, . THUMifh . 11 fiyam n*llo9 • • H. H. & Co. [; , r •hlwi 0814111412A.* : eidl Sn bektitci a9,KI ,f , ),17a Java' TERist : g. A.4444 . 6l, iv tAgati ii i t allaigisa. in 5 4 1 , 1 1 , ±7 304 4. 1 147010 , " , rit0t 1.&ftivn.,11 1,14.1 ••!... net,. ..npan , •!cirtvl;2rtirtma,s , inolii i•VI:!,/ Igo .nn "CI :4,1, 1 4, '/I • 1, THE LAN MIT •Dfg'gr4, o4 4* . A published. , 7f. 85 per wadi ' • A,/ If 1-304,11. i • q .1 4 11,1 , 1fP. Thai ). 1•1!.1 I ;.e. 111111t1 bltra4 . lf , P. OFFICIE-Alotrressrser.Cousideuset QMltThx s QuARE , • - • rata Awl,'; it , OW It( maul. • t• , 'll '4,1,110 ,A•..,1j, •L. 1.1 , . Itr :PILICTIMELWEILL The Journal -defpi .„l 4 tasteful loVbr Of t!enlirfhtd•TPll lines. willtantPezdlii M,Knoul thy Sidi& xe69i," My midnight dreamantre all Of thee; Fo L n d a S t ra ff nrerlrott i cnna l lVnd ' l' 'l ! Ohein,that shilanygtosiovadhofxr; ..1:10W . s 4ft i Vggi rgi v irdl i ft 7. 4 11.,10urp,h n Thhtihfiat Pittictlarptight ave:rill tar Wan* tltDttghtatthlnh f 13 , 14);tir 4 . 3641 1 18 . ii; 11 Whate ; er May Ve tfOrthiftyg . liete;. I:iudeltet InVoL4 n!Yfronirtliee " °rill' ono bbont a; dentlo tour; ' ''• AlayLblwgmillnintunfrom ItbOVlt . 1 .111 : N eer' Pla ktri"_,fig t uMrgr.lig , "ertr froin'th," gnrwljg soca depart. ; FateWhlVl all drearrin Hest thounno tender 'thought. of Me?' • re stiMinek y hopen like multmerbloo illepart; But there'd oft, tiot'dle, •Thy,holy metnoF luny hdart p , d . • No errn..that Pilo Dwell* atIP ly 011. Auntlght to s lowa+ he givou, 1 .,„ light tylll II ve and flourish attli " ~ 'Ad deathles s as a tidal; OtHEnVen!' My soul greoln thine; urimitaked;tilisoughl,'.! Rant thou' for manna gent.la•thodgllt •, - Farewell ! fareb'ell toy, far-011 frlund ! , • Between us Briny]; blue rivers And forekta wave and plains extend, 1 • • And Mountains hrthe sunlight glow? • The wind that Menthe. upon, thy prow,' In net the 01,111 that braatitesm; ndne, The starbeanix shining no thee now 'Are not the bearrik that ore me shine, ' • But memory's spell In With me yet— Cann 3 t thou Ina hob: part forget? The hitter tears that thou and `I • May shed wheniiior la , itnixidAlitiowed, • Exalted IMO the noontide uhy, • • •• . . . .. , Muy n umt mO,llllllOO in. the cloud Anil thus, my much i , ,,V1..1 Irlend, though ;we Far, tar apart must' live cud MON', . Our Huila, NO:en i Intl bath get them freii,' . Can mlllOllll the world iif love Thla Were an eestaey to tee— Say—would IL he a Joy to thee ?, ,TT/J; BE.II:I:p , VL GATE have rend anti dreamed of Oman k tai gala, Moving on hinges of purest wad, On the other sine of the River of Death WhOgu watera are-dark, and dreary, and told Many,hav'e reached that deep, dark Arena], Ott ittl quiet brink to watch aud wait For the inesNetwer pale, to hour them across Ita wavelogA tide to the tiolden Tho that one that left our household baud Was ono who had eyes of deepeat blue, • With a brdw no taletta the ratio sprlng And a heart as pure lei the morals; dew. Long she lay on a Imod of. pain, Long, very-long, 111,1 we hope aud wall My angel Miter, where Is she now? She has entered In ut the Gohlen Gate An angel gaunt, and Within her struts She bore her :may to her hunto ttitore* I caught the gleam of a glittering bawl, And hoard Awret wordtt from it hymn of lost But the angel gueat Noon value agaln, And another one left our broken hand— Another one panned through the ()olden ' 1701i03131Yi1l 19/111 unt u n - iai - ..in - 4 , I ifs lo .0103 dtll JAIIO/1 9[ll it , i r 'tidal 7dia , ' fi ' - ''. f l„ "6 ,' --- ''' , , 1- ~,, f 1 A . , ,„,,,,)1=1„,,, ._ , -9715•111 . .111 of - Vilt , h , ,qu , flli , o, P.llllOl f. ma iii 2 mo• - )0 „, i m i l, An 4-4„.„ i .11,1 ,N f I Ibiru - Jyf,flp.:"' . l.) ~r 31.:1t47- 4 1- . ..J faturgi 941 flit MO7 7,tinq I 111.1(1 Ili . .trywbfatic, ..... - u boatel, our_kna of luny: , tf ,, •3 . 701J1.: ,mulaccurgtwxi io.urg .f ...0 u, • . 1,1 '2 ,9 no n "•• I '''''.' . • of ..)08 wen if if 1,4 ,Asti.i , 7 ?ILA') I Off) 'prthloqq..? . - ..,aIPI//4 /CP ~ Y , I LU • 11, - 1 1119- ' 3l °I 911 - 119. - -a ) n9,ln-P.ta.. 11- icy . _ ;,,.‘ l ' i d " .l l ' l r i 1 i : Q " ; 4 ,,..i.,, 5 n' ; ?, 17 ,_.,1V: ; ''''' ,,i ' 1 L :c 1 , , , " ,,,,,,,,, , . 3:11 1 1 1 .. .„ b . n it ' 1 b l ik • cl mal i z i,2 'I: ~' 'l ll9O 101119 v 0 . 1-' ' ,c - u4ll, Al, El m qid e i nil t,, wan 1...,,04„ - I' ,, ito , 4•u , 71 oil'it Rlforir,n7 7111;;Ii ' - ' - --'' ' " liol'ult ` 31.11 anid / 41979. ! . b " . 111,1 ... 1 /'/ 41 ""''''.`." 4.) .' th .r th ' IL P ° 77 11 q!"T ' 7 , I P 1?- ..., *". . q • ',l; - .;,- -...,.... o. 4•11.1. z. ! '•". ilo "i l2 ^ , fl' , l'r , •' , III l'10: .0.11,11 ./ 0 9 -1 . ' ito.l a 14.r1ti: ' ;bihnun ',el If i 11 , - YI 9 TII ~. IT "' CI " ' ''''' I. ''.# llllll9 ' 0 L'l.Y.'-'d .<',,o+ .au onaaer:cne . fl“littrr • , ilc ill . 4H .aid haat.). utukr,/,1 9111 lo frgnanq eve: - Nakfili 6iltd),al9onl9o 6.mit : 1199 d Tad tau , 11 li Tilinu fair fwiroile mirk 7t.fimirl-ffil^,Rllll TT) 01 iv - in - Lb 1 noiz.e.uapelloi•toicvnl.ll.9lHUlLlgtrontil lzmol ( fait 397 rbp t t1i61 5 148 riTdtk wl i zAs . us l l7o,llCtleEi t of west p the. t4f Ya:l v 4 ry 4;" trpkbeftattettihiapatt-: letndeoffnirkiattageav CJI', that/ VEdli6ll4l ofalVitginktiduaddra Mkt -shouldd:beNfotind. lhattel n(tfoitthern Sates dtartimiattlVtiieVniq Itettittti, alid*rrktbinihhiitldi'AW tthft,. the' Mfr. i Vifgr e; Pte,e .:" - a lii9P44 ' s l.riseA: in..that.,W4y,!1,41 PonventitMotiVirgii}iiii Aand:kkmught Abe•4Eola:rations; and. preceedinktaxif-this . day . ritito victsti,l- as t!olieva-Vir ginia inightittotthavetbeentd:tiartstift•the Unit:9l at BecitiViit'lierfniiyiyafiffiasid: "If 'lt 'vere by.somc Insttuttan'tiehi' tit:begs, it ti:6111(1 be of,leiis,p,teni4ice. where the Gov ern *lit : ".There; was a. communication thy the lunialmtvithairosul.actually laid out of about,:forty miles; • httheo , yon:descend the:Kiskinilnotrifitothe . Alleghany, and theneeto Pittfiliurg,"is thirty miles." Mr: tee nitit'ed strikeimit:',‘•,the!akSt, batik' ortwity4f use "1114,A041,)i , :k0c tirtho iivet P.o tOntae,!;.W,hielt Wasrlost and after .sev eral dayslctinlirOYeritii, uuii numerous at tempts:to changelts tenor,:., the original Su.squehanim, ,:restiLution• Agismad- the HOUSee by, a:I-kite-of to 47, and was Si) sent .to the:Semite: • • ' On the tttlforEtepteinherthe'bill came lack:from the Seinde, where it had been, a:intent recoryled debate, anienthA to read : district of teu mile pi square, bounded on the Sonth.bynline running pandlol'at one mil.e's distance from the city of Philadelphia." . • Thereon mg:mat:deal of wrath was ex pended in the House, which refused to concur in the amendment;and the Mat ter droppeil,for the sesaiqn. The action of the,Senhte :WassleterminLitt, after a tie vote iu,that b6cly, the casting vote of the Yiee.Preaident, Mr.. Adams, but for whom Om Oupitol.of the United States would now.stand "on the banks of the Susquehanna," probably at Wrights ville, inYork-county, opposite 'OOltini On the 31st of May, 1790, a - bill was Introduced in the Senate by Mr. Butler, of. South Carolina, "to determine the permanent Seat Of Congress and of the Governinentot the United States." This bill passed the Senate on theist of July, providing "that's district on the river Potomac, at some place between the mouths of the . Eastern- Branch and Conococheape, be and the same is here by accepted for thepermanent seat of the Goveriamtret of the thii ted States." This washy', a vdte of 14 to 12, and, as before, with Out recorded debtite. The bill further Preyided that the temporary seat of Government should be at Philo delphia until the ..yeas 1800, buildings meanwhile:to be prepared on- the Poto mac. Efforts were madeto keep it at New Yolle till 18110; tllll.7fti," WI 1702, but all wlthoutiMil. The PriSident was directed to ap point commissioners, who ; under his direction, should survey and purchase lauds within the District for the capital, and provide the necessary buildings. He was also, for defraying the expense of "such purchases and buildings,' "au thorized and 'requested to accept grants of money." The acceptance referred to in the bill related net only to the phraseology of the Constitution, but also to the act of cession by the Legislature of the State of Maryland. The Maryland Legislature also granted $72,000, and the Virginia Legislature $120,000, in pursuance of the suggestion contained in the bill. So the bill went to the House. Mr. Sherman, of Connecticut, at once moved to strike out the Putomacand in sert " a district to include the town of Baltimore." Mr. Burke, of South Carolina, prefer red Baltimore. "There was no politi cal necessity for removing from New York to Philadelphia. The measure would excite the most turbulent pas sions in the minds of the citizens of 7 ..1s ew York." He spoke in handsome terms of the State of Pennsylvania. " He had as high an opinion of the peeple of that State as any man whatever ; but he was afraid of their influence. A Quaker State was a bail neighborhood for the South Carolinians." Mr. Lawrence, of New York, " ad- verted to the funding bUShICBB, and very strongly intimated tlutt these and other important matters which remain to be decided on were to be determined ae- , cording to the fate of this bill." 1 Mr. Madison ; of Virginia, said: "It , is not in our power to guard against a repeal. Our nets are not, like those of the Medes and Persians, unalterable. A repeal is a thing against which no pro vision can be made. I am not under apprehensions of repeal; but if danger 1 of repeal does exist, it is of that kind against which we can not guard.'' Mr. Gerry, of Connecticut, said: " It appears pretty evident the advocates of the bill are sure of a majority ; it is very evident that it has had a very pernicious influence on the great business of fund ing the public debt." He ridiculed the idea of fixing the Government at Con-' ococheague ( just where it is now). "He did not think there was any serious in tention of ever going to that Indian place. Ile considered the whole busi ness us a mere manonivre." Mr. Hartley defended the Quakers, "remarkable for their moral laws, for the plainness of their manners, and -their benevolence. Nay, should the gentleman go to Philadelphia, he will find that these people will treat him as well as any . other so.elety." Mr. Page, of Virginia, with Primitive credulity, remarked: " There is not a city in the World in- which I would sooner trust myself and Congress than in New York ; for it is superior to any place I know for the orderly and decent behavior of its Inhabitants.' , Mr. Gerry, of Connecticut, continued: "That taking so southern a situation [l. e., as the Potomac] would amount to a disqualification of many of the Nor- them membeN, who would forego their election rather than attend the National Legislature on that river." But the "determined majoriiy " of I which he spoke had their way neverthe less ; and on the Bth of July, 1700, by a vote of 32 to 29, the bill became a laW. Whence the-majority came from is a ' curious piece of semi-private history. The references 'to 'the " Assumption Bill" are full of In ., » i n g. In the com pilation of Hamilton's writings it is stated that; " it being ascertained that ill a certain contingency there VMS a majority in favor of tits Assumption in the other House, a bill finally passed the Senate providing that the seat of Gov ernment should remain at Philadelphia until the year 1800 ; and that it should