Chapter 5
The Building Campaign of 1820
For if the plan and the general order were good, the
execution of the details was no less admirable.
Lewis Mumford(367)
Bitter Weather
Despite Jefferson's hyperbole about Virginia's "genial
climate," the new year
opened with a bitter arctic blast. "On the morning of the 1st Jany
(Saturday last)
the Thermometer hung out in the open air, stood at 9
below Zero, a little before
SunriseAt 9. oclock being removed into the passage where it
usually hangs, it
stood at 2 degrees below 0 after breakfast, 1 degree
above 0 . . . Ice 7 Inches
thick on the River."(368) These
winter conditions brought work on the buildings at
the university to a near standstill. Huddled by the Monticello
fireplaces trying to
keep warm, Jefferson's concern during the month was focused more on
raising
the money necessary to continue construction and "relieve the
actual distresses of
our workmen" than on the progress those workmen were making.
Private
subscriptions came in "slow & grudgingly" when at all,
Jefferson complained to
state Senator Joseph Carrington Cabell.(369) He directed Alexander Garrett
to draw
$13,000 to distribute "among the claiments," whose demands, the
bursar
informed Jefferson's partner on the committee of superintendence,
"already
exceeds the second annual donation by the state."(370)
Land Deed
Before he left for Richmond to secure the funds, Garrett found
the time to
draw up a land deed for a forty-eight and three quarter acres tract
of land,
surveyed by Albemarle County Surveyor William Woods, that John M.
and
Frances T. Perry were selling to the university for $7,231.80.
Bordered in part
by the Wheelers and Three Notch'd roads and adjacent to the
forty-three and
three quarter acres parcel that the Perrys had sold to the Central
College, the
second tract greatly increased the holdings of the university but
its purchase
contributed to the severe financial drain faced by the institution.
Upon his return
from Richmond, Garrett made an estimate of the university's
financial situation,
based on figures provided by the proctor, and concluded that an
additional
$97,098.25 was needed to complete the university$38,898.25 to
finish the
buildings already commenced, and $58,200.00 to erect the buildings
not yet
started. Some $80,000 of that amount still was wanting, and the
private
subscribers to the Central College were expected to provide a
maximum of only
$8,800.02.(371) In order to
counter "the deplorable state of our funds," which also
included approximately $15,000 in debts owed to university
contractors, an
appeal was maded to Senator Cabell to raise the money in the
Virginia General
Assembly so that the undertakers would not have to discharge their
journeymen
for the lack of funds to pay them.(372)
Financial Woes
While Jefferson awaited the result of Cabell's efforts from
his mansion
outside Charlottesville, he expressed his uneasiness about the
state of affairs to
Madison. "The finances of the University are in a most painful
state," he wrote.
"the donation of 1820. is recieved & paid away, and we still
owe 15,000 for
work already done."(373)
Meanwhile, the best Cabell could do was to win support
for a bill authorizing the university to borrow money to finish its
buildings. The
recent embezzlement by the state treasurer of $120,000 ruled out an
outright gift
of $80,000.(374) Jefferson,
nevertheless, was relieved when Cabell wrote to inform
him of the passage of a compromise bill on 24 February granting the
institution
power to borrow $60,000 against the credit of its own funds, adding
that the
"University is popular in the Senate, and unpopular in the House of
Delegates"
(see appendix H).(375)
The Work Continues
Back at the construction site, John Neilson "brought up some
workmen" to
begin his part of the joinery work on Pavilion V in mid-February
while George
W. Spooner, Jr., continued to work on the same building.(376) Ware and his
Philadelphia workmen presumably were weathering the cold as best
they could,
working outside on the east lawn when possible, for Ambrose
Flanagan delivered
the Philadelphians $106.57 worth of plank on 10 February.(377) Oldham, Dinsmore,
and Perry still had interior work to shield them from the weather.
