings.” During Mr. Low’s residence there, Louis
-Phillippe, then an exile, was his guest. In one of these the first copy
-of the _National Intelligencer_ was printed, October 31, 1800. Another
-row of houses on New Jersey avenue, one block south of the Capitol, was
-also built by Thomas Low. Originally they were fashionable
-boarding-houses, and such men as Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Dallas and
-Louis Phillippe were entertained beneath their roof. They are now
-occupied by the Coast Survey. In this house the bill was drawn up and
-prepared for presentation to Congress, authorizing the establishment of
-a United States Bank. A house a little nearer to the Capitol, long
-occupied by John W. Forney, was built for the Bank of Washington, but
-never occupied for that purpose. Instead, the United States Supreme
-Court held its sessions in it for several years, and a house opposite
-was used as the Bank of Washington.
-
-Opposite the eastern front of the Capitol may be seen a block of three
-houses, which for modern elegance will bear comparison with any in
-Washington. Any one who recalls the forbidding-looking edifice which
-used to occupy this site will find it difficult to identify this elegant
-block of private dwelling-houses with the Old Capitol Prison.
-Nevertheless the walls which once enclosed Wirz, Belle Boyd, “rebels”
-and sinners of every phase and degree beside no inconsiderable number of
-perfectly innocent prisoners, now surround the luxurious drawing-rooms
-of a supreme judge, a senator, and an advocate-general. This building
-which will ever remain most memorable as the Old Capitol Prison, was
-built for the temporary accommodation of Congress in 1815. Niles,
-_Register_ of November 4, 1815 in an article entitled:—“The Capitol
-Rising from Its Ashes” thus speaks of this building:
-
- “The new building on Capitol Hill preparing for the accommodation of
- Congress, is in such a state of forwardness, that it is expected to be
- finished early in November. The spacious room for the House of
- Representatives has been finished for several weeks. The Senate-room
- has been _plaistered_ for some time.”
-
-Congress took possession of the new house, December 4, 1815. The first
-day a communication was received from the citizens who voluntarily
-erected the building for the temporary accommodation of Congress. The
-building cost $30,000; $5,000 of which had been expended on objects
-necessary for the accommodation of Congress, which would be useless when
-they vacated the house. Therefore the proprietors declared they would be
-satisfied with $5,000 in money, and a rent of $1,650 per annum with cost
-of insurance. Niles’ _Register_ went on to say:
-
- “The spot where this large and commodious building was erected was a
- garden on the fourth of July last; the bricks of which it is built
- were clay, and the timber used in its construction was growing in the
- woods on that day.”
-
-The building thus expeditiously erected, was used as the Capitol for
-several years. In front of this building, James Monroe was inaugurated
-with great brilliancy, March 4, 1817. In the winter of 1833-4, Luigi
-Persico occupied a room in this house as a studio. There in plaster
-stood the group, which now in marble occupies the south block in front
-of the main entrance to the Rotunda known as “Columbus and the Indian.”
-Says the Hon. B. B. French:
-
- “How well I remember the _artistic_ enthusiasm with which he described
- to me his conception of Columbus holding up, with his right hand, the
- new world which he had discovered!
-
- There he stands, in marble, to-day, with that same “new world,” in the
- form of a huge nine-pin ball, or bomb-shell, elevated in his right
- hand, to the vast apparent admiration or fear of the crouching squaw
- at his side! What the squaw is there for, or what she is doing, has
- never yet been satisfactorily decided!”
-
-The next mutation of this historic house was into the eminently
-Washingtonian one of a fashionable boarding-house. It was first kept by
-a Mrs. Lindenberger, afterwards by a Mr. Henry Hill, and was always a
-favorite abode of Southern Members of Congress. John C. Calhoun, while a
-Senator from South Carolina, died in this house. It was at one time
-occupied by the famous Ann Royal, who with her factotum Sally Brass used
-it as the publishing house of her feared and famous publications “The
-Huntress” and “Paul Pry.”
-
-Mrs. Royal inaugurated black-mailing journalism at an early day. She was
-the widow of a Revolutionary officer, who, reduced to the necessity of
-earning her living, chose a very malicious way of doing it. She kept
-what she called the Black Book, in which she recorded descriptions of
-the persons and characters of conspicuous residents of the city. She
-canvassed the city for subscribers to her publications, and whoever
-refused was threatened with a place in the Black Book. So fearfully and
-effectually was this threat carried out, but few had the temerity to
-refuse her requests. If such a daring mortal was found, the
-breakfast-tables of Washington were, the next morning, regaled with a
-portrayal whose impudence and audacity was only equalled by its
-shrewdness and sharpness. All who gave her money were sure of adulation,
-while those who refused it were equally sure of being defamed, without
-regard to truth.
-
-She was feared by all mankind, from the highest functionary in the
-Government to the remotest clerk in the departments. “Few refused to
-comply with her demands, and clerks, who saw her approach, would not
-disdain to seek a friendly hiding-place.” I believe she printed her
-papers with her own hands, and they were afterwards peddled about the
-town by her female man, Sally Brass.
-
-During the War of the Rebellion this building perfectly swarmed with
-prisoners. Not only soldiers from the Rebel army, and undoubted
-culprits, but also hundreds of citizens, arrested on the faintest
-suspicion, were incarcerated within its walls. Any one suspected of
-having given comfort to the enemy, of having interfered with military
-discipline, or of having defrauded the Government in the remotest way,
-was hurried off to the Old Capitol Prison. It was a small American
-Bastile, and it is well, perhaps, that its walls cannot tell all or
-aught of the oppression and outrage which transpired within them. In its
-yard stood the just gallows whereon Wirz was hung for the tortures which
-he inflicted on Union prisoners at Andersonville. Others were also
-executed here during the war.
-
-Soon after the close of the war, Mr. George T. Brown, then
-Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, bought the property and proceeded to
-transmute the Old Capitol Prison into the three elegant mansions which
-now occupy its ground.
-
-With this famous house must close my chapter on the Historic Homes and
-Haunts of Washington. To write minutely of them all would require a
-volume. Full detail is here impossible, but no one of the most famous
-has been omitted.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIX.
- MOUNT VERNON—MEMORIAL DAY—ARLINGTON.
