Chapter 8 The Building Campaign of 1823
The library is the only real weakness, however, in the whole
conception; in every other respect the design is a masterpiece.
Lewis Mumford(548)
Another Loan Pursued
After the new year the supporters of the university in the
General Assembly
accelerated their efforts to gain passage of a bill authorizing the
university to
borrow an additional $60,000 dollars. Jefferson accordingly
prepared the visitors
for a special meeting in the event the bill passed into law so that
the workmen
could be engaged "before they undertake other work for the ensuing
season."(549)
Madison replied a week later that he surely would not fail to join
the visitors
upon "receiving the expected notice from Mr. Cabell, if the weather
& my health
will permit: but I am persuaded it will be a supernumerary
attendance, if the
money be obtained, and the sole question be on its application to
the new
Edifice."(550) "The object of the
meeting," Jefferson told Cabell, "will be to
authorise the commencement of the building, and to talk over some
ulterior
measures, which however cannot be finally concluded till April."(551) Senator Cabell
agreed with Madison that the entire board would confirm the loan
without
hesitancy,(552) and so Jefferson,
elated that "the University is advanced to that point,
from which it must & will carry itself through; and it will
strengthen daily,"
decided to put off engaging the workmen till the April meeting of
the Board of
Visitors.(553) In early February,
Cabell wrote to inform Jefferson, with "the most
heartfelt pleasure . . . that there is now no doubt of
the success of our Loan Bill."
At the same time it became apparent to Cabell that adding an
amendment to
release the university from the debts owed to the Literary Fund
would only
hinder the loan bill, so he wisely left that matter for the next
session of the
legislature.(554) A week later
the senator told Jefferson that "We have done much;
but much, very much, remains to be done. In the course of the
ensuing year, we
must avail ourselves of the press. This Assembly has gone as far
as the public
mind will now bear. It is necessary to bring up the people to the
level of the
age."(555)
The impact of the loan bill's passage on Jefferson was
immediately obvious.
"The late good news of a further loan to the University of 60,000$
was recieved
with heart felt pleasure by Mr. J.," Alexander Garrett told John
Hartwell Cocke.
"his manner, conversation, and countenance, all depict the joy of
a father on the
birth of a first and long-wished for son; the day after recieveing
the news he rode
to the University (for the first time he had been on horse back
since breaking his
wrist)[.] I met with him on his return, when he remarked, that he
had recieved
from Mr. Cabell the welcome news of a further loan to the U. of
60,000$ and he
hoped the workmen would prepare immediately for the rotundo; so you
see the
big house is still his first object."(556) "Mr Jefferson seems in high
spirits in
consequence of the mony granted by the Asembly," John Neilson told
Cocke on
22 February, "he said he should write to the Visitors for them to
sanction his
measures, and fall to work imediately. I beleive he would be
anxious that
Dinsmore and my self would undertake the carpenter work but I
avoided the
subject being resolved to be guided entirely by your judgement. He
is full of
brickmaking ideas at present, he said they had or would engage Mr
Thorn (a
brick-layer who came here in partnership with Mr [Richard] Ware) as
superintendent of the brick-yard[,] Mr Jefferson being better
pleased with the
colour of his brick in No 2 and 4 than he is with other that was
made here."(557)
Work Resumes
Two days later Jefferson called on his partner on the
committee of
superintendence "to join me in setting the thing agoing," but Cocke
could not
leave his plantation, so Jefferson proceeded, "according to the
best of my
judgment, with the aid of mr Brokenbrough, and with all the caution
the case
admits."(558) In fact the proctor
soon contracted with Abiah B. Thorn and
Nathaniel Chamberlain for the brickwork of the library (see
appendix K). The
proctor agreed to "furnish the bricks, lime, Sand and scaffolding
at the expence
of the University of Va all of which is to be delivered at
convenient distances
from the building," and Thorn & Chamberlain agreed "not to put
in the wall any
samel bricks, nor to use more than one bat to five whole bricks,
the bricks to be
layed in what is called flemish bond that is header & Strecher
alternately, the
walls to be solidly grouted from bottom to Top and in every course
if deemed
necessary by the Proctor with cement of a fourth lime and three
fourth good pure
sand, for the out side work the mortar to be made of a third lime
and two thirds
good sharp sandThe out side bricks to be of the best rubed
stretchers and
equal in quality and regular colour to the fronts of the Pavilions
No 2 and 4 the
Walls in all cases are to be run perfectly plum and true." Thorn
further agreed to
"superintend the making and burning the bricks" at the rate of $50
per month.(559)
Brockenbrough also contracted with bricklayer William B. Phillips
to lay
"400,000 hard bricks to be taken from the Kiln."(560)
Shortly after Brockenbrough contracted for the Rotunda's
brickwork, he met
with John Neilson and James Dinsmore, proving correct Neilson's
assessment
that Jefferson desired to give him and Dinsmore a major portion of
the work at
the library. Dinsmore & Neilson contracted with the proctor
for the carpentry
work of the Rotunda at "average" Philadelphia prices, agreeing to
make "All the
Window frames & sashes, the two principal floors, the out side
doors including
the outside finishing, the staircases, all the centers for the
brick work, the framing
of the roof and sheeting, The portico framing and sheeting the
Corinthian
entablature all round completethe Base & Cornice of the
Attic, the steping on
the roof, the wood bricks and bond timbers &c that may be
required hereafter for
the finishing of the inside work . . . The materials for
the above named work to
be furnished at the expence of the University."(561) Jefferson was pleased with
Brockenbrough's efforts and notified the Board of Visitors of the
contracts with
the workmen on 12 March, informing the board members that the
proctor had
engaged the "only two bricklayers and two carpenters capable of
executing [the
work] with solidity and correctness . . . Thorn &
Chamberlain for the brickwork,
and Dinsmore & Nelson for the roof and carpenter's work on
terms which I think
will make our money go the farthest possible, for good work; and
his
engagement is only for the hull compleat. that done, we can pay
for it, see the
state of our funds and engage a portion of the inside work so as to
stop where
our funds may fail, should they fail before it's entire completion.