For instance,
the Corinthian pavilion reserved for Thomas Cooper on the west lawn
(number
III) was ready for the plasterer in early March 1820.(378) The walls and ceilings had
to be plastered before the doors and windows could be hung, which
the
housejoiner assured Jefferson could be done in a fortnight, and
then the whole
interior had to be painted. Jefferson optimistically predicted
that the building
would be ready for occupancy by the first of May, although he
calculated another
month might be necessary so that "the plaistering may become drier,
as to allow
for little miscalculations of workmen."(379) In mid-March, James Glasgow
and
Joseph Antrim sent in separate proposals for plasterwork. Glasgow
offered "to
Do all the Plastering Ruff Casting & Stuco Work that may be
Wanting to be
Done,"(380) and both men
referenced the price book of the Master Plasterers
Company of Philadelphia's and agreed to let the work be measured by
the
Philadelphia mode of measurement. Brockenbrough signed a contract
with
Antrim on 22 March,(381) and in
mid-May John H. Craven delivered Antrim 1,625
pounds of hay to mix with the plaster and some plank for his work
on the
pavilion.(382)
As for painting, John Bevan of "Kilmarnock Lancaster county"
"assumed the
liberty of soliciting work" in that line of business from Jefferson
back in
September 1819, but his proposal apparently came too early to be
given serious
consideration.(383) Benjamin
Collins of Philadelphia in December 1819 sent in a bid
offering to glaze the window sashes and do plain painting by the
yard.(384) Collins
and the proctor apparently worked out some kind of agreement in
which Collins
would supply glass and the paint supplies and Englishman John
Vowles (who was
later the principal painter and glazer at the Rotunda and the
Anatomical Hall)
would actually oversee its application at the university, although
Vowles at about
this time submitted his own bid, for plain and "Mahogany, or any
kind of Fancy
Work," addressed to "Mr. John Carr proctor U. Va."(385) Collins later sold the
contract to Edward Lowber of Philadelphia, the actual supplier of
the materials,
although Lowber quickly came to regret making the bargain.(386) In any event,
painters were active on the site by the beginning of May when the
proctor
procured a pint of oil from them for Jefferson, possibly to use in
making the hotel
drawings he was then engaged in.(387)
The Visitors Meet
When the spring meeting of the Board of Visitors rolled
around, the board
spent its time discussing the pending loan from the Literary Fund,
and the only
action it took regarding construction of the buildings was to vote
to apply the
monies from the loan to the debts owed the workmen, and to direct
any balance
"towards the erection of buildings of accommodation on the eastern
back
street."(388) On the day of the
visitors' session at the university, Robert McCullock,
who with his brother James operated one of more than three dozen
sawmills in
Albemarle County's Fredericksville Parish, delivered 3,286 feet of
lumber to
James Oldham (receiving $57.56 for his compensation), indicating at
least some
small life at the site.(389)
After the members separated, Jefferson directed the
proctor to make an estimate "of the whole expence of compleating
such
buildings, distinguishing the expence of each," to be enclosed
later in the fall
report to the president and directors of the Literary Fund.
Brockenbrough
estimated that $10,000 was needed immediately to pay the
institution's debts and
another $18,000 was needed to complete the 7 pavilions and 31
dormitories in
progress. To "compleat the Area," meaning the upper square, or
lawn, the final 3
pavilions would require $18,000 and the 24 dormitories, $9,600.
For the "East
back street," to be commenced in the current year, Brockenbrough
estimated 3
hotels could be built for $9,000 and 25 dormitories for an
additional $10,000.
That meant $74,600 was wanting to bring the accounts to date and to
carry on
the work projected for 1820. All that would remain after that was
"2. Hotels &
Proctor's house & 25. dormits. compleatg. W. back street" that
were expected to
be started in 1821 at a projected cost of $19,000.(390) The $93,600 total, not far off
from the bursar's February estimate, would "accomplish the
buildings of the
whole establishment (the Library excepted)" by the end of 1821.(391)
Spring Brings New Life
About a month following the visitors' meeting the construction
at the
university site was once again being carried on at a respectable
speed. The
proctor pressed his architect to send the hotel plans down from the
mountaintop
so that the carpenters could ascertain the size and amount of
timber that needed
to be cut. He had decided to assign Hotel A to James Oldham, whom
he thought
could better manage the large flat roof that was planned for the
building.
