BookW3J_\il5a. ©HE Commission appointed under theJoinH^e^olUtion oJQDn^re^S approved jY(.ay IS" 1554, ir? relahoq \o cererr^onie^ to be aurf^orized at tt^e dedicatior^ oj the e-- — ^ — Washinc;ton Monuneht — — ^«^ reqUe^r^ tl^e plea^bre oj ^oLir atter^dar^ee at t^e^e eerenQor^ies to be beld iQ X\\z City o\ Wa5hin£tor^,"D.C- or] JfebrUar^ §1 ^M5S5. 'Jr ./n.t/„i S..Vf>i/t/f //;//, //»/,. //'//I /J.-/\/t,,//„,-. //,.,! X,,//,,,,,,,/ //./:/,/,;;/,/, . /I'/i// //tt/ii/i'//)///}/! /•■/•/: //itui/ // /ii/tt//it//t/. Ai/i/i // /,'i;/iyii/i . ... /fi.\/y)/f li I If// //!>//. . '//!, <■ »////////vy ,/ //!• . //,>Mii/trn/ y/'/f>.:'/.//ltr'/// f.if.iii/ //fi// //'//' I i'nii/>//i . I /'/r.s.' ./n/itf.s t. //?///'//>/. ///■ ./I'.u/t/i .//. /i'/ur. lA.'^- CoTr\rr>sroperly presides at the high festival we hold this day at the base of the finished Monument. On the 5th of July, 1S76 (the date is significant), he moved the adoption of a joint resolution de- claring, after an appropriate preamble, that the Senate and House of Representatives m Congress assembled, ''in the name of the people of the United States, at the beginning of the second century of the national existence, do assume and direct the completion of the Wash- ington Monument, in the city of Washington." A bill in pursuance of this joint resolution was passed unanimously in the Senate on the 22d of Julv, in the House of Representatives without opi)Osition on the 27th of July, and was signcil by President (Jrant on the 2d of August, 1876. By this act, which gave a Congressional expression to the national gratitude, a Joint Commission was created, to consist of the President of the United States, the Supervising Architect of the Treasury De- partment, the Architect of the Capitol, the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army, and the First Vice-President of the Washington National Monument Society, under whose direction and supervision the construction of the Monument was placed. According to a provision ot the same act, the \V'ashington National Monument Society transferred and conveyed to the United States in due form all the property rights and easements belonging to it in the Monument, the conveyance being legally recorded in the proper court register. By a further clause of this same act it was providetl : That notlung therein should be so construed as to prohibit said Society from con- tinuing its organization '• for the purpose of soliciting and collecting money and material from the States, associations, and the people in aid of the completion of the Monument, and acting in an advisory and coojjerative capacity" with the Commission named in the said act imtil the completion and dedication of the work. I'pon the death of President Madison, in 1836, the constitution of the Society had been so amended as to provide that the President o'\ the United States should be ex-officio president of the Society. An- 20 Dediniiion of the Washington Xational Monument. drew Jackson was the first ex-o/ficio president. The mayors of Wash- ington, and, at a later day, the (Governors of the several States were made ex-officio vice-presidents. 'I'he mayors of Washington thus ( on net led with tlie work were John I'. Van Ness, WiUiani A. IJradlcy, Peter Force, ^V. \\ . Seaion, Walter l^ennox, John W. Maury, John 'J\ 'lowers, Wilham W. Ma gruder, Richard \Vallacii, James G. Jierret, Sayles J. IJowen, and Matthew (i. lunery. In the roll of the Society's nienibershi]» the following names are recorded : Chief Justice John Marshall, Roger C. Weightman, ("onnuodore John Rodgers, General Thomas S. Jesup, Cieorge Bomford, M. St. Clair Clarke, Samuel H. Smith, John McClelland, William Crane h, WiUiam Hrent, George Watterston, Nathan Towson, Archibald Hen- derson, Thomas Munroe, 'I'homas C'arberry, I\'ter Force, ex-Presi dent James Madison, John P. Van Ness, William Ingle, William L. Brent, (ieneral Alexander Macomb, John J. .Abert, Philip K. I'en- dall, Maj. (len. Winheld Scott, John Carter, General Walter Jones, Walter Lennox, T. Hartley Crawford, M. F. Maury, U. S. Navy, B. Ogle layloe, Thomas Blagden, John Carroll Brent, James Kear- ney, Elisha Whittlesey, W. W. Seaton, J. Bayard H. Smith, W. \\. Corcoran, John P. Ingle, James M. Carlisle, Dr. John B. Blake, Dr. William Jones, William L. Hodge, Dr. James C. Hall, William B. Todtl, James Dunlop, General U. S. Grant, George W. Riggs, Henry D. Cooke, Peter G. Washington, William J. McDonald, John M. Hrodhead, General William T. Sherman, Dr. Charles H. Nichols, 1). .\. Watterston, Alexander R. Shei)herd, Fitzhugh Coyle, James Ci. Bcrrct, J. C. Kennedy, William A. Richardson, General O. E. Babcock, Fdward Clark, Rear-Admiral F. M. Powell, Charles F. Stansbury, Frederick I). Stuart, Robert C. Winthrop, Joseph Henry, General William McKee Dunn, John C. Harkness, Horatio King, Daniel B. Clarke, George W. McCrary, Dr. Josei)h M. Toner, James C. Welling, George Bancroft, Rear-Admiral C. R. P. Rodgers. In conclusion, let me say that I should be strangely wanting to uiy sense of the proprieties belonging to this time and place, if, stand- ing here as the representative of the Washington National Monument Society, I should fail in this high [)resence and at this solemn mo- ment to give emphatic expression to the i)rofound gratitude which is due from the Society to the Legislative and Executive Departments Dedkat.o)! of ihr Washingian Nat'onal Monumrnt. 21 of the Government, who have brought to a successful completion the patriotic work which the Society was not able to accomplish. For the praise of the accomplished engineer of the Army, ("ol. Thomas Lincohi Casey, who has here built so solidly and so skill- fully, we have only to look up to the finished work of his scientific hand, as th.at work stands before us to-day in the strong and even poise of its well-balanced architecture. The heraldic ensign of Washington bore for its motto the wonls Exitus acla prohat, "'Iheir issue puts actions to the proof" The actions of Washington, as put to the ])roof of time, have issued in a great nation made free and independent uiider his military leader- shi|); in a constitutional polity, based on liberty regulated by law, as le who to-day find in his name and fame their choicest national legacy; and, finally, in the veneration and homage of all mankind, who, to the remotest ends of the world, have learned to honor in our illustrious countryman the best as well as the greatest of the sons of men. Surely, then, it is glory enough for the Washington National Monu- ment Society that its pious labors, as put to the proof of time, have issued in the majestic structure which stands before us to-day. and ii is glory enough for the Legislative and Fxecutive Departments of the (Government that in "assuming and directing the completion df •.he Monument" on the fi)undations laid by the peo|)le, they have at once redeemed a sacreil national Hedge, and fulfilled a sacred na- tional duty, by giving to this great obelisk the culmination and c rou n with uiiich it towers above earth and soars heavenward, like the fame it commemorates. I'lIK MAS (INK: CK RKM ONI F. S. The Masonic fledic atory ceremonies were then ])erforme us of equality, and its use is to prove horizontals. Grand Master. Have you applied it, .md arc the courses level? Senior Grand Warden. 1 have, and I Jind the courses to be level; the workmen have done their duty. Grand Master. R. W. Junior Grand Warden, what is the proper implement of your office ? Junior Grand Warden. The plumb, Most Worshipful. Grand Master. What is its Masonic use ? Junior Grand Warden. Morally, it tea( hes rectitude of conduct, and we use it to try perpendiculars. Grand Master. Ha\e \i National Monument. found insufficient, then the further continuance of the work was not to be authorized by anything contained ni tlie act until the furtlicr action of Congress." ]'"roni the early days of the construction there had been apprehen- sions that the foundation was not of sufficient size to sustain the column if carried to the height originally designed. These ap])re- hensions, which, just after the laying of the cornor-stone, were shared by but few persons, had, as {ax: back as 1 85 3, become wide-spread, and were entertained by many intelligent people. In 1873, after a la[)sc of twenty years, the question of tlie sufficiency of the foundation was again the sultject of discussion, at this lime by a connnittee of the House (jf Rejjresentatives, '{"his was the select committee of thirteen, created to consider the practicabilit)- of completing the Washington Monument bv the limc^ of the C'entennial Celebration of the Declaration of Independence. July 4, 1876. During their deliberations, they caused s])ecial investi gations to l)e made concerning the stability of the existing structure. These investigations and the reports were made by cai>able engineers, and the conclusions drawn by them were to the effect that the exist- ing foundation should not be subjected to an)- additional load what ever; in other words, that it would be unsafe to increase the lu-iglil of the incomplete shaft. It was hardly to be expected that the further examinations recpiired by the act of August, 1876, would disclose anythmg different as to the condition of the foundation, ne\ertlieless the Joint Commission secured the services of another board of experienced engineers, who, after careful borings, examinations, and tests of the earth of the site, and due deliberation, reported on the 10th of April and 151)1 of June, 1877, that the existing foundation was of insulhcient s[)read and depth to sustain the weight of the lompleted stiucture, but that it was feasi ble to liring the foundation to the required stability b\ hooping-in the earth u|)()n which it stood. These opinions were concurred in b\ most of the engineers who considereil the subject, while the\ were i|aite as unanimous in the belief that to excavate beneath and put a new foundation under the old one would be hazardous in the extreme. ( )n the 8th of November, 1877, the Joint Commission made its fust ii|iort to Congrt'ss, announcing the decision of the engnieerN, and this report led to the enactment of the joint resolution of June 14, 1S78. authorizing the Joint Connnission to expend the sum of thirty six nrdiuUioii of llir ]]',Ts/iii/x'/nii Yatioihil }[oniimrn(. zq thousand dollars, if ihey deemed it advisalile, in givin;^ j;reater sta- bility to the foundation. Two years had now elapsed since llie creation of tlie Joint Com- mission. They at once sccuretl the services of an engineer and his assistant, and directed the chief to i)rei)arc a ])roject for strengthening^ the existing foundation so that the Obelisk could be carried to the de sired height. This project, which necessarily included the form ani^h»i Ahitional Momtiiiciit. 31 supplied means for the completion of the grandest monuniental column ever erected in any age of the world. In its proportions the ratios of the dimensions of the several parts of the ancient Egyptian obelisk have been carefully followed. The entire height has been made slightly greater than ten times the breadth of base, producing an obelisk that, for grace antl delicacy of outline, is not excelled by any of the larger Egyptain monoliths, while in dignity and grandeur it surpasses any that can be mentioned. Mr. President: For and in behalf of the Joint Commission for ihc completion of the Washington Monument I deliver to you this column. Senator Sherman then introduced "the President of the United States, ' ' and as Mr. Arthur stepped forward he was loudly applauded. When silence was restored he read the followinhai, or THE Day. — I.icutcnant-Cicneral Pliilip II. Sheridan, U S. Army. Chief of Staff. — IJx t. Jjrig. Gen. .\lbc-rt Ordway, U. S. Volunteers. Personal Aides-de-Canip. — Lieut. Col W. J. \'olkniar. V . .S. Army, Mr. Linden Kent. Aides-dc-Canip. — Lieut. Col. ]\L V. Sheridan, U. S. Army; Lieut. Col. James Gregory, U. S. Army; Capt. S. K. iJlunt, L'. S. Army; Mr. Walker Blaine; Mr. Sevellon A. Brown ; Capt. Francis V. Greene, U. S. Army; Col. H. L. Cranford, U. S. Volunteers; Medical Di- rector J. ^L Browne, \j . S. Navy; Mr. H. Grafton Dulaney; Lieut. T. B. M. ALison, U. S. Navy; Col. Amos Webster, U. S. Volunteers; Mr. Edward McCauley; Lieut. W. H. Emory, jr., U. S. Navy; Capt. S. S. Burdett, U. S. Volunteers; Maj. Green Clay Cioodloe, L. S. Marine Corps; Mr. R. J. Dangerfield; Bvt. Maj. Clayton Mc- Michael, U. S. Volunteers; Bvt. ."NFaj. John 15. Fassit, U. S. Volun- teers; Bvt. Lieut. Col. J. P. Nicholson, U. S. \'olunteers; Mr. Mills Dean; Bvt. Lieut. Col. George Truesdell, U. S. Volunteers; Capt. L N. Burritt, U. S. Volunteers; Bvt. Col. Archibald Hopkins, U. S. Volunteers; Capt. John M. Carson, U. S. Volunteers. Honorary Staff, representing States and Territories. — Alabama, Mr. John H. Morgan; Arkansas, General James C. Tappan; California, Mr. Thomas C. Quantrell; Colorado, Maj. J. V. W. Vandenburgh; Connecticut, General" C. P. Graham; Delaware, General J. Parke Postles; Florida, Col. Wallace S. Jones; Georgia, Col. Clifitbrd W. Anderson; Illinois, G^gneral Green B. Raum; Indiana, Col. R. \V. McBride; Iowa, Col. William P. Hepburn; Kansas, General C. W. Blair; Kentucky, Col. J. B. Castleman; Louisiana, Col. Charles A. Larendon ; Maine, General John M. Brown; Maryland, Col. E. L. Rodgers; Massachusetts, Mr. A. A. Hayes; Michigan, Col. H. M. Duffield; Minnesota, Col. C. W. Johnson; Mississippi, Col. J. M. •McCaskill; Missouri, Hon. J. W. Stone; Nebraska, Col. L. W. Colby; Nevada, Hon. John H. Kinkead; New Hampshire, (ieneral J. N. Patterson; New Jersey, Col. S. Meredith Dickinson ; New York, Maj. Alexander H. Davis; North Carolina, Mr. Fred Stith; Ohio, Col. C. A. Layton; Oregon, Mr. E. D. Appleton; Pennsylvania, Col. P. L. Goddard; Rhode Lsland, Col. F. M. Bates; South Carolina, Col. J. A. Simons; lennessee. General A. B. Upshur; Te.xas, ('ol. J. 1^. Labatt; Vermont, General William AV'ells; Virginia, Maj. L. Bl ick- ford; West Virginia, Col. Robert White; Wisconsin, General J. C. Starkweather; Arizona, Hon. J. W. Eddy; Dakota, Col. William Thompson; Idaho, Maj. William Hyndman; Montana, Hon, Martin 34 DciUcation of llic IVas/iiin^ioii National Moiiu incut. Magiiinis; New Mexico, ilon. F. A. .Man/.anures; Utah, Mr, liuiu- plireys McMaster; Washington, Hon. C. S. Voorhees; Wyoming, Hon. M. E. Post. Escort to the Marshal of the Day. — I'lie First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry, organized in 1774, Capl. F. Burd (jrubb, commanding. THE FIRST J) I V I SION. Marshal. — Bvt. Maj, Gen. R. B. Ayers, U. S. Army. Staff. — Bvt. Lieut. Col. George Mitchell, U. S. Army; First Lieut. Sebree Smith, U. S. Army; First I.ieut. Medorem Crawford, U. S. Army; First Lieut. H. R. Lemly, U. S. Army; Second Lieut. M. C. Richards, U. S. Army; Second Lieut. AV. VValke, U. S. Army ; Second Lieut. H. L. Hawthorne, U. S. Army; Mr. L H. McDonald, Mr. W. J. Johnson, Mr. Arthur D. Addison. Battalion of Second U. S. Artillery, Lieut Col. Loomis L. Lang- don. Battalion of U. S. Artillery, Bvt. Lieut. Col. L. L. Livingston. Light Battery A, Second U. S. Artillery, Capt. Frank B. Hamil- ton. Battalion U. S. Marine Corps, Capt. John H. Higbee. The Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, of Massachusetts, (organized in 1638), commander, Capt. Augustus Whittemore; first lieutenant, Lieut. Col. E. B. Blasland; second lieutenant, Lieut. G. H. Gibson ; adjutant, First Lieut. J. P. Frost, preceded by the Salem Cadet Band. The Governor's Foot Guard, of Hartford, Conn, (organized in 1 771), Maj. John C. Kinney; Capt. J. C. Pratt; Lieuts. T. C. Nae- dele, J. Robert Dwyer, and F. C. Clark. The German Fusiliers, of Charleston, S. C. (organized in 1775), Capt. Henry Schachte ; First Lieut. Henry B.Schroder; Second Lieut. H. Fischer. Richmond Light Infantry Blues, of Richmond (organized in 1793), Capt. Sol. Cutchins. Washington Light Infantry Corps, of the District of Columbia, Lieut. Col. William G. Moore. Union Veteran Corps (Old Guard), of the District of Columbia, Capt. S. E. Thomason. Washington Continentals, of the District of Columbia, Capt. George E. Timms. Emmet Guard, of the District of Columbia, Capt. W. H. Muri)hy. Washington Rifle Corps, of the District of Columbia, Capt. George F. Ham mar. Butler Zouaves, of the District of Columbia, Capt. Charles B. Fisher. Washington Cadet Corps, of the District of Columbia, Maj. C. A. Fleetwood. Dedication of the Washington National Monument, 35 Capital City Guard, of the District of Columbia, Capt. Thomas S. Kelly. Capitol City Guards, of the District of Columbia, Capt. W. P. Gray. National Rifles, of the District of Columbia, L.ieut. J. O. Manson. accompanied by the National Rifle Cadets, Lieutenant Domer. Lawrence Light Guard, Company E, Fifth Regiment Infantry, Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, Capt. J. E. Clarke. Detroit Light Infantry, of Micliigan, First Lieut. George W. Corns. Alexandria Light Infantry, of Virginia, Capt. G. A. Mushback. Washington High school Cadets, of the District of Columbia, Maj. Frederick Sohon. Corcoran Cadet Corps, of the District of Columbia, Capt. E. C. Edwards. • • 'n- St. John's Academy Cadet Corps, of Alexandria, Va., Maj. William L. Pierce. ' THE SECONM) DIVISION. Marshal.