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Essential
Architecture- Washington D.C.
Washington Monument |
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architect
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Robert Mills |
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location
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Washington, DC |
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date
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1884 |
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style
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NeoClassical |
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construction
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Stone
(Limestone clad) |
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type
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Monument |
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The Washington Monument at dusk
Washington Monument
IUCN Category III (Natural Monument)
The Washington Monument is a large, white-colored obelisk at the
west end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C. It is a United States
Presidential Memorial constructed for George Washington.
The monument is among the world's tallest masonry structures,
standing 555 feet (169.29 m) in height and made of marble, granite, and
sandstone. It was designed by Robert Mills, a prominent American
architect of the 1840s. The actual construction of the monument began in
1848 but was not completed until 1884, almost 30 years after the
architect's death. This hiatus in construction was because of a lack of
funds and the intervention of the American Civil War. A difference in
shading of the marble, visible approximately 150 feet (45 m) up, clearly
delineates the initial construction from its resumption in 1876.
Its cornerstone was laid on July 4, 1848; the capstone was set on
December 6, 1884, and the completed monument was dedicated on February
21, 1885. It officially opened to the public on October 9, 1888. Upon
completion, it became the world's tallest structure, a title it
inherited from the Cologne Cathedral and held until 1889, when the
Eiffel Tower was finished in Paris, France.
The Washington Monument reflection can be seen in the aptly named
Reflecting Pool, a rectangular pool extending to the west, towards the
Lincoln Memorial.
History
Motivation
Among the Founding Fathers of the United States, George
Washington earned the title "Father of the Country" in recognition of
his leadership in the cause of American independence. Appointed
commander of the Continental Army in 1775, he molded a fighting force
that won independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain. In 1787, as
president of the Constitutional Convention, he helped guide the
deliberations to form a government that has lasted for more than 200
years. Two years later he was unanimously elected the President of the
United States. Washington defined the Presidency and helped develop the
relationships among the three branches of government. He established
precedents which successfully launched the new government on its course.
He refused the trappings of power and veered from monarchical government
and traditions and twice—despite considerable pressure to do
otherwise—gave up the most powerful position in the Americas. Washington
remained ever mindful of the ramifications of his decisions and actions.
With this monument the citizens of the United States show their enduring
gratitude and respect.
When the Revolutionary War ended, no man in the United States
commanded more respect than George Washington. Americans celebrated his
ability to win the war despite limited supplies and inexperienced men,
and they admired his decision to refuse a salary and accept only
reimbursements for his expenses. Their regard increased further when it
became known that he had rejected a proposal by some of his officers to
make him king of the new country. It was not only what Washington did
but the way he did it: Abigail Adams, wife of John Adams, described him
as "polite with dignity, affable without familiarity, distant without
haughtiness, grave without austerity, modest, wise, and good."[1]

The George Washington Statue in the Washington Monument lobby,
next to the elevators.
Washington retired to his plantation at Mount Vernon after the
war, but he soon had to decide whether to return to public life. As it
became clear the Articles of Confederation had left the federal
government too weak to levy taxes, regulate trade, or control its
borders, men such as James Madison began calling for a convention that
would strengthen its authority. Washington was reluctant to attend
because he had business affairs to manage at Mount Vernon. If he did not
go to Philadelphia, however, he worried about his reputation and about
the future of the country. He finally decided that, since "to see this
nation happy… is so much the wish of my soul," he would serve as one of
Virginia's representatives. The other delegates during the summer of
1787 chose him to preside over their deliberations, which ultimately
produced the U.S. Constitution.[1]
A key part of the Constitution was the development of the office
of President of the United States. No one seemed more qualified to fill
that position than Washington, and in 1789 he began the first of his two
terms. He used the nation's respect for him to develop respect for this
new office, but he simultaneously tried to quiet fears that the
President would become as powerful as the king the new country had
fought against. He tried to create the kind of solid government he
thought the nation needed, supporting a national bank, collecting taxes
to pay for expenses, and strengthening the Army and Navy. Though many
people wanted him to stay for a third term, in 1797 he again retired to
Mount Vernon.[1]
Washington died suddenly two years later. His death produced
great sadness, and it restarted attempts to honor him. As early as 1783,
the Continental Congress had resolved "That an equestrian statue of
George Washington be erected at the place where the residence of
Congress shall be established." The proposal called for engraving on the
statue which explained it had been erected "in honor of George
Washington, the illustrious Commander-in-Chief of the Armies of the
United States of America during the war which vindicated and secured
their liberty, sovereignty, and independence."
Ten days after Washington's death, a Congressional committee
recommended a different type of monument. John Marshall, a
Representative from Virginia (who later became Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court) proposed that a tomb be erected within the Capitol. But a
lack of funds, disagreement over what type of memorial would best honor
the country's first president, and the Washington family's reluctance to
move his body prevented progress on any project. [1]
Design