-
-The Tomb of Washington—The Pilgrims Who Visit it—Where George and
- Martha Washington Rest—The American Mecca—The Thought of Other
- Graves—The Defenders of the Republic—Eating Boiled Eggs—A
- Butterfly Visit—The Old Mansion-House—Patriarchal Dogs—Remembering
- a Feast—The Room in which Washington Died—The Great Key of the
- Bastile—The Gift of Lafayette—The Harpsichord of Eleanor
- Custis—The _Belle_ of Mount Vernon—Moralizing—Inside the
- Mansion—Uncle Tom’s _Bouquets_—Beautiful Scenery—Memorial Day at
- Arlington—The Soldiers’ Orphans—The Grave of Forty Soldiers—The
- Sacrifice of a Widow’s Son—The Children’s Offering—The Record of
- the Brave—A National Prayer for the Dead.
-
-
-We have newer and dearer shrines, even, than the tomb of Washington;
-yet, in these soft, summer mornings, many pilgrims turn their faces
-toward Mount Vernon.
-
-Every morning a large company, including the young and the old, the
-refined and the vulgar, land at the little wharf below the home of
-Washington. Fathers and mothers come with their children and their
-lunch-baskets. Pretty girls come with venerable duennas, and young men
-come to look at them in spite of their keepers. Lovers come and go,
-maundering along the lanes, as lovers will. Relic-hunters come to break
-off twigs and pilfer pansies; newspaper people come, agog for an item;
-and, for the climax, we will believe that a few come solely to do
-reverence at the tomb of the Father of their country.
-
-Passing up a wooded lane that winds over the hill, we reached the famed
-sarcophagus, which engravings have made familiar to many eyes that have
-never beheld it. Here, on their marble couch, amid the grassy slopes and
-tutelary trees of their ancient domain, rest the bodies of George and
-Martha Washington. Full of years and full of honors they laid down, and
-their tomb has been the Mecca of this continent. It never can be other
-than it is. Who would rob it of one hallowed memory? Yet, as I looked at
-its sculptured marble, I thought of many and many a nameless grave that
-I had seen by the roadside, and on the scathed fields of Virginia,
-parched by summer’s sun, covered by winter’s snow, unturfed,
-uncared-for—the grave of the volunteer. Dear to me as this sepulchre of
-the great, is the grave of the lowliest soldier who perished for his
-country.
-
-The nation will reverence always the grave of Washington. But to this
-generation, and to the generations which shall come after, are committed
-many graves which cannot be held less dear. Let every city and every
-village in the land gather, as most precious jewels, the names of its
-dead who died for liberty. Set them in enduring marble; blazon them in
-the public places; let them greet the traveller on silent hill-tops, and
-in the peaceful vales; the names of our heroes, that we, our children,
-our children’s children, to remotest time, may never forget the
-defenders of the republic, what they suffered and what they gained.
-
-We ate boiled eggs and other good things within sight of the tomb of the
-Father of our Country—a very necessary proceeding before essaying to
-climb the hill. While we were eating, a bright blue butterfly came and
-paid us a visit. It looked just as if one of the myrtles had danced up
-from the bank before us, and was palpitating in the sunshiny air. Miss
-Butterfly was the loveliest “blue” I ever saw.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- VIEW OF “THE CITY OF THE SLAIN.”—ARLINGTON.
- The remains of over 8,000 soldiers, killed during the war, lie buried
- in this Cemetery;—the name, regiment, and date of death of each is
- painted on a wooden head-board.
-]
-
-From the tomb to the old mansion house is a pleasant walk over upland
-lawns and under sheltering trees. A few patriarchal dogs came forth to
-meet us, and that was all the welcome we received. Their tails were very
-limp, their ears very droopy, their legs very shaky, but they did their
-best to seem glad to see us, and that was more than anybody else did.
-One emaciated quadruped, I am sure, will remember to his dying hour the
-luncheon of beef and eggs of which he partook so peacefully yesterday,
-under an old tree within sight of Washington’s dining-room.
-
-I am thankful that Congress appropriated thousands of dollars to repair
-the Mount Vernon mansion. A mansion in its day, its rooms can bear no
-comparison with those of modern houses which make no pretensions. The
-dining-hall is the only one that can claim anything like stateliness or
-elegance of proportion. The parlors are the merest boxes, each
-containing one high window. The chamber in which Washington died
-commands an exquisite view, through the vistas of the grounds, down the
-Potomac. But, oh! what a cell, compared with the spacious apartments
-inhabited by the great generals of our own day. Mrs. Washington never
-occupied this room after the death of her husband. It was closed, and
-all in it kept sacred to his memory. She removed to the chamber above,
-and occupied it till her death. We went up. It is a mere garret. One
-little attic-window gives a meagre glimpse of the lovely landscape
-below. But in its best estate the room must have been very contracted,
-dreary, and without a convenience. No modern “Bridget” would be content
-to occupy for a week such a room as this in which Martha Washington
-lived and died.
-
-The home of Washington, now the home of the nation, at last is open,
-kindly and genial. Here, in the hall, in its glass case, hangs the great
-key of the Bastile, presented to Washington by Lafayette, at the
-destruction of that prison in 1789.
-
-Here what an opportunity to stand and gaze and moralize over the history
-of the brave men and beautiful women whose faces it shut into darkness!
-So thick gather the celebrated names, I must not mention one.
-
-Here, in the grand dining-room, stands the quaint old harpsichord which
-General Washington presented as a wedding gift to his adopted daughter,
-the beautiful Eleanor Custis. It was made in Cheapside, Haymarket,
-London, and old ocean tossed it over to delight the heart of the _belle_
-of Mount Vernon. Here what another fine opportunity to “reflect” over
-the broken and rusty keys that once thrilled to the touch of beauty, and
-stirred with melody in the presence of the great, and made the old halls
-ring with the music of festivals! Only my reflections, like many other
-people’s, have all come to me afterward, sitting here in my chair,
-thinking of that old harpsichord. When I looked at it, I doubt if I had
-a reflection at all. Staring at relics in the midst of a jostling crowd
-is not particularly conducive to reflection—at least not to emotion.
-Even the bedstead on which Washington died seems to lose half its
-sacredness being handled and commented on by a careless crowd.
-
-In the dining-room, we see the famous marble mantel, carved in Italy,
-and presented to General Washington by Samuel Vaugh. Its proportions are
-not grand, but its carving is exquisite, and it still retains its
-whiteness and polish.
-
-The dining-room is a noble apartment of lofty proportions, extending
-through the depth of the house, its windows on front, back and sides
-overlooking the loveliest portion of the grounds. It is a sunshiny room,
-fit for family cheer. And (reflection third) what illustrious men and
-famous women have broken bread and tasted wine within its carved and
-mouldy walls in the days that are no more!