be permanently established, after that time, near the Potomac—a decision in which regard to the perSongi wishes of Washingtomhad Weight." This may be true, but notsueh weight as the : "contingency." however. Mr. Monroe wrote from,. Virginia to Al r Madisep 1. ".The .Asspmption will be dislikedlier6iinder any shape it can as- sume. I believe, hoWaver, a satisfactory adjustment of the other business [the .Potomac] would make this [the As-', sumption] more palatable here." But fors, full explanation we must hearpli. Jefferson. , : • " This game was • over, and • another Was on the carpet at the moment of my arrival [froth Fran cc to become Secre- tdry of State]; and 'to this l' Was most ignorantly and innocently made to hold the Candle. This , fiscal measure was .known by the : name of the Assumption. Independently of the debts of Congress the States had, during the war, eon traeted separatemid heavy debts. This money, whethet ' Wisely /or foolishly , spent, was pretendedte have been spent forlgeneral,,piiites'es; :MK : ought there fore' to tie ,p t ild - frotri 'the gine* parse. This Me,lisnte ~ predneed . :, - the MOO bitterantt angry qoittest . 6 . er, known ' Ino• ICOhgrees, ,, betake.. 4r: ~ , since: the Union of: the S4tteri , !; J . arrived :in the midst alit. ,ThitiastrangertothegroUnd, a Stranger by the.actors melt-'.so long ab sent es to have lost all familiarity with the subject ; . and as • yet unaware - Oita .1 'object.=-4: Mole-fib' eontern init.' - Us great : and trying ipieetioti; however,'Whe lost in the House of-ItePreseritatlVes--- So high were the - fedds excited by, this sub getthat on its rejeetion business Was sus . MO. . Congreas Met and . ttiljeurti iii ed. ' '' .driYtb day Withrmt 'doing 'Any thing, the partieS heingtoo Mach too ' temper ',4,6 'do :be:Shims ‘tegether.': . The Eastern ' ineirthere :'particularly, who *Allipq ti4CrOalh*, - Were the twitthi. , ,EEP 4109 ,4 4 ,.tike5. c ,- seeeee, mreatenea. a , secieleToti ~antl;xlisealution. ' Hamilton -was In despair. , As I was going to the President one day I met --- --------- .--,..... Itti irViralk i: • ..4 P' . • .p a«. . ,-.- ' i e aof ' 0 4, 1 1 z. 1". 4; • ' •0Rti.....” 6 •'' ". ',1''.441. ! FL cool o o concerti f tbau ). 'si c ' -...:• 41 , ]ffailhillg elin4N•Plajw., , .J;doiti , a&al. -1 - ,i,fk i - 0,-)AtuftEifirmecoArtlmately ~ reatedoutd „that all; of,,,ns should •ittligatittlaxmilrilriM, laid stipphrt.4 . ithjointi worts mettailtials px ApproovedibY himl.andtilattlieAuekt . Invving , 4seeii lok' bg 4 1- sinulr !PP - only - --*ltgVittilitibtili'lltaV'4ri': 6 is) 3 i 713. 045'Ae 'AU, Am eat iji tit ti 4 reAi 0 01.A°_,t "Or AY, Alo#l n/ 1 0.4' WS9.t. la :P4P,i4 . is tPP,Pten-AW . ttP4-10M4S.Pf _Ewyekiii v i,pw2.o34 , megaedt,„4lg,ht , again Sot ~inaton,, iltoldliim tW, '-I . 'NAL-really a ,stranger sto the:-whale subject; tintti:not having - yetinfarthed myself ofltheaystenT of lintMeeetuilept&l, I knew not this' was-a nedekilit7 sequence';' that, utidribbtedly,!'ff ,It.til'i•e , dection endangered it'idissolutyi,:6l our Vidciti'nftliit 3 , l 4 l filehtgibigi,iol{i4uild ',olden]. ttiat3lte most.tinfortnnate ,pf4il Obliseenences;, tZ T S,3.7eit Willeh. all partial and temporary evils ,should be Tielded. I I proposed to him, however,' to slide .with ane the next day, and iwould an -vile another, friend or two, bring them ltdo , confereitee together,'and 1 thought 'lt-impossible that reasonable men' Con— *thing together Cooly, cohld ' fail' 'by sonic tnntual 'sacrifices of opinion to form a ethnprcimise which Was to save the Union. The discunstou.took place. I could take no part in it but ad exhorta tory one, because I was a stranger to the circumstances which should govern it. But it was finally agreed that whatever ' importanee had been attached to there- Jection of this proposition, the preserva tion of the Union and of a concord among the States was 'utbre.important, and that therefore itwonidbobetter that tip: vote of rejectionshoolti be resei ailed, to effect which 861.11 Q ;members should change their votes. Bath was observed that this measure would be partinularly bitter to the Southern States, and that some concomitant measure should be adopted to sweeten it a little to them. There had before been 'proposi tions to fix the seat of governineut either lit Philadelphia or at Georgetown on the Potomac ; and it was thought that by giving it to Philadelphia for ten years, and to Georgetown permanently after ward, this might, as an anodyne, calm In some degree the ferment which might be excited by the other measure alone. So two of the Potomac. members White and Lee, but White with a revulsion of shanach almost convulSive),*reed to change. their votes, and liaTiltOn un iiertoilo carry, the.other paint., In do ing this, the influence he had. estab lished over the Eastern members, with the agency of Robert Morris with those of the Middle States effected hieside of the engagement." to "twenty millions I of stock were divided among favored States," and the Capital went to the Po tomac The above is from Jefferson's diary. Lato', in the letter to Washington, he adds: "I was duped by the Secretary of the Treasury, and made a tool for for warding his schemes; and of all the errors of my political life, this has occa sioned me the deepest regret," A later law, at Washington's sugges tion, so changed the boundaries as to include a portion pf Virginia with the town of Alexandria. How far Washington had engaged In tbis contest does not appear, although the project was at the tune denounced as his " hobby-horse." It it said the spot attracted him during his early life while surveying, and that he afterward encamped there during Braddock's campaign against rho