there it may rest
ever so long, be used, and not delay the opening of the
institution, the work will
occupy three years. all this will be more fully explained at our
meeting and will I
hope recieve your approbation."(562)
Internal Disagreement
Just as the future of the Rotunda finally seemed to begin to
shape up an
internal threat arose. Senator Cabell, afraid that he might miss
the upcoming
spring meeting of the Board of Visitors, wrote Jefferson on 24
March to warn
him that "it is highly probable that our friend Genl. Cocke may
propose at the
meeting to adopt a course of proceeding somewhat different from the
one you
seem to have adopted in regard to the Library. He has written to
me, that he
should propose, first, to pay off all existing debts, and, then to
adapt the plan of
the Library to the residue of the funds. Perhaps contracts which
you have
authorized may divert him from this course." Cabell planned to go
to Bremo on
the 29th to try to sway Cocke to support the prudent (in Cabell's
view) plan of
building the library's hull and depend on a later session of the
legislature to
relieve the institution of the debts it had incurred during the
building process.(563)
Upon receipt of Cabell's letter Jefferson drafted a "general view
of the finances"
to show the visitors that the immediate debts of the university
($13,500) did not
cut too deeply into the funds made available by the new loan,
thanks in part to
the annual annuity.(564) At its
meeting the Board of Visitors authorized Cabell and
Cocke to "settle and repeat to the board" the accounts of both the
bursar and
proctor,(565) and after the
meeting Jefferson prepared a second statement of the
finances to reassure Cocke (who missed the meeting) that "the 4.
rows & all
expences of land Etc. will be compleated without taking a dollar
from the last
loan, which it is the opinion of mr Br[ockenbrough] Dinsmore Etc.
will be quite
sufficient to compleat the Rotunda. still we think it prudent to
contract only for a
part at a time, so as never to go beyond our funds."(566) In the end Cocke was
convinced of the propriety of carrying on the work on the Rotunda
as originally
planned.