Spooner and Perry would receive the smaller hotels. The layout of
the buildings
on the west range apparently had not been finalized, at least not
in
Brockenbrough's thinking, for he informed Jefferson that "Hotel A
if placed in a
line with the North flank wall of Pav: No 1. will have no dormitory
attached to it
as there is only 56 feet from the north flank to the alley or cross
street runing up
to the back of the dormitories." To solve this difficulty the
rector was requested
to visit the site before Brockenbrough set the laborers to digging
the foundations
of the hotels. "I find if we cut in the bank the depth of Hotel A
we shall have a
bank 7 feet high & then the cellar to dig out in order to save
some labor I
propose advancing the buildings a few feet in the street & then
throwing the
street more to the East."(392)
Also in May, Brockenbrough attempted to revitalize efforts at
the university
to push forward the stonework. He sought to hire a stonecutter,
"by the day or
piece work," who just finished carving for General Cocke at Upper
Bremo. He
could pay for "plain work 25 cents pr Superficial foot & 50 pr
foot straight
moulded work, & 75 cents for circular Moulded do pr foot
superficial," or $1.50
a day.(393) Luther M. George sent
up "Som cut Stone" from Milton, apparently
shipped from Richmond by Thomas B. Conway, along with the word that
"a very
Large one hear" weighing at least 2,800 pounds could be wagoned up
when
wanted.(394) A few days later
George sent word that his "Boatman Elijah has
brough[t] up an other of them Large Rock and have Sent it on by a
waggoner."(395)
(Elijah, who apparently was George's slave, later worked for the
university 41
days straight "inclusive easter Monday & 2 other lost days
deducted.")(396)
Destined to become an Ionic cap, the 2,149 pound stone at Lewis
Ferry cost the
university $12 by the time it reached the construction site. John
H. Wood
charged the university $13.14 for boating 3 small "ones of wrought
stone" to be
used for bases and caps and one 2,389 pound rock from Richmond to
Milton at
the end of the month.(397) In
early June the proctor tried to talk Jefferson into
buying marble from Pennsylvania after Giacomo Raggi, who "complains
much of
this stone," returned from Philadelphia with a sample more to his
liking.(398)
Jefferson would hear nothing of the proposal, although in July he
finally
conceded that something must be done. He wrote Consul Thomas
Appleton in
Leghorn to ask how much it would cost, "considering the low price
of labor, and
of the material with you," to get the Corinthian capitals ready
made from
Carrara.(399) It was February
1821 before Jefferson received Appleton's reply, and
only then did he discover that he had omitted to give Appleton the
number of
capitals he wanted carved!(400)
Jefferson visited the university on Tuesday, 6 June, but
Brockenbrough,
unfortunately "out of place," was not able to get the rector's
opinion on several
important points immediately at hand. One of the questions he
wanted to ask,
whether to place the "ornaments for the metops layed down by
Nicholson" in the
"Frize of Pavilion No 2 E. Range," gives some indication of Richard
Ware's
progress on that building.(401)
The substitution of tin gutters for wooden ones and
the ordering of marble from Philadelphia both have been discussed
previously, as
has the progress of the pipe borers in laying down waterpipes.
Jefferson's
answers to the proctor's inquiries about substituting 10 x 12 glass
for 12 x 12 in
the hotel windows in order to save money and whether the cornice
and
entablature of the pavilions would look better a stone color rather
than perfectly
white have not survived but can be easily surmised. The question
of building a
small house for each of the Italian stonecutters' wives worked
itself out when the
women decided not to leave their native homes. Finally, the
proctor had
concluded brickwork agreements for the new buildings at $10 per
thousand for
"common & peace bricks" and $16 for the "front or rubed
stretchers." Curtis
Carter contracted for Pavilion VI and Hotel A; John Perry and Abiah
Thorn for
Pavilion VIII and Hotel B; William B. Phillips for Pavilion X and
Hotel C; and
the "dormitories divided amongst them."(402) By the end of June John
Neilson
could report that the "brick-layers have begun their seasons work
and all seems
getting forward."(403)
Over the course of the late spring and summer the university's
suppliers
continued to provide various kinds of materials to the construction
site. James
Leitch's account for the period shows that while the merchant
continued to sell
nails, he also became the institution's main whiskey and Jamaica
rum dealer.(404)
The firm of Brockenbrough & Harvie helped out its Richmond
competitor, John
Van Lew & Co., by taking over some of its accounts with the
university for the
glass, tin, hardware, etc. that the latter had sold to the
university between August
1819 and mid-May 1820.(405) John
Van Lew & Co., experiencing difficulties in
procuring boats, began to ship its tin, iron, herring, and
assortment of hardware
exclusively by wagons; James Stone, Andrew Jamison, Hembro
Pendleton, and
Thomas Jackson all drove wagons to the university during the spring
and
summer.(406) Thomas Perkins of
Boston, in response to a request from the
university, sent Brockenbrough a quote for Boston Crown Glass from
the agents
of the Boston Glass Manufactory, Pearson & Cloutman.(407) In June William
Bowen delivered 6,500 wooden shingles to James Oldham, at a cost of
$58.50.(408)
Jefferson Enthusiastic
On the day before Jefferson wrote to the president and
directors of the
Literary Fund to request authorization to draw the remaining third
of its $60,000
loan from the fund he wrote a long personal letter to his
son-in-law, John Wayles
Eppes of Mill Brook, who had retired from Congress a year earlier
because of
declining health.(409) In
addition to describing the general scheme and progress of
the university to Eppes, Jefferson invited his ailing son-in-law to
bring his family
for a visit to Monticello and the institution's site.