Indians. It is certain that he entered on the work with vigor, and that he did not gvow less San guine. Commissioners were appointed, and in March, 1791 he writes to the Sec retary of the Slate: " The terms entered into by me, on the part of the United States, with the land holders of Georgetown and Carrot Is burgh are that all the land from Rock Creek along the river to the Eastern Branch, and so upward to or above the Ferry, including a breadth of about a mile and a half, the whole containing from three to five thousand acres, is ce ded to the public on condition that, when the whole shall be surveyed and laid off as a city (which Malor L'Enfant is new directed to do,) the present proprleters shall retain every other hit ; and for such part of the land as may be taken for ieubliense, Infsonares, lots, eto. ; they shall be allOWed at the rate of £25 per acre, the public having i the right to reserve such parts of the wood on the land as may be tlinught necessary for ornament; the landhold ers to have the use and profits of all the grounds until the city is laid off into lot 8, and sale is made of these lots which by this agreement becomes public prop erty. Nothing is to be allowed .for the ground which may be occupied as streets and alleys. To these considerations all ' the principal landholders have agreed, and it is not doubted that the .fow who were not present will readily come into the measure, even the obstinate Mr. Burns." The refractory personage last men tioned was pealed to by Washington, explaining olf im the advantage he was resisting; o all which he replied : " I suppose you think people - here are going to take every grist that comes from you as pure grain; but what would you have been if you hadn't married the widow Custis ?" ,- The Father of his Country had no more to say. But the Maryland Legis lature was in tarn too much for Mr. Burns. The laws of Maryland were to have. force within the District until Con gress Otherwise provided, so they went on to enact, that " whereas some of the proprietors of lots, as well assomp of the proprietors of lands. have not, from im becility and other causes, come into any [the above] agreement concerning their lands thereforey the Commissioners were by law vested with the title to their lands on the• same terms with the . rest. it does not appear that at this time Washington knew that the city would be celled•by his name. A few months latter the Commissioners, Johnson, Stuart, and Carroll, wrote to Major L'Ehfant, the French engineer who had been employed to lay out the city : "GEORGETOWN, September 9, 1791. "Sin,—We have agreed that the Fed eral District shall be called The Terri tory of Columbia,' and the Federal City 'The City of Washington ;' the title of the map will therefore be, ' A Map of the City of Washington, in the Territory of Columbia."' In 1792 Washington writes: " It is with pleasure I add, as my opinion, that the roots of the permanent city are penetrating deep, and spreadiligfar and wide. Tho Eastern States are not only getting more and more reconciled to the measure, but are beginning to view it in a more advantageous light, as it re gards their policy and interests." In 1799 he writes The Federal City, in the year 1800, will beeometheseatof the General Government of the United States. Ins increasing fast in buildings and rising into consequence ; and will, I have no doubt, from the advantages given to it by nature, and "its proahruty to n rich interior country_and the West ern territory, become the emporium of the United States." Mentiorywes , made in the Senate' of “ fifteen years since the Government re moved here, during the fimt yeart of which period' there prevailed,; not only in Ihis country, 'but fill , over Europe, a degree of entlundasm .bordering 'upon madness respecting the future destines of tbiametropolis..” • Difficulties, however, attended the whaleundertaking, and calamitous dis aster overtook it; The French engineer, L'Enfant, was found' to be as touchy as he was thought to be talented, 'and wits proportionately troublesome. At the first sale allots the rumor was industri ously spread that Cortgrea' s'never*ffid remove' to the 'Potomac, - but would Main at PhiladelPhia." In, I.792:WaSh lirgtbn wrote the Commid toners, that unless great actiYity prevailed, their whole previous labor might be lost.-- 7 Later he was obliged to make.residence on the spot a sine 'guano:xi-with the Commissioners. The watiV.of Money wits severely felt. The $269 0 600 subscrib ed: by NirgMisi and Mary land *as all expended: ' r in 1790 Congress authrirlied and gu . arMiteed ' a loalf- "'toy the 00mMWsia#*; 'of . $800,006,; , but the monelr; - ,,Waa not - MY .be..;'b4d.", e State of..',Attityhind" - tOnhi ,peniii)*l toot - Ilia; of it ; but required the Ooininiadoners to add their individual guarantee to that MEOMZI 3 !Ai11 . .: v: v : ...174 1) . . ?•:'' •;" 44 1 E, • ei: - .. o• • -ref'? A • • -49- .• ' 714 ' . ' . ' .."" ' - ' ' " • • , : • * .., i i i, D tke,As;esn & t ot . s• •- :, re, • , , crwityygotkle likkilloi .itilditnge -made ' WASlrellaVrtote.thr 1,.. ~ , voLIC., ea laith geheafbrattneis did inot.farir so •:. 4.1.1 0 ret nitfe'ldevefillittinfiliik -M/biltif 4i • '''' •f ' 'l , Mittair Of! : I 1 . ,f. tifir, :, ~ r. , ltd.: 1 ...„. q i , ..ie):ip: A:'..?l-7..: ~,,T . : . ..7.7 * , :i ..- fta,i3 ? di . ' :-- 1 - .P . fl i t: ''. l'e -ißeee,intd ~ , : ~ w e . opB4 i n ,..., 4 _ idisidwita x , - i%wriffddieroodway ,tai nbe lbuiltancianpt id/ma/Hl:in/ft twit/62nd And Teter* theclty) fl'o'dne-half 13f the trenfibiti . Of"Vitind . thri"Uttitcd 13tititet?" _iftWerfllt , ertlittit,Oikent. i it 1 i , 303 < 4 C,Y,1 6. .k. • : I ”•TbeetrkTe Iqo.rt a : i) ,-4 - ,ptilc4 o4 :,..,A g t „. -EPim.mq..,0z44.4,44 -413 t, u 4 .