A Brief History of Pierre L’Enfant and Washington, D.C.
How one Frenchman’s vision became our capital city
- By Kenneth R. Fletcher
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Eventually, the city's surveyor, Andrew Ellicott, produced an engraved map that provided details for lot sales. It was very similar to L'Enfant's plan (with practical changes suggested by officials), but the Frenchman got no credit for it. L'Enfant, now furious, resigned at the urging of Thomas Jefferson. When L'Enfant died in 1825 he had never received payment for his work on the capital and the city was still a backwater (due partly to L'Enfant's rejected development and funding proposals).
Through the 1800s to the McMillan Commission
A century after L'Enfant conceived an elegant capital, Washington was still far from complete.
In the 1800s, cows grazed on the Mall, which was then an irregularly shaped, tree-covered park with winding paths. Trains passing through a railroad station on the Mall interrupted debate in Congress. Visitors ridiculed the city for its idealistic pretensions in a bumpkin setting and there was even talk after the Civil War of moving the capital to Philadelphia or the Midwest.
In 1901, the Senate formed the McMillan Commission, a team of architects and planners who updated the capital based largely on L'Enfant's original framework. They planned an extensive park system, and the Mall was cleared and straightened. Reclaimed land dredged from the river expanded the park to the west and south, making room for the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials. The Commission's work finally created the famous green center and plentiful monuments of today's Washington.
L'Enfant and Washington Today
Some of L'Enfant's plans, including a huge waterfall cascading down Capitol Hill, were never realized. But the National Mall has been a great success, used for everything from picnics to protests. "The American people really took to the Mall in the 20th century and turned it into this great civic stage," Feldman says. "That was something that Pierre L'Enfant never envisioned ... a place for us to speak to our national leaders in the spotlight." It has become so popular that officials say it is "terribly overused," as evidenced by worn grass and bare patches of earth.
John Cogbill, chairman of the National Capital Planning Commission which oversees development in the city, says the Commission strives to fulfill L'Enfant's original vision while meeting the demands of a growing region. "We take [L'Enfant's plan] into account for virtually everything we do," he says. "I think he would be pleasantly surprised if he could see the city today. I don't think any city in the world can say that the plan has been followed so carefully as it has been in Washington."
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Comments (13)
Where is the truth that Benjamin Banneker is the one who remembered the actual design from memory because Pierre L'Enfant was no longer on the project. Why isn't the truth being told here and on other sites concerning this.
Posted by BenFan on May 5,2013 | 10:53 PM
History(His-Stoty) Trying to brighten my horizon and go back in (His-Story) but things seem to be mislead or misplaced or not available. Where is the information concerning Benjamin Banneker and the conflict about the White House and the people who was suppose to work on the plans for the city.There is much information and all the information is in concflict which each other.
I heard things that have been passed down from others concerning the history which I am reviewing, and voices' from the grave speak a different tune. Does race play a part in the plans of Washington D.C.
A person can never really learn about the land in which he lives, if lies are writen about certain parts of history not (His-Story)
Posted by whisperkwane on December 20,2010 | 10:43 PM
this is a good info site but i was wandering what did l'enfant 's park area become i needed it for a homework paper.
Posted by kayla on April 7,2010 | 09:13 PM
i am doing a project on the u.s navy memorial which Pierre L' Enfant built and i was wondering if you could e-mail me more information please. It is very difficult to find the proper information and then having to make sure it is correct.
Posted by Tara on March 5,2010 | 03:37 PM
Quick question: I read the article and I was just wondering how long did it take to build the city?? Thanks
Posted by Lauren Truong on February 12,2010 | 12:20 PM
i once read an article about the design and architecture of Washington, D.C. and many religious enscriptions and features of the city. i'd like to see that info again, if anyone can e-mail me: mickey.rizzo@comcast.net
thanx
Posted by mickey rizzo on February 12,2010 | 09:19 AM
I would like to know ... Who is the statue of on top of the Capital building, Why is it there, and which way is he facing? This has been bugging me for a long time.
Posted by Michael Straub on October 5,2009 | 01:34 PM
I was doing a history report and this article told me a lot of information.Part of the page needs to talk a little bit more about the landscaping and how he figured out where to put the builidngs and make the streets.Also how can he be poor but come from a rich family? The page could use some more information but it was still well written and thought through.
Posted by Lindsey Troupe on February 28,2009 | 01:06 PM
This is a very interesting article. However, was his father black or was his mother black? The article just says he was a black frenchman who came to fight in the war. One article says he was poor and another says he was from a rich family in France. Need to know more about him.
Posted by Marilyn T. Holly on February 7,2009 | 03:13 AM
Many thanks for this history lesson. Washington DC is one of my favorites in the US, much because of the Smithsonian. Leif Jonne ,Halmstad, Sweden
Posted by Leif Jonne , Sweden on June 19,2008 | 04:22 PM
This was very interesting to know!
Posted by Nyna Taylor on May 6,2008 | 09:13 AM
Very interesting and cogently written. I had no idea, truthfully hadn't thought of, how this was developed!
Posted by Wendy Porter on April 27,2008 | 03:51 PM
I recall reading, some years ago, in the Smithsonian a different article about L'Enfant (was it by the same author, Fletcher?), which was a more detailed account about the alterations to L'Enfant's vision, including the Washington Monument, itself. I read that article and this one in hopes of learning something about Robert Mills, but neither article mentioned him even though the earlier article did discuss the Washington Monument, and its ultimate alterations, more specifically. Still, it surprises me that there isn't more recognition for his contribution. From what I've read and heard, it was Mills' design that was chosen for the Washington Monument -- albeit that design was massively altered before too long. If what I've read is in error or if there is more information, I would be glad to learn about it.
Posted by William Cadle on April 26,2008 | 09:40 AM