-
-The east and west parlors, leading from the dining-room, are meagre,
-high-windowed rooms. Indeed, the whole house of the Father of his
-Country, though, doubtless, a princely mansion in its day, reminds a
-denizen of the present generation of the growth of architecture, and of
-modern convenience and elegance, quite as much as of anything else. Out
-on the veranda, where a venerable Uncle Tom drives a thrifty trade in
-the _bouquet_ line, we find the real beauty of Mount Vernon—its
-prospect. Here, looking out upon terraced lawns and forest trees, and
-down the gentlest of slopes to the wide Potomac, flecked with milky
-sails, steamboats plying its waves, and pleasure-barques drifting and
-dozing with the spring-time gales, we see one of the softest and fairest
-of landscapes. A gentle sky, the blue air goldened with daffodils and
-fragrant with hyacinths, pleasant friends by my side. Thus I think of
-Mount Vernon.
-
-Last Saturday was Memorial Day. With banners and bands, music and speech
-under the softest of May skies, and in its serenest airs tens of
-thousands of our soldiers’ graves were decorated with flowers. Most
-lovely was Arlington that day! No words could have been more eloquently
-fitting than those which were spoken; no music tenderer, nor fuller of
-precious memories, nor sweeter with suggestions of Heaven, than that
-sung under those patriarchal trees by fifty orphan children. And no
-sight could have been more touching than when these soldiers’ orphans
-laid their flower-wreaths down upon ten thousand soldiers’ graves. Yet
-the magnetism of the multitude was there. The tide followed the banners
-and the bands, the blooming maidens, the eloquent speech.
-
-Miles out Seventh street, beyond Fort Stevens, there is a little
-cemetery where forty soldiers lie alone, who fell in defence of
-Washington. One of these was a poor widow’s son. She had three; and this
-was the last that she gave to her country. She, a poor widow, living far
-in northern Vermont, has never even seen the graves of her three soldier
-sons, whom she gave up, one by one, as they came to man’s estate; and
-who went forth from her love to return to it living no more.
-
-To this little grave-yard on Seventh street one woman went alone with
-her children, carrying forty wreaths of May’s loveliest flowers, and
-laid one on every grave. Forty mother’s sons slept under the green turf;
-and one mother, in her large love, remembered and consecrated them all.
-She chose these because, with more than thirty thousand others in the
-larger cemeteries to be decorated, she feared the forty, in their
-isolation, might be forgotten. No others followed her; and this mother,
-alone with her children, scattering flowers in the silence of love upon
-those unremembered graves, some way wears a halo which does not shine
-about the multitude.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE TOMB OF “THE UNKNOWN.”—ARLINGTON.
- Erected by the Government to the memory of Unknown Soldiers killed
- during the War.
-]
-
-We look on Arlington through softest airs. How beautiful it is! how sad
-it is! how holy! Again the tender spring grasses have crept over its
-sixteen thousand graves. The innocents, the violets of the woods, are
-blooming over the heads of our brave. In the rear of the house a granite
-obelisk has been raised to the two thousand who sleep in one grave. Four
-cannon point from its summit, and on its face it bears this
-inscription:—
-
- “Beneath this stone repose the bones of two thousand one hundred and
- eleven unknown soldiers, gathered after the war from the fields of
- Bull Run, and the route to the Rappahannock. Their bodies could not be
- identified, but their names and deaths are recorded in the archives of
- their country, and its grateful citizens honor them as their noble
- army of martyrs. May they rest in peace.”
-
-The rooms and conservatories of the house are filled with luxurious
-plants, soon to be set out on the graves of this cemetery. Beauty and
-silence reign through this domain of the dead. There is a hush in the
-air, and a hush in the heart, as you walk through it, reading its names,
-pausing by the graves of its “unknown,” thinking of the past. Far as the
-sight reaches, stretch the long columns of immortal dead. The beauty of
-their sleeping-place, the reverent care covering it everywhere, tells
-how dear to the Nation’s heart is the dust of its heroes, how sacred the
-spot where they lie. In this let us not forget the still higher love
-which we owe them; let us attest it by a deeper devotion to the
-principles for which they died.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER L.
- THE LIFE AND CAREER OF JAMES A. GARFIELD, THE MARTYRED PRESIDENT.
-
-The National Republican Convention of 1880—Nomination of James A.
- Garfield as President Hayes’s Successor—The History of His Life—His
- Humble Home—Death of His Father—Hardships and Privations of Pioneer
- Life—Struggles of His Mother to Support the Family—Splitting Fence
- Rails with her own Hands—The Future President’s Early School
- Days—Working as a Carpenter—Chopping Wood for a Living—Leaving
- Home—Life as a Canal Boat Boy—Narrow Escapes—Beginning His Education
- in Earnest—School Life at Chester—How He Paid His Own Way—First
- Meeting with his Future Wife—Early Religious Experience—Enters
- Williams College—Professor and President—His First Appearance in
- Politics—His Brilliant Military Record—His Services at Shiloh,
- Corinth, and Chickamauga—His Congressional Career—Republican Leader
- of the House of Representatives—He is Elected to the United States
- Senate—His Appearance as the Leader of the Sherman Forces at the
- Chicago Convention—He is Himself Nominated amid the Wildest
- Enthusiasm—An Exciting Campaign—His Triumphant Election.
-
-
-The occupants of the White House, from March, 1877, to March, 1881, were
-Rutherford B. and Lucy Webb Hayes, of Ohio. Mr. Hayes’s nomination by
-the Republican National Convention, at Cincinnati, was a surprise to his
-party and the country, and his election was for a long time in doubt.
-Both the Republicans and the Democrats claimed the electoral votes of
-Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana, and at one time civil war seemed
-a not remote possibility, so intense was the partisan excitement, and so
-inflammable the state of the public mind. But better and wiser counsels
-prevailed, and by the efforts of leading men of both parties an
-electoral commission was established to which all doubtful matters were
-referred, and Mr. Hayes was declared elected by a majority of one
-electoral vote over Samuel J. Tilden, of New York. Many of Mr. Tilden’s
-friends and party supporters, and some of those who had opposed his
-election, questioned the legality of Mr. Hayes’s election, and contended
-that Mr. Tilden should have had the position. Mr. Hayes’s administration
-was generally quiet and uneventful, save that it marked the resumption
-of specie payments, and witnessed the transition from almost
-unprecedented business depression and industrial inactivity to a period
-of almost unexampled industrial activity and business prosperity. Mrs.