A sketch of the proposed Washington Monument done by architect
Robert Mills circa 1836.
Progress towards a memorial finally began in 1833. That year,
which marked the 100th anniversary of Washington's birth, a large group
of concerned citizens formed the Washington National Monument Society.
They began collecting donations, much in the way Blodgett had suggested.
By the middle of the 1830s, they had raised over $28,000 and announced a
competition for the design of the memorial.
On September 23, 1835, the board of managers of the society
described their expectations:
It is proposed that the contemplated monument shall be like him
in whose honor it is to be constructed, unparalleled in the world, and
commensurate with the gratitude, liberality, and patriotism of the
people by whom it is to be erected… [It] should blend stupendousness
with elegance, and be of such magnitude and beauty as to be an object of
pride to the American people, and of admiration to all who see it. Its
material is intended to be wholly American, and to be of marble and
granite brought from each state, that each state may participate in the
glory of contributing material as well as in funds to its construction.
The society held a competition for designs in 1836. The winner,
architect Robert Mills, was well-qualified for the commission. The
citizens of Baltimore had chosen him to build a monument to Washington,
and he had designed a tall Greek column surmounted by a statue of the
President. Mills also knew the capital well, having just been chosen
Architect of Public Buildings for Washington.
His design called for a 600-foot (183 m) tall obelisk—an upright,
four-sided pillar that tapers as it rises—with a nearly flat top. He
surrounded the obelisk with a circular colonnade, the top of which would
feature Washington standing in a chariot. Inside the colonnade would be
statues of 30 prominent Revolutionary War heroes.
Yet criticism of Mills' design and its estimated price tag of
more than $1 million (over $21 million in 2007USD[2]) caused the society
to hesitate. In 1848, its members decided to start building the obelisk
and to leave the question of the colonnade for later. They believed that
if they used the $87,000 they had already collected to start work, the
appearance of the monument would spur further donations that would allow
them to complete the project.
About this time Congress donated 37 acres (150,000 m²) of land
for the project. The spot Pierre Charles L'Enfant had chosen (now marked
by Jefferson Pier) was swampy and unstable, making it unsuitable for
supporting the heavy structure. The new location was slightly south and
east of the original but still offered many advantages. It "presents a
beautiful view of the Potomac," wrote a member of the Society, and "is
so elevated that the monument will be seen from all parts of the
surrounding country." Because it is public land, he continued, "it is
safe from any future obstruction of the view… [and it] would be in full
view of Mount Vernon, where rests the ashes of the chief."
Construction

