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Washington Monument

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Expedition Overview

In 1933 the National Park Service assumed responsibility for the monument when the Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks was reorganized under the Department of the Interior. A year later, as a Depression Era public works project, the monument underwent its first restoration. There was another in 1964 and another from 1998 to 2001, when the current elevator was installed. On August 23, 2011, a magnitude 5.8 earthquake struck, its epicenter 90 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. The quake rocked the monument, displacing joints, chipping stones and causing more than 150 cracks. The National Park Service closed the monument for 32 months while repairs were made, and reopened the monument to the public on May 12, 2014. Later that year in August 2014, CyArk in partnership with DJS Associates and the Heritage Documentation Programs of the National Park Service laser scanned and photographed the monument to document the restored site.Today, as in the past, the Washington Monument exemplifies a nation’s gratitude to the man who led the colonies in war and the fledgling nation in peace.

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Introducing the Washington Monument

Like the monument built in his honor, George Washington stands tall in American history. He attained victory in the Revolutionary War and then, to help unify the quarreling states, reluctantly took the reins of government as the nation’s first president. Washington was a unifier, a man who understood that if there was to be popular rule in America – and not rule by kings -- then he must set an example. He asked to be called simply, “Mr. President,” and voluntarily gave up power when his term was done.After Washington’s death, admirers including James Madison and Chief Justice John Marshall looked for a way to honor him. In 1833, they formed the Washington National Monument Society and set out to raise a million dollars to build a memorial “whose dimensions and magnificence shall be commensurate with the greatness and gratitude of the nation.” In 1845 the Society selected an architectural design by South Carolinian Robert Mills, who claimed to be the first native-born American to study specifically to become an architect. Born in 1781, Mills worked with Benjamin Latrobe, an architect of the U.S. Capitol, and counted Thomas Jefferson as mentor. Named “Architect of Public Buildings,” Mills designed the emerging capital’s Treasury Building (1836-39), Patent Office (1836-40) and Post Office (1839). His design for the Washington Monument was elaborate – an Egyptian-style 600-foot obelisk rising from a temple base ringed by 30 Doric columns 100 feet high.On July 4, 1848, the cornerstone was laid, but Mills’ design fell unto hard times. Funds lagged and politics intervened as the nation lurched toward civil war. When the monument was finally completed, only the marble obelisk remained. The flags in a circle at its base were added permanently in 1958.

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Commemorative Stones

As its name implies, the Washington National Monument Society envisioned a national monument to George Washington. The Society wanted every state in the Union represented and sought from each a commemorative stone to be inlaid in the monument wall. Engraved slabs arrived by rail, sea and ox team, though few came with the hoped-for cash donation. Stones came not only from states, but from cities and counties, fraternal organizations and community groups, foreign countries and a few individuals.During the early years of construction, from 1849 to 1855, 92 commemorative stones were set into niches cut in the interior wall. A stone from the Franklin Fire Company went up at the 30-foot level and one from the German Benevolent Society at 40 feet. The Association of Journeyman Stonecutters sent an elaborate stone designed by an apprentice working for Messrs. John Struthers & Son of Philadelphia. It featured all the tools of the trade framed by a garland of leaves. Indiana’s stone was carved in limestone, New Hampshire’s in granite, and Georgia’s in marble, as was South Carolina’s, defaced though it was “by some of the baser sort” who had broken off heads and carted away the trumpet borne by an angel.

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This project was made possible through the generous support of Iron Mountain and the following partners:

DJS Associates

HABS

National Park Service

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.