is it impossible that mrs [Mary Jefferson] Eppes yourself
and
family
should pay a visit to Monticello where we could not be made happier
than by seeing you. it is little over a day's journey whether by
New
Canton or Buckingham C. H. the former being the best road. and our
University is now so far advanced as to be worth seeing. it
exhibits
already the appearance of a beautiful Academical village, of the
finest
models of building and of classical architecture, in the US. it
begins to be
much visited by strangers and admired by all, for the beauty,
originality
and convenience of the plan. by autumn 3 ranges of buildings will
be
erected 600. f. long, with colonnades and arcades of the same
length in
front for communication below, and terraces of the same extent for
communication above: and, by the fall of the next year, a 4th.
range will
be done, which compleats the whole (the Library excepted) and will
for
an establishment of 10. Pavilions for professors, 6. hotels or
boarding
houses, and 100. Dormitories. these will have cost in the whole
about
130,000 D. there will remain then nothing to be added at present
but a
building for the Library of about 40,000. D. cost. all this is
surely worth
a journey of 50. miles, and requires no effort but to think you can
do it,
and it is done."(410)
When writing to the sovereigns of Montpelier and Braintree two
weeks later,
Jefferson echoed his enthusiasm for the progress taking place at
the village that is
so obvious in his letter to Eppes, and unlike his constant
complaints of a year
previous. "Our buildings at the University go on so rapidly and
will exhibit such
a state and prospect by the meeting of the legislature," he
hopefully suggested to
Madison, "that no one seems to think it possible they should fail
to enable us to
open the institution the ensuing year."(411) And to his former political
rival he
wrote, "our university, 4. miles distant, gives me frequent
exercise, and the
oftener as I direct it's architecture. it's plan is unique, and it
is becoming an
object of curiosity for the traveller."(412)
Coffee in New York
As the end of the summer of 1820 neared, the English
ornamental sculptor
William John Coffee wrote to Jefferson two times, first to give him
the result of
his inquiry into the cost of fire engines and next to update him on
the frieze
ornaments he promised to make for Poplar Forest and the university.
Coffee
visited Albemarle County earlier in the year and arrived back at
New York on 18
July, he said, "much fatigued with a Journey of 1,203 miles by
Land, that is from
Monticello to Canada & from Canada to N. York ViaAlbany."
Once in New
York City, Coffee visited No. 293 Pearl Street, the home of Able W.
