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Are there other buildings that interest you in the same way?
I write about American history, but I also have a background in classical archaeology, and so it was interesting to me to experience a building that was very much a reinterpretation of the Greco-Roman ideals. I found that fascinating. I've always loved Greek temples, and this building is the American version of a Greek temple. They modeled the building's facades after the Parthenon, so they were very consciously echoing that. And I think once again, today, as it was in 1836, the Patent Office can be an object of civic pride as Parthenon was and is in Athens.
How did you approach writing the article?
I really tried to write a biography of the building, as if the building had had a life of its own, and had a personality and adventures—ups and downs in much the way that a person does. But because of its importance and because it's so old it's had a much richer life than many people. I looked for moments from that history, in particularly details—I love a sense of physical details. For example, the roast pheasants being trodden underfoot at Lincoln's inaugural ball, or the architect of the building, Mills, being called an idiot by the workmen. Those little details just brought the history alive for me.


Comments
Adam:
How might I get a copy of your article about a Philmont Ranch Trek, listed in OUTSIDE MAGAZINE, November, 1989:
"Thrifty-Lean and Brave"
YiS,
Lel medford
The article was outstanding...................
Posted by Lel Medford on July 26,2009 | 04:26PM