-Hayes was perhaps the most popular President’s wife who had ever
-occupied the White House, and more of the people of the United States
-saw the inside of the Executive Mansion during her residence there than
-during any previous administration, or perhaps all of them combined. No
-one of the many excursion parties that visited Washington while Mrs.
-Hayes was there was allowed to go away without seeing the “blue room,”
-the “red room,” and the famous White House conservatory, if any wish to
-that effect was expressed; and besides opening the White House freely to
-the people, Mrs. Hayes received her multitude of visitors no less
-gracefully and cordially than if they had been neighbors who had
-“dropped in” of an afternoon or evening.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- JAMES A. GARFIELD. THE MARTYRED PRESIDENT.
- (Engraved from a photograph, expressly for this work.)
-]
-
-The National Republican Convention, which met at Chicago, in 1880, to
-select a candidate to succeed Mr. Hayes, nominated James Abram Garfield.
-That Ohio should carry off the first honor of the Republican party for
-two successive Presidential terms was an extraordinary circumstance, but
-Gen. Garfield’s nomination, while it pleased Ohio men, electrified the
-country, and awoke great enthusiasm.
-
-James Abram Garfield was born in a log cabin at Orange, Ohio, November
-19, 1831. His father, Abram Garfield, was born in New York from
-Massachusetts ancestry, the founder of the Garfield family in the United
-States, Edward, having emigrated from England in 1736, and settled at
-Watertown, Mass. Two of Edward Garfield’s sons, Abraham and Solomon,
-took part in the revolutionary war, and when that war was over Solomon
-left New England, and fixed his residence in Otsego county, New York. It
-was there that Abram Garfield was born, and after his marriage with
-Eliza Ballou, a New Hampshire girl, and a connection of Hosea Ballou,
-one of the great apostles of Universalism in this country, the young
-couple went to Ohio and wrested a farm from the primeval forest.
-
-The dwelling of the Garfields was built after the standard pattern of
-the houses of poor Ohio farmers in that day. Its walls were of logs, its
-roof was of shingles split with an axe, and its floor of rude thick
-planking split out of tree-trunks with a wedge and maul. It had only one
-room, at one end of which was the big cavernous chimney, where the
-cooking was done, and at the other a bed. The younger children slept in
-a trundle-bed, which was pushed under the bedstead of their parents in
-the daytime to get it out of the way, for there was no room to spare;
-the older ones climbed a ladder to the loft under the steep roof.
-
-The father worked hard early and late to clear his land and plant and
-gather his crops. No man in all the region around could wield an axe
-like him. Fenced fields soon took the place of the forest; an orchard
-was planted, a barn built, and the family was full of hope for the
-future when death removed its strong support. Just before he died,
-pointing to his children, he said to his wife: “Eliza, I have planted
-four saplings in these woods. I leave them to your care.” He was buried
-in a corner of a wheat-field on his farm. James, the baby, was eighteen
-months old at the time.
-
-The eldest of Mrs. Garfield’s four children was a daughter, aged eleven;
-then came Thomas, aged nine; then a daughter of seven, and the baby boy
-of two summers. A part of the farm was sold to pay off the debt, and
-Mrs. Garfield and Thomas cultivated the rest, and kept the family
-together. Mrs. Garfield split rails for fencing with her own hands,
-slight and delicate woman though she was. Some of her neighbors
-undertook to give her a “bee” to help her get out rails for fencing, but
-went home when she declined to treat them with rum, and the brave little
-woman split her own rails. Mrs. Garfield’s anxiety that her children,
-and especially James, should have educational advantages was so great
-that the first school house in that region was built on land which she
-gave for that purpose.
-
-There, at the age of three, James began his life of study, and that he
-was enabled to pursue his studies after he reached the age when he could
-work was largely due to the self-denial of his mother and his brother
-Thomas. The first pair of shoes which the little fellow had were bought
-with money which Thomas had earned, and it was the pleasure of this
-elder brother, who is now living near Grand Rapids, Mich., to do
-everything in his power to help James along. For that he gave up his own
-desire for an education, and he always rejoiced in his brother’s
-advancement and renown as though it had been his own.
-
-James was a precocious boy, both physically and mentally. At four, he
-received at the district school the prize of a New Testament as the best
-reader in the primary class. At eight he had read all the books
-contained in the little log farm-house, and began to borrow from the
-neighbors such works as “Robinson Crusoe,” Josephus’s “History and Wars
-of the Jews,” Goodrich’s “United States,” and Pollock’s “Course of
-Time.” These were read and re-read, until he could relate whole chapters
-from memory. At the district school James was known as a fighting boy.
-He found that the larger boys were disposed to insult and abuse a little
-fellow who had no father or big brother to protect him, and he resented
-such imposition with all the force of a sensitive nature backed by a hot
-temper, great physical courage, and a strength unusual for his age. Many
-stories are told of the pluck shown in his encounters with the rough
-country lads in defence of his boyish rights and honor. They say he
-never began a fight and never cherished malice, but when enraged by
-taunts or insults would attack boys of twice his size with the fury and
-tenacity of a bull-dog. When he was twelve years old his brother
-returned from Michigan, where he had been employed by a farmer to make
-clearings, with money enough to build a frame house for his mother.
-James assisted him, and did so well that one of the joiners advised him
-to follow carpentering as a trade. During the next two years he worked
-regularly as a carpenter, going to school only at intervals, but
-studying diligently in spare hours at home.
-
-He was as ready to work as he was to study or defend himself. He often
-got employment in the haying and harvesting season from the farmers of
-Orange. When he was sixteen he walked ten miles to Aurora, in company
-with a boy older than himself, looking for work. They offered their
-services to a farmer who had a good deal of hay to cut. “What wages do
-you expect?” asked the man. “Man’s wages—a dollar a day,” replied young
-Garfield. The farmer thought they were not old enough to earn full
-wages. “Then let us mow that field by the acre,” said the young man. The
-farmer agreed; the customary price per acre was 50 cents. By four
-o’clock in the afternoon the hay was down and the boys earned a dollar
-apiece. Then the farmer engaged them for a fortnight. James’s first
-wages were earned from a merchant who had an ashery where he leached
-ashes and made black salts, which were shipped by lake and canal to New
-York. He got $9 a month and his board, and stuck to the business for two
-months, at the end of which his hair below his cap was bleached and
-colored by the fumes until it assumed a lively red hue. About that time
-he took a job of cutting 100 cords of oak wood at 50 cents a cord, and
-put up his two cords a day without any trouble.