— IsW]. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee, of Virginia. Staff.— Co\. Thomas Smith; Maj. J. Courtland H. Smith; Mr. Henry Dangerfield; Mr. Bernard P. Green; Dr. Arthur Snowden ; Col. Frederick A.Windsor; Maj. S. A. Robertson; Mr. Barbour Thompson; Mr. Eppa Hunton, jr.; Mr. W. L. Smoot; Mr. J. G; Beckham. This division was headed by carriages, containing the invited guests, viz : The Congressional Commission, the Orators and Chaplains of the Day, the Washington National Monument Society, members and ex-members of the Joint Commission for the completion of the Monu- ment, the Engineer of the Monument, his assistants, and detail of workmen, the President of the United States, members of the Cabinet, President and Vice-President elect of the United States, ex-Presidents of the United States, Judges of the Supreme Court and other Federal courts, the Diplomatic Corps, the Governors of States, accompanied by their respective staffs, the Senate, The House of Representatives, officers of the Army and Navy, the Society of Cincinnati. The Masonic fraternity followed, marshaled by Harrison Dmg- man, marshal of the Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia, who had as his aides L. D. Wine, Will A. Short, J. C. Dulin, T. G. Lock- erman, Charles G. Smith, and H. A. Johnston. The organizations in line were : Grand Commandery, Knights Templar, of Maryland. Grand Commandery, Knights Templar, of Virginia. Grand Encampment of United States, Knights Templar. Royal Arch Masons of the District of Columbia. Grand Royal Arch Chapter of the District of Columbia. General Grand Royal Arch Chapter of the United States. 36 Dedicafion of tJit W'ashiiif^toii National Mo?uim('ni. Master Masons of the District of Columbia. Alexandria Washington Lodge, No. 22, Alexandria, \'a. Washington Lodge, No. 3, Baltimore, Md. Saint John's Lodge, No. 1, New York City. Fredericksburg Lodge, No. 4, Fredericksburg, Va. Dupont Lodge, of Dupont xMills, Delaware. Delegations from the Grand Lodges of Free and Accepted Masons of West Virginia, Michigan, Illinois, Delaware, Dakota, New Hanii)- shire, 'J exas, California, Maryland, New York, Virginia, North Caro lina, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts. 'I'he (jrand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the District of Columbia, ]\L W. Grand Master Myron M. Parker. THIRD DIVISION. Manhal.—^MX.. Brig. Gen. W. W. Dudley, U- S. Volunteers. Stajf. — General William Birney, Lieut. Col. F. G. Butterfield, Lieut. Col. G. C. Kniffin, Lieut. Col. E. C. Ford, Surg. T. B. Hood, Maj. E. W. Clark, Capt. J. B. Tanner, Capt. Fred. Mack. Union Veteran Corps (First Company), Ca|)t. M. A. Dillon, a.cting as escort to the Grand Army of the Republic. George Washington Post, No. 103, Ci. A. R. of New York, Gen- eral M. T. McMahon commander. Grand Army of the Republic, Department of the Potomac, N. M. Brooks, commander; John Cameron, assistant adjutant-general. John A. Rawlins Post, No. i, H. E. Weaver, commander. Kit Carson Post, No. 2, Marcus L. Hopkins, commander. Lincoln Post, No. 3, H. H. Smith, commander. O. P. Morton Post, No. 4, Charles H. Shoater, commander. George G. Meade Post, No. 5, John B. Dowd, commander. John F. Reynolds Post, No. 6, S. E. Faunce, commander. James A. Garfield Post, No. 7, J. H. Jochum, commander. Burnsldc Post, No. 8, C H. Ingram, commander. (Charles Sumner Post, No. 9, George M. Arnold, commander. Farragut Post, No. 10, W. T. Van Doren, commander. The Valley Forge Memorial Association. The Association of the Boston Light Guard, of Massachusetts (composed of members who participated in laying corner-stone of Monument). 'I'he Independent Order of Rechabites, George W. Shoemaker, District Chief Ruler (participated in laying corner stone of Monu- ment). The Journeyman Stone-Cutters' Association (composed of men who cut the stone for the Monument). (jcrman associations, under Mr. A. E. L. Keese, marshal, com- l)rising: Association of Eighth Battalion, District of Columbia Vol- DcdiaUion of tin- ]Vas/iiiii;;foii N'aiional Moninu-iit. 37 iiiUcers; (lerman Veterans of Washington ; Clermania Mitnnenhor; Cieiinan Democratic Association. Ijrotherhood of Cari)enterf, Union No. i, of Washington, D. C. 13rotherhood of Carpenters, Union No. 29, of Bahimore. Md. President's Mounted Guard, Alaj. George A. Arms. \'irginia Club (mounted), Capt. W. A. Dinwiddie. Maryland Club (mounted), Capt. B. W. Summey. Washington Club (mounted), Capt. Thomas K. Hunter. (icorgetown Club (mounted), Capt. A. Fox. Fire Department of the District of Columbia, Chief Kngineer Martin Cronin, with their steam fire engines and apparatus. The procession moved from the Monument grounds through vSeventeenth street to the new vState, War, and Navy Department building, and thence in front of the Kx- ecutive Mansion, through Fifteenth street into Pcnns\lva- nia aventie. This national thoroughfare was decorated with flags and bunting, while many thousand spectators on stands and on the sidewalks formed a brilliant framework for the ])a.ssiug pageant. When the head of the column had reached the Capitol a halt was ordered, and the President of the United vStates, who occupied an open carriage drawn by four horses, passed the military to the Capitol. On his arri\-al there, after a brief delay, the President took his positioiT on a re- viewing stand which had been erected directly in front of the Capitol, where he was joined b\' the members of his Cabinet, several Senators, Representatives, and diplomats. The column then passed in review, the officers .saluting as they passed. General vSheridau, with his moiuiled staff, 38 DedicaHoii of the Washington National MoJiument. wheeled out after they had passed the reviewing stand and took their position opposite the President. It took upwards of an hour for the military and civic organizations to march past in review, and as each body left the Capitol Grounds it was dismissed to the command of its head. EXERCISKS AJT THK CAPiaOL. The seats had been removed from the floor of the Hall of the House of Representatives, which was filled with chairs, assigned to the invited guests, viz: The Senators, Repre- sentatives, and Delegates composing the Forty-eighth Con- gress; the President of the United States, the President- elect, the Vice-President-elect, and the ex-Presidents; the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court; the Cabinet officers, the Admiral of the Navy, the Lieu- tenant-Gencral of the Army, and the officers of the Army and Navy who, by name, had received the thanks of Con- gress; the Chief Justice and Judges of the Court of Claims, and the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia; the Diplomatic Corps; the Commissioners of the District, Governors of vStates and Territories, tlie general officers of the Society of the Cin- cinnati; the Washington National IMonument Societv, members and ex-members of the Joint Connnission for the Completion of the Monument, engineers of the Monument, a detail of workmen, and other guests invited to the floor. The Ivxecutive Gallery was reserved for the invited guests of the President, the families of the nnuibeis of the DeJkation of the Washington National Monument. 39 Cabinet, and the families of the Supreme Court. The Diplomatic Gallery was reserved for the families of the members of the Diplomatic Corps. The Reporters' Gallery was reserved exclusively for the use of journalists, and the remaining galleries were thrown open to the holders of tickets thereto. The Marine Band occupied the vestibule in the rear of the Speaker's chair, and performed a succession of patriotic airs. The House of Representatives having been called to order by Mr. Speaker Carlisle, at a quarter past one o'clock p. m., Messrs. Dorsheimer, Tucker, and Cannon were appointed a committee to wait on the Senate and inform that body that the House was ready to receive it, and to proceed with the ceremonies which had been appointed to take place in the Hall of the House. This duty was performed, and at half-past two o'clock the members of the Senate, following their President pro ton- pore and their Secretary, and preceded by their Sergeant- at-Arms, entered the Hall of the House ot Representatives and occupied the seats reserved for them on the right and left of the main aisle. The Hon. George V. Edmunds, a Senator from Vermont, President //v; tempore oi \\\q. Senate, occupied the vSpeaker's chair, the Speaker of the House sitting at his left. The Chaplain of the House, Rev. John S. Lindsay, D. D., and Rev. S. A. Wallis, of Pohick Church, near Mount Vernon, Virginia, sat at the Clerk's desk. The chairman of the Joint Committee of Arrangements, the orators, and the other officials designated were seated in accordance witli llu- arrangements of the Joint Committee of Arragemcnts. 40 Dedication of t/w IVas/ii/igto/i Ahitional Moniiniciit. Tlie President pro Icntpore of the vSenate lia\'in.t4 ra])ped with his i^avel, there was silence, and he said: Gentlemen of the Senate and House of Rejjiesenlatives, you are assembled, jjursuant to the concurrent order of the two Houses, to celebrate the completion of the Monument to the memory of the first President of the United States. It is not only a memorial but an inspiration liiat shall live through all the generations of our i)osterily, as we may hope, which we this day inaugurate and celel)rate by tiie ceremonies that have been ordered l)y the two Houses. Rev. vS. A. Wallis, of Pohick Church, near Monnt Vernon, Virginia, then offered the following pra^'er: Almighty and everlasting God, Lord of heaven and earth, who alone rulest over the nations of the world, and disj^osest of them ac- cording to Thy good pleasure, we praise Thv hol\' name for the bene- fits we commemorate this day. ^^'onderful things didst Thou for us in the davs of our fathers, in the times of old. For they gat not the land in ])ossession bv their sword, neither did their own arm sa\e them, but Thy right hand and the light of Thy countenance, because Thou hadst a favor unto them. I'.specially do we render Thee our heart v thanks for Th\- servant George Washington, whom J'hou gavest to be a commander and a governor unto this j)eople, and didst l)y him accomplish for it a great and mighty deli\ erance. And as we are now gathered before Tiiee in these Halls, we bless Thee for the government antl cixil (.u'der 'J'hou didst establisli tiirough him. Grant that it ma\- be upheld b\' tliat righteousness which exalteth a nation, and that diis ])hice mav evermore be the habitation of judgment and justice. Let Thy bless ing rest upon our Chief Magistrate and his successors in all genera- tions, (irant each in his time those hea\enl)- graces that are requi- site for so high a trust ; that the laws may l)e impartiallv administered to the ])unishment of wickedness and \ice, and t ) die maintenance of Thy true religion and virtue. ^Ve also humbly beseech Thee for our Senate and Representatives in Congress assembled that Thou wouldst l)e jjleased to direct ail their consultations to the advance- ment of 'l'h\' i^lorx, the good of Thv Cluircli. the safetw lionor, and Dciiication of the Washington National Monument. 4 1 welfare of Thy i;eo|)le, that all things may be so ordered ami settled by their endeavors upon the best and surest foundations, that peace and Hai)]Mness, truth and justice, religion and piety may be established among us for all generations. \\'e pray Thee for our judges and offi- cers that they may judge the people with just judgment, be no re- sjjecters of jjersons, and hear both the small and the great in his cause (), Lord C.od of Hosts, be pleased to save and defend our Army and Navy, that each may be a safeguard to these United States, both by land and sea, until Thou dost fulfill I'hy word, that nation shall not lift u]) sword against nation, neither shall they learn war an\- more. I'»e with those who have been appointed to speak unto us this da\ as they recount the deeds of old time, Thy marvel- ous works, and the judgments of Thy mouth, (iive them grace to utter such words as mav stir us up to emulate the \irtues of our fore- fathers, so that we may transmit the Republic to our posterity high in praise and in name and in honor. Let Th\' richest blessings rest upon our cxuiiitry at large; may we lend a true obedience to the laws cheerfully and willingly for con- science' sake. Let no causeless divisions weaken us as a nation, but grant that we ma\- be knit together more and more in the bonds of peace and imil\-. Preserve us from the dangers now threatening society, and enable each of us, high and low. rich and poor, to do his dutv in th.u stale of life unto which Thou hast called him. So we that are 'i'h\' people and sheep oS Thy pasture shall give Thee thanks fore\er. and will alwavs be showing forth Thy praise from generation to generation. These and all other benefits of Thy good ])rovidence we humbly beg in the name and through the mediatioii of Jesus (■hri>t our most blessed Lord and .^a\ior. Amen. The President //7; IcDipoi-c oi the Senate, after the Marine l>an(l had played ''Hail Coltiinbia, " said: Oendemen of the Senate ;ind House of Representatives, the iirst jjroceeding in order is the oration by Hon. Robert (.". Wmthrop, of NLissachusetts The Chair is sorr\- to announce that .Mr, \Vinthro]\ from indisposition, is unable to attend. According to the arrange- ments of the committee the oration will be now read by Hcjn. lohn I). Long, a member of the House of Representati\es fr(jm the State of Massachusetts. Dedicaiion of ihe Washington National Monument. ORATION BY HON. ROI5ERT C. WINTHROP.* President Arthur^ Senators and Representatives of the United States : By a joint Resolution of Congress you have called upon nie to address you in this Hall to-day on the completion of yonder colossal monument to the Father of his Country. Nothing less imperative could have brought me before you for such an effort. Nearly seven and thirty years have passed away since it was my privilege to perform a similar service at the laying of the corner-stone of that monument. In the prime of manhood, and in the pride of official sta- tion, it was not difficult for me to speak to assembled thou- * Note by Mr. VVinthrop' s son to a panipltlet edition of his oration. — -On being informed of the passage of the joint resolution designating him as the orator at tiic dedication of the Monument, Mr. Winthrop wrote to Senator Sherman, of Ohio, chairman of the Monument Commission, and to Senator Morrill, of Vermont, one of its leading members, to express, not merely his deep sense of the honor con- ferred upon him, but also his great doubt whether he ought not respectfully to de- cline it. He had regarded his centennial oration at Yorktown, in 1881, as tlie closing effort of the series of historical addresses which he had been privileged to pronounce at different periods, and he hesitated to risk impairing the success of the present celebration by subjecting it to the contingencies of failing health and strength to which a man far advanced in his seventy-sixth year would necessarily be liable. Senators Sherman and Morrill, however, both replied that the interest of the occasion would be greatly enhanced if the orator whose name was associ- ated with the inception of the Monument should officiate at its completion, and strongly urged Mr. Winthrop to accept the appointment, whicli he eventually did, though not without misgivings, which have been unhappily justified. Two months only before the appointed time, and after he had substantially pre- pared what he proposed to say, Mr. Winthrop fell dangerously ill of pneumonia, his recovery from which was too slow to admit of the delivery of his oration in person. Under these circumstances, and at the joint request of the Monument Commission and of Mr. Winthrop, it was most kindly and effectively read for liini by lion, John Davis I.ong, late Governor of Massachusetts, and now a niemlit-r of the United Stales House of Keiiresenlalives. R. C. W., |k. Dedication of tJie Washington National Alonument. 