The partially completed monument, photographed by Mathew Brady
circa 1860

The monument plans and timeline of construction.
Excavation for the foundation of the Washington Monument began in
the spring of 1848. The cornerstone was laid as part of an elaborate
Fourth of July ceremony hosted by the Freemasons, a worldwide fraternal
organization to which Washington belonged. Speeches that day showed the
country continued to revere Washington. One celebrant noted, "No more
Washingtons shall come in our time ... But his virtues are stamped on
the heart of mankind. He who is great in the battlefield looks upward to
the generalship of Washington. He who grows wise in counsel feels that
he is imitating Washington. He who can resign power against the wishes
of a people, has in his eye the bright example of Washington."
Construction continued until 1854, when donations ran out. The
next year, Congress voted to appropriate $200,000 to continue the work
but rescinded before the money could be spent. This reversal came
because of a new policy the society had adopted in 1849. It had agreed,
after a request from some Alabamians, to encourage all states and
territories to donate memorial stones that could be fitted into the
interior walls. Members of the society believed this practice would make
citizens feel they had a part in building the monument, and it would cut
costs by limiting the amount of stone that had to be bought. Blocks of
Maryland marble, granite and sandstone steadily appeared at the site.
American Indian tribes, professional organizations, societies,
businesses and foreign nations donated stones that were 4 feet by 2 feet
by 12-18 inches (1.2 by 0.6 by 0.3 to 0.5 m). Many, however, carried
inscriptions irrelevant to a memorial for George Washington. For
example, one from the Templars of Honor and Temperance stated "We will
not buy, sell, or use as a beverage, any spiritous or malt liquors,
Wine, Cider, or any other Alcoholic Liquor." It was just one memorial
stone that started the events that stopped the Congressional
appropriation and ultimately construction altogether. In the early
1850s, Pope Pius IX contributed a block of marble. In March 1854,
members of the anti-Catholic, nativist American Party - better known as
the "Know-Nothings" - stole the Pope's stone as a protest and supposedly
threw it into the Potomac. Then, in order to make sure the monument fit
the definition of "American" at that time, the Know-Nothings conducted
an election so they could take over the entire society [citation
needed]. Congress immediately rescinded its $200,000 contribution.
The Know-Nothings retained control of the society until 1858,
adding 13 courses of masonry to the monument—all of which was of such
poor quality it later was removed. Unable to collect enough money to
finish work, they increasingly lost public support. The Know-Nothings
eventually gave up and returned all records to the original society, but
the stoppage in construction continued into, then after, the Civil War.
The bottom third of the monument is a slightly different color than the
rest. When construction resumed after the Civil War, the builders were
unable to find the same quarry stone used earlier, resulting in a slight
change in appearance.
Interest in the monument grew after the Civil War ended.
Engineers studied the foundation several times to see whether it
remained strong enough. In 1876, the Centennial of the Declaration of
Independence, Congress agreed to appropriate another $200,000 to resume
construction. The monument, which had stood for nearly 20 years at less
than one-third of its proposed height, now seemed ready for completion.
Before work could begin again, however, arguments about the most
appropriate design resumed. Many people thought a simple obelisk, one
without the colonnade, would be too bare. Architect Mills was reputed to
have said omitting the colonnade would make the monument look like "a
stalk of asparagus"; another critic said it offered "little… to be proud
of."[1]
This attitude led people to submit alternative designs. Both the
Washington National Monument Society and Congress held discussions about
how the monument should be finished. The society considered five new
designs, concluding that the one by William Wetmore Story seemed "vastly
superior in artistic taste and beauty." Congress deliberated over those
five as well as Mills' original; while it was deciding, it ordered work
on the obelisk to continue. Finally, the members of the society agreed
to abandon the colonnade and alter the obelisk so it conformed to
classical Egyptian proportions.
Construction resumed in 1879 under the direction of Lieutenant
Colonel Thomas Lincoln Casey of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Casey
redesigned the foundation, strengthening it so it could support a
structure that ultimately weighed more than 40,000 tons. He then
followed the society's orders and figured out what to do with the
memorial stones that had accumulated. Though many people ridiculed them,
Casey managed to install all 193 stones in the interior walls.
The building of the monument proceeded quickly after Congress had
provided sufficient funding. The stones used to proceed were taken from
a different quarry and have a slightly different color than the bottom
third of the obelisk. In four years, it was finally completed, with the
100 ounce (2.8 kg) aluminum capstone being put in place on December 6,
1884, during another elaborate dedication ceremony. It was the largest
single piece of aluminum cast at the time.[3] The monument opened to the
public on October 9, 1888.[4]
Later history

An ultra wide angle view of the monument showing the American
flags arranged around it. Tourists wander at the base.
At the time of its construction, it was the tallest building in
the world. It is still the tallest building in Washington D.C., and
because of a 1910 law restricting a new building's height to be no more
than 20 feet (6 m) greater than the width of the adjacent street,
probably always will be (there is a popular misconception that the law
specifies that no building may be taller than the Washington Monument,
but in fact the law makes no mention of it).[5] Ordinary antique
obelisks were seldom taller than around 100 feet (30 m), making this
monument vastly taller than the obelisks around the capitals of Europe
and in Egypt.
The Washington Monument drew enormous crowds even before it
officially opened. During the six months that followed its dedication,
10,041 people climbed the 893 steps to the top. After the elevator that
had been used to raise building materials was altered so that it could
carry passengers, the number of visitors grew rapidly. As early as 1888,
an average of 55,000 people per month went to the top, and today the
Washington Monument has more than 800,000 visitors each year. As with
all historic areas administered by the National Park Service, the
national memorial was listed on the National Register of Historic Places
on October 15, 1966. The stairs are no longer accessible to the general
public due safety issues and vandalism of the interior memorial plaques.
For ten hours in December 1982, the Washington Monument was "held
hostage" by a nuclear arms protester, Norman Mayer, claiming to have
explosives in a van he drove up to the monument's base. Eight tourists
trapped in the monument at the time the standoff began were set free,
and the incident ended with U.S. Park Police opening fire on Mayer and
killing him. The monument was undamaged in the incident, and it was
discovered later Mayer did not have explosives.

