HomeMontgomery C. Meigs and the Building of the Nation's Capital (Perspectives on the Art and Architectural History of the United States Capitol)
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Montgomery C. Meigs and the Building of the Nation's Capital (Perspectives on the Art and Architectural History of the United States Capitol)

paperbackFebruary 1, 2002
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ISBN-13: 9780821413975 ISBN-10: 082141397X
Publisher
Ohio University Press
Binding
paperback
Published
February 1, 2002
Weight
1.0 lbs
Dimensions
25.40×1.80×17.80 cm

About this book

Montgomery C. Meigs and the Building of the Nation's Capital (Perspectives on the Art and Architectural History of the United States Capitol) by Dickinson, William C.. paperback edition. ISBN: 9780821413975.

At the age of thirty-six, in 1852, Lt. Montgomery Cunningham Meigs of the Army Corps of Engineers reported to Washington, D.C., for duty as a special assistant to the chief army engineer, Gen. Joseph G. Totten. It was a fateful assignment, both for the nation’s capital and for the bright, ambitious, and politically connected West Point graduate. Meigss forty-year tenure in the nations capital was by any account spectacularly successful. He surveyed, designed, and built the Washington water supply system, oversaw the extension of the U.S. Capitol and the erection of its massive iron dome, and designed and supervised construction of the Pension Building, now the home of the National Building Museum. The skills he exhibited in supervising engineering projects were carefully noted by political leaders, including president-elect Abraham Lincoln, who named Meigs quartermaster general of the Union Army, the most important position he held during his long and active military career. Meigs believed Washington, D.C., should be the reincarnation of Rome, the ancient capital of the Roman Empire. He endeavored to memorialize the story of the American nation in all the structures he built, expressing these ideas in murals, sculpture, and monumental design. Historians have long known Meigs for the organizational genius with which he fulfilled his duty as quartermaster general during the Civil War and for his unwavering loyalty to Lincoln and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. This volume establishes his claim as one of the major nineteenth-century contributors to the built environment of the nations capital.