A Capitol Vision From a Self-Taught Architect
In 1792, William Thornton designed America's defining monument, where a new visitor center opens in December
- By Fergus M. Bordewich
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Despite the setbacks, the Capitol's North Wing, housing the Senate's semielliptical chamber, was completed, if only barely, in time for the arrival of Congress from Philadelphia in 1800. (For the time being, the House of Representatives would meet in the second-floor library.) When members of Congress entered the building that November to hear President John Adams proclaim the official installation of the government in Washington, D.C., the scent of newly cut lumber and fresh paint hung in the air.
It would take 33 years to complete the building that Thornton had begun to envision on Tortola. As the structure was altered and enlarged over time, Thornton's name and his memory would be submerged beneath the work of others. The Capitol's South Wing was completed by architect Benjamin Latrobe in 1811. The rotunda and portico were at last finished in 1826, under architect Charles Bulfinch. Major expansions, including new House and Senate wings, altered the Capitol in the 1850s and 1860s (when Bulfinch's teacup-shaped dome also was replaced by the towering cast-iron dome punctuating the city's skyline today.)
However, elements of Thornton's design remain, including the original western facade of the wings, the stately Law Library Door at the southeast corner of the old North Wing and much of the eastern facade, now part of a corridor behind the East Front extension, erected between 1958 and 1961. The visitor center, plagued by delays and cost overruns, surveys the Capitol's history, incorporating interactive exhibits and a live feed from House and Senate chambers when Congress is in session.
Thornton's Capitol was the greatest design achievement of the early republic. "Thornton's stroke of genius was to put wings on the Pantheon, and to make them the working parts of the building, and the Pantheon a ceremonial part," says Allen. "He established for all time what the Capitol was to be. Everything that came later had to follow Thornton's design." His creation, Allen notes, would also inspire nearly every state capitol erected throughout the 19th century, most notably in North Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi. "By separating the wings, he also physically expressed the bicameral form of the government," Allen adds. "He got everything right at once: the size, the degree of grandeur, the Anglo-American feel. It was the perfect recipe. Some of the alternative submissions had too much salt, so to speak, others too much pepper. Others were overbaked. Thornton's was just right. It was a flash of genius."
Thornton lived the rest of his life in his adopted city, which, with characteristic effusiveness, he compared to Constantinople, boasting, "We are approaching a state which will, I doubt not, be the envy of the world." In 1794, President Washington appointed him to the three-man board of commissioners that oversaw the continuing development of the federal city. After the board was abolished in 1802, President Jefferson named him the head of the U.S. Patent Office, a position he held until his death, at age 68, in 1828. Thornton also designed several additional buildings that stand in Washington, including Octagon House (1798-1800), a couple of blocks from the White House and now a museum operated by the American Architectural Foundation, and Tudor Place (1816), a Georgetown mansion originally the home of the Peter family and now a museum as well.
Although Thornton's commitment to the emancipation of slaves diminished in the capital's proslavery climate, his enthusiasm for republican government never waned. He became an outspoken advocate of Greek independence and of democratic revolution in South America. To the end of his days, Thornton was consumed by a passionate desire to leave his mark on the world. He sensed, and feared, the ephemeral nature of fame. "I cannot rest when I think what I might have done, and reflect on what only I have done," he wrote to his cousin John Coakley Lettsom in January 1795. "I sicken at the idea, and lament the loss of time—God grant grace to me, and direct me to be, if possible, a benefactor to man....I must do more than I have ever yet done, or my name too will die."
Writer Fergus M. Bordewich's most recent book is Washington: The Making of the American Capital.
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Related topics: Architecture Congress Architects 18th Century Washington, DC Historic and Cultural Monuments
Additional Sources
Papers of William Thornton, Volume 1, 1781-1802 edited by C. M. Harris, University Press of Virginia, 1995









Comments (2)
Some years ago I purchased a subscription of The Smithsonian at the local desk in D.C. I received a wonderful edition which included workshops, local events, and was especially interesting. Do you know about this edition? Several times I have subscribed and asked for the local edition. Please let me know if there is such an edition. I am 73, do not work anymore and love your city. I would go to work shops if I knew about them.
Thank You,
Anita Harris
Posted by Anita Harris on October 21,2010 | 08:09 PM
I just completed reading Scott Berg's book called, "Grand Avenues" about L'Enfant being the original architect and planner of the federal city. The same commisioners and Jefferson who supported and praised Thornton's design were also the ones who brought about the demise of L'Enfant. Jefferson took L'Enfant's plan for the city, have it tweeked and put in Andrew Ellicot's name on the engraving, which left L'Enfant devastated for the rest of his life. Only in the early 1900's was his plan enacted by the more advanced nation and his name finally credited. The politics behind the design and making of the federal city seem to come down to Jefferson. Your story of Thornton's process of approval seem very simple, whereas L'Enfant's was rifed with struggles and as if Jefferson had some enmity towards him. Why? And do you know if L'Enfant himself, along with his plan for the city, also had a design of the Capitol building which upon the departure of L'Enfant Jefferson and the commissioners began soliciting new designs for it?
Posted by Bonnie C on December 4,2008 | 07:15 PM