Allegations of Misconduct
At the meeting the Board of Visitors had to deal with one
other issue, an
anonymous letter sent to House of Delegates Representative Thomas
Griffin
alleging various "charges of misconduct" against Brockenbrough the
university
proctor, signed a "Farmer" and in fact written by James Oldham.(567) Oldham
drafted the letter back in late January after he and Brockenbrough
had a dispute
over the use of Mathew Carey's Philadelphia Price Book of
1812 as the standard
of settlement for the housejoiner's work on Pavilion I and Hotel A,
Oldham
claiming that his contract was with Jefferson and not the
proctor.(568) The letter
made absolutely no impact in Richmond because of the delegates'
aversion to the
anonymous nature of the attack,(569) and there the matter rested
until the visitors'
April meeting, when Brockenbrough, whose "feelings have been much
wounded
by those calumnious charges," asked the board to "do me the justice
to make
some public declaration" in his favor.(570) The board instructed the
executive
committee to call on Oldham for evidence to support his charges but
by now the
two men could not even agree on setting up arbitration about the
matter.(571)
Oldham in November 1823 filed a lawsuit against the University of
Virginia and
the case dragged on with both sides exchanging accusations and
taking
depositions until the Staunton Chancery Court settled it in the
early 1830s.(572)
Library Begun
The work on the Rotunda began even before the Board of
Visitors' meeting
of 7 April. "We had a pleasant meeting," Cabell informed General
Cocke's wife
the next day, "and the Rotunda goes on, and Mr. Jefferson is
delighted. The
buildings appear more & more beautiful every time I see
them."(573) Cabell and
fellow visitor and legislator George Loyall met together after the
meeting to plot
some changes to the "plan & interior distribution of the
Library House. The two
especially wanted to have at least one of the Rotunda's two large
oval rooms
"fitted up with seats runing around the rooms parallel to the walls
& rising one
above another, so that the Lecturer's eye & voice would
distinctly reach the eye
& ear of every student present." Rather than directly
attempting to "interfere too
much with Mr. Jefferson's architectural views," the schemers
requested James
Madison to approach the rector about "this modern plan."(574) Jefferson rejected
the plan as unnecessary, pointing out that the rooms in the
pavilions were
designed to serve as "ordinary lecturing rooms" and that the oval
rooms were not
designed to accommodate large numbers of students on a regular
basis. "no
human voice can be habitually exerted to the extent of such an
audience,"
Jefferson asserted. "we cannot expect our Professors to bawl daily
to multitudes
as our strong orators do once a year. they must break the numbers
into two or
more parts accomodated to voice and hearing, & repeat the
lecture to them
separately."(575) Madison noted
that plenty of "time & opportunity" remained for
readjusting the "manner of finishing the interior of the Rotunda
rooms," if need
be.(576)
Cabell and Loyall were not the only ones trying to alter
components of
Jefferson's plan for the Rotunda. James Dinsmore consulted
Jefferson on 21
April about changing the design of the building's main exterior
entablature as well
as those for its windows. After carefully examining "all the
antient Corinthians in
my possession," Jefferson demurred, observing that Palladio, "as
usual, has given
the finest members of them all in the happiest combination."
Palladio also
supplied the "handsomest entablatures for windows that I can find
any where."(577)
Some small necessary alterations during the period were approved,
however, in
order to adapt the exterior and interior designs to the actual
building process and
in order to produce effects more pleasing to the eyes.(578) Even as he feverishly
worked to finish the architectural drawings for his Academical
Village's capstone,
Jefferson could soon note with satisfaction that the Rotunda was
"rising nobly"
from the ground.(579)
Carrara Marble
By Independence Day 1823 word reached Monticello that the
Italian marble
capitals intended for the pavilions were en route to Richmond from
New York,
where they had arrived on board the Draco on 10 June.
Several of the capitals
were "so enormously heavy" that Bernard Peyton, the university's
commission
agent in Richmond, scarcely knew what to do with them upon their
arrival.
"They are too heavy to be transported by Drags, from Rocketts to
the Basin," he
informed the proctor, "& the Locks are not in order to admit
the passage of
Boats from the Basin to Tide water, & again, I fear they are
too heavy for Boats,
particularly those of the North river, & when the water is
low."(580) Jefferson
immediately wrote to Thomas Appleton in Leghorn to apprize him of
the
impending arrival of the stones at the Albemarle site ("expected to
have been
here a 12 month sooner") and to notify the consul to expect another
order of
capitals, for the Rotunda, "for which we shall be ready in 3.
months from this
time."(581) If Jefferson, now a
dozen weeks past his 80th birthday, contemplated
the possibility that he might not live to see the capitals for the
Rotunda he did not
let on to Appleton, who was 20 years to the day his junior. "On
observing the
coincidence of our birth days I congratulate you on your attainment
of your 3.
score years on the same day which filled up my 4 score, when
however the
psalmist tells us that `their strength are but labour and sorrow.'
yet my health is
so sound that I count on seeing the completion of my university
when I shall be
ready to `go hence & be no more seen' singing with old Simeon
`nunc demittas
Domine.'"(582) Nearly two years
passed, however, before Appleton could write to
say that the last of the marble stones had been shipped from
Leghorn for
America,(583) and John Gorman set
the capitals in place (for $100) only weeks
before Jefferson's death in July 1826.(584)
It was August before Peyton could engage boats to ship the 18
boxes of
marble to Scott's Landing, from which they were carted to the
university to
"make the final finish of all our buildings of accomodation."(585) On 20 September
Brockenbrough reported to Jefferson that the capitals had been set
in place
without incident but complained that the carvers had compromised
the stones'
elegance by omitting and failing to complete some of the more
delicate details of
their designs.(586) "All the
Corinthian Capitels want the listel and cavetto which
constitutes a part of the Astragal on the top of the shaft of the
Column," the
proctor fretted. Those omissions complicated the subjoining of the
capitals to
the brick columns. Additionally, the upper part of the leaves of
the Corinthian
capitals were not "finished off as it should have been," and the
"carving of the
bead under the Ovolo" was omitted altogether from the Ionic
capitals, detracting
from the beauty of both. Despite the departure from Palladio's
designs and the
inferior workmanship, Jefferson told Thomas Appleton that the
capitals were
"well approved on the whole."(587)
Engravings
In mid-July, with the columns of the buildings of
accommodation still gaping
for their capitals, Jefferson wrote to John Trumbull concerning
engravings of the
painter's Declaration of Independence and Resignation
of General
Washingtona copy of the first one intended for his old
friend at Montpelier.
