![]() The Smithsonian Castle, for example, has been standing straight since the late 1840s.Įarly maps show the same. Leaf through the images in the Library of Congress and you’ll see a dry landscape with buildings that would not have survived to the present had their foundations been sunk in muck. Pictorial panoramas of the city proliferated during the 19th century as ways to instill national pride in Washington, and are one of the best sources for understanding early Washington. ![]() ‘City of Washington from Beyond the Navy Yard’ ![]() The canal was pretty unpleasant by the 1840s, but that was because of inadequate sewers, not because of inherent swampiness. The western part of the creek was turned into the Washington City Canal in 1815. After all, it’s Capitol Hill, originally called Jenkins Hill, not Capitol Slough.įlowing between the Capitol and White House was Tiber Creek, a perfectly respectable watercourse whose route took it southward, roughly along North Capitol Avenue, skirted the future Union Station Plaza and turned west where Constitution Avenue now runs. He picked one high point for the presidential mansion and one for the houses of Congress. The spurs of land that extended northward from the main river were immediately obvious to Pierre L’Enfant, the French immigrant who mapped out the streets and squares for the new city. The land sloped steadily upward away from the Potomac between Rock Creek and the Anacostia River, then called the Eastern Branch of the Potomac. Like many other early American cities such as Philadelphia and Cincinnati, Washington was built on a firm and dry riverbank. Washington knew the region intimately as a nearby landowner and resident, and the site for Washington looked much like his home at Mount Vernon – a rolling riverside terrain of old tobacco fields. There was never much doubt that the new federal district and city would be near the head of navigation on the Potomac River, adjacent to the thriving port town of Georgetown and well away from the squishy margins of Chesapeake Bay. George Washington knew exactly what he was doing in early 1791 when he led the three-member commission that Congress had authorized to pick the site for the nation’s capital. The assumption is just plain wrong: Washington was never a swamp, as I’ve discovered in exploring its first two centuries. The metaphor gets its clout from the notion that Washington was built in an actual physical swamp, whose foul landscape has somehow nourished rotten politics. These ambitious “hydraulic engineers” rely on a phrase that is deeply mired in our political discourse. What do Ron Paul, Nancy Pelosi and President Donald Trump have in common? They’ve all promised to “drain the swamp” of Washington politics.
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