The Jefferson Memorial on Washington's Tidal Basin.
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When Franklin D. Roosevelt
laid the cornerstone of the Jefferson Memorial eighty years ago
today on November 15, 1939 it was just plain good politics. He was planning to run for re-election in November for an
unprecedented third term which was sure to elicit howls of outrage by Republicans
who could hardly stand to utter his name. The country’s recovery from
the Great Depression had not only slowed, but had slid backwards as a
new recession hit the already shaky economy—a
recession brought on in no small part to his agreement with Congress to belt
tightening budget cutting after
years of stimulating the economy with free spending. Even Southern
Democrats, who by in large had backed his New Deal programs as
long as he left their traditional racial
arrangements untouched, were getting restive, especially a few Senators
who could see themselves in the White House if FDR would get out of the
way.
The new memorial would remind voters
that the generally revered Founding Father and author of the Declaration of Independence was also the founder
of what evolved into the Democratic
Party. It would celebrate the particular hero of
southerners. And, of course, it would be another of those high
profile public works projects that put Americans to work—always the most
popular part of the New Deal.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt symbolically lays the cornerstone of the Memorial
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Of course the monument and its
honoree both had plenty of critics.
Republican conservatives of that era were to a man—there were hardly any
leading women to speak of—Hamiltonians. They favored sound
money, a national bank (the Federal Reserve would do), high tariffs,
low internal taxes, and a Federal government vigorous enough
to defend not only the shores but the industrial and commercial elite from the democratic rabble. Only much later when they make a marriage of convenience with Southern
Whites resentful of Civil Rights legislation would the GOP adopt states’
rights conservatism which would
claim Jefferson as its founder.
FDR and the Democrats preferred to
see Jefferson as a champion of the
people against oligarchy and privilege.
They cherished the ringing endorsements of liberty in the Declaration, but also
his oft stated view that one generation
cannot bind future ones. They
believed that whatever his views on the balance of state and Federal power may
have been when alive, that his commitment to the wellbeing of the common man and suspicion of the
amassing power of corporations,
would put him in that day squarely on the side of the New Deal.
None of the political opposition to
memorializing Jefferson came then, as it surely would today, because of his
ownership of slaves, his racist
assumptions of the inferiority
of Blacks, his aggressive Indian policy, and his perceived
hypocrisy for not extending the blessings of his beloved Liberty to all.
There was also the customary carping
and complaining about every aspect of the Memorial itself from its location to
its design. Traditionalists
were shocked that its placement broke from Pierre
Charles L’Enfant original and elegant
grand design of the city. Construction
also required the destruction and
removal of a grove of ancient oaks
and several of the Japanese cherry trees that had been a gift of that
country in 1928. Others felt that the location between the main channel
of the Potomac River and the Tidal Basin was too remote or that the landfill on which it would be built was too unstable to support the
weight. And just about everybody had a critical opinion of the design.
Despite it all, the
project, which had begun with site
preparation a month earlier, was definitely going to be built when the
President, who could not stand
unassisted, symbolically laid the cornerstone by touching it before workmen
set it into place.
It had been a long
time coming.
The future site of
the memorial was created by landfill
from dredging of the Potomac in the
late 19th Century. In 1908 the construction of Tidal Basin
Inlet Bridge made
the site accessible and it became part of Potomac Park. Ten years
later chlorine dispensers
were installed under the bridge to make the brackish water safe to swim
in. Sand was brought in and a public swimming
beach opened. It was operated for Whites only and was popular with
local residents in the scorching Washington summer. But when challenged
by local Blacks who claimed that segregation
of public facilities was not
legal under Federal Law, the beach
was permanently closed. In ’28 those cherry trees were planted along the
shore line.
Meanwhile, after the completion and
dedication of the Lincoln Memorial in 1922 it was assumed that it would
complete the grand plan and would be the last big monument on the National
Mall. But some people thought there should be accommodation made for
at least one future memorial reserved perhaps for some future Great Man.
Others supported the erection of a classic Pantheon containing statues
of notable and honorable dignitaries—a sort of open air Hall of Fame had
the term been in circulation at the time. The Tidal Basin site was one of
the proposed possible locations.
Memorial architect and champion of Neo-Classical design John Russell Pope.
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In 1925 some admirers thought they found
just the right man to honor with a grand new memorial—Theodore
Roosevelt. They raised money for a national design completion for the
structure. Leading New York architect John Russell Pope who proposed
a colonnaded half-circle next to a circular basin. He envisioned the
Tidal Basin site, so recently vacated by bathers.
Despite hefty
Republican majorities in both houses of Congress, funding for the project could
not get approved. Not only did powerful business interests oppose
memorializing the Trust Buster, but many conservative Republicans were
still bitter at his splitting the party in 1912 costing William Howard Taft re-election.
Plans for any
memorial or for other use of the Tidal Basin site languished for years until
1934 when another Roosevelt asked the Commission of Fine
Arts to consider adding a memorial to
Jefferson to the massive Federal Triangle Project already under
construction. Encompassing several blocks facing Pennsylvania Avenue
along its hypotenuse the project featured the construction of several massive
building in the Neo-Classic style including buildings for the National
Archives, Internal Revenue Service, and the Departments of Justice,
Commerce, and Labor.