43 sands in the open air, without notes, under the scorching rays of a midsummer sun. But what was easy for me then is impossible for me now. I am here to-day, as I need not tell you, in far other condition for the service you have a.s- signed me — changed, changed in almost everything except an inextinguishable love for my Country and its Union and an undying reverence for the memory of Washington. On these alone I rest for inspiration, assured that, with >our in- dulgence, and the blessing of God, which I devoutly invoke, they will be sufficient to sustain me in serving as a medium for keeping up the continuity between the hearts and hands which laid the foundation of this gigantic structure and those younger hearts and hands which have at last brought forth the capstone with shoutings. It is for this you have summoned me. It is for this alone I have obeyed your call. Meantime I cannot wholly forget that the venerable Ex- President John Ouincy Adams — at whose death-bed, in my official chamber beneath this roof, I was a privileged watcher thirty-seven }ears ago this ver\- day — had been originally designated to pronounce the Corner-stone Oration, as one wdio had received his first commission, in tlie long and bril- liant career at home and abroad which awaited him, from the hands of Washington himself. In that enviable distinc- tion I certainly have no share; but I may be pardoned for remembering that, in calling upon me to supph- the place of Mr. Adams, it was borne in mind that I had but lately taken the oath as Speaker at his hands and from his lips, and that thus, as was suggested at the time, the electric chain, though lengthened by a single link, was still un- broken. Let me hope that the magnetism of that chain may not even \et l^e entirely exhausted, and that I may 44 Dedication of the WasJmigton National Motnimeiit. still catch something of its vivifying and qnickening power, while I attempt to bring to the memory of Washington the remnants of a voice ^^"hich is failing and of a x'igor which I am conscions is ebbing away! It is now, Mr. President, vSenators, and Representatives, more than half a centnry since a voluntary Association of patriotic citizens initiated the project of erecting a National Monument to Washington in the cit>' which bears his name. More than a whole centnr}- ago, indeed — in that great )'ear of our Lord which witnessed the Treaty of Peace and Inde- pendence, 1783 — Congress had ordered an Equestrian Statue of him to be executed ' ' to testify the love, admiration, and gratitude of his countrymen"; and again, immediately after his death, in 1799, Congress had solemnly voted a marble monument to him at the Capital, "so designed as to com- memorate the great events of his military and political life." But our beloved country, while yet in its infanc}', and I nun- add in its indigene}', with no experience in matters of art, and heavily weighed down b>- the great debt of the Revolu- tionary W^ar, knew better how to vote monuments than how to build them, or, still more, how to pay for them. York- town monuments and W^ashington monuments, and the statues of I know not how many heroes of our struggle for Independence, made a hue show on paper in our earh- records, and were creditable to those who ordered them; l)ut their practical execution seems to have been indefmitelv post- poned. The Washington Monument As.sociation, instituted in 1833, resolved that no such postponement should longer W endured, and proceeded to organize themselves for the work, wliich has at leiigtli been comi)leted. The\- had for iheir Dedicafioti of the ll'as/tiiii^fon A'ational MoiiiimciU. 4^ first President the great Chief Justice John :\hirsl\all, the 'per- sonal friend and chosen biograj^her of Washington, whose inipressi\e image >ou have so recently and so worthih- inneiled on >onder Western Terrace. Thev had for their second President the not less illnstrions James ]\Iadison, the father of the Constitntion of which Marshall was the inter- preter, and whose statne might well have no inferior place on the same Terrace. Among the other officers and mana- gers of that Association I cannot forget the names of William W. Seaton, whose memory is deservedly cherished b\- all who knew him; of that grand old soldier and patriot Winfield Scott; of Generals Archibald Henderson and Nathan Tow- son; of Walter Jones, and Peter Force, and Philip R. P'en- dall, together with that of its indefatigable General Agent, honest old Elisha Whittlesey. To that Association our earliest and most grateful acknowledgments are due on this occasion. But of those whom I have named, and of mauN- others whom I might name, so long among the honored and familiar figures of this metropolis, not one is left to be the subject of our congratulations. Meanwhile we all rejoice to welcome the presence of one of their contemporaries and friends, whose munificent endowments for Art, Education, Religion, and Charity entitle him to so enviable a place on the roll of American philanthropists — the venerable William W. Corcoran, now, and for many years past, our senior Vice- President, Nearly fifteen years, however, elapsed before the plans or the funds of this Association were in a state of sufficient for- wardness to warrant them even in fixing a day for la\ing the first foundation-stone of the contemplated structure. That day arrived at last — the 4th of July, 1848. And a great day 4-6 Dedication of the ]]'asliiiip;tou National Monument. it was ill this capital of the nation. There had been no day like it here before, and there have been but few, if any, days like it here since. If any one desires a description of it, he will find a most exact and vivid one in the columns of the old National Intelligencer — doubtless from the pen of that prince of editors, the accomplished Jo.seph Gales. I recall among the varied features of the long procession Freema- sons of every order, with their richest regalia, including the precious gavel and apron of Washington himself; Firemen, with their old-fashioned engines; Odd-Fellows from a thou- sand Lodges; Temperance vSocieties and other Associations innumerable; the children of the Schools, long ago grown to mature manhood; the military escort of regulars, marines, and volunteer militia from all parts of the country, com- manded by Generals Quitman and Cadwalader and Colonel May, then crowned with laurels won in Mexico, which long ago were laid upon their graves. I recall, too, the masses of the people, of all classes, and sexes, and ages, and colors, gazing from the windows, or thronging the sidewalks, or grouped in countless thousands upon the Monument grounds. But I look around in vain for any of the principal witnesses of that imposing ceremonial : the venerable widows of Alex- ander Hamilton and James Madison; President Polk and his Cabinet, as then constituted — Buchanan, Marcy, John Y. Mason, Walker, Cave Johnson, and Clifford; Vice-Presi- dent Dallas; George Washington Parke Custis, the adopted son of the great Chief; not forgetting Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, both then members of the House of Rep- resentatives, and for whom the liveliest imagination could hardly have pictured what the future had in store for them. Of that whole bodv there are now but a handful of surviv- J'>rcf:cafion of the Washiih^lon Naiional Moituinrnf. 47 ors, and probabl)- not more than two or three of them i)res- ent here to-day — not one in either branch of Congress, nor one, as I believe, in any department of the national service. To those of us who took part in the laying of that first stone, or who witnessed the ceremonies of the august occa- sion, and who have followed the slow ascent of the stupen- dous pile, sometimes with hope and sometimes with despair, its successful completion is, I need not say, an unspeakable relief, as well as a heartfelt delight and joy. I hazard little in saying that there are some here to-day, unwearied work- ers in ihe cause, like my friends Horatio King and Dr. Toner— to name no others — to whose parting hour a special pang would have been added had they died without the sight which now greets their longing eyes on yonder plain. I dare not venture on any detailed description of the long intervening agony between the laying of the first stone and the lifting of the last. It would fill a volume, and will be sure hereafter to furnish material for an elaborate mono- graph, whose author will literally find ' ' sermons in stones" — for almost every stone has its story if not its sermon. Every year of the first decade certainly had its eventful and note- worthy experiences. The early enthusiasm which elicited contributions to the amount of more than a quarter of a mill- ion of dollars from men, women, and children in all parts of the land, and which carried up the shaft more than a hun- dred and fifty feet almost at a bound; the presentation and formal reception of massive blocks of marble, granite, por- phyry, or freestone from every State in the Union and from so many foreign nations — beginning, according to the cata- logue, with a stone from Bunker Hill and ending with one from the Emperor of Brazil; the annual assemblies at its 48 Dedication of the lf\is/iington Ahiiional Moiiiimetit. base on each succeeding Fourth of July, with speeches by distinguislied visitors; the sudden ilhiess and sad death of that sterling patriot President Zachary Taylor, after an ex- posure to the midday heat at the gathering in 1850, when the well-remembered Senator Foote, of Mississippi, had in- dulged in too exuberant an address — these were among its beginnings; the end was still a whole generation distant. Later on came the long, long disheartening pause, when — parti)' owing to the financial embarrassments of the times, parth- owing to the political contentions and con\ulsionsof the country, and parti)- owing to unhapp)' dissensions in the Association itself — an)' further contributions failed to be forthcoming, all interest in the Monument seemed to flag and die away, and all work on it was suspended and ]-)racti- call)- abandoned. A deplorable Civil War soon followed, and all efforts to renew popular interest in its completion were palsied. How shall I de])ict the sorr)- spectacle which those first one hundred and fift)--six feet, in their seeminglv' hopeless, help- less condition, with that dismal derrick still standing as in mocker)' upon their summit, presented to the eye of ev^ery comer to the Capital for nearly a quarter of a century! No wonder the unsightly pile became the subject of pity or de- rision. No wonder there were periodical panics about the security of its foundation, and a chronic condemnation of the original design. No wonder that suggestions for tearing it all down began to be entertained in many minds, and were advocated by man)- pens and tongues. That truncated shaft, with its untid)- surnmndings, looked onl)- like an insult to the niemor) of Washington. It s)-nil)oli/:ed nothing but an ungrateful country, not dcstinc-d — as, (rod be thanked, it still Dedication of the ]Vas/iini:;to/i National Monument. 49 was— to o-rowtli and grandeur and imperishable glory, but doomed to premature decay, to discord, strife, and ultimate disunion. Its very presence was calculated to discourao-e many hearts from other things, as well as from itself. It was an abomination of desolation standing where it ought not. All that followed of confusion and contention in our country's history seemed foreshadowed and prefigured in that humili- ating spectacle, and one could almost read on its sides in letters of blood, " Divided! Weighed in the balance! Found wanting!" And well might that crude and undigested mass have stood so forever, or until the hand of man or the operation of the elements should have crushed and crumbled it into dust, if our Union had then perished. An unfinished, fragmentary, crumbling monument to Washington would have been a fit emblem of a divided and ruined Country. Washington him- self would not have had it finished. He would have desired no tribute, however imposing, from either half of a disunited Republic. He would have turned with abhorrence from be- ing thought the Father of anything less than One Country, with one Constitution and one Destiny. And how cheering and how inspiring the reflection, how grand and glorious the fact, that no sooner were our un- happy contentions at an end, no sooner were Union and I/ibert}% one and inseparable, once more and, as we trust and believe, forever reasserted and reassured, than this mon- ment to Washington gave signs of fresh life, began to at- tract new interest and new effort, and soon was seen rising again slowly but steadily toward the skies— stone after stone, course upon course, piled up in peace, with foundations ex- tended to the full demand of the enormous weight to be 4 W M 50 Deification of the JVas/iint^/oii National ATomtnicnt. placed upon them, until we can now hail it as complete! Henceforth and forever it shall be lovingly associated, not only with the memory of him in whose honor it has been erected, but with an era of assured peace, unity, and con- cord, which would have been dearer to his heart than the costliest personal memorial which the toil and treasure of his countrymen could have constructed. The Union is itself the all-sufficient and the only sufficient monument to Wash- ington. The Union was nearest and dearest to his great heart. ' ' The Union in any event, ' ' were the most emphatic words of his immortal Farewell Address. Nothing less than the Union would ever have been accepted or recognized by him as a monument commensurate with his services and his fame. Nothing less ought ever to be accepted or recognized as such by us, or by those who shall rise up, generation after generation, to do homage to his memory! For the grand consummation which we celebrate to-day we are indebted primaril}' to the National Government, under the successive Presidents of the past nine years, with the concurrent action of the two branches of Congress, prompted by Committees so often under the lead of the veteran Sen- ator Morrill, of Vermont, The wise decision and emphatic resolution of Congress on the 2d of August, 1876 — inspired by the Centennial Celebration of American Independence, moved by Senator Shennan, of Ohio, and adopted, as it auspicioush' happened, on the hundredth anniversary of the formal signing of the great Declaration — that the monu- ment should no longer be left unfinished, with the appoint- ment of a Joint Commission to direct and supervise its completion, settled the whole matter. To that Joint Com- mission, consisting of the President of the United States Dedication of the lVas/iii}i:;to>t National Monument. 5 1 for the time being, the Senior Vice-President of the Monn- ment Association, the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army, with the architects of the Capitol and the Treasury, the congratulations and thanks of us all may well be tendered. But I think they will all cordially agree with me that the main credit and honor of what has been accom- plished belongs peculiarly and pre-eminently to the distin- guished officer of Engineers who has been their devoted and untiring Agent from the outset. The marvellous work of extending and strengthening the foundations of a structure already weighing, as it did, not less than thirty-two thousand tons — sixty-four million pounds — an operation which has won the admiration of engineers all over the world, and which will always associate this monument with a signal triumph of scientific skill — was executed upon his responsibility and under his personal supervnsion. His, too, have been the ingenious and effective arrangements by which the enor- mous shaft has been carried up, course after course, until it has reached its destined height of five hundred and fifty-five feet, as we see it at this hour. To Col. Thomas Lincoln Casey, whose name is associated in three generations with valued military servace to his country, the successful com- pletion of the monument is due. But he would not have us forget his accomplished Assistant, Capt. George W. Davis, and neither of them would have us fail to remember Super- intendent McLaughlin and the hard-handed and honest- hearted mechanics who have labored so long under their direction. Finis corotiat opus. The completion crowns the work. To-day that work speaks for itself, and needs no other orator. Mute and lifeless as it seems, it has a living and audible 52 Dedication of the Washington National Monument. voice for all who behold it, and no one can misinterpret its language. Nor will any one, I think, longer cavil about its design. That design, let me add, originally prepared by the Washington architect, Robert Mills, of vSoutli Carolina, and adopted long before I had any relations -to this Association, was commended to public favor by such illustrious names as Andrew Jackson, John Ouincy Adams, Albert Gallatin, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster. A colonnade encircling its base, and intended as a sort of Pantheon, was soon dis- carded from the plan. Its main feature, from the first, was an obelisk, after the example of that which had then been recently agreed upon for Bunker Hill. And so it stands to-da}-, a simple sublime obelisk of pure white marble, its proportions, in spite of its immense height, conforming ex- actly to those of the most celebrated obelisks of antiquity, as my accomplished and lamented friend, our late Minister to Italy, George P. Marsh, so happily pointed out to us. It is not, indeed, as were those ancient obelisks, a monolith, a single stone cut whole from the quarr\-; that would have been obviously impossible for anything so colossal. Nor could we have been expected to attempt the impossible in deference to Egyptian methods of construction. We might almost as well be called on to adopt as the emblems of Amer- ican Progress the bronze Crabs which were found at the base of Cleopatra's Needle! America is certainly at liberty to present new models in art as well as in government, or to improve upon old ones; and, as I ventured to suggest some years ago, our monument to Washington will be all the more significant and symbolic in embodying, as it does, the idea of our cherished National motto, E rLURinus UNu:\r. That compact, consolidated structure, with its countless Dedication of the VVas/ii/igton National Monument. 