Hardenbrook, a maker of "fire Engins." Hardenbrook's prices per
foot "For Hose
or Leaders as they are Called her[e]" were "$1that is 8 Shillings
this City
money" for 3½ inches diameter, 50 cents for ½ inch, and $3 for "the
Suckers or
Suction Pipes." New York City fire engines used 3 to 400 feet of
hose,
Hardenbrook told Coffee, but the common length of leaders was about
100
feet.(413) Coffee wrote again a
week later from Newark, New Jersey, to inform
Jefferson that the ornaments for "Bedford House" and "The
University" were in
"great fordwardness," claiming that "no time has been Lost Sines I
have been at
home or have I applyed a Single hour to any other Employment so
very
Laboreous & difficult has been this undertaking." The shipment
of the ornaments
to Virginia, however, would depend on the "unfortunate State" of
New York
City, which had become, according to Coffee, so dangerous to the
health and life
of its inhabitants that it was draining off "all that Can any way
Convenintly leave
Such a Smite of disease and Corruption, I need not say to you that
it will
Continue its Scourgeing March ontill the first part of november at
which time we
are Visited by the Healthy nor'west winds and a Black frost. So
much do I
dislike this Stinking Pestilential City, and so dread the
prevailing fever that I
thought it Proper to leave The City for this little Town." Coffee
also added that
he had waited upon Peter Maverick (who worked in Newark) and "gave
him
your Drawing," and he "Promised to Send you a Proofe Plate I hope
by this time
he has don So."(414) This was the
first step in the production of the famed Maverick
group of engravings, the first printed ground plan of the
Academical Village (see
appendix O).(415)
Italian Artisan Disgruntled
While the sculptor in plaster and terra cotta was molding
ornaments for frieze
work and running errands in the New York City area, his friend at
Monticello
was engaged in a minor "difficulty" with one of the Italian
sculptors. Attention
has been called already to the Raggi brothers' dissatisfaction with
the Virginia
stone. Back in October 1819 the "Senior [Giamoco] Raggi"
communicated the
stonecutters' willingness to dissolve their contract with the
university, but the
offer was ignored and the stonework commenced, albeit slowly, for
the next ten
months.(416) At the beginning of
September Michele Raggi renewed his offer to
void his current agreement with the university, this time
presenting three new
options, that of carving the Corinthian capitals in Carrara marble
at the European
quarry under contract at a "most desirable price"; carving the
capitals at Carrara
"as if under your eyes for just the wages which we have now"; and
lastly, because
he could "no longer work with these stones since they are thereby
prejudicing
[my] health," the university could import stone from Philadelphia
or Italy, and
meanwhile he would renew his contract for five years and travel to
Europe at his
own expense to get his wife.(417)
The younger Raggi, desperate to see his new
bride and the child that had been born to them since he left Italy,
recently had
sprained his wrist while working on the lesser quality stone so
that he could not
"work this month or two, in this state of body, and homesick, &
love-sick mind,
he will be of no use to us." Thinking that Consul Thomas Appleton
in Leghorn
could arrange to furnish capitals cheaper, Jefferson, in agreement
with his partner
on the committee of superintendence, made a counter proposal to the
stonecutter.(418) The university
would release Raggi with "wages to the day of
discontinuing" only, and the Italian would pay the expenses of his
journey and
voyage back to his homeland. The committee considered this a fair
compromise
because the university had received only about one-half of the time
for work
agreed to, although it had paid for the cutter's voyage to
America.(419)
Michele Raggi chose to sever his ties to the university on 9
September
according to the terms offered him by the committee of
superintendence but
apparently had second thoughts about it after arriving in
Washington, for on 26
September he wrote Jefferson a scathing letter outlining his
grievances.
Being unable any longer to stand the bad food which your
Director of
the College was sending me, and seeing that you were not putting
yourself to any haste to procure the marble blocks so that I might
finish
the time of my contract as I would have done if this stone of yours
had
not ruined my stomach along with the sheep which the said Director
sent
me to eat, for the mere sight of the said food turned my stomach.
You
know well that my contract said I was to be lodged and nourished
according to my profession, nor are you ignorant how Artists are
treated
in Italy and France! Propriety, duty, and justice demand that I be
satisfied at least as to my trip since you have not gotten for me
the
material to work with not having the means to give me the marble
blocks
as explained.(420)
Raggi then appealed for $300 dollars to cover his voyage "back
to the bosom of
my family from which you took me" and told Jefferson that the
ex-president's
"reputation alone brought me to America, and that it has ruined my
expectations
and my health, and that I am going home with one arm perhaps
useless to earn
my bread." Disappointed that the university did not commission him
to carve the
Corinthian capitals at Carrara, he offered to execute the works out
of
Washington stone for $1,000 a year, the "least salary that the
lowest of
countrymen has, and which I think I, too, deserve." He concluded
by begging
Jefferson "not to throw me in the middle of a street" and closed by
adding a
postscript to direct the money to the care of "the Widow Franzoni"
requesting
Jefferson to "answer me in French."(421)
Jefferson responded to Raggi's complaints and accusations with
a lengthy
remonstrance that placed blame squarely upon the young artisan's
shoulders.
