As the nation’s largest and most expensive public works project, the expansion of the United States Capitol, including its new cast iron dome, coincided with the most politically divisive period of American history. Between the election of Abraham Lincoln in November 1860 and his inauguration the following March seven states had withdrawn from the Union. Washington’s vulnerable geographical position between the slave states of Virginia and Maryland, and growing “rumors of an approaching Southern Army—with designs to blow up the public buildings,” created a sense of panic in the city. The Capitol construction had been under the direction of the Department of War, and on May 15, 1861 the project was halted “until after the war.” Thus Walter was forced to leave his greatest work unfinished. In addition, after getting his wife and son to the safety of Philadelphia, Walter abandoned the DC townhouse that he designed and built for his family in the 1850s.


The Capitol from Pennsylvania Avenue, Looking Southeast  
Reproduction of Albumen Photograph
Summer 1860

Courtesy of The Architect of the Capitol
 
U. S. Capitol, Looking East
Progress Photograph
Salted Paper Print
November 16, 1860

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia



Walter’s Washington Residence at 614 F Street, NW
Reproduction of Albumen Photograph                                
c. 1925


Courtesy of The Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library, Washingtoniana Division

Walter’s Washington Residence at 614 F Street, NW
Plan of Residence

Thomas U. Walter, Architect                                        Watercolor on Whatman Paper
1853

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia

United States Capitol Dome
Progress Photograph
Salted Paper Print
September 29, 1860

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
Capitol Dome, View from the East  
Progress Photograph
Reproduction from Stereoscopic View
May 9, 1861

The East front of the Capitol with Union soldiers drilling in the foreground.  

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
 
Capitol Dome Construction, View from the Northeast
Salted Paper Print
May 15, 1861

This image was taken on the day that construction was officially halted by the Federal Government until “after the war.”
 

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
 
Willard’s Hotel, Washington, Saved by the New York Zoaves  
Harper’s Weekly
Volume V, Number 230, Cover
May 25, 1861  
 
Diary of Thomas Ustick Walter
May 9, 1861   

Once his F Street house had been emptied, Walter stayed at Willard’s Hotel at 14th & Pennsylvania Avenue. Despite its reputation as one of Washington’s finest hotels, the architect complained of rotten food and roaches in the tea.  The fire (described in his diary) was the last straw. For the next week he would sleep in his empty house and take his meals at Mrs. Irving’s boarding house,” Walter, who enjoyed his wine, gin and “seegars,” negotiated an arrangement with the tee-totaling Mrs. Irving:  “I have concluded to eat there while I remain, and they have concluded to let me have my wine—her price for eating is $5 per week; cheap enough.  I paid Willard $31 for one week, 2 fires and 2 bottles of wine, the biggest shave I ever had!”  

Walter Collection, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia
 

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