53 blocks, inside and ontsidc, held firmly in position by their own weight and pressnre, will ever be an instructive type of the National strength and grandeur which can only be secured by the union of "many in one." Had the Fine Arts indeed made such ach'ances in our country forty years ago as we are now proud to recognize, it is not improbable that a different design might have been adopted; yet I am by no means sure it would have been a more effective and appropriate one. There will always be ample opportunity for the display of decorati\-e art in our land. The streets and squares of this city and of all our great cities are wide open for the statues and architectural memorials of our distinguished statesmen and soldiers, and such monuments are ever^-where welcomed and honored. But is not — I ask in all sincerity — is not the acknowledged pre-eminence of the Father of his Country, first without a second, more fitly and adequately represented \^\ that soar- ing shaft, rising high above trees and spires and domes and all the smoke and stir of earth — as he ever rose above sec- tional prejudices and party politics and personal interests — overtopping and dominating all its surroundings, gleaming and glistening out at every vista as far as human sight can reach, arresting and riveting the eye at every turn, while it shoots triumphantly to the skies? Does not — does not, I repeat, that Colossal Unit remind all who gaze at it, more forcibly than any arch or statue could do, that tliere is one name in American history above all other names, one char- acter more exalted than all other characters, one example to be studied and reverenced beyond all other examples, one bright particular star in the clear upper sky of our finnament, whose guiding light and peerless lustre are for 54 Dedication of the WasJiington National Monument. all men and for all ages, never to be lost sight of, never to be nnbceded? Of that name, of that character, of that ex- ample, of that glorious guiding light, our Obelisk, standing on the very spot selected by Washington himself for a mon- ument to the American Revolution, and on the site ^yhich marks our National meridian, will be a imique memorial and s}inl3ol forever. For oh, my friends, let us not longer forget, or even seem to forget, that we are here to commemorate not the ]\Ionu- ment but the Man. That stupendous pile has not been reared for any vain purpose of challenging admiration for itself. It is not, I need not say it is not, as a specimen of advanced art, for it makes no pretension to that; it is not as a signal illustration of engineering skill and science, though that ma)- confidently be claimed for it; it is not, certainly it is not, as the tallest existing structure in the world, for we do not measure the greatness of men by the height of their monuments, and we know that this distinction ma}- be done away with here or elsewhere in future years; but it is as a Memorial of the pre-eminent figure in modern or in ancient history the world over — of the man who has left the loftiest example of public and private virtues, and whose exalted character challenges the admiration and the homage of man- kind. It is this example and tl;is character — it is the ]\Ian, and not the Monument — that we are here to commemorate! Assembled in these Legislative Halls of the Nation, as near to the Anniversary of his birth as a due respect for the Da)- of our lyord will allow, to signalize the long-delayed accom- plishment of so vast a work, it is upon him in whose honor it has been upreared, and upon the incomparable and ines- timable services he has rendered to his conntrN- and to the Deihcation of the Washingtoti National Motuiment. 55 world, that our tliou^i;hts should be concentred at this hour. Yet what can I say, what can any man say, of Washington, which has not already been rendered as familiar as house- hold words, not merely to those who hear me, but to all readers of history and all lovers of Liberty throughout the world? How could I hope to glean anything from a field long ago so carefull)' and lovingly reaped b}- such men as John Marshall and Jared Sparks, by Guizot and Edward Everett and Washington Irving, as well as by our eminent living historian, the venerable George Bancroft, happily here with us to-day? Others, many others, whom I dare not attempt to name or number, have vied with each other in describing a career of whose minutest details no American is ever weary, and whose variety and interest can never be exhausted. Every stage and step of that career, every scene of that great and glorious life, from the hour of his birth, one hundred and fifty-three years ago — "about ten in the morning of y'" ii^'' day of February, 1731-2," as recorded in his mother's Bible — in that primitive Virginia farm-house in the county of Westmoreland, of which the remains of the "great brick chimney of the kitchen" have been identified only witliin a few years past — every scene, I say, of that grand and glo- rious life, from that ever-memorable hour of his nativity, has been traced and illustrated by the most accomplished and brilliant pens and tongues of our land. His childhood, under the loving charge of that venerated mother, who delighted to say that "George had always been a good son," who happily lived not only to see him safely restored to her after the exposures and perils of the Revolutionary struggle, but to see him, in lier eighty-second 56 Dedication of tlic WasJiiiigton National Monument. )-car, uiianimousl}' elected to be the President in Peace of the country of which he had been the vSaviour in War; his primary education in that "old-field school-house," with Hobby, the sexton of the parish, for his first master; his early and romantic adventures as a land surveyor; his nar- row escape from being a midshipman in the British Nav)' at fourteen years of age, for which it has been said a warrant had been obtained and his luggage actualh' put on board a man-of-war anchored in the river just below Mount Vernon; his still narrower and hairbreadth escapes from Indian arrows and from French bullets, and his survival — the only mounted officer not killed — at the defeat of Braddock, of whom he was an aide-de-camp; together with that most remarkable prediction of the Virginia pastor, Samuel Davies, afterward President of Princeton College, pointing him out — in a sermon, in 1755, on his return, at the age of twenty-three, from the disastrous field of the Mononga- hela — as "that heroic youth. Colonel Washington, whom I cannot but hope Providence has preserved in so signal a manner for some important service to his country" ; who has forgotten, who can ever forget these most impressive incidents of that opening career by which he was indeed so providentially preserved, prepared, and trained up for the eventful and illustrious future which awaited him? Still less can any American forget his taking his seat, soon afterward, in the Virginia House of Burgesses — with the striking tribute to his modesty which he won from the vSpeaker — and his subsequent election to the Continental Congress at Philadelphia, where on the 15th of June, 1775, at the instance of John Adams and on the motion of Thomas Johnson, aftc-rward Governor of AIar\laiid, he was unani- Dedication of the Washington National Moni/ment. 57 mously appointed "General and Commander-in-Chief of such Forces as are, or shall be, raised for the maintenance and preserv-ation of American Liberty. ' ' Nor can any of us require to be reminded of the heroic fortitude, the unswerv- ing constancy, and the unsparing self-devotion with w'hich he conducted through seven or eight 5^ears that protracted contest, with all its toils and trials, its vexations and vicis- situdes, from the successful Siege of Boston, his first great triumph, followed by those masterly movements on the Del- aware, which no less celebrated a soldier than Frederick the Great declared ' ' the most brilliant achievements of any recorded in the annals of military action" — and so along — through all the successes and reverses and sufferings and trials of IMonmouth and Brandywine and Germantown and Valley Forge — to the Siege of Yorktown, in 1781, where, with the aid of our generous and gallant allies, under the lead of Rochambeau and De Grasse and Lafayette, he won at last that crowning victory on the soil of his beloved Vir- ginia. Nor need I recall to you the still nobler triumphs wit- nessed during all this period — triumphs in which no one but he had any share — triumphs over himself; not merely in his magnanimous appreciation of the exploits of his sub- ordinates, even when unjustly and maliciously contrasted with disappointments and alleged inaction of his own, but in repelling the machinations of discontented and mutinous officers at Newburgh, in spurning overtures to invest him with dictatorial and even Kingly power, and in finally sur- rendering his sword and commission so simply, so sublimely, to the Congress from which he had received them. Or, turning sharply from this sunnnary and faniiliar 5^ Dedication of the Washington National Monument. sketch of his military career — of which, take it for all in all, its long duration, its slender means, its vast theatre, its glo- rious aims and ends and results, there is no parallel in his- tory — turning sharply from all this, need I recall him, in this presence, presiding with paramount influence and au- thority over the Convention which framed the Constitution of the United States, and then, with such consummate dis- cretion, dignity, and wisdom, over the original administra- tion of that Constitution, when the principles and precedents of our great Federal system of Government were molded, formed, and established? It was well said by John Milton, in one of his powerful Defences of the People of England, "War has made many great whom Peace makes small." But of Washington we may say, as Milton said of Cromwell, that, while War made him great. Peace made him greater; or rather that both war and peace alike gave opportunity for the display of those incomparable innate qualities which no mere circumstances could create or destroy. But his sword was not quite yet ready to rest quietl)- in its scabbard. Need I recall him once more, after his retire- ment from a second term of the Chief Magistracy, accept- ing a subordinate position, under his successor in the Presi- dency, as Lieutcnant-General of the American Armies in view of an impending foreign war, which, thank God, was so happily averted? Nor can any one who hears me require to be reminded of that last scene of all, when, in his eight-and-sixtieth year, having been overtaken by a fatal shower of sleet and snow in the midst of those agricultural pursuits in which he so iiiuch (It-lighted at Mount Vernon, he laid liinist-lf calmly Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 59 down to die — "not afraid to go," as he whispered to his physician — and left his whole country in tears such as had never flowed before. "Mark the perfect man and behold the upright, for the end of that man is peace ! ' ' Eighty-five years ago to-morrow — his sixty-eighth birth- day — was solemnly assigned by Congress for a general mani- festation of that overwhelming national sorrow, and for the commemoration, by eulogies, addresses, sermons, and relig- ious rites, of the great life which had thus been closed. But long before that anniversary arrived, and one day only after the sad tidings had reached the seat of Government in Phil- adelphia, President John Adams, in reply to a message of the House of Representatives, had anticipated all panegyrics by a declaration, as true to-day as it was then, that he was "the most illustrious and beloved personage which this country ever produced ' ' ; while Henry Lee, of Virginia, through the lips of John INIarshall, had summed up and condensed all that was felt, and all that could be or ever can be said, in those imperishable words, which will go ringing down the centuries, in every clime, in ever}- tongue, till time shall be no more, ' ' First in War, First in Peace, and First in the hearts of his Countrymen!" But there are other imperishable words which will resound through the ages — words of his own not less memorable than his acts — some of them in private letters, some of them in official correspondence, some of them in inaugural addresses, and some of them, I need not say, in that im- mortal Farewell Address which an eminent English his- torian has pronounced "unequaled by any composition of uninspired wisdom," and which ought to be learned by heart by the children of our .schools, like the Laws of the 6o Dedication of the Wasliington National Monument. Twelve Tables in the schools of ancient Rome, and never forgotten when those children grow up to the privileges and responsibilities of manhood. It was a custom of the ancient Egyptians, from whom the idea of our Monument has been borrowed — I should rather say, evolved — to cover their obelisks with hieroglyphical in- scriptions, some of which have to this day perplexed and baffled all efforts to decipher them. Neither Champollion, nor the later Lepsius, nor any of the most skillful Egypt- ologists, have succeeded in giving an altogether satisfactory reading of the legends on Pompey's Pillar and Cleopatra's Needle. And those legends, at their best — engraved, as they were, on the granite or porphyry, with the letters enameled with gold, and boasted of as illuminating the world with their rays — tell us little except the dates and doings of some despotic Pharaoh, whom we would willingly have seen drowned in the ocean of oblivion, as one of them so deserv- edly was in the depths of the Red Sea. Several of the in- scriptions on Cleopatra's Needle, as it so strangely greets us in the fashionable promenade of our commercial capital, in- form us in magniloquent terms, of Thothmes III, who lived in the age preceding that in which Moses was born, styling him a "Child of the Sun," "Lord of the Two Worlds," "Endowed and endowing with power, life, and stability." Other inscriptions designate him, or Rameses II — the great oppressor of the Israelites — as the "Chastiser of Foreign Nations," "The Conqueror," "The Strong Bull!" Our Washington Needle, while it has all of the severe simplicity, and far more than all of the massive grandeur, which were the characteristics of Egyptian architecture, bears no inscriptions whatever, and none are likely ever to Drdicafkm of flu- U'as/tiiiiitoii Xalioiial Moinininit. 6i be carxed on it. Around its base bas-reliefs in bronze may possibly one da>- be placed, illustrative of some of the great events of Washinoton's life; ^vllile on the terrace beneath may, perhaps, be arranged emblematic figures of Justice and Patriotism, of Peace, Liberty, and Union. All this, how- ever, may well be left for future years, or even for future generations. Each succeeding generation, indeed, will take its own pride in doing whatever may be wisely done in adorning the surroundings of this majestic pile, and in thus testifying its own homage to the memory of the Father of his Country. Yet to the mind's eye of an American Patriot those marble faces will never seem vacant— never seem void or voiceless. No mystic figures or hieroglyphical signs will, indeed, be descried on them. No such vainglorious words as ' ' Conqueror, " or " Chastiser of Foreign Nations, ' ' nor any such haughty assumption or heathen ascription as "Child of the Sun, ' ' will be deciphered on them. But ever and anon, as he gazes, there will come flashing forth in letters of living light some of the great words, and grand precepts, and noble lessons of principle and duty which are the matchless be- quest of Washington to his country and to mankind. Can we not all read there already, as if graven by some invisible finger, or inscribed with some sympathetic ink— which it requires no learning of scholars, no lore of Egypt, nothing but love of our own land, to draw out and make legible— those masterly words of his Letter to the Governors of the vStates in 1783: There are four things which, I humbly conceive, are es- sential to the well-being— I may even venture to say, to the existence— of the United States as an independent Power: First, an indissoluble Union of the States under one Federal 62 Dedication of the Washinglon National Moniimciif. head; Second, a sacred regard to Public Justice; Third, the adoption of a proper Peace Establishment; and, Fourth, the prevalence of that pacific and friendly disposition among the People of the United States which will induce them to forget their local prejudices and policies, to make those mutual concessions which are requisite to the general pros- perity, and, in some instances, to sacrifice their individual advantages to the interest of the Community. These are the Pillars on which the glorious fabric of our Independency and National Character must be supported. ' ' Can we not read, again, on another of those seemingly vacant sides, that familiar passage in his Farewell Address — a jewel of thought and phraseology, often imitated, but never matched — "The name of American, which belongs to you in your National capacity, must always exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any appellation derived from local discriminations?" and, not