Timeline
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I
1. Pierre L'Enfant's Two Plans for Executing the President's Vision
2. Financing the Federal City
3. Constructing the Federal City
4. Developing a Commercial Center
5. Early Infrastructure and Transport Improvements
6. Building Military Defenses for the Capital
Part II
7. The First Public Building Campaign (1791-1802)
8. The Second Public Building Campaign (1803-1811)
9. The Third Public Building Campaign (1815-1824)
10. Later Transportation Improvements
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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Description
""Kapsch, a historian of engineering, focuses principally on the decades between the passage of the Residence Act of 1790, which selected the site for the new nation's capital, and the repair and reconstruction efforts that followed the burning of public buildings by British troops in 1814. The narrative centers on the transition from an eighteenth-century mode of construction led by ""gentleman planters"" to one orchestrated by professionally trained ""architect-engineers."" Along the way, Kapsch examines the supply chains, building techniques, financial expedients, and political wrangling that went into making the city.""