The Washington Monument from the Lincoln Memorial site.
On July 4, 2005, a US$ 15 million security and landscaping
enhancement project was completed.[citation needed] The design, an
innovative and subtle series of concentric walls 30 inches (0.76 m)
high, called a ha-ha in landscaping terminology for its hidden nature,
is designed to make it impossible to drive up to the monument, though
approaching on foot or on bicycle should be unimpeded. In addition to
the security upgrade, the construction, which required the monument to
be closed starting in September 2004, also included an upgrade to the
external lighting of the monument.[6][7]
Construction details

Cherry blossoms

These fireworks over the reflecting pool between the Washington
Monument and Lincoln Memorial are typical of Fourth of July celebrations

A view from the top of the monument in December of 1999. Looking
East towards the Capitol Building, the Dome can be seen approximately
1.4 miles away. The Smithsonian Building can be seen on the right.
The completed monument stands 555 ft 5⅛ in (169.29 m) tall, with
the following construction materials and details:
Phase One (1848 to 1858): To the 152 foot (46 m) level, under the
direction of Superintendent William Daugherty.
Exterior: White marble from Texas, Maryland (adjacent to and east
of north I-83 near the Warren Road exit in Cockeysville)
Exterior: White marble, four courses or rows, from Sheffield,
Massachusetts
Phase Two (1878 to 1888): Work completed by the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, commanded by Lt. Col. Thomas L. Casey.
Exterior: White marble from a different Cockeysville quarry [1]
Interior: Granite from Maine and New Hampshire[2]
Cap is made from aluminum, at the time a rare metal, valued about
the same as silver. The cap was forged by William Frishmuth and a
detailed history was printed in JOM, a publication of The Minerals,
Metals & Materials Society. Before the installation it was put on public
display and stepped over by visitors who could later say they had
"stepped over the top of the Washington Monument".
Inscriptions
The four faces of the pyramidal point all bear
inscriptions:
North Face West Face South Face East Face
JOINT COMMISSION
AT
SETTING OF CAPSTONE.
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
W. W. CORCORAN, Chairman.
M. E. BELL.
EDWARD CLARK.
JOHN NEWTON.
Act of August 2, 1876. CORNER STONE LAID ON BED OF FOUNDATION
JULY 4, 1848.
FIRST STONE AT HEIGHT OF 152 FEET LAID
AUGUST 7, 1880.
CAPSTONE SET DECEMBER 6, 1884. CHIEF ENGINEER AND ARCHITECT,
THOS. LINCOLN CASEY, COLONEL, CORPS OF ENGINEERS.foundhere Assistants:
GEORGE W. DAVIS, CAPTAIN, 14TH INFANTRY, BERNARD R. GREEN, CIVIL
ENGINEER. Master Mechanic. P. H. MCLAUGHLIN. LAUS DEO.
Praise be to God (Latin)
Halfway up the steps of the monument is an inscription in Welsh
reading "Fy iaith, fy ngwlad, fy nghenedl Cymru - Cymru am byth" (My
language, my land, my nation of Wales - Wales for ever). The reason for
this inscription or its author is unknown.[3]
The cost of the monument was $1,187,710.
Exterior structure
Total height of monument:
555 ft 5⅛ in (169.294 m)
Height from lobby to observation level:
500 ft (152 m)
Width at base of monument:
55 ft 1½ in (16.80 m)
Width at top of shaft:
34 ft 5 in (10.5 m)
Thickness of monument walls at base:
15 ft (4.6 m)
Thickness of monument walls at observation level:
18 in (460 mm)
Total weight of monument:
90,854 short tons (82,421 t)
Total number of blocks in monument:
36,491
Capstone
Capstone weight:
3,300 lb (1.5 t)
Capstone cuneiform keystone measures 5.16 ft (1.57 m) from base
to the top
Each side of the capstone base: 3 ft (914 mm)
Width of aluminum tip: 5.6 in (142 mm) on each of its four sides
Height of aluminum tip at base:
8.9 in (226 mm)
Weight of aluminum tip on capstone:
100 oz (2.8 kg)
Foundation
Depth:
36 ft 10 in (11.23 m)
Weight:
36,912 short tons (33,486 metric tons)
Area:
16,001 ft² (1487 m²)
Interior
Number of memorial stones in stairwell: 199
Present elevator installed: 1998
Present elevator cab installed: 2001
Elevator travel time: 70 seconds
Number of steps in stairwell: 897
Fastest known ascent time via stairs : 6.7 minutes (in 2005)
References
The National Parks: Index 2001–2003. Washington: U.S.
Department of the Interior.
^ a b c d e "The Washington Monument: Tribute in Stone", National
Park Service, ParkNet.
^ Dollar Conversions From 1800 to 2016 Oregon State University.
^ A History of the Washington Monument: 1844–1968 by George J.
Olszewski. April 1971. National Park Service. (Retrieved January 3,
2007).
^ "Washington Monument". Teaching with Historic Places. National
Park Service. (Retrieved October 15, 2006).
^ The Building Height Act of 1910, codified at D.C. Code §
6-601.05
^ Washington Monument (from the Olin Partnership website)
^ Monumental Security (from the American Society of Landscape
Architects website, April 10, 2006)
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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