° 4 .bent •41414w.•and 4ffitttasiagileafO6 ooo lets at.s6o.eaclifikattsin3'nsfr,theee , partite ibecarne4nsplyant.rhatlngifccotitpllithed ~ tici yllttle;mnltongrowaof brick houses -weretoireneneeclatotheir e rintisbetween - theAtiperdtkitineVlintyl 7tirill,:•toid-fOr *tiff .i•lini• ) l.lle."chittirieyi'reiniihiett W 4 OitiOdtheidg ti r gih'llent.4' . dt . - AIL' ' ' ',44;4:::1:14*,,P!#.4 of 1311wgr9,1.43,w5t5A../gr?onde 'Of ~WswhiliOon- , next.4eorgetewn, dit -001 , - eial timer ,the:fewicents pen: square .foot •themacarit property is :worth in 1806, It liweurnmt , that the lion. •Daniel Carroll, one of the Conimlissioners; , •ithe'ewiied Most Of Cattbi Hill; abbut one'tlilict of 'the'eityip Sett an efferbfs2o6,ooo from •Stbpheri Ginfird hint otherafor, every al ter/44i let, rtAd' 'debt/Ada $1,000,600 for' th e Orue. AI4O, that; he died insolv ent, leaving, the., propertY, . vacant, and $18,060 unpaid city taxes. , This is the old fable of the boy's hand imthe jar ; but still, "the' main reason for its slow -growth in the first forty yerrs: is to be -found ln-the uncertainty which so long existed'es to its being'the permanent 'seat of the Government." • , ... , In,lBoo, during the I'rekldency of the 'elder :Adams, the transfer was effected, the executive offices being 12n/toyed to Washington in June. It was not a very formidable tranafer, so far as persons or materials,mere.eoneerned. , The "Oldest' Inhabitant" assures. me that a single "packet" sloope•breught all theoffice furniture of the Departments ! ' besides the " seven large boxes and four of five smaller ones" which ' contained' the "`Archives" of thegovernment: :Fifty four persons' comprising the President, SecretarieS, and the clericel'Airce choSe their own method of conveyance. The cornerstone was laid. by Wash ington, in, Iff93._ Up :to 1812 only the wings had been completed, :and ' work .was suspended. during .the war.', After the destruction of the 'interior by the British, 111'1814, &building , was erected for atempcirary Capitol. - Phis building was used' during . the war of BeeeSaion as It prison, and was known as the'Oldtap itol Prison. It ha.i received Some niter aliens, and is now Used, as,dwellings. The original Capitol was completed. in 182.5. , ~Thecornerstone of the extension, which constitutes the main• portion of tile present Capitol, was laid on the 4th of July,lB6l, by President Fil more,' upon which occasion Daniel Webster deliver ed one of his most eloquent orations, and deposited under the cornerstone a document In his own handwriting, which reads. If, therefore, it\shall hereafter be the will of God that this structure Ethan fall from its base, the its foundations g, shall be upturned, an the deposit be neath this stone brou tto the eyes of men, be it then known that on this day the Union of the United States of Amer ica stands firm, that their Constitution still exist unimpaired; and with all its original usefulness and glory, growing every day stronger and stronger iu the affections of the great body of the Amer ican people, and attracting more and more the admiration of the world. And all here assembled, whether belonging to public or to private life, with hearts devoutly thankful to Almighty God for the preservation of the liberty and happi ness of the country-, unite In sincere and fervent prayers that this deposit, and the walls and arches, the domes and towers, the columns and entablatures, now to be erected over it, may endure forever. God save the United States of America i" The comfortable (martens and good living which Philadelphia afforded were not abandoned for the backwoods with out severe discontent. On the 4th of July, the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Wolcott,gives his impressions in a let ter to his wife : " The CilPito/ in nituntod o rni fleece, which I shOuld suppose was near the centre of the immense country here called the city. There is one good tavern about forty rods from the Capitol, and several other houses are built and erect ing; but Ido not perceive how the mem bers of Congress can possibly secure lodgings, unless they will consent to live like scholars in a college, or monks in a monastery, crowded ten or twenty in one house, and utterly secluded from society. The only resource for such as wish to live comfortably will, I think, be found in Georgetown, three miles distant, over as bad. a road in winter as the clay grounds near Hartford. " I have made every exertion to secure good lodgings near the office, but shall be compelled to take them at the distance of more than half a mile. There are in fact, but few houses in any one place, and most of them, small, miserable huts, which present an awful contrast to the public buildings, The people are poor, arid as far as I can judge, they live like fishee, by eating . each other. All the ground for several miles around the city, being in the opinion of the people, too valuable to be cultivated, remains u n fenced." President Adams arrived with his family in November. On the2sth Mrs. 'Adams Wrote to her daughter, Mrs. Smith " I arrived here on. Sunday last, and without meetlhg with any accident worth noticing except losing ourselves when we left Baltimore, and going eight or nine miles on the Frederick road, by'which means we were obliged to go the'other eight through the woods, where we wandered two hours without finding a guide or the path. Fortunately, a straggling black came up with us, and we engaged him as a guide to extricate us out of our difficulty ; but woods are all you see from Baltimore until you reach the city, which is only so in name. Here and there is a small cot, without a glass window, interspersed 'among the forests through which you travel miles without seeing any hymau being. 