Jefferson first narrated the history and terms of the contract made
in Leghorn
with Appleton on behalf of the university and reminded Raggi of the
$200
advance to cover his "expences by sea and land to this place" and
of another
$200 that was sent later to Leghorn to enable his wife to come to
America.
[She] declined coming. yourself became uneasy &
desponding, declared
you could not continue here according to your contract, without
your
wife, and solicited to be discharged from your obligation. in pure
commiseration of your feelings, it was yielded to, & the
Proctor was
instructed to arrange with you the conditions of dissolving the
contract
and to settle and pay whatever was you due. one half of your term
having now elapsed, it was agreed that the expences of your coming
and
wages to that date should be at our charge, but that those for your
return
should be your own, as the retirement from the fulfilment of your
engagements for the latter half of your term, was you own act, and
not
our wish.
The last remark seems a little disingenuous considering that
Jefferson expected
the sculptor to remain unemployed for another two months because of
his wrist
injury and when it is recalled that Jefferson already had written
Thomas Appleton
on 13 July requesting the consul to inquire into the cost of
carving the capitals at
Carrara and crating them for shipment across the Atlantic.
Jefferson then
recounted the settlement between Raggi and the proctor, noting that
exclusive of
board and lodging the university had spent $919.68 for Raggi's
traveling and
wages over a 15-month period and "for this you know, we have
nothing to shew
but a single Ionic capitel, and an unfinished Corinthian."
Although the
"misfortune was ours, and was increased by that of the sprain of
your wrist
disabling you from work," Jefferson said, the university gave up
the remaining
portion of an agreement that "might have lessened our loss, merely
to indulge the
feelings and uneasiness under which we saw you." Raggi's
complaints about his
lodging and diet and his insinuation that Jefferson and
Brockenbrough were
personally responsible for his misery incensed Jefferson the most,
however:
As to your lodging, it was in as decent and comfortable
a room as I
would wish to lodge in my self. so far I have spoken of my own
knolege.
the subject of diet, I learn from others that, in the
beginning, it was
furnished you from a French boarding house of your own choice.
from
this you withdrew, of your own choice also, and boarded with the
Proctor himself, sharing the same fare with himself, which was that
of the
respectable families of the neighborhood, plentiful, wholsome,
& decent,
in the style of our country, and such as the best artists here are
used to,
and contented with. your uncle & companion, Giacomo Raggi, is
so far
satisfied with it, and with the treatment he has recieved in common
with
you, that altho' he was offered permission to return with you, he
chose to
abide by the obligations and benefits of his contract, and
continues his
services with perfect contentment. I am conscious of having myself
ever
treated you with just respect, and the character of the Proctor,
the most
unassuming and accomodating man in the world, is a sufficient
assurance
of the same on his part.
Jefferson, insisting that he and the proctor had fulfilled "all
the claims of justice,
of indulgence, and of liberality" toward the artisan, told Raggi
that the
"desponding and unhappy state" of his mind while at the university
"proceeded
from the constitutional and moral affections resulting from your
own
temperament and the incidents acting on it, and not from any thing
depending on
those in our employ." Jefferson declined Raggi's offer to make the
capitals at
Washington and closed the matter to further discussion, directing
future
correspondence to the proctor, "within whose duties it lies, and
not within
mine."(422)
Money Requested from Literary Fund
On the same fall day that Jefferson wrote to Michele Raggi to
absolve himself
and the university from the stonecutter's ire, he sent a desperate
plea for money
for the university to his son-in-law and governor, Thomas Mann
Randolph, Jr.,
who was also president of the Literary Fund. The institution had
exhausted the
first two-thirds of the $60,000 loan it obtained from the Literary
Fund and on 13
August had requested the remaining $20,000 which the fund's board
of directors
refused to provide.(423)
Alexander Garrett, the bursar, with "demands now pressing
hardly" on him, called on Jefferson on 7 October asking him to
"sollicit from your
[Literary Fund] board an immediate attention to the supplementary
loan of
20,000. D."(424) The Board of
Visitors at its fall meeting a few days before on 23
October had decided to include in its annual report to the
president and directors
of the Literary Fund a financial statement drawn up between
February and April
1820 that listed the existing debts and projected costs of
completing the buildings
at $93,600.(425) Of course that
statement, covering the university's first year of
operation (from the spring of 1819 to the spring of 1820) did not
accurately
represent the university's financial situation in October 1820
because another
half-year had passed. Accordingly, the proctor made a detailed
statement of the
university's expenditures covering the previous twelve months,
which Jefferson
sent along with the report to the Literary Fund in December.(426) Although there
was no business concerning the buildings' construction to be
discussed by the
visitors at their meeting, the account summarized the disbursements
to the
undertakers over the past year. Despite the desperate state of the
university's
finances, shifting the debts owed to the workmen to the Literary
Fund allowed
the building process to continue at the rate initially planned,
although it meant
postponing the hiring of professors and the opening of the school
to students.