far below it, his memora- ble warning against Party Spirit — "A fire not to be quenched, it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its bursting into a flame, lest, instead of warming, it should consume?" Still again, terser legends from the same prolific source salute our eager gaze: "Cherish Public Credit;" "Observe good faith and justice towards all Nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all;" "Promote, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general diffiision of Knowl- edge. In proportion as the structure of a Government gives force to public opinion, it is essential that public opinion should be enlightened." And, above all — a thousand-fold more precious than all the rest — there will come streaming down from time to time, to many an eager and longing eye, from the very point where Dcdicalion of I he IVas/iiiii^/o/i Kalioiial MonuincitL 63 its tiny aluiiiiiiiiiin apex reaches nearest to the skies — and shining forth with a radiance which no vision of Constan- tine, no labaruni for his legions, could ever have eclipsed — ■ some of those solemnly reiterated declarations and counsels, which might almost be called the Confession and Creed of Washington, and which can never be forgotten by any Chris- tian Patriot : "When I contemplate the interposition of Providence, as it was visibly manifest in guiding us through the Revolu- tion, in preparing us for the reception of the General Gov- ernment, and in conciliating the good-will of the people of America toward one another after its adoption, I feel myself oppressed and almost overwhelmed with a sense of Divine munificence. I feel that nothing is due to my personal agency in all those wonderful and complicated events, ex- cept what can be attributed to an honest zeal for the good of my country." "No people can be bound to acknowl- edge and adore an Invisible Hand which conducts the affairs of men more than the people of the United States. Every step by which they have advanced to the character of an Independent Nation seems to have been distinguished by some token of Providential Agency." "Of all the disposi- tions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and Morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism, who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the duties of men and of citizens." And thus on all those seemingly blank and empty sides will be read, from time to time, in his own unequaled lan- guage, the grand precepts and principles of Peace, Justice, Education, Morality, and Religion, which he strove to incul- 64 Dedication of the WasJiiir^toii Xatioiial Moiiiiinciit. cate, while encircling and illuminating them all, and envel- oping the whole monument, from corner-stone to cap-stone, will be hailed with rapture by every patriotic eye, and be echoed by every patriotic heart, "The Union, the Union in any event!" But what are all the noble words which Washington wrote or uttered, what are all the incidents of his birth and death, what are all the details of his marvelous career from its commencement to its close, in comparison with his own exalted character as a Man? Rarely was Webster more impressive than when, on the completion of the monument at Bunker Hill, in describing what our Country had accom- plished for the welfare of mankind, he gave utterance, with his characteristic terseness and in his inimitable tones, to the simple assertion, "America has furnished to the world the character of Washington!" And well did he add that, "if our American institutions had done nothing else, that alone would have entitled them to the respect of mankind." The character of Washington! Who can delineate it worthily? Who can describe that priceless gift of America to the world in terms which may do it any sort of justice, or afford any degree of satisfaction to his hearers or to him- self? Modest, disinterested, generous, just — of clean hands and a pure heart — self-denying and self-sacrificing, seeking nothing for himself, declining all remuneration beyond the reimbursement of his outlays, scrupulous to a farthing in keeping his accounts, of spotless integrity, scorning gifts, charitable to the needy, forgiving injuries and injustices, brave, fearless, heroic, with a prudence ever governing his impulses and a wisdom ever guidiug his valor — true to his DcdiaUion of the Wasliiiigton National Monument. 65 friends, true to his whole country, true to himself — feari no- God, believing in Christ, no stranger to private devotion or public worship or to the holiest offices of the Church to which he belonged, but ever gratefull}' recognizing a Divine aid and direction in all tliat he attempted and in all that he accom- plished — what epithet, what attribute could be added to that consummate character to commend it as an example above all other characters in merely human history! From first to last he never solicited or sought an office, militar)' or civil. Every office stood candidate for him, and was ennobled by his acceptance of it. Honors clustered around him as if by the force of "first intention. " Respon- sibilities heaped themselves on his shoulders as if by the law of gravitation. They could rest safely nowhere else, and they found him ever ready to bear them all, ever equal to discharge them all. To what is called personal magnet- ism he could have had little pretension. A vein of dignified reserve, which Houdon and Stuart have rightly made his peculiar characteristic in marble and on canvas, repressed all familiarities with him. His magnetism was that of merit — superior, surpassing merit — the merit of spotless integrity, of recognized ability, and of unwearied willing- ness to spend and be spent in the service of his country. That was sufficient to attract irresistibly to his support not only the great mass of the people, but the wisest and best of his contemporaries in all quarters of the Union, and from them he selected, with signal discrimination, such advisers and counselors, in War and in Peace, as have never sur- rounded any other American leader. No jealousy of their abilities and accomplishments ever ruffled his breast, and with them he achic\-ed our Independence, organizcfl onr 5 W M '; 66 Dedication of tJie IVas/iing/on Nafional Monument. Constitutional Government, and stamped his name indelibly on the a<^e in which he lived as the Ai^e of Washington! Well did Chief-Justice Marshall, in that admiral Preface to the biography of his revered and illustrious friend, sum up with judicial precision the services he was about to describe in detail. Well and truly did he say, "As if the chosen in- strument of Heaven, selected for the purpose of effecting the great designs of Providence respecting this our Western Hemisphere, it was the peculiar lot of this distinguished man, at every epoch when the destinies of his country seemed dependent on the measures adopted, to be called by the united voice of his fellow-citizens to those high stations on which the success of those measures j^rincipally de- pended. ' ' And not less justly has Bancroft said, when describii]g Washington's first inauguration as President: "But for him the Country could not have achieved its Independence; but for him it could not have formed its Union; and now but for him it could not set the Federal Government in success- ful motion." I do not forget that there have been other men, in other days, in other lands, and in our own land, who have been called to command larger armies, to preside over more dis- tracted councils, to administer more extended Governments, and to grapple with as complicated and critical affairs. Grat- itude and honor wait ever on their persons and their names! But we do not estimate Miltiades at Marathon, or Pausanias at Platsea, or Themistocles at Salamis, or Epaminondas at Mantinea or Leuctra, or Leonidas at Thermopylte, by the number of the forces which they led on land or on sea. Nor do we gauge the glory of Columbus by the size of the little Dedication of fhc WasJnngton Nafio?ial Motuiment. 67 fleet with which he ventured so heroically upon the perils of a mighty unknown deep. There are some circumstances which can not occur twice; some occasions of which there can be no repetition; some names which will always assert their individual pre-eminence, and will admit of no rivalry or comparison. The glory of Columbus can never be eclii:»sed, never approached, till our New World shall require a fresh discovery; and the glory of Washington will remain unique and peerless until American Independence shall require to be again achieved, or the foundations of Constitutional Lib- erty to be laid anew. Think not that I am claiming an immaculate perfection for any mortal man. One Being only has ever walked this earth of ours without sin. Washington had his infirmities and his passions like the rest of us; and he would have been more or less than human had he never been overcome by them. There were young officers around him, in camp and elsewhere, not unlikely to have thrown temptations in his path. There were treacherous men, also — downright trai- tors, some of them — whose words in council, or conduct in battle, or secret plottings behind his back, aroused his right- eous indignation, and gave occasion for memorable bursts of anger. Now and then, too, there was a disaster, like that of St. Clair's expedition against the Indians in 1791, the first tidings of which stirred the very depths of his soul, and betrayed him into a momentary outbreak of mingled grief and rage, which only proved how violent were the emotions he was so generally able to control. While, however, not even the i^olluted breath of slander has left a shadow upon the purity of his life, or a doubt of his eminent power of self-command, he made no boast of 68 Dedication of the U'as/iiir^/oii Xaiioiial Mviiiiinoif. virtue or valor, and no amount of flattery ever led him to be otherwise than distrustful of his own ability and merits. As early as 1757, when only twenty-live years of age, he wrote to Governor Dinwiddle: "Tliat I have foibles, and perhaps many of them, I shall not den\ ; I should esteem myself, as the world also would, vain and empty were I to arrogate perfection. ' ' On accepting the command of the Army of the Revolu- tion, iu 1775, he said to Congress: "I beg it may be remem- bered by ever}- gentleman in the room that I this day de- clare, with the utmost sincerity, I do not think m)self equal to the command I am honored with." And, in 1777, when informed that anonymous accusations against him had been sent to Laurens, then President of Congress, he wrote privately to beg that the paper might at once be submitted to the body to which it was addressed, adding these frank and noble words: "Why should I be ex- empt from censure — the unfailing lot of an elevated station? Merit and talents which I cannot pretend to rival have ever been subject to it. My heart tells me it has been my unre- mitted aim to do the best which circumstances would per- mit; yet I may have been very often mistaken in my judg- ment of the means, and may, in many instances, deserve the imputation of error." And when at last he was contemplating a final retirement from the Presidency, and in one of the draughts of his Fare- well Address had written that he withdrew "with a pure heart and nndefiled hands," or words to that effect, he sup- pressed the ])assage and all other similar e\])ressious, lest, as he suggested, he should seem to elaim W>\ himself a meas- ure of perfection which all the world now unites in accivd- Ledkarion of the ]Va,hinot,>„ Xatio, al Momwinif. 6y in- to him. For I liazard little in asserlino- that all the world does now accord to Washinoton a tribute, which has the indorsement of the Kncycloixedia Britannica, that "of all men that have exer lived, he was the greatest of good men, and the best of great men." Or, let me borrow tlie same idea from a renowned English poet, who gave his young life and brilliant genius to the cause of Liberty in modern Greece. "Wliere," wrote Byron— "Where may the wearied eye repose AMien gazing on the great, Where neither guilty glory glows, Nor despicable state ! Yes, One — the first, the last, the best, The Cincinnatus of the West, Whom envy daretl not hate — Bequeathed the name of Washington, To make men blush there was but One! " To what other name have such tributes ever been paid by great and good men abroad as well as at home? You have not forgotten the language of Lord Erskine in his inscri])- tion of one of his productions to Washington liiuisclf: " You are the only being for whom I have an awful rever- ence." You have not forgotten the language of Charles James Fox, in the House of Commons: " Illustrious Man, before whom all borrowed greatness sinks into insignificance." Y^ou have not forgotten- the language of Eord Brougham, twice uttered, at long interxals, and with a ])urpose, as Brougham himself once told uie, to imiM-css and enforce those emphatic words as his fixed and final judgment: "Until time shall be no more will a test of the progress which our race has made in Wisdom and \'irtue be derived 70 Dedication of tJic WasJiirigton National Monument. from the veneration paid to the innnortal name of Wash- ington ! ' ' Nor can I fail to welcome the crowning tribnte, perhaps, from oiir mother land — reaching me, as it has, at the last mo- ment of revising what I had prepared for this occasion — in a pnblished letter from Gladstone, her great Prime Minister, who, after saying in casnal conversation that Washington was ' ' the pnrest fignre in history, ' ' writes deliberately, ' ' that if, among all the pedestals snpplied by history for public characters of extraordinary nobility and purity, I saw one higher than all the rest, and if I were required at a moment's notice to name the fittest occupant for it, I think my choice, at any time during the last forty-five years, would have lighted, and it would now light, upon Washington!" I)Ut if any one would get a full impression of the affection and veneration in which Washington was held by his con- temporaries, let him turn, almost at random, to the letters which were addressed to him, or which were written about him, by the eminent men, military or civil, American or European, who were privileged to correspond with him, or who, ever so casually, found occasion to allude to his career and character. And let him by no means forget, as he reads them, that those letters were written a hundred years ago, when language was more measured, if not more sincere, than now, and before the indiscriminate use of the superla- tive, and the exaggerations and adulations of flatterers and parasites, sending great and small alike down to posterity as patterns of every virtue imder Heaven, had tended to render such tributes as suspicious as they often are worthless. What, for instance, said plain-speaking old Benjamin Franklin? " My fine crab-tree walking-stick, with a gold Dedicaiion of the Washington National Monument. 