6 IU the city.• there :are, buildinw enough, if they were compact and fin ished, to accommodate Congress and those attached to it ; but as they are, and scattered as they are, I ace no great com fort for them " If the twelve years in which this place has been considered as the future seat of Government had been improved, as they would have been in New Eng land, very many of the present incon veniences would have been removed It is a beautiful spot, capable of any improvement, and the more I view it the more I am delighted with it." John Cotton, Santa, a member front Connecticut, wrote 'also: " Our approach to the city was accom panied with sensations not easily des cribed. One wing of the Capitol only had been etected, which, with the Presi dent's house, a mile distant from it, both constructed with white sandstone, were -shining objects In dismal contrast with the scene around them. Instead of recognizing the avenues and streets por trued on the plan of the city, not one I was visible, unless we except a road, with two buildings on each aide of it called the New Jersey Avenue, The Permsylvania,leading, as laid down on paper, from the Capitol to the Presi dential mansiorr, -was then nearly the whole distance`a_ deep. morass covered with alder-bushes, which _were cut through the width of the intended ave nue during the 'then ensuing winter. " Between the President's house and GeorgetoWn 'a bleck of houses had been erected, which then bore, and may' still bear, the ; name Of the Six .Buildings. There were also two other blocks, con sisting of two or, three dwelling-hohses, in . different ,direetions and now :and th e n an insulated wooden habitation ; the intervening spaces, and, indeed, the surface of the citrgenendly, being cov ered With 4714.4,'64p&f1iNis oh the' high er grounds,, a n y on the marshy soil eithoitrees or, some sort. Of shrubbery. No; Wag Akfi ' esolete asPft9t thqliwe a little augmented by a number '.o un ihdaluad edifices at ,GreculeArs..Point, and on , an eminence a snort dia.- tanco - from it, commented by an indi vidtial whose name they bore but the date of - whose compelled,. hind, to liEstiaon,flieni, not tent.funfinisitedtlltrt in a ruinous condition- 2 ' ' " One of the blocks of buildings at GI noqu I=nlM4 I,[l , faumaicurse - ioo • , TIMM= liVvAyi i ;EP, RanNtedoalai , & mastaf triptiviintent ti l . dk ji. r it itnilkio j iartriipmtobeing- Vedsbymattinecktmnotstersalethl• Ihdtd" adirMElliaated . 1 : : • 'll . l4l:enri ' al • -, !1' 7 a o,,im .r:,.. 4 1 . , . . 44i M I, r P,WP_ r thaPti,fsP . A.c. ! . . ,; -. o-.lor/ 2 19 'Ohio KR '' UK _, reseTh I T o onotta/AftylaW‘pete -Dantwolloll-i mond,:nrallarlsesold4::efakkatiMetlent. !Speaket- , :gaelgoviek hvemallophod asiatido, todilittrolftdtbleroistrofkrAAtiblilllfiivoViol - excietiotiviettama , vOiltimtta , ;., , wm . alifiiivolitzuotisiiiiirk ~ vied , Otrrtrri - T'''Wfie, 'Se -all ..,i,,triew*o... ti., 3 , .-tw.d., ;lois; ,:ar.fous,:tititioyay.4l4..ixatial,;44,we; ,W.eXe.atiOndeflAY , Xiet \te - IMIL fAthOil' -sorvenia... t, hirgeiproportiOw of: Saab-, ern members tookraoligings 4 at.ul. 36 r , town (which ithoughtof a ottopervor o er, were threet mileedistant - tront , the:cl4l-, tol,-;andWof icaursti , rendered the!. ddt 'empleynient'ofhienty .coa,-ellcs4:(i'apis 'pe,nsiLble.• • """- ''' ' ' ' ,..-:. , -... . ' `NotWithgtiihdigg.,llo - _,.l.tilT4o,ratile , .404 whia , 'CV41 1 44! -0 4:PTOqut9 .4 6iP, lopr arrly'a,l, reanaio . , Illeoentlyexpreas ony gdmiration of ita .10Cal. positietl-n-L- , Whenever.,•during the idx years .of-My .Connection with Congress,' the question of remcivingthiLsetit •of Gocurntuentifo :Mind uther platso ' was' ngittotedand the •prtipo l Sltien was - fropently made--I :stiipdhlritostalone.; .q . ' a"Northen ' Man. riiigii/ng ray i:litp'td,tiMitidgatlye * f t =:'. I 'The ' - 's"ces,th or, hytohizigOil:i , :;ll' . vitYl; I spared him if knowledge p' ;s disenii .ltent., He had anticipated hal:direction rif it should at any; time exist. :Perhaps 'his death also load eheckedthepreparn dons., libp,lmemory •may • have &leo cheeked the'dgitatiom for , removal, hilt in 1808,'It Wa. , 4 openly renewed by 'a bill for the temporary remOyaT of the Gtfir erntfient to Ardtfintire, - Which ,tr. Wright, of Maiyhunl, IntrOdnepd.lti the Senate, avowedly, as a; spur to the inhab itants of Washington, anti Mr- Jackson, of Georgia, denounced as. a "bill to frighten the women and, children" of the city,- .and calculated to , de feat the very purpose ''of the motor.-=- Mr. Anderson, bf •I'rerthesiee,' 'Was th favor of the bill, buCtiltowed that' '''" ln stieh an event an obligation would'arise to Indemnify , the proprietors' for the' losses they weld thercb,y siisydri," r lit* Sohn Quincy Adams,. of 41.assaelnisotts, considered the measure, as Inexpedldnt as it was LlUCOnlitittltiAtlaik Mr. Daytol3, .of New -Jersey, said- If •a. removal took place, Congress wasbound to Indemnify the proprietors, . Mr. Jackson said rap-. ther : " The Vine would come, though he hoped to OW roelther his dilldreh nor his children's children would Itv'e .. ft: see it when the population on tills side of the Mississippi would pass that ricer, and the seat of Government would be translated , to :' its , bSr i kSU ifeenturies would, however, elapse lieftimtirat Ipe adod arrived, , liar....Nue}ay, of Pentisy,l,- yenta, contended that no constitutional obstacle did exist. Mr. Adams hislated further, that from the foundation of the Constitution until the removal df the Government to this place, but. one sen timent had existed, which was that the seat of Government, once fixed under the Constitution, became