By the time the first shots were fired at Fort Sumter in April 1861, the United States Capitol building had been under construction for more than a decade. The new Senate and House wings remained unfinished; and the magnificent dome rose to less than half its final height. The Great Civil War that would test whether the nation would survive was a trial for the building itself, and also its long-suffering Philadelphia architect, Thomas Ustick Walter (1804-1887). Based on original drawings, photographs, prints and the architect’s own diaries and letters, this exhibition focuses on the architectural, engineering, political, artistic, military and family challenges Walter faced during the war years.




Thomas Ustick Walter
Salted Paper Print
c. 1861

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia


United States Capitol From the East  
Reproduction from Daguerreotype
1846   

This is how the Capitol looked when Walter was first hired to design the extension wings.  The low saucer-shaped plaster & wood dome was completed in 1823 by Boston architect Charles Bulfinch (1763-1844).  


Courtesy of The Library of Congress




United States Capitol Approved Extension Design
Thomas U. Walter, Architect
Ink, Wash  & Watercolor on Whatman Paper
1851

On June, 10, 1851, President Millard Fillmore approved Walter’s design for the extension wings, one for the House of Representatives and one for the Senate, each with three porticos and each connected to the original capitol structure with narrow corridors. The cornerstone of the new work was laid on July 4, 1851, the 75th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
     


Plan and Elevation of Room #4, North Wing, Extension of U. S. Capitol
Thomas U. Walter, Architect
Ink, Wash and Watercolor on Whatman Paper
1854
 

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia


Plan of Principal Story, North Wing, Extension of U. S. Capitol  
Thomas U. Walter, Architect
Ink, Wash and Watercolor on Whatman Paper
May 12, 1854  

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia


Column Shaft Installation  
North Connecting Corridor, U. S. Capitol
Salted Paper Print
November 26, 1860  

In this posed ceremonial photograph is seen the architect, (with hand on hip) and Senator Jefferson Davis.  Within a few weeks  Davis had left the Senate to become the President of the         Confederate States of America.  

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia


Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln  
East Front of United States Capitol
Mounted Albumen Print
March 4, 1861  

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
 

Copyright © 2012 The Athenaeum of Philadelphia