-
-Like most active and restless boys he wanted to become a sailor, and
-went to Cleveland to ship on a lake schooner. The first captain to whom
-he applied greeted him with such a torrent of profanity that he turned
-about to go home, but afterwards accepted an offer from his cousin, Amos
-Setcher, to drive horses on the canal boat tow path for “$10 a month and
-found,” a dazzling offer in those days. A few months of association with
-the rough canal boatmen dispelled much of the romance with which his
-fancy had invested an aquatic life, and after falling into the canal no
-less than 14 times, the last time barely escaping with his life, he made
-up his mind that Providence might have something better in store for him
-than driving a canal boat. His brief canal experience was followed by a
-long fit of sickness, and after his recovery he took his savings, and
-with some assistance from his brother Thomas, began his education in
-earnest.
-
-Accompanied by a cousin and another young man from the neighborhood, and
-supplied by his mother with a few pots, frying pans and dinner plates,
-he set out for Chester, where the academy was located. The three young
-men rented a room in an old, unpainted building near the academy, and,
-with their cooking utensils, a few dilapidated chairs, loaned by a
-kindly neighbor, and some straw ticks, which they spread upon the floor
-to sleep on, they set up housekeeping—for they were too poor to pay
-board as well as tuition. Garfield paid his own way by taking odd jobs
-from carpenters Saturdays and evenings. During the summer he made enough
-by chopping wood to pay his board for the next academy term, the price
-for his board, washing, and lodging being $1.06 a week.
-
-He now thought himself competent to teach a country school, but in two
-days’ tramping through Cuyahoga county failed to find employment. Some
-schools had already engaged teachers, and where there was still a
-vacancy the trustees thought him too young. He returned home completely
-discouraged and greatly humiliated by the rebuffs he had met with. He
-made a resolution that he would never again ask for a position of any
-sort, and the resolution was kept, for every public place he has since
-had has come to him unsought.
-
-Next morning, while still in the depths of despondency, he heard a man
-call to his mother from the road, “Widow Gaffield” (a local corruption
-of the name Garfield), “where’s your boy Jim? I wonder if he wouldn’t
-like to teach our school at the Ledge.” James went out and found a
-neighbor from a district a mile away, where the school had been broken
-up for two winters by the rowdyism of the big boys. He said he would
-like to try the school, but before deciding must consult his uncle, Amos
-Boynton. That evening there was a family council. Uncle Amos pondered
-over the matter, and finally said, “You go and try it. You will go into
-that school as the boy, ‘Jim Gaffield,’ see that you come out as Mr.
-Garfield, the school-master.” The young man mastered the school, after a
-hard tussle in the school-room with the bully of the district, who
-resented a flogging and tried to brain the teacher with a billet of
-wood. His wages were $12 a month and board, and he “boarded around” in
-the families of the pupils.
-
-In the fall of this term he first met Lucretia Rudolph, whom the whole
-world now honors as Mrs. Garfield. English grammar, natural philosophy,
-arithmetic and algebra were his principal studies, and he soon had
-sufficient knowledge of them to teach in a district school. For three
-years he continued his work at the academy, at the school, and in the
-carpenters’ shops in autumn and winter, and in the woods in the summer,
-thus managing not only to pay his expenses at the academy, but to save
-something toward the expenses of his college education. It was while he
-was teaching during his academy life that he became personally
-interested in religion and joined the Christian Disciples, or
-Campbellites as they are often called from their founder. Of this
-denomination he was ever after a consistent and active member. In the
-fall of 1851 he went to Hiram and asked of the trustees of the
-institution there the privilege of making the fires and sweeping to pay
-a portion of his expenses. He soon became a teacher, and in 1854, was
-ready to enter college in advance and had $350 saved toward meeting his
-expenses. His decided anti-slavery opinions led him to seek admission to
-some New England college, and a friendly reply from President Mark
-Hopkins, of Williams College, to a letter of inquiry, secured for
-Williams her most illustrious alumnus. He graduated at Williams in 1856,
-returned to Hiram as professor of Greek and Latin, and two years later
-was married and elected president of Hiram College.
-
-Up to 1856 Mr. Garfield had taken but little interest in public affairs,
-but with the Kansas-Nebraska legislation his political pulses began to
-stir. He then became an active Republican, and entered into politics
-with the same ardor that characterized his efforts as an educator. His
-first political speech was made at Williamstown in 1856, just before he
-left college, in behalf of Fremont, the first Republican candidate for
-the Presidency. His first vote was cast at the Presidential election
-that fall. In 1859 he was elected by a large majority to the Senate of
-Ohio from the counties of Portage and Summit, and though yet scarcely
-28, at once took high rank as a man unusually well informed on the
-subjects of legislation, and effective and powerful in debate. His most
-intimate friend in the Senate, Jacob D. Cox, afterward became a
-Major-General, Governor of the State, and Secretary of the Interior.
-Garfield pushed his law studies forward, and early in the winter of 1860
-was admitted to the bar of the supreme court. He was serving in the
-State Senate when the war broke out, and when the President’s call for
-75,000 men was read in the chamber, amidst the tumultuous acclamations
-of the assemblage, he moved that 20,000 troops and $3,000,000 at once be
-voted as the quota of the State. When the time came for appointing the
-officers for the Ohio troops, Gov. Dennison offered him command of the
-Forty-Second Infantry, but he modestly declined, on account of his lack
-of military experience, and, resigning the Presidency of Hiram College,
-he accepted a position as Lieutenant-Colonel. A few weeks later, when
-the Forty-Second was organized, he yielded to the universal desire of
-its officers, and accepted the Colonelcy. His first military duty was
-the conduct of an expedition against Humphrey Marshall, in Eastern
-Kentucky, by which he won a Brigadier-Generalship. He was at Shiloh, at
-Corinth, and at Chickamauga, where he wrote every order but one, and for
-his gallant bravery at Chickamauga he was made a Major-General. While he
-was in camp, after the battle of Shiloh, a fugitive slave took refuge
-with the Union soldiers. A few moments later the owner rode up and
-demanded his property. Gen. Garfield was not present, and the
-slaveholder passed on to the division commander, who ordered Garfield,
-by written order, to deliver the fugitive. Garfield answered by simply
-endorsing on the order: “I respectfully but positively decline to allow
-my command to search for or deliver up any fugitive slaves. I conceive
-that they are here for quite another purpose.” This position was
-sustained by a general order subsequently issued by the war department.
-
-In 1862 Ohio Republicans of the 19th Ohio District elected Gen. Garfield
-to succeed Joshua R. Giddings in the House of Representatives. At
-President Lincoln’s suggestion he reluctantly resigned his commission in
-December, 1863, to enter Congress, where he was the youngest member.