"Independant of the motives of friendship to which we shall owe
your kind visit,"
wrote the octogenarian as he invited the celebrated artist to
Monticello, "I can
promise you a gratification well worth the trouble of your journey,
in a visit to
our University. I can assure you that, as a specimen of
architecture strictly
classical, you will find it unrivalled in this country, and
possessing the merit of
pure originality in the design. it is by such as yourself
therefore that I wish it to
be seen and judged. the building however which is to be it's
greatest ornament,
and in fact the key-stone which is to give Unity to all that is
already done, will
only have it's walls compleated the present year, and will not
recieve it's roof until
the next: but this your experienced eye will supply. it's
Perspective would
furnish a subject worthy of your pencil and of the burin of Mr.
Durand. it would
be a very popular print." Asher B. Durand, whose engraving of
Trumbull's
Declaration of Independence made the engraver's reputation
(and proved a
financial disaster for the painter), never produced an engraving of
the university
although he later made one of Monticello.(588)
Jefferson Ill
The old sage of Monticello, who had recently bragged to Consul
Appleton of
his sound health, actually was so desperately ill that by late July
he could not
even write a note to Brockenbrough to request a meeting at
Monticello on
university business.(589) Senator
Cabell, hearing at home in Nelson County that
"Jefferson's health is so feeble," felt concerned at having
troubled Jefferson with
letters about the new jail planned for Nelson County.(590) Brockenbrough sent a
short note to Cabell to update him of Jefferson's condition on 27
July, writing
that "he was something better than he had been," and adding that
the "Rotunda
progresses well The walls are partly up to the upper floor."(591) It was nearly mid-August
before Jefferson ventured writing again,(592) and by the third week of
August joiner John Neilson could report to General Cocke from the
university
that "the work of the Pantheon goes on rapidly. Mr Jefferson is
got well he was
here yesterday."(593) When he
paid that visit to the site, Jefferson informed E. S.
Davis of Abbeville, South Carolina, the library's walls had risen
to two-thirds of
"their intended height, and thus will attain their full height in
the course of
another month. but the roof being weighty & from it's
spherical form pressing
outwardly in every direction we shall not venture it on our walls
while green. it
will not be put on therefore till the next summer, and the interior
will require
perhaps still another year."(594)
On 8 September Jefferson invited his old friend
William Short, who was returning from a lengthy tour of Canada to
Philadelphia,
to spend the next spring season in Albemarle County, when "we shall
then have
more for you to see and approve. by that time our Rotunda (the
walls of which
will be finished this month) will have recieved it's roof, and will
shew itself
externally to some advantage. It's columns only will be wanting,
as they must
await their Capitels from Italy." Furthermore, Jefferson
challenged his old
friend, "in your substitution of Monticello instead of your annual
visit to Black
rock, I will engage you equal health, and a more genial and
pleasant climate. but
instead of the flitting, flurting and gay assemblage of that place,
you must be
contented with plain and sober family and neighborly society."
(595)
Visitors Meet
At the Board of Visitors' annual fall meeting on Monday 6
October 1823 the
board only needed to decide on a couple of matters, besides
drafting its annual
report to the president and directors of the Literary Fund.(596) The visitors ratified a
contract that the proctor entered into in September with
stonecarver Giacomo
Raggi for furnishing the 10 bases and 2 half-bases of the columns
for the Rotunda
out of Carrara marble (at $65 each whole base) and recommended to
the
executive committee that it also procure the capitals for the
building from
Carrara, "if practicable on terms not higher than those offered by
Thomas
Appleton."(597) The visitors also
directed the committee to look into the feasibility
of arranging to have the marble paving squares for the Rotunda's
portico made in
Italy as well. When writing to inquire about the 1,400 one-foot
squares a couple
days after the meeting, Jefferson also asked Appleton to provide an
estimate for
the cost of carving from wood the 40 Palladian Composite capitals
intended for
the dome room of the Rotunda's interior.(598) Appleton replied in February
1824
that the "polish'd and accurately Squar'd, ready to be laid Down"
squares would
cost $22.50 the hundred in Leghorn but tried to convince Jefferson
to carve the
interior Composite capitals out of marble, citing a price of $100
each.(599) Jefferson
ordered the squares in May 1824 but sought the interior capitals
elsewhere.(600)
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