the neriniitient seat. The preponderance of opinftin was against Mr. Adams, but the boll , was nevertheless lost by a vote of 18to 0, and and Congress resumed its migrations between Georgetown and the Capilbl. About this time Sir Augustus Foster, the Secretary of .the British Minister, gave his view of the feelings by which the powers that be were actuated :. "Che richer and more respectable members of Congress had, for the most part, always inclined to vote fdr return ing to Philadelphia, or selecting some other town of practical importance ; hat every such proposal had been distasteful to the majority, it Using in a great rneL.4- ure composed of rough and unfa.shioned persons, to whom it is of consequenceto be in a place where they could. he at tended to inure than in a large city,— This majority had usually found sup port in the Government, so long com posed of Virginians, who liaturally preferred Washington to any remoter situation, but the removal could hardly, he apprehends, have been avoided,: but for the determined personal opposition of Jefferson. This President alleged as his reason the danger of throwing open again a question so difficult and delicate as that of the choice of the seat of Gov ernment." In 1814 there was trouble again. The city had been captured by a force leas than half that which diagracefifily fled, and the public buildings were alt sacked and burned, with many private houses. Congress assembled in September. The situation of the city at that time is thus described : "Twelve or fifteen cluster'of houses, at a considerable distance from each other, bringing to our recollection the appearance of a camp of nomad Arabs, which, however, if connected to gether, would make a very respectable - town, not much Inferior, perhaps, to the capital of Virginia, and here and there an insulated house; the whole of it, when seen from the ruins of our public edifices, looking more like the place where proud Washlngton once stood than where humble Washington now lies." Mr. Fisk, of New York, introduced in the House a resolution of inqry ui into the expediency of removal. Tlic' conn try, he said, was alarmed for the safety of Congress—it was necassary that some steps should be taken. Mr. Lewis, of Virginia, hoped, by rejecting it, an end would be put to sim ilar attempts hereafter, "and that the good people of this District would be permitted to continue their improve ments here without the dread of being sacrificed." Mr. Macon, of North Carolina, said that " if the seat of Goveriunent was once set on , wheels there was he saying where It would stop." Mr. Oakley, of New York, said AWLS true a removal might injure individ.uals, but he presumed no gentleman in the House would hesitate to make a fair and liberal compensation by tray of in demnity to such sufferers. Mr. Stockton of New lerSey, felled on the fifth section of the ,COnstitutionto prove his position. It is theAeproylded that " neither House shall, withpa the consent of thnother, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other place than that in which the two houses stfall be sitting." This Mr. Stockton said, " expressly admits and regulates the general power of removal." The debate continued several days; the old ground Was gone over, the propo sition negatived by u vote of 83 to 74, and the rebuilding set vigorously on foot. The corporation ofAlexandria, In 1804, memorialized the. Legislature of,.Vir- Onto, asking its consent tothe retroces sion of so much of the District as.•had been taken from'that State.' The Leg islature at once and by a unanimous vote, approved tie proposition; and In May of that yetir's bill to that effect passed the House of • Representatives, after an animated debate, in which the question of constitutional power viasnot seriously raised. In the Senate, how ever, the debate turned largelY on that point. Mr. Hay Wood, of North Caro lina and Mr. -Miller of New Jersey, doubted the of Congress in. tint particular. HtitMeßeverdy Johnson, Mr. Calhoun, and Mr: Hunteril of Vir ginia, having carefully examined the subject, were clear that there was nath ing In'all of the prOceedings rellitilitS' to the establishment of the seat of Oovern ment to prohibit the retrocession of the ten-mile square to the States from which it was taken, or.any portion thereof. Mr. Calhoun, in particular, considered the right to remove the seat of Gover&• merit incontestable. He, however,'stateil that it frap - penetl'nt the Memphis 05n- Vetition, shady compos9dhf dik hundred members, possessed ofgreat Intelligente, I and representing alniostexchistvelythe interests of ,those who live,cli upon the soil, a resolution was offered-, recom mending a change , of the seat of.the General Government. A mostextrtuar. dinary • sensation I was 'produced, 'and when thertSefutionwassubmittedthere **one loudAiithedbVer*heltnifig "NO opposed ''tO; life 'atilitary' ,rice of the giver. . ' ' Since then, till now, the question.hat not been seriously-fru-lied. - The "int. stantaiseows process,' , which , Mr.' Scott -reckoned , ths' least'possible of : !f .11SN't was 'adtiltilb: . ninstql‘ ki , life by a,Coni cl gressional appropriation and-now " seminates laws.v.