-From that time until 1880 he represented his district in the House, and
-came to be the Republican leader of that body and the party candidate
-for Speaker. It is impossible to detail here his congressional services,
-but he did most faithful and valuable work as chairman of the important
-committees on military affairs, banking and currency, and
-appropriations. In the winter of 1880 he was elected U. S. Senator to
-succeed Allen G. Thurman, receiving the vote of every Republican member
-of the Ohio Legislature in the nominating caucus, an honor never before
-accorded to any politician in the Buckeye State. Gen. Garfield went to
-the Chicago convention as the leader of the Ohio delegation, and when
-the nominations were made he presented the name of John Sherman,
-Secretary of the Treasury, in a most eloquent speech.
-
-When the balloting began, a single delegate from Pennsylvania voted for
-Garfield. No attention was paid to this vote, which was thought to be a
-mere eccentricity on the part of the man who cast it. Later on a second
-Pennsylvania delegate joined the solitary Garfield man. So the balloting
-continued, the fight being between Grant, Blaine, and Sherman, with
-Washburne, Edmunds, and Windom in the field.
-
-Some unsuccessful efforts were made on the second day’s voting to rally
-on Edmunds and Washburne. Finally, on the thirty-fourth ballot, the
-Wisconsin men determined to make an effort in an entirely new direction
-to break the deadlock. They threw their seventeen votes for Garfield.
-
-General Garfield sprang to his feet and protested against this
-proceeding, making the point of order that nobody had a right to vote
-for any member of the Convention without his consent, and that consent,
-he said, “I refuse to give.” The chairman declared that the point of
-order was not well taken, and ordered the Wisconsin vote to be counted.
-On the next ballot nearly the whole Indiana delegation swung over to
-Garfield, and a few scattering votes were changed to him from other
-States, making a total of fifty votes cast for him in all. Now it became
-plain that, by a happy inspiration, a way out of the difficulty had been
-found. On the thirty-sixth ballot, State after State swung over to
-Garfield amid intense excitement, and Gen. Garfield was finally
-nominated on the tenth day of the convention, in a whirlwind of
-enthusiasm. His election followed by a large majority, the Electoral
-College standing 214 for Gen. Garfield to 155 for Gen. Hancock.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LI.
- THE HISTORY OF THE ASSASSINATION AND DEATH OF PRESIDENT
- JAMES A. GARFIELD—THE GREAT
- TRAGEDY OF THE AGE.
-
-Inauguration of President Garfield—Kissing His Venerable Mother—Chief
- Magistrate of Fifty Million People—Illness of Mrs. President
- Garfield—Tender Solicitude of the President for the Welfare of His
- Wife—She goes to Long Branch—The President’s Plans to Meet Her—His
- Arrival at the Depot of the Baltimore and Potomac R. R. at
- Washington—His Buoyant Spirits—Joyous Anticipation of Meeting His
- Wife—The Assassin Lying in Wait—The Fatal Shot—Tremendous
- Excitement—The Wounded President—His Assassin, Charles J.
- Guiteau—Who He is—His Infamous Appearance and Character—His Cool
- Deliberation—His Capture and Imprisonment—A Thrill of Horror
- Throughout the Country—Removal of the President to the White
- House—Arrival of Mrs. Garfield—Her Courage and Devotion—The Fight
- for Life—Anxious Days—Removal of the Wounded President to Long
- Branch—A Remarkable Ride—Great Anxiety throughout the
- Country—Fighting Death—Slowly Sinking—After Eighty Days of
- Unparalleled Suffering the President Breathes His Last—Grief and
- Gloom throughout the Land—The Whole Civilized World in
- Tears—Unprecedented Funeral and Memorial Honors—His Burial at
- Cleveland—Attendance of Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand People—His
- Life and Character Reviewed.
-
-
-No President was ever inaugurated under happier and more favorable
-auspices than was President Garfield. From the day that the electric
-wires flashed over the country the unexpected news of his nomination up
-to his inauguration, his popularity had steadily increased. Of the
-hundreds of speeches which he was called upon to make under all possible
-circumstances during the campaign and after his election, every one was
-appropriate to the occasion, and gave a new revelation of his
-versatility and capability. His first act after taking the oath of
-office at Washington, March 4, was to turn and kiss his venerable
-mother, who had lived to see her “baby” inaugurated as chief magistrate
-of a nation of 50,000,000 people. His inaugural message was eloquent,
-patriotic, and courageous, and was cordially indorsed. The people
-everywhere felt that it was one of their own number whom they had placed
-in the White House, and they knew that he would not forget them, but
-would sympathize with their toils and trials. Everything went on
-smoothly until the President’s appointment of William H. Robertson to
-the New York collectorship antagonized Senator Conkling, who endeavored
-to have the nomination withdrawn. President Garfield adhered to his
-nomination, and Senator Conkling and his colleague, Mr. Pratt, resigned.
-The Senate then confirmed Mr. Robertson’s nomination without opposition,
-and the President’s quiet and dignified bearing throughout the whole
-contest rather strengthened him than otherwise with the country at
-large, though many politicians of his own party regarded the alienation
-of Mr. Conkling as something that had better been avoided than
-precipitated.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MRS. JAMES A. GARFIELD.
- (Engraved from a photograph, expressly for this work.)
-]
-
-Very early in President Garfield’s administration Mrs. Garfield was
-prostrated by illness, the result of overwork and anxiety, and for a
-time her life was despaired of. The social demands made upon her during
-the campaign and after the election at their Ohio home were continuous
-and exacting, and she went to the White House weary and worn.
-
-Mrs. Garfield is a lady of refinement, devoted to her family and averse
-to display, although thoroughly at home in the best society. Her home
-life and quiet has always been more pleasure to her than the attractions
-of fashionable society. But from the nomination of General Garfield
-until he left his delightful home for the last time there was no quiet
-at Mentor. The quiet country house was turned at once into a hotel,
-crowded with political workers of aspirants for office from morning to
-night, all of whom had to be courteously received while many had to be
-entertained with meals and lodgings.
-
-An intimate friend of General Garfield, who assisted him during the
-campaign, asserts that during a large portion of the time Mrs. Garfield
-and “Mother” Garfield were compelled to dine or lunch from forty to
-sixty persons every day, while the children were sent away at night to
-make room for the guests who had to be entertained. Many of these were
-persons without claims of any kind upon such hospitality except that
-they were engaged in political work.