Financial Statement
Brockenbrough's "Statement of the application of the Funds"
showed that
between 1 October 1819 and 30 September 1820, John M. Perry earned
more
than any of the other contractors by his association with the
university.(427) First,
he received the last payment for the 48¾ acres of land that he sold
to the Central
College, $3,615.90. He earned $2,990.54 for the "brick work of
Pavilion No 3
and seven dormitories, executed in 1819" and an additional
$8,598.75 for
"carpenters work on pavilion No 4 West and 16 Dormitories,
including plastering
& lumber, and the brick work of No 4 East with 8 dormitories
& the brick &
wood work of Hotel B with 9 dormitories" ($15,205.19 total). James
Dinsmore
received $5,314.15 for "carpenters & Joiners work of Pavilion
No 2 West and
Pavilion No 4 East and eight dormitories including lumber &
other articles."
Dinsmore & Perry received $1,544.11 for "Carpenters &
Joiners work and
lumber for Pavilion No III West and six dormitories." Altogether
Perry and
Dinsmore together received a total of $12,063.45 from the
university bursar.
After Perry, Richard Ware and his gang of Philadelphians
earned the most at
the construction site during the period. For the "brick work of
Pavilions No 1
and 2 East with four dormitories" Ware was paid $3,891.72, and for
"Carpenters
& Joiners work & lumber for Pavilions 1, 2, & 3 and 13
dormitories" he received
$6,503.77, or a total of $10,395.49. Carter & Phillips "for
their brick work last
year in Pavilions 1 & 5 West & 5 dormitories &c" were
paid $3,506.75. Phillips
earned another $898.71 for "brick work this year in pavilion No 5
East and Hotel
C" and Carter received an additional $926.79 for "brick work in
Pavilion No 3
East & Hotel A." Together, Curtis Carter and William B.
Phillips took in
$5,332.25.
James Oldham brought in $2,919.99 for "carpenters &
joiners work on
Pavilion No 1 West with four dormitories and Hotel A with nine
dormitories and
lumber." Abiah Thorn earned only $86.50, that for laying the
"stone foundation
to Columns to Pav: No 1." George W. Spooner, Jr., apparently
gaining from the
proctor's mistake in awarding him extra work, made $2,084.57 for
"carpenters
work on Pav: No 5 West and on Hotel C with 10 dormitories &
lumber." John
Neilson, on the other hand, earned only $1,486.57 for "work and
lumber for Pav:
No 5 West and pavilion No 5 East with 7 dormitories." For "brick
work in
Pavilion No 5 west," Peter Myers was paid $11.56.
The former proctor of the Central College, Nelson Barksdale,
received $800
"for lumber for the buildings," $1,101 for "the hire of Negroes for
1819," and
$65 for "a horse for the use of the Institution," a total of
$1,966. The Italian
stonecutters Michele and Giacomo Raggi received for "Wages as
scu[l]ptors,
board, washing &c." $1,294.24, and Giacomo Raggi another $70
for "wages,"
bringing their earnings together to $1,364.24. Stonecutters Joseph
Cowden and
James Campbell were paid $314.50, and John Gorman got $679.06.
John Cullen
"& others for quarrying Stone for Boxes, Caps, Sills, steps
&c" received
$269.25, and Thomas B. Conway $75 for "free Stone."
Joseph Antrim earned $681.69 for "plastering," and Edward
Lowber was
paid $598.25 for his role in the "painting & Glazing." A. H.