Although that location was shot
down, Congressman John J. Boylan of New York
proposed the creation of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission.
The bill passed later in ’34 and Boylan was appointed the first chairman. The next year he
secured a $3 million appropriation
to go ahead with the design and construction.
Eschewing a long
and inevitably controversial design competition, the Commission turned to John
Russell Pope who had recently completed the designs of two of the most
prominent buildings in the Federal Triangle Project—the National Archives and the National Gallery of Art (now the West Wing of the Gallery.)
Pope quickly turned
out four distinct plans for four possible locations—the Anacostia River at
the end of East Capitol Street, at Lincoln Park, on the
south side of the National Mall across from the National Archives, and the
Tidal Basin site. The Tidal Basin won out both because it was the most
prominent site and because it was located directly across the Basin from the White House, affording a dramatic view
of each building from the other.
Pope returned to
the familiar Neo-Classical style.
He drew heavily on his Henry E. Huntington mausoleum on the grounds of The Huntington Library in Los Angeles. It was to be an open edifice
based on the Pantheon and surmounted
by a shallow dome. It was to
sit on a broad platform on a rise from the Tidal Basin and to be flanked by two
smaller temple-like buildings.
Pope's plans were savaged by
modernists who were chaffing at the bit to liberate public architecture from
Neo Classicism. Pope never responded to the complaints, serene in his
conviction that the design, which echoed architect Jefferson’s own Monticello
home and his design for the Rotunda of the Main Hall of the
University of Virginia. As it turned out it, however, it would be the
last major Neo Classic structure built in Washington.
By the time construction began,
Popes had died. His former partners Daniel P. Higgins and Otto R. Eggers
completed the project. At the request of the Commission they eliminated
the side buildings and made other modifications, but stayed essentially true to
the original designer’s intent.
The Memorial under construction.
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As construction was underway the
Commission did undertake completions for a statue of Jefferson to go under the
rotunda dome and for the decorative frieze for the pediment above the
entrance overlooking the Basin. Rudolph Evans won the commission
for a standing bronze statue of Jefferson and Adolph Weinman, noted for
his architectural animation did the frieze.
The building was finally completed
and dedicated by FDR on April 13,
1943, Jefferson’s 200th birthday.
Because of World War II metal
shortages, Evans’ statue could not be cast. In its place stood a plaster model painted to look
bronze. It was not until well after the War in 1947 that a bronze could
be cast and put into place.
The 1943 dedication competed with war news.
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Along the walls of the rotunda were
large plaques containing quotations
from Jefferson, including long excerpts from the Declaration of Independence
and from the Virginia Statue for Religious Freedom as well as snippets
from his only book Notes on Virginia and from several
letters. In a frieze ringing the rotunda under the dome was carved one of
Jefferson’s most famous epigrams, “I have sworn upon the
altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of
man.”
Naturally the
selected words caused an uproar. Historians noted that the word
inalienable rather than unalienable had been used in the opening words of the
Declaration—a common error—and that some of the final words were not from
Jefferson’s pen but additions from other members of the drafting committee. It
also eliminated the right of revolution passage that was central to
Jefferson’s justification for Independence.
Conservatives
charged that other quotes were cherry
picked to seem to endorse the New Deal and its priorities such as a passage
on the necessity of an educated
electorate which they charge was intended to fool people into believing
that Jefferson would support universal
public education. Of course Democrats countered that is exactly what
he had in mind.
On the subject of
Blacks and slavery, always tricky with Jefferson, the Commission truncated on
crucial sentence which began “Nothing is more certainly written in the book of
fate than these people are to be free”
but omitted the second half, “Nor is it less certain that the two races,
equally free, cannot live in the same government.”
Rudolph Evan's standing bronze is surrounding by Jefferson's words on the gleaming walls.
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Today the Monument
is maintained by the National Park Service and is open 24 hours a
day. Because of its location far enough away from other attractions to
require a long hike around the Tidal Basin, driving, or tour bus—it is not
served by the Metro—it is not visited as much as other leading
attractions. Still more than 2 million people visit it each year.
Controversy over
the design has faded among all but the bitterest International
Modernists. In fact in 2007 it was ranked fourth on a List of Americas Favorite
Architecture by the American
Institute of Architects.
Restoration is under way and scaffolding surrounds the dome to scrub the biofilm covering it and restore it to its original gleaming white.
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Earlier this year a major restoration project got underway to
address severe deterioration of the structure including dealing with a
dark biofilm that has spread over the surface of the dome and
preservation of the marble itself which has become pitted by pollution and
acid rain. Insect and arachnid
infestations have to be eradicated.
Decorative stone work which has been falling needs to be shorn up. It is an $8.5 million dollar, multi-year
project. Currently the dome of covered
by scaffolding as work goes on restoring it to its pristine, shining white.
The Jefferson Memorial can be seen from the White House across the South Lawn, Ellipse, and Tidal Basin.
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In my opinion whatever it and its
subject’s flaws the Memorial is a stunningly beautiful building. It is
best seen as dusk descends. Jefferson seems to peer out across the Tidal
Basin to the shining, illuminated White House across the water. Similarly
seen from the White House in the same gloaming, the Memorial seems to
glow. Gives me chills.
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