-
-Then came the excitement incident to the removal to the White house, the
-inauguration, and the daily necessity of giving receptions for the
-thousands of sight-seers and office-seekers. The break-down came at
-last, and for weeks the President’s wife was prostrated with severe
-illness, her life for a time hanging by a thread.
-
-As soon as she was able to bear the journey, the President took her from
-Washington to Long Branch, and, when her condition warranted, returned
-to Washington to prepare for a trip through the Eastern States, the
-central object of which was attendance upon the exercises of
-commencement week at Williams College, where the members of his class
-were to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their graduation. Mrs.
-Garfield’s rapidly improving health, the prospect of a week’s recreation
-from public duties, and the anticipation of renewing the pleasant
-associations of college life, all combined to give him great buoyancy of
-spirits. He was to be accompanied from Washington by several members of
-the Cabinet and their wives, was to meet Mrs. Garfield at Jersey City,
-and arrangements had been made at the places included in his tour for
-most cordial and hearty receptions.
-
-Saturday, July 2, had been fixed upon for leaving Washington, and on the
-morning of that day the President and those of the party who were in
-Washington drove to the depot to take the special train which was to
-convey them to Jersey City, where Mrs. Garfield was to join them. The
-President walked into the waiting-room of the depot, arm-in-arm with
-Secretary Blaine, toward the door leading to the train, when a man, who
-had been lounging about the room, stepped forward and fired two shots at
-the President from behind, one taking effect in the lower portion of the
-body, the other inflicting a wound in the arm. The wounded man sank to
-the floor, and was surrounded by an anxious and excited crowd. As soon
-as possible he was removed to the railroad office in the building and
-surgical aid summoned, and after the preliminary treatment of his
-injuries he was taken to the White House, where his long and patient
-suffering has become matter of history. The assassin was speedily
-captured and conveyed to prison, where he was strongly guarded, as
-threats of summary punishment were freely made by the angry and
-horrified populace. His name was ascertained to be Charles J. Guiteau, a
-man of notoriously bad reputation and ill-balanced mind, although he
-possessed a certain amount of intelligence and shrewdness. He had long
-been an applicant for office, and had greatly annoyed the President and
-other officials by the persistence and impudence of his demands. Neither
-then nor afterwards did the miserable assassin express any regret over
-his murderous deed, the only sorrow which he expressed being that he did
-not kill the President instantly, as he had hoped and intended. His
-plans had all been made with cool deliberation, and his villainy stands
-out without a parallel in history.
-
-It is impossible to express in words the thrill of horror which the
-country, and indeed the whole world, experienced as the news was flashed
-abroad that the President had been shot. From that moment until the time
-when his wasted form was carried to its burial on the beautiful shore of
-Lake Erie, there were no distinctions of party and no fractional
-dissensions in the United States. Everything was forgotten and hushed in
-the absorbing hope and agonizing prayer that the President might recover
-and live to complete the administration which had been so auspiciously
-begun. With varying hopes and fears, the whole world watched at the
-President’s bedside, and eagerly devoured every word of information sent
-out from the sick room by the physicians and attendants. Mrs. Garfield,
-rudely awakened on the day of the assassination from her dream of
-recreation with her husband by the touchingly thoughtful message
-dictated by the President, that he was hurt, he knew not how badly, and
-sent her his love, and wished her to come to him at once, sped from Long
-Branch to Washington as fast as steam could carry her, and, invalid
-though she was, bravely took her place by her husband’s side, and
-comforted and cheered him during his long and weary fight for life. How
-grandly she rose to the occasion, how tenderly she endured the weary
-weeks, always wearing a cheerful face, while her heart was breaking with
-its cruel load, the whole world knows. Her heroic devotion to her
-husband grandly typified the loyal and self-sacrificing spirit of
-wifehood, which finds nowhere more conspicuous illustration than in our
-American homes, and when one of the New York merchant princes proposed
-the raising of a fund to testify the Nation’s appreciation of Mrs.
-Garfield’s quiet heroism, money flowed in from every quarter until over
-$300,000 had been subscribed.
-
-July and August slowly wore away, the hopes aroused by one days’
-favorable indications being dashed by the appearance of some new
-complication, or the development of some alarming symptom, and early in
-September the physicians were importuned by the President to take him
-away from Washington. He wanted most of all to go to his Ohio home, but
-being told that was impossible his next thought was Long Branch, where
-he could see the ocean and breathe its life-giving air. The journey was
-undertaken, and so complete were the arrangements and appliances for his
-comfort that he endured the railroad ride of 250 miles with apparent
-advantage, rather than discomfort. Weak as he was he enjoyed the ride,
-and at one time said to Mrs. Garfield, “Well, Crete (his pet name for
-Lucretia) this is a great ride, isn’t it.” It certainly was a great
-ride, and the whole country stood with bated breath, watching the
-telegraphic reports of the progress of the swift-moving train. Quartered
-at Long Branch in a luxurious cottage tendered by a British subject, Mr.
-Francklyn, of New York, the cool sea-breezes for a time seemed to send
-life into his blood, and once or twice after his arrival he, at his own
-request, was permitted to recline in an easy position by the window
-where he could look out upon the ocean. One day while Mrs. Garfield was
-in the adjoining room, love, hope, and gratitude filling her heart, she
-sang the beautiful hymn commencing—
-
- “Guide me, O thou Great Jehovah!”
-
-As the soft and plaintive notes floated into the sick chamber the
-President turned his eyes upon Dr. Bliss and asked:
-
-“Is that Crete?”
-
-“Yes,” replied the Doctor, “it is Mrs. Garfield.”
-
-“Quick, open the door a little,” anxiously responded the sick man.
-
-Dr. Bliss opened the door, and after listening a few moments Mr.
-Garfield exclaimed, as the large tears coursed down his sunken cheeks:
-
-“Glorious, Bliss! isn’t it?”
-
-But the hopes that were awakened were illusive and short-lived, and at
-10.35, Monday evening, September 19, on the anniversary of the battle of
-Chickamauga, in which he won great distinction for personal heroism and
-cool, clear-headed generalship, the earthly life of James Abram Garfield
-was ended.
-
-The sad event was announced in many of the principal cities by the
-tolling of the bells at midnight, and never did the death of a man cause
-such general lamentation and inspire such a universal outburst of public
-and private grief. Dispatches of condolence and sympathy were sent to
-Mrs. Garfield and the State Department from every government in the old
-world, and Queen Victoria, mindful of that dark hour when the noble
-Prince Consort was taken from her side, sent touching messages of
-womanly sympathy, and directed her ambassador at Washington to lay a
-rich and costly floral offering upon the coffin of the dead President.