-Tiie."'seven larg boxes" . which: contained the archly are increased' by , many. thousand:tons; and the , personnel , has .tecOme• a real army The Preildent'SWife is mitnovr lost oft' fhp ' high-real& train 'Natifilnite* 'g o wn , it ifujlippithiableltillvelOalefte t' Ver ye, ;536;ItibgthiA v e e tite4a14 have to lodge in Para; or fly 4e cline election on account o I e destrue- 7.1111111 OE 1111.11. - a 1141 M wan e irerr4 wurtinin • VicoliklailWlStrnfthringbitthoMeaterp', trevalerslosttult • !.:., IP" 4 1 .41E1 0 9 "4. i • .tititiatta ••• kt tilett A i MIR • ' 2cNVIIMin N tt, I_2oa if d . A lo `'IW - lifiedVre§t k , J. filittlibriTikettetht -bilthrefiffeitin pohitbf pOissiatiohAp. lalnilWofl4gtatiftflppfs l e 4ffral4aVitt -; of ;&•ehriV pi:OVerd- fart licie 41tlinutlliedres.dn9 , bignt.iiamiticeth l ' 'Eten, after, kaleathe ataidity -eteminn9VoPlalPg wrih t hr •ttNrUzig44 l- Wttegitl re 4r 4 , ivhdthitt lOW etty• doonkE thirrCkild.lfor -thei itblnontit 1 61 PC/140 1 Ott itlJerl ll ,Yisliigle inkino r u p e7 a i nith ~Zers t: t 9 a . 'averunien mewh 'this te!' The , Ontielliihent reached ram lialtilefloYs, , toqlB343 sonleqs7sooooi her S.i.des:s2# o 4 l oQ,WerthSt . Ioto:YINF4 ?1• 941 veAll.iv,T),Or stiff hol4iTia pcks,lession. Against this,l(lovernine trittfAiffeielt 'tiAtes litid drhed• to' t 'city, Ili' All, SOO,OW ; lien ... local taxes, lame of which it pays, and which.Avotthllitive fllcgi?ntßtßsgtlSttlltiMes s4iinMellii If e t , WPFIP 'AP/ i n.! P./T 4 3 , ,4 1 4 e y. epx, tUrra, Tett -stihiti' btv - aceolaiit oftliepagt was not eneou:raging. Forth° tint ferty,years 'of its life, the growth ,4 1 411e.city As.reckonii at 550 par all, a,ra te pf increase blinogt . ilit- Worth • the citpitalof a single Arni , rl4Arr. Dur thetett years following 1810. a generalmnewalxaf tho public Buildings rwas.projecteil ,and, begun, upon u scale which shut out from the minds K moat men theldea 'llity•wouid eVer be alien defied. The 'Posted, the Treasury, the- Patent-office, , and above ' nth ' the I Capitol, weremade to loorn /JP 4.1 UM& APPile an- 1 reWqrflites (1 / 1 1 " - lug ,govennuen The result kord at dnce updn Ole ' ' ,7 l7lo , annuithinerease trebled, and aftdr ilBoliwas increased to 200t1 Permanent mulcostly buildings were the oyidences of.faith and or actjvity, until, in 1860, A ' aslilngton had over 60,000' pernile. e"Witr "aid more for Itthan'Simply `double theie. The place did not fall off, as,utts expected, after the cessation of AQl3gigeki 4114 the rePßval o f e f'4 9, 9P e • The worftman's house repine the sot dices tent. Street rallroadS'new afford convenience,' as the parks and lmb lfa . educate the taste .and (Affer-irecreatine, There, is . icommeme andincipientmanufaeturers. The finest school-house in the country indicates the change ; the ceritetery at Arlington' de lit.teS a portion of cost. The inVistments in property in Washington havegrown *yowl a hundred. millions, pa against the eighty millions Which the public line gtake. These It' Is prOpoiseol to throw 'lnto the sea. If the pubilegotrd reouirs It, it wW be rightly done. ..Tiut if the inotir-he a different one, 14 will be. felt by tlie,people, ps wa.s said in the Senate, that the man who could propose this change from personal considerations de serves the execration of the country. Na tional considerations alone should ; de cide llte she of the National Capital,— • ifai ß. e n4 gckgc lzo . 2e ' ' A' Visit to a ChinOse Silk Factory A cOrrespondent of the Cincinnati Commereliil writes from Canton : • I directed my guide, to take me into .the silk weaving streets. We soon en tered them. I at once dismounted to make a careful observation of their mo des operandi for the prodrietiOn of this renowned,. fabric - of - Oriental looms. Alt around nie-ttiar's.„ but 'silk. iti'small, dark houses little better than Iwels, were seen people,. chiefly women ,dying this delicate textile,. Out side, in . little filthy yards and pjg styes oiler the ground where the family swine were wallowing, were placed bamboo poles, whereon were hanging skeins of 'coleredsilkijustfrom thedye, and glow ing:with the most vivid hues, us they hung for drying in the Sunshine over 'the loaths some pools below. I visited several of 'their weaving shops. They were quite similar iu their fixtures. and arrangements. I spent some tine M examining one of the largest It, was, perhaps, one hundred feet long and about sixteen feet wide. The walls were of 'coarse clay blocks, sumdried, impierced by a single aperturelor air or right, save at the trout, whioh tirely open the whole breadth of the - building. The floor was simply of trod den clay,' uneven and untidy. An aisle rim down the centre, just wide enough for one person to pass ; on either side of this were ranged the neatest looms, and standing as close together as they could be placed. Two or three persons were employed on the work of each loom. The, looms are plain, common-looking affairs, al most precisely of the same, kind, as to appearance and mode of manipnlation, as were those upon which our grand mothers in Ohio used to weave the lin sey woolsey for the wear of us Western .boys, when even the preacher was al inoSt a stranger to broad-cloth. Squat ting myself down by one of these friend ly acquaintances of my boyhood; I lei surely watched the delicate and diligent manipulations of the weaver and his assistants, as their shuttles tleiv to and fro in the mazy mystery of figures and floVt-ers' that came gradually nut larger end plainer upon the glowing surfaceof the gorgeous fabric which,tbosc skillful workmen were there creating under my .eye. so complex were the habvements cif the Men on theSe simple lofting ma chines, and so marvellously' beautiful were the products resulting therefrom, , that I gazed with unbounded, ama.re ment upon this work of silk weaving as Lt prOgreftsed'before me. ' The 'weather being warns and the shop crowded, the workmemare almost naked., My visit interested them man ifestly, yet, not a loom ceased its (lick ing, clacking neitie, not a man left his empleynaent tct gaze, but I - detected them giving flittiVg 'glances and•eachanging mutual- smiles4mong thentselves.at the 'unions stranger. who bail thus 4-lucerP 4ruultuuslY, sqnatted hio