Brooks "for
Covering pavilions 1 and 5 West and 1 and 2 East with Tin & tin
pipes for No 2
W" was paid $798.47. Elijah Huffman got $242.53 for "boring &
laying water
pipes," Lewis Bailey for "ditching for the pipes" $25.50, and
William Boin &
others for do" $85.67. John Herron for "Wages as Overseer" earned
$106 and
Jesse Lewis for "Smiths work" $160.88. Another $1,620.26 was spent
"for
provisions for laborers & Overseer paid for hire of laborers,
Waggonage and
other unavoidable expences." Charlottesville merchant James Leitch
took in
$1,332.73 for "sundries furnished for the buildings in the year
1818 and 1819,"
and the Richmond merchant firm of Brockenbrough & Harvie "for
nails" was
paid $282.96. The largest Richmond firm supplying the university,
John Van
Lew & Co., was paid $1,360.76 for supplying "Tin, hardware" and
the smallest
Richmond supplier, D. W. & C. Warwick received for "Sundries"
only $37. (The
suppliers total added up to $3,013.45.) Finally, Proctor
Brockenbrough received
$1,604.85 for his salary and Alexander Garrett $375 for his
services as bursar.
All told, the disbursements amounted to $59,158.81.
In addition to recording monies already spent in construction
at the
university, Brockenbrough's 30 September statement provided an
estimate of the
amount required to finish the "buildings now on hand, and two more
Hotels, a
Proctors house and twenty eight dormitories to complete the range
on the
Western Street." First, "Agreeable to our estimate on the 1st Oct:
1819. we
required to complete the buildings then contracted for the sum of"
$38,898.25.
To complete the "3 other Pavilions now building," would require
$18,000; the 3
Hotels or boarding houses do," $9,000; and the "45 Dormitories
do," $18,000,
making a total of $45,000. "For 2 Other Hotels & proctors
house on the West
Street with 28 dormitories yet to be put up," $20,200 was expected
to be needed.
Add for the "Stone work digging & removing earth and other
unavoidable
expences at least 25 pr cent," or $26,024.56, and the grand total
needed to finish
construction climbed to $130,122.81. However, $59,158.81 already
paid to the
"Several undertakers of the buildings and others as pr the
foregoing account
since Oct: 1st 1819" could be subtracted from the $130,122.81,
leaving an
estimated $70,964 needed to finish all the construction of the
buildings. As for
income, the $20,000 balance from the $60,000 loan was yet left, and
the 1821
yearly annuity would be $15,000, although $2,400 had to be deducted
from that
to pay interest on the outstanding $40,000. Thus the Balance
required to
complete the buildings (exclusive of the library), Brockenbrough
estimated, was
$38,364.
Jefferson's Summary of Finances
Jefferson summarized the foregoing statement at the end of
November for
Senator Cabell to use "in conversations, to rebut exaggerated
estimates of what
our institution is to cost, and reproaches of deceptive estimates."
According to
the best estimates of the university bursar, proctor, and rector,
all the lands,
buildings, and "other expenditures" for the University of Virginia
could be
expected to cost $162,364, exclusive of the library and an
observatory. That
included the original estimate of 10 pavilions for the professors'
accommodation
($60,000), 6 hotels for dieting the students ($21,000), 104
dormitories
($36,400), 200 acres of land with additional buildings ($10,000),
and
contingencies such as leveling the grounds and streets, laying the
water pipes,
covering roofs with tin instead of shingles, and "numerous other"
contingencies
($10,000), plus the actual cost above the estimates of about 18
percent
($24,964). An observatory could be built, Jefferson thought, for
$10,000 to
$12,000 and the "Library House" for $40,000 more, thus pushing up
the estimate
for the entire group of buildings to $214,364.(428) Jefferson told Senator Cabell
that "not an office at Washington has cost less" than the $162,364
figure, and the
"single building of the Court house of Henrico has cost nearly
that: and the
massive walls of the millions of bricks of Wm. & Mary could not
be now built for
a greater sum."(429) His letter
to Cabell containing the statement and defense of the
probable costs of the buildings also contained an impassioned
argument for a
whole scheme of public education for his beloved Virginia, but
Cabell and other
university supporters in the General Assembly thought its promotion
might work
against the university's best interest. "Our object is now," wrote
Senator Cabell,
"to finish the buildings."(430)
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