-After funeral services at Long Branch the remains were borne back to
-Washington over the same route which the President traversed on his way
-to the sea, and after imposing funeral ceremonies in the Capitol
-building the cortege once more pursued its mournful way to Cleveland,
-where, on Monday, September 26, 250,000 people from all parts of the
-country participated in the final obsequies. That day was also observed
-throughout the United States, and in England and other countries as
-well, as a general memorial day, and was marked by the total suspension
-of ordinary business and the holding of public services in all the
-cities and towns. These observances in this country were invited by
-President Arthur and the State executives, but in truth no official
-summons was needed to stimulate every possible tribute of respect. The
-whole country was in mourning, and, as it was when the Prince of Orange
-died, “the little children cried in the streets.”
-
-President Garfield was large-framed, large-brained, and large-hearted.
-He was six feet in height and was a splendid picture of a man. His
-personal character and habits were clean and pure, and his home life at
-Mentor or Washington was simply delightful. No husband and wife ever
-lived happier together than President and Mrs. Garfield, and no man who
-honored his mother as did President Garfield could fail to be idolized
-by his children. Five of his seven children survived him, two of whom,
-Harry and James A., entered Williams College as freshmen during their
-father’s illness.
-
-President Garfield was one of the closest students this country has ever
-known. No man at Washington ever made so much use of the vast literary
-treasures of the Congressional library as he, and when he was tired and
-worn by committee and legislative work, he used to find recreation in
-general literary study. At the close of a long and busy session of
-Congress, a caller found him surrounded with every edition of the Latin
-poet, Horace, which he could find in the library, and he was hard at
-work “resting himself,” as he called it. It has been well said, since
-his death, by one of our well-known scholars and public men: “The future
-historian will declare Garfield the most thorough student of political
-problems in the Presidential chair since John Quincy Adams; the man of
-most scholarly breadth in statesmanship since James Madison; the most
-eloquent parliamentarian since John Adams. His had been a life, a
-career, a character which would have satisfied the highest hopes of
-Washington and Jefferson for their successors in the chief magistracy.”
-
-In a word, James A. Garfield was a man physically, intellectually, and
-morally who was an honor to his country and to his race, and no more
-imperishable name will ever adorn our country’s annals.
-
-THE END.
-
-(Whole number of pages with illustrations, 705.)
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-The Table of Contents refers the reader to p. 92 for Chapter IX. The
-chapter begins on p. 93 and the Table was amended.
-
-President Fillmore’s name was spelled with a single ‘l’ in nearly all
-appearances.
-
-On p. 298, the author provides a list of Secretaries of the Treasury
-which mis-names Walter Forward (as Howard) and George Bibb (as Beble).
-The mistakes are retained but noted. The name of the last
-Postmaster-General appointed by Washington was also corrupted being
-Joseph Habersham, rather than Haloshan (p. 395).
-
-Some compound words are hyphenated inconsistently. When the hyphenation
-occurs on a line break, the hyphen is removed unless there is clear
-evidence that it should be retained.
-
-Other errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected,
-and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the
-original.
-
- vii.32 “Poor Hallet[t]” and His Plan Removed.
-
- viii.22 Bust of Koscius[c/k]o Replaced.
-
- x.36 A Well-Regulated [A ]Lady Removed.
-
- xv.45 “She’ll do it _Cheaper[]_” Added.
-
- xx.25 The Tra[d/g]edy of the Decatur House Replaced.
-
- 21.27 but as a Capital he never entered it[.] Added.
-
- 23.11 Rhode Island, Newport; Maryland, An[n]apolis; Inserted.
-
- 27.22 in the State of Pennsylvania.[”] Added.
-
- 74.9 of a suddenly growing city[.] Added.
-
- 143.6 every Vice[ /-]President who reigned in the Replaced.
- Senate
-
- 147.25 The gown worn by Judge Mc[C/L]lean still hangs Replaced.
-
- 109.9 Bust of Koscius[c/k]o Replaced.
-
- 123.2 where we witness a _teté-a-teté>_ _sic>_
- tête-à-tête
-
- 157.19 to repeat the _Unter de[r/n] Lindens_ Replaced.
-
- 190.5 he is a poet after all.[”] Added.
-
- 203.6 Mr. John [O/A]gg’s Little “Poem” Replaced.
-
- 243.17 “Bare-necked Dowagers[”] Added.
-
- 256.11 [“]The Census of Spittoons” Added.
-
- 256.13 “More Than Shak[e]speare’s Women” Inserted.
-
- 273.18 The President looks decid[ed]ly cooler Inserted.
-
- 278.18 A Protest again[s]t “Shams” Inserted.
-
- 298.30 Walter [Howard], of Pennsylvania; _sic_
- Forward
-
- 298.31 George M. [Beble], of Kentucky _sic_> Bibb
-
- 302.1 to succeed Vice[ /-]President Henry Wilson Replaced.
-
- 334.13 Such is its acknowle[d]ged value Inserted.
-
- 364.25 in the Dead[ /-]Letter Office Replaced.
-
- 365.13 for an entire State,[”] Removed.
-
- 381.1 Yet there was scar[c]ely a Member Inserted.
-
- 389.26 As early as the year [1792] _sic_ 1692
-
- 393.32 This experiment brought him in debt £9[0]0 Unclear.
-
- 394.23 at a salary of $100 per ann[n/u]m Inverted.
-
- 395.18 Joseph [Haloshan/Habersham] Replaced.
-
- 405.22 amounting to $33,658,740[,/.]27 Replaced.
-
- 406.3 any sum over $5 is sent by money[ /-]order Replaced.
-
- 452.12 [“]On the other side Added.
-
- 428.21 within their respective districts[.] Restored.
-
- 486.16 Fort Conch[a/o], Texas Replaced.
-
- 494.5 for its especial service at Al[la]toona, Ga. Inserted.
-
- 558.6 on the river[-]side of the old Burns cottage Probable.
-
- 502.23 the central office at Washington.[”] Added.
-
- 568.23 and silver shoes.[”] Removed.
-
- 575.1 stands jus[t] in front of the old site Added.
-
- 576.18 [“]The brother of Lord Ellenborough Removed.
-
- 578.15 [“]There he stands, in marble, Removed.
-
- 588.15 amid the Wildest Enthusia[s]m Inserted.
-
- 590.3 and awoke great enthusi[s]am. Inserted.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TEN YEARS IN WASHINGTON ***
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