7 1 head curiously wrought \\\ the form of tlie cap of Liberty," — these are the words of his Will in 1789 — "I give to my friend and the friend of mankind George Washington. If it were a sceptre, he has merited it, and would become it." " Happy, happy America;" wrote Gouverneur Morris from Paris, in 1793, when the French Revolution was making such terrific progress — "haiDpy, happy America, governed by reason, by law, by the man whom she loves, whom she almost adores! It is the pride of my life to consider that man as my friend, and I hope long to be honored with that title." "I have always admired," wrote to him Count Herz- burg, from Berlin, where he had presided for thirty years over the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, under Frederick the Great — "I have always admired your great virtues and qualities, your disinterested patriotism, your unshaken courage and simplicity of manners — qualifications by which you surpass men even the most celebrated of antiquity." "I am sorry," wrote Patrick Henry, then Governor of Virginia, in allusion to the accusations of one of the no- torious faction of 1777 — "I am sorry there should be one man who counts himself my friend who is not yours." Thomas Jefferson, who, we all know, sometimes differed from him, took pains, at a later period of his life, to say of him in a record for posterity: " His integrity was most pure; his justice the most inflexible I have ever known; no motives of interest or consanguinity, of friendship or hatred, being able to bias his decision. He was, indeed, in every sense of the word, a wise, a good, and a great man." And when it was once suggested to him, not long before his own death, that the fame of Washington might lessen 72 Drdicaiioii oj lltr WasJiur^ton Ahtlioi al Aloniiiiiriit. with the lapse of years, Jefferson, lookiiifj up to the sky, and in a tone which betrayed deep emotion, is said to have replied: " Washino^ton's fame will go on increasing until the brightest constellation in yonder heavens is called by his name! " "If I could now present myself," wrote Edmund Ran- dolph, who had made injurious imputations on Washington before and after his dismissal from the Cabinet in 1795 — " if I could now present myself before your venerated uncle, " he wrote most touchingly to Judge Bushrod Washington in 1810, "it would be my pride to confess my contrition that I suffered my irritation, let the cause be what it might, to use some of those expressions respecting him, which, at this moment of indifference to the world, I wish to recall, as being inconsistent with my subsequent conviction. My life will, I hope, be sufficiently extended for the recording of my sincere opinion of his virtues and merit in a style which is not the result of a mind merely debilitated by misfortune, but of that Christian Philosophy on which alone I depend for inward tranquillity." And far more touching and more telling still is the fact that even Thomas Conway, the leader of that despicable cal)al at Valley Forge, but who lived to redeem his name in other lands, if not in our own — when believing himself to be mortally wounded in a duel, in 1778, and "just able," as he said, "to hold the pen for a few minutes" — employed those few minutes in writing to Washington to express his "sincere grief for having done, written, or said anything disagreeable" to him, adding these memorable words: " You are, in my e\"es, the great and good man. May )ou long Dedication of iJie Wasliiih^foii Xafwiial I\[<'iiiintr?it. 73 enjoy the love, veneration, and esteem of these States, whose liberties yon have asserted by your virtnes!" From his illnstrions friend Alexander Hamilton I need not cite a word. His whole life bore testimony, more im- pressive than words, to an admiration and affection for his great chief, which conld not be exceeded, and which no momentary misnnderstandinf^^s conld shake. Bnt listen once more, and only once more, to Lafayette, writing to Washington from Cadiz, in 1783, when the glad tidings of the Treaty of Peace had jnst reached him : ' ' Were yon bnt snch a man as Jnlins Qesar, or the King of Prnssia, I slionld almost be sorry for yon at the end of the great tragedy where you are acting such a part. But, with my dear General, I rejoice at the blessings of a Peace in which our noble ends have been secured. . . . As for you, who truly can say you have done all tins, what must \o\\x virtuous and good heart feel in the happy moment when the Revolution you have made is now firmly established!" Rightly and truly did Lafayette say that his beloved General was of another spirit and of a different mould from Caesar and Frederick. Washington had little, or nothing, in common with the great military heroes of his own or any other age — conquering for the sake of conquest — "wading through slaughter to a throne " — and overrunning the world, at a countless cost of blood and treasure, to gratify their own ambition, or to realize some mad dream of universal empire. No ancient Plutarch has furnished any just parallel for him in this respect. No modern Plutarch will find one. In all history, ancient and modern alike, he stands, in this resjiect, as individual and unique as yonder majestic Needle. In his ]£ulog\' on \\'ashingl()n before the Legislatnre of 74 Dedication of the Washington National Alonument. Massachusetts the eloquent Fisher Ames, my earliest prede- cessor in Congress from the Boston district, said, eighty-five years ago, that in contemplating his career and character, "Mankind perceived some change in their ideas of great- ness. . . . The splendor of power, and even the name of Conqueror, had grown dim in their eyes. . . . They knew and felt that the world's wealth, and its empire too, would be a bribe far beneath his acceptance." Yes, they all saw that he bore ever in his mind and in his heart, as he said at Philadelphia on his way to Cambridge, in 1775, that "as the Sword was the last resort for the preservation of our liberties, so it ought to be the first thing laid aside when those liberties were firmly established. ' ' And they saw him lay down his sword at the earliest moment, and retire to the pursuits of peace, only returning again to public service at the unanimous call of his country; to preside for a limited period over a free Constitutional Republic, and then eagerly resuming the rank of an American Citizen. That was the example which changed the ideas of mankind as to what constituted real greatness. And that example was exhibited for all nations and for all ages, never to be forgotten or over- looked, by him who was born one hundred and fifty-three years ago to-morrow in that primitive little Virginia farm- house! I am myself a New-Englander by birth, a son of INTassa- chusetts, bound by the strongest tics of affection and of blood to honor and venerate the earlier and the later worthies of the old Puritan Commonwealth, jealous of their fair fame, and ever ready to assert and vindicate their just renown. But I turn reverently to the Old Dominion to-day, and sa- lute her as the mother of the pre-eminent and incom])aral)le Dedication of the Was/iirigfofi National Monument. 75 American, the Father of his Country, and the foremost fig- ure in all merely human history. In the words of our own poet TvOwell: "Virginia gave us this imperial man, Cast in the massive mould Of those high-statured ages old Which into grander forms our mortal metal ran; She gave us this unblemished gentleman: What shall we give her back but love and praise?" Virginia has had other noble sons, whom I will not name, but whom I do not forget. When I remember how many they are, and how great they have been, and how much our country has owed them, I may well exclaim, '■'' Felix prole virihn. ' ' But, as I think of her Washington — of our Wash- ington, let me rather say — I am almost ready to add, '^ La^ta Dethn partii P ' A celebrated philosopher of antiquity, who was nearly contemporary with Christ, but who could have known noth- ing of what was going on in Judea, and who alas! did not always "reck his own rede" — wrote thus to a young-er friend, as a precept for a worthy life : " Some good man must be singled out and kept ever before our eyes, that we may live as if he were looking on, and do everything as if he could see it." Let me borrow the spirit, if not the exact letter, of that precept, and address it to the young men of my Country: "Keep ever in yotir mind and before your mind's eye the loftiest standard of character. You have it, I need not say, supremely and unapproachably, in Him who spake as never man spake and lived as never man lived, and who died for the sins of the world. That character stands apart and alone. But of merely mortal men the monument we have dedicated •jC) Dciiicaiicn of the ]Vos/ii//i:;ft)/i National Moiiiiniciit. to-day points out the one for all Americans to study, to imi- tate, and, as far as may be, to emulate. Keep his example and his character c\-er before your e\es and in your hearts. Live and act as if he were seeing and judj^ing your personal conduct and \our public career. Strive to approximate that lofty standard, and measure your integrity and your patriot- ism by your nearness to it or your departure from it. The prime meridian of universal longitude, on sea or land, may be at Greenwich, or at Paris, or where you will. lUit the prime meridian of pure, disinterested, patriotic, exalted hu- man character will be marked forever by yonder Washing- ton Obelisk!" Yes, to the Young Men of America, under God, it remains, as they rise up from generation to generation, to shape the destinies of their Country's future — and woe unto them if, regardless of the great example which is set before them, they prove unfaithful to the tremendous responsibilities which rest upon them! Yet, let me not seem even for a moment to throw off upon the children the rightful share of those responsibilities w^hich belongs to their fathers. Upon us, upon us it devolves to provide that the advancing generations shall be able to com- prehend and ecpial to meet the demands which are thus be- fore them. It is ours — it is yours especially, Senators and Representatives — to supi)ly them witli the means of that Universal Education which is the crying want of our land, and without which any intelligent and successful Free Gov- ernment is impossible. We are just entering on a new Oh ni])iad of our national history — the twenty-fifth Olympiad since Washington first cnkivd on the adiiiinislraliou of our Constitutional (3i)vern- Dcdicaiioii of f/ic U\ishiii\:;foii Xalioinil Afc/iH/iic/if. 77 iiient. Tlie will of the People has alrcad>- desionated under whom the first century of that Government is to be closed, and the best hopes and wishes of every jDatriot will be with him in the great responsibilities on wdiicli he is about to enter. No distinction of party or of section i)revents our all feeling- alike that our Country, b)- whomsoever governed, is still and ahva)-s our Country, to be cherished in all our hearts, to be upheld and defended by all our hands! ■ INIost happy would it be if the 30th of April, on which the first Inauguration of Washington took place in 17S9, could henceforth be the date of all future inaugurations— as it might be by a slight amendment to the Constitution- giving, as it would, a much-needed extension to the short sessions of Congress, and letting the second centur>' of our Constitutional History begin where the first century practi- cally began. But let the date be what it may, the inspiration of the Centennial Anniversary of that first great Inauguration must not be lost upon us. Would that an>- words of mine could help us all, old and young, to resolve that the princi- ples and character and example of Washington, as he came forward to take the oaths of office on that dav, shall once more be recognized and re\'erenced as the model for all who succeed him, and that his disinterested purity and patriot- ism shall be the supreme test and standard of American statesmanship! That standard can never be taken away from us. The most elaborate and durable monuments may perish. But neither the forces of nature, nor any fiendish crime of man, can ever mar or mutilate a great example of public or private virtue. Our matchless Obelisk stands proudly before us to-day, an,l we hail it with the exultations of a united and ol(,ri,,ns 78 Dedication of the Washington National Momiment. Nation. It may or may not be proof against the cavils of critics, but nothing of human construction is proof against the casualties of time. The storms of winter must blow and beat upon it. The action of the elements must soil and discolor it. The lightnings of Heaven may scar and blacken it. An earthquake may shake its foundations. Some mighty tornado, or resistless cyclone, may rend its massive blocks asunder and hurl huge fragments to the ground. But the character which it commemorates and illustrates is secure. It will remain unchanged and un- changeable in all its consummate. purity and splendor, and will more and more command the homage of succeeding ages in all regions of the Earth. God be praised, that character is ours forever! The reading of Mr. Winthrop's oration, which was fre- quently interrupted by applause, was followed by music from the Marine Band. The President of the Senate. Gentlemen, an ora- tion will now be delivered by Hon. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. ORATION BY HON. JOHN W. DANIEL. Mr. President of the United States^ Senators^ Representa- tives^ Judges^ Mr. CJiairnian^ and my Countrymen : Alone in its grandeur stands forth the character of Wash- ington in history; alone like some peak that has no fellow in the mountain range of greatness. "Washington," says Guizot, "Washington did the two greatest things which in politics it is permitted to man to Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 79 attempt. He maintained by Peace the independence of his country, which he had conquered- by War. He founded a free government in the name of the j^rinciples of order and by re-establishing their sway." Washington did indeed do these things. But he did more. Out of disconnected fragments he molded a whole and made it a country. He achieved his country's inde- pendence by the sword. He maintained that independence by peace as by war. He finally established both his coun- try and its freedom in an enduring frame of constitutional government, fashioned to make Liberty and Union one and inseparable. These four things together constitute the un- exampled achievement of Washington. The world has ratified the profound remark of Fisher Ames, that "he changed mankind's ideas of political great- ness." It has approved the opinion of Edward Everett, that he was "the greatest of good men, and the best of great men." It has felt for him, with Erskine, "an awful reverence." It has attested the declaration of Brougham, that "he was the greatest man of his own or of any age." It is matter of fact to-day as when General Hamilton, an- nouncing his death to the Army, said, ' ' The voice of praise would in vain endeavor to exalt a name unrivaled in the lists of true glory." America still proclaims him, as did Col. Henry Lee, on the floor of the House of Representa- tives, "The man first in peace, first in war, and first in the hearts of his countr}'men." And from beyond the sea the voice of Alfieri, breathing the soul of all lands and peoples, still pronounces the blessing, "Happy are you who have for the sublime and permanent basis of your glory the love of country demonstrated by deeds. ' ' 8o Dedication of the JVas/iiiii^ton National Moiiiiiiient. Yc who lia\-c unrolled the scrolls that tell the tale of the rise and fall of nations; before whose eyes has moved the panorama of man's strug<^les, achievements, and progres- sion, find \on anywhere the storN' of one whose life-work is more than a fragment of that which in his life is set before 3-ou? Conquerors, who have stretched your scepters over boundless territories; founders of empire, who have held N'our dominions in the reign of law; reformers, who have cried aloud in the wilderness of oppression; teachers, who have striven with reason to cast down false doctrine, heresy, and schism; statesmen, whose brains have throbbed with mighty plans for the amelioration of human society; scar- crowned Vikings of the sea, illustrious heroes of the land, wl] o have borne the standards of siege and battle — come forth in bright array from your glorious fanes — and would )e be measured by the measure of his stature? Behold you not in him a more illustrious and more venerable presence? Statesman, Soldier, Patriot, Sage, Reformer of Creeds, teacher of Truth and Justice, Achiever and Preserver of Liberty — the P'irst of Men — Founder and Savior of his Country, Father of his People — this is HE, solitar)- and un- approachable in his grandeur. Oh! felicitous Providence that gave to America our Washington ! High soars into the sky to-day — higher than the Pyramids or the dome of vSt. Paul's or St. Peter's — the loftiest and most imposing structure that man has ever reared — high soars into the sky to where " Karth highest yearns to meet a star," the monument which "We the people of the United States" have erected to his memor\-. It is a fitting monumi-nt, more fitting than any statue. Dcdicaiion of i/ie Washington N'ational MonKmcnf. 8 1 For his image could only display him in some one phase of his varied character — as the Commander, the Statesman, the Planter of Mount Vernon, or the Chief Magistrate of his country. So Art has fitly typified his exalted life in yon plain lofty shaft. Such is his greatness, that only by a sym- bol could it be represented. As Justice must be blind in order to be whole in contemplation, so History must be silent, that by this mighty sign she may unfold the ampli- tude of her story. It was fitting that the eminent citizen who thirty-seven years ago spoke at the laying of the corner-stone should be the orator at the consummation of the work which he in- augurated. It was Massachusetts that struck the first blow for independence; it was her voice that made the stones of Boston to "rise in mutiny"; it was her blessed blood that sealed the covenant of our salvation. The finnament of our national life she has thickly sown with deeds of glory. John Adams, of Massachusetts, was among the first to urge the name of Washington to the Continental Congress when it commissioned him as Commander-in-Chief of the Ameri- can forces; it was .upon her soil that he drew the sword which was sheathed at Yorktown, and there that he first gave to the battle-breeze the thirteen stripes that now float in new galaxies of stars. And meet it was that here in the Capitol of the Republic, at the distance of more than a cen- tury from its birth, the eloquent son of that illu.strious State should span the chasm with his bridge of gold, and em- blazon the final arch of commemoration. And I fancy, too, that in a land where the factious tongues of the elder nations are being hushed at last, and all rival strains commingled in the blood of brotherhood, the accom- 6 w M 82 Dedicaiion of the Washington National Monument. plishcd mission of America finds fitting illustration in the Sage descended from the Pilgrims crowning the Hero sprung from the Cavaliers. It has seemed fitting to you, Mr. Chairman and gentle- men of the Commission, that a citizen of the State which was the birthplace and the home of Washington — whose House of Burgesses, of which he was a member — made the first burst of opposition against the Stamp Act, although less pecuniarily interested therein than their New England brethren, and was the first representative body to recom- mend a General Congress of the Colonies ; of the State whose ]\Iason drew that Bill of Rights which has been called the Magna Charta of America; whose Jefferson wrote, whose Richard Henry Lee moved, the Declaration that these Col- onies be "free and independent States " ; whose Henry con- densed the revolution into the electric sentence, "Liberty or Death ;' ■ of the State which cemented union with that vast territorial dowry out of which five States w^ere carved, hav- ing now here some ninety representatives; of that State whose Madison was named "the Father of the Constitu- tion," and whose Marshall became its most eminent ex- pounder; of the State which holds within its bosom the sacred ashes of Washington, and cherishes not less the principles which once kindled them with fires of Heaven descended — it has seemed fitting to you, gentlemen, that a citizen of that State should be also invited to deliver an address on this occasion. Would, with all my heart, that a worthier one had been your choice. Too highly do I esteem the position in which )ou place me to feel aught but solemn distrustfulncss and apprehension. And who indeed might not shrink from Didicatio?i of the Washington National Monument. S^ sucli a theater when a Winthrop's eloquence still thrilled all hearts with Washington the theme? Yet, in Virginia's name, I thank you for the honor done her. She deserv^ed it. Times there are when even hardi- hood is virtue; and to such virtue alone do I lay claim in venturing to abide your choice to be her spokesman. None more than her could I offend did I take opportunity to give her undue exaltation. Her foremost son does not belong to her alone, nor does she so claim him. His part and her part in the Revolution would have been as nauf^ht but for what was so gloriously done by his brothers in council and in arms and by her sister Colonies, who kept the mutual pledge of "Life, Fortune, and Sacred Honor.'.' New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connect- icut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, your comrade of the old heroic days, salutes you once again in honor and affection ; no laurel could be plucked too bright for Virginia's hand to lay upon your brows. And ye, our , younger companions, who have sprung forth from the wil- derness, the prairie, and the mountain, and now extend your empire to the far slopes where your teeming cities light their lamps by the setting sun— what grander tribute to the past, what happier assurance of the present, what more auspicious omens of the future could Heaven vouchsafe us than those which live and move and have their being in your presence? What heart could contemplate the scene to-day — grander than any of Old Rome, when her victor's car "climbed the Capitol"— and not leap into the exclamation, "I, too, am an American citizen ! ' ' Yet may I not remind you that Washington was a Vir- 84 Dedication of fhc Masliiiii^ton iXalional A/oiiiiiiiciif. giniaii before he became an American, to tell his country- men that "the name of American, which belongs to yon in your national capacity, must always exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any appellation derived from local dis- crimination?" And may I not seek the fountain from which sprang a character so instinct with love of country? The Puritans of England, who from the landing at Ply- mouth in 1620 to the uprising against Charles I in 1640, "turned to the New World," in the language of Canning, "to redress the balance of the Old," were quickly followed to America by a new stream of immigration, that has left as marked an impress upon our civilization between the South Atlantic and the Mississippi as the sons of the Pilgrims have made between the North Atlantic and the Lakes. When Charles I was beheaded in 1649, and when his son, the Second Charles, was beaten at Worcester in 1651, mul- titudes of the King's men turned their faces also to the new land of hope, the very events which checked the immigration of the Puritans to New England giving impulse to the tide which moved the Cavaliers to the Old Dominion. Between 1650 and 1670 the Virginia Colony increased from fifteen thousand to forty thousand souls, and nearly one-half of this number thither came within the decade after the execution of the King and the establishment of Cromwell's common- wealth on the ruins of his throne. Intense loyalists were these new Virginians, who "would defend the crown if it hung upon a bush " ; and when indeed its substance vanished with the kingly head that wore it, these "faithful subjects of King and Church" held allegi- ance to its phantom and to the exiled claimant. Rut they were not inattentive to their liberties. And if \'irginia was Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 85 the last of all the countries belonging to England to submit to Cromwell, yet she was also ' ' the first state in the world composed of separate boroughs, diffused over an extensive surface, where representation was organized on the principle of universal suffrage." And in the very terms of surrender to the commonwealth it was stipulated that "the people of Virginia" should have all the liberties of the free-born people of England; should intrust their business, as formerly, to their own grand Assembly; and should remain unques- tioned for past loyalty to the King. As in New England the Pilgrim Colony grew apace, so in Virginia prospered that of the Cavaliers. With that love of landed estates which is an instinct of their race, they planted their homes in the fertile lowlands, building great houses upon broad acres, surrounded by ornamental grounds and gardens. Mimic empires were these large estates, and a certain baronial air pervaded them. Trade with Europe loaded the tables of their proprietors with luxuries ; rich plate adorned them. Household drudgeries were separated from the main dwelling. The family became a considerable government within itself — the mistress a rural queen, the master a local potentate, with his graziers, seedsmen, gardeners, brewers, butchers, and cooks around him. Many of the heads of families were traveled and accomplished men. The parishes were ministered to by the learned clergy of the Established Church. In the old College of William and Mary ere long were found the resources of classic education, and in the old capital town of Williamsburg the winter season shone re- splendent with the entertainments of a refined society. Barges imported from England were resources of amusement 86 Dedication of the Washington National Monumeni. and means of friendly visitations along the water-courses, and heavy coaches, drawn by four or six horses, became their mode of travel. ' ' Born almost to the saddle and to the use of firearms, they were keen hunters, and when the chase was over they sat by groaning boards and drank confusion to the French- man and Spaniard abroad, and to Roundhead and Prelatist at home. When the lurking and predatory Indian became the object of pursuit, no speed of his could elude their fierj* and gallantly mounted cavalry." This was the Virginia, these the Virginians, of the olden time. If even in retrospect their somewhat aristocratic manners touch the sensitive ner^'^e of a democratic people, it may at least be said of them that nothing like despotism, nihilism, or dynamite was ever found amongst them ; that they cherished above all things Honor and Courage, the vir- tues preservative of all other virtues, and that they nurtured men and leaders of men well fitted to cope with great forces, resolve great problems, and assert great principles. And it is at least true that their habits of thought and living never proved more dangerous to ' ' life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness" than those of others who in later days corrupt the suffrage in the rank growth of cities; build up palaces and pile up millions amid crowded paupers; monopolize telegraphic and railway lines by corporate machinery; spurn all relations to politics, save to debauch its agencies for personal gain; and know no Goddess of Liberty and no Eagle of Country save in the images which satire itself has stamped on the Almighty Dollar. In 1657, while yet " a Cromwell filled the Stuarts' throne, ' ' there came to Virginia with a party of Carlists who had Dedication of the Washitigton National Moinnnent. 87 rebelled against him John Washington, of Yorkshire, Eng- land, who became a magistrate and member of the Honse of Bnrgesses, and distinguished himself in Indian warfare as the first colonel of his family on this side of the water. He was the nephew of that Sir Henry Washington who had led the forlorn hope of Prince Rupert at Bristol in 1643, and who, with a starving and mutinous garrison, had de- fended Worcester in 1649, answering all calls for surrender that he "awaited His Majesty's commands." And his progenitors had for centuries, running back to the conquest, been men of mark and fair renown. Pride and modesty of individuality alike forbid the seeking from any source of a borrowed luster, and the Washingtons were never studious or pretentious of ancestral dignities. But "we are quotations from our ancestors," says the philoso- pher of Concord — and who will say that in the loyalty to conscience and to principle, and to the right of self-determi- nation of what is principle, that the Washingtons have ever shown, whether as loyalist or rebel, was not the germ of that deathless devotion to Liberty and Country which sooti discarded all ancient forms in the mighty stroke for inde- pendence? Two traits of the Anglo-Saxon have been equally con- spicuous — respect for authority — resistance to its abuse. Ex- acting service from the one, even the Second Charles learned somewhat from the other. When pressed by James to an extreme measure, he answered: "Brother, I am too old to start again on my travels." James, becoming King, forgot the hint, was soon on his travels, with the Revolution of 16S8 in full blast, and William of Orange upon his throne. The Barons of Runnymede had, indeed, written in the Great 88 Dcd'uation of the Washington National Mo/mment. Charter that if the King violated any article thereof they should have the right to levy war against him until full satisfaction was made. And we know not which is most admirable, the wit or the wisdom of the English lawyer, John Selden, who, when asked by what law he justified the right of resistance, answered, "By the custom of England, which is part of the common law." Mountains and vales are natural correspondences. A very Tempe had Virginia been, sheltering the loyal Cavaliers in their reverence for authority. The higher and manlier trait of the Anglo-Saxon was about to receive more memorable illustration, and she uprose, Olympus-like, in her resistance to its abuse. And the Instrument of Providence to lead her j^eople and their brethren, had he lived in the days when mythic lore invested human heroes with a God-like grace, would have been shrouded in the glory of Olympian Jove. One hundred and fifty-three years ago, on the banks of the Potomac, in the county of Westmoreland, on a spot marked now only b)- a memorial stone, of the blood of the people whom I have faintly described, fourth in descent from the Col. John Washington whom I have named, there was born a son to Augustine and Mary Washington. And not many miles above his birthplace is the dwelling where he lived and now lies buried. P>orne ujxju the bosom of that river which here mirrors Capitol dome, and monumental shaft in its seaward flow, the river itself seems to reverse its current and bear us silently into the past. Scarce has the vista of the city faded from our gaze when we behold on the woodland height that swells abo\-e the waters — amidst walks and groN'es and gar- Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 89 dens— the wliite porch of that old colonial plantation home which has become the shrine of many a pilgrimatre. Contrasting it as there it stands to-day with the marble halls which we have left behind ns, we realize the trnth of Emerson: "The atmosphere of moral sentiment is a region of grandenr which rednces all material magnificence to to>s, }'et opens to every wretch that has reason the doors of the Universe. ' ' The quaint old wooden mansion, with the stately but simple old-fashioned mahogan>- furniture, real and nngar- nished; the swords and relics of campaigns and scenes familiar to every school-boy now; the key of the Bastile hanging in the hall incased in glass, calling to mind Tom Paine's happy expression, "That the principles of the American Revolution opened the Bastile is not to be doubted, therefore the key comes to the right place;" the black velvet coat worn when the farewell address to the Army was made; the rooms all in nicet>- of preparation as if expectant of the coming host— we move among these memorials of days and men long vanished— we stand under the great trees and watch the solemn river, in its never- ceasing flow, we gaze upon the simple tomb whose silence IS unbroken save by the low murmur of the waters or the wild bird's note— and we are enveloped in an atmosphere of moral grandeur which no pageantry of moving men nor splendid pile can generate. Nightly on the plain of Mar- athon the Greeks have the tradition, that there may yet be heard the neighing of chargers and the rushing shadows of spectral war. In the spell that broods o\'er the sacred groves of Vernon, Patriotism, Honor, Courage, Justice, Virtue, Truth— seem bodied f,,rth— the onl\- imperishable realities of man's bein<'. QO Dedicatmi of the JVas/ii/ii^/ou N'ational Monument. There emerges from tlie shades the figure of a }'Oiith over whose cradle had hovered no star of destiny, nor dandled a royal crown — an ingenuous youth, and one who in his early days gave auguries of great powers; the boy whose strong arm could fling a stone across the Rappahannock; whose strong will could tame the most fiery horse; whose just spirit made him the umpire of his fellows; whose obedient heart bowed to a mother's yearning for her son and laid down the Midshipman's warrant in the British Navy which answered his first ambitious dream; the student transcrib- ing mathematical problems, accounts, and business forms, or listening to the soldiers and seamen of vessels in the river as they tell of "hair breadth 'scapes by flood and field" ; the early moralist in his thirteenth year compiling matured "Rules for behavior and conversation"; the surveyor of sixteen, exploring the wilderness for Lord Fairfax, sleeping on the ground, climbing mountains, swimming rivers, kill- ing and cooking his own game, noting in his diary- soils, minerals, and locations, and making maps which are models of nice and accurate draughtsmanship; the incipient soldier studying tactics under Adjutant Muse, and taking lessons in broadsword fence from the old soldier of fortune, Jacob Van Braam; the Major and Adjutant-General of the Virginia frontier forces at nineteen — we seem to see him yet as here he stood, a model of manly beauty in his youthful prime — a man in all that makes a man ere manhood's years have been fulfilled — standing on the threshold of a grand career, ' ' hear- ing his days before him and the trumpet of his life." The scene changes. Out into the world of stern ad\cn- ture he passes, taking as naturally to the field and the front- ier as the eagle to the air. At the age of twenty-one he is Dedication of the U'as/iington Naiioiial Monument. 91 riding from Willianisbiirg to the Frciicli post at Venango, in western Penns}-lvania, on a mission for Governor Din- widdie, which reqnires "conrage to cope with savages and sagacity to negotiate with white men"— on that mission which' Edward Everett recognizes as "the first movement of a military nature which resulted in the establishment of American Independence." At twenty-two he has fleshed his maiden sword, has heard the bullets whistle, and found "something charming in the sound " ; and soon he is colonel of the Virginia regiment in the unfortunate affair at Fort Necessity, and is compelled to retreat after losing a sixth of his command. He quits the service on a point of military etiquette and honor, but at twenty-three he reappears as \^olunteer Aide b}- the side of Braddock in the ill-starred ex- pedition against Fort DuOuesne, and is the onh- mounted officer unscathed in the disaster, escaping with four bullets through his garments, and after having two horses shot un- der him. The prophetic eye of Samuel Davies has now pointed him out as "that heroic youth, Colonel Washington, whom I can but hope Providence has hitherto preserved in so signal a manner for some important ser\-ice to hiscoimtry"; and soon the prophecy is fulfilled. The same year he is in'com- mand of the Virginia frontier forces. Arduous conflicts of varied fortunes are ere long ended, and on the 25th of No- vember, 1759, he marches into the reduced fortress of Fort DuOuesne— where Pittsburgh now stands, and the Titans of Industry wage the eternal war of Toil— marches in with the advanced guard of his troops, and plants the P.ritish flag over its smoking ruins. That self-same year Wolfe, another young and brilliant 92 Dt'dication of the IVas/ii/igton National MoJiiii/iefit. soldier of Britain, has scaled and triumphed on the Heights of Abraham — his flame of valor quenched as it lit the blaze of victory; Canada surrenders; the seven years' war is done; the French power in America is broken, and the vast region west of the Alleghanies, from the lakes to the Ohio, em- bracing its valley and tributary streams, is under the scepter of King George. America has been made whole to the Eng- lish-speaking race, to become in time the greater Britain. Thus, building wiser than he knew, Washington had taken no small part in cherishing the seed of a nascent nation. Mount Vernon welcomes back the soldier of twenty-seven, who has become a name. Domestic felicity spreads its charms around him with the "agreeable partner" whom he has taken to his bosom, and he dreams of "more happiness llian he has experienced in the wide and bustling world." Already, ere his sword had found its scabbard, the people of Frederick county had made him their member of the House of Burgesses. And the quiet years roll by as the planter, merchant, and representative superintends his plantation, ships his crops, posts his books, keeps his diary, chases the fox for amusement, or rides over to Annapolis and leads the dance at. the Maryland capital — alternating between these private pursuits and serving his people as member of the Legislature and justice of the county court. But ere long this happy life is broken. The air is electric with the currents of revolution. England has launched forth on the fatal policy of taxing her colonies without their con- .scnt. The spirit of liberty and resistance is aroused. .He is loath to part with the Mother Land, which he still calls "home." But she turns a deaf ear to reason. The first Colonial Congress is called. \\v is a (k-leirale, and rides to Dcifualioii of the W'ashinglon National Monument. 93 Pliiladclphia with Henry and Pendleton. The blow at Lex- ington is struck. The people rush to arms. The sons of the Cavaliers spring to the side of the sons of the Pilgrims. "Unhappy it is," he says, "that a brother's sword has been sheathed in a brother's breast, and that the once happy plains of America are to be either drenched in blood or inhabited by slaves. Sad alternative! But how can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?" He becomes commander-in-chief of the American forces. After seven >-ears' war he is the deliverer of his country. The old confederation passes away. The Constitution is established. He is twice chosen Presi- dent, and will not consent to longer serve. Once again Mount Vernon's grateful shades receive him, and there — the world-crowned Hero now— becomes again the simple citizen, wishing for his fellow-men "to see the Avhole world in peace and its inhabitants one band of brothers, striving who could contribute most to the happi- ness of mankind"— without a wish for himself, but "to live and die an honest man on his farm. ' ' A speck of war spots the sky. John Adams, now President, calls him forth as Lieutenant-General and Commander-in-Chief to lead Amer- ica once more. But the cloud vanishes. Peace reigns. The lark sings at Heaven's gate in the fair morn of the new nation. Serene, contented, yet in the strength of manhood, though on the verge of three-score years and ten, he looks foj-th— the quiet farmer from his pleasant fields, the loving patriarch from the bowers of home— looks forth and sees the work of his hands established in a free and happy peo- ple. Suddenly comes the mortal stroke with severe cold. The agony is soon over. He feels his own d>ing pulse — the hand relaxes— he murmurs, "It is well;" and Washington 94 Dedication of the IVas/ii/igton National Monument. is no more. While yet Time had crumbled never a stone nor dimmed the lustrous surface, prone to earth the mighty column fell. Washington, the friend of Liberty, is no more! The solemn cry filled the universe. Amidst the tears of his People, the bowed heads of kings, and the lamentations of the nations, they laid him there to rest upon the banks of the river whose murmurs were his boyhood's music — that river which, rising in mountain fastnesses amongst the grandest works of nature and reflecting in its course the proudest works of man, is a symbol of his history, which in its ceaseless and ever-widening flow is a symbol of his eternal fame. No sum could now be made of Washington's character that did not exhaust language of its tributes and repeat virtue by all her names. No sum could be made of his achievements that did not unfold the history of his country and its institutions — the history of his age and its progress — the history of man and his destiny to be free. But, whether character or achievement b^' regarded, the riches before us only expose the poverty of praise. So clear was he in his great office that no ideal of the Leader or Ruler can be formed that does not shrink by the side of the reality. And so has he impressed himself upon the minds of men, that no man can justly aspire to be the chief of a great free people who does not adopt his principles and emulate his example. We look with amazement on such eccentric characters as Alex- ander, Cocsar, Cromwell, Frederick, and Napoleon; but when the serene face of Washington rises before us man- kind inslinctivcly exclaims, "This is the Man for the Nations to trust and reverence and for heroes and rulers to copy." Dedicaiion of I he WasJiington National Monument. 95 Drawing his sword from patriotic impulse, without ambi- tion and without malice, he wielded it without vindictivc- ness and sheathed it without reproach. All that humanity could conceive he did to suppress the cruelties of war and soothe its sorrows. He never struck a coward's blow. To him age, infancy, and helplessness were ever sacred. He tolerated no extremit}' iniless to curb the excesses of his enemy, and he never poisoned the sting of defeat by the exultation of the conqueror. Peace he welcomed as the Heaven-sent herald of Friendship ; and no coinitry has given him greater honor than that which he defeated; for England has been glad to claim him as the scion of her blood, and proud, like our sister American States, to divide with Virginia the honor of producing him. Fascinated by the perfection of the man, we are loath <^o break the mirror of admiration into the fragments of analy- sis. But, lo! as we attempt it, every fragment becomes the miniature of such sublimity and beauty, that the destroying hand can only multiply the forms of immortality. Grand and manifold as were its phases, there is }'et no dif- ficulty in understanding the character of Washington. He was no Veiled Prophet. He never acted a part. Simple, natural, and unaffected, his life lies before us, a fair and open manuscript. He disdained the arts which wrap power in mystery in order to magnify it. He practiced the pro- found diplomacy of truthful speech, the consunnnate tact of direct attention. Looking ever to the All-Wise Disposer of events, he relied on that Providence which helps men by giving them high hearts and hopes to help themselves with the means which their Creator has piit at their service. There was no infirmity in his conduct over which Charity g6 Di-ilicaiion of lite Washington N^ational Monument. must fling its veil ; no taint of selfishness from which Pnrity averts her gaze; no dark recess of intrigne that nuist be lit np with colored panegyric; no subterranean passage to be trod in trembling lest there be stirred the ghost of a buried crime. A true son of nature was George Washington, of nature in her brightest intelligence and noblest mold; and diffi- culty, if such there be in comprehending him, is only that of reviewing from a single standpoint the vast procession of those civil and military achievements which filled nearly half-a-century of his life, and in realizing the magnitude of those qualities wdiicli were requisite to their performance — the difficult)- of fashioniug iu our minds a pedestal broad enough to bear the tow-ering figure, whose greatness is di- minished by nothing but the perfection of its proportions. If his exterior — in calm, grave, and resolute repose — ever impressed the casual observer as austere and cold, it was only because he did not reflect that no great heart like his could have lived unbroken unless bound by iron nerves in an iron frame. The Commander of Armies, the Chief of a People, the Hope of Nations could not wear his heart upon his sleeve; and yet his sternest will could not conceal its high and warm pulsations. Under the enemy's guns at Boston he did not forget to instruct his agent to administer generously of charity to his needy neighbors at home. The sufferings of women and children, thrown adrift by war, and of his bleeding comrades, pierced his .soul. And the moist eye and trembling voice with which he bade farewell to his veterans bespoke the underlying tenderness of his nature, even as the storm-wind makes music in its under-tones. Disinterested Patriot, he would receive no pay for his mil- Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 97 itary services. Refusing gifts, he was glad to guide the benefaction of a grateful State to educate the children of his fallen braves in the institution at Lexington which yet bears his name. Without any of the blemishes that mark the tyrant, he appealed so loftily to the virtuous elements in man that he almost created the qualities of which his coun- try needed the exercise; and yet he was so magnanimous and forbearing to the weaknesses of others, that he often obliterated the vices of which he feared the consequence. But his virtue was more than this. It was of 'that daring, intrepid kind that, seizing principle with a giant's grasp, assumes responsibility at any hazard, suffers sacrifice with- out pretense of martyrdom, bears calumny without reply, imposes superior will and understanding on all around it, capitulates to no unworthy triumph, but must carry all things at the point of clear and blameless conscience. Scorning all manner of meanness and cowardice, his bursts of wrath at their exhibition heighten our admiration for those noble passions which were kindled by the inspirations and exigencies of virtue. Invested with the powers of a Dictator, the countr}- be- stowing them felt no distrust of his integrity; he, receiving them, gave assurance that, as the sword was the last resort of Liberty, so it should be the first thing laid aside when Liberty was won. And keeping the faith in all things, he left mankind bewildered with the splendid problem whether to admire him most for what he was or what he would not be. Over and above all his virtues was the matchless man- hood of personal honor, to which Confidence gave in safet>- the key of every treasure ; on which Temptation dared not smile ; on which Suspicion never cast a frown. And why 7 W M 98 Dedication of the Washington National Monument. prolong the catalogue? "If you are presented with medals of Caesar, of Trojan, or Alexander, on examining their -features you are still led to ask, what was their stature and the forms of their persons? but if you discover in a heap of ruins the head or the limb of an antique Apollo, be not curious about the other parts, but rest assured they were all conformable to those of a God." Great as a Commander, it may not be said of him as of Marlborough, that "he never formed the plan of a campaign that he did* not execute; never besieged a city that he did not take; never fought a battle that he did not gain." But it can be said of him that, at the head of raw volunteers, hungry to the edge of famine, ragged almost to nakedness, whose muniments of war were a burlesque of its necessities, he defeated the trained bands and veteran generals of Europe; and that, when he had already earned the name of the Ameri- can Fabius, destined to save a nation by delay, he suddenly displayed the daring of a Marcellus. It may be said that he was the first general to employ large bodies of light infantry as skirmishers, catching the idea from his Indian warfare, and so developing it that it was copied by the Great Frede- rick of Prussia, and ere long perfected into the system now almost universal. It can be said of him, as testified by John Adams, that "it required more serenity of temper, a deeper understanding, and more courage than fell to the lot of Marl- borough, to ride on the whirlwind" of such tempetuous times as Washington dealt with, and that he did "ride on the whirlwind and direct the storm. ' ' It can be said that he was tried in a crucible to which Marlborough was never subjected — adversity, defeat, depression of fortune bordering on despair. The first battle of his youth ended in capitula- Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 99 lation. The first general engagement of the revolution at Long Island opened a succession of disasters and retreats. But with the energy that remolds broken opportunities into greater ones, with the firmness of mind that can not be un- locked by trifles but which when unlocked displays a cabi- net of fortitude, he wrenched victory from stubborn fortune, compelling the reluctant oracle to exclaim as to Alexander, "My son, thou art invincible." So did he weave the net of war by land and sea, that at the very moment when an elated adversary was about to strike the final blow^ for his countr}^'s fall, he surrounded him b}' swift and far-reaching combinations, and twined the lilies of France with the Stars and Stripes of America over the ramparts of York- town. And if success be made the test of merit, let it be remembered that he conducted the greatest military and civil enterprises of his age, and left no room for fancy to divine greater perfection of accomplishment. Great in action as by the council board, the finest horse- man and knightliest figure of his time, he seemed designed by nature to lead in those bold strokes which needs must come when the battle lies with a single man — those critical moments of the campaign or the strife when, if the mind hesitates or a nerve flinches, all is lost. We can never for- get the passage of the Delaware that black December night, amidst shrieking winds and great upheaving blocks of ice which would have petrified ^ leader of less hardy mold, and then the fell swoop at Trenton. We behold him as when at Monmouth he turns back the retreating lines, and galloping his white charger along the ranks until he falls, leaps on his Arabian bay, and shouts to his men: "Stand fast, my boys, the vSoutheru troops are coming to support )'ou!" And we lOO Dedication of the Washiny^lon IWitional Alonuinoit. hear Lafayette exclaim, "Never did I behold so superb a man!" We see him again at Princeton dashing through a storm of shot to rally the wavering troops; he reins his horse between the contending lines, and cries: "Will you leave your general to the foe?" then bolts into the thickest fray. Colonel Fitzgerald, his aid, drojjs his reins and pulls his hat down over his eyes that he may not see his chieftain fall, when, through the smoke he reappears waving his hat, cheering on his men, and shouting: "Away, dear Colonel, . and bring up the troops ; the day is ours. ' ' ' 'Cceur de Lion ' ' might have doflfed his plume to such a chief — foi a great knight was he, who met his foes full tilt in the shock of battle and hurled them down with an arm whose sword flamed with righteous indignation. As children pore over the pictures in their books ere they can read the words annexed to them so we linger with ting- ling blood by such inspiring scenes, while little do we reck of those daik hours when the aching head pondered the problems of a country's fate. And yet there is a greater theater in which Washington appears, although not so often has its curtain been uplifted. For it was as a statesman that Washington was greatest. Not in the sense that Hamilton and Jefferson, Adams and Madison were statesmen; but in a larger sense. Men may marshal armies who can not drill divisions. Men may mar- shal nations in storm and travail who have not the accom- plishments of their cabinet ministers. Not so versed as they was he in the details of political science. And yet as he studied tactics when he anticipated war, so he studied poli- tics when he foresaw his civil role approaching, reading the history and examining the principles of ancient and modern Dedication of the Washington National Monument. loi confederacies, and making notes of their virtues, defects, and methods of operation. His pen did not possess the facile play and classic grace of their pens, but his vigorous eloquence had the clear ring of our mother tongue. I will not say that he was so astute, so quick, so inventive as the one or another of them — that his mind was characterized by the vivacity of wit, the rich- col- orings of fancy, or daring flights of imagination. But with him thought and action like well-trained coursers kept abreast in the chariot race, guided by an eye that never quailed, reined by a hand that never trembled. He had a more infallible discrimination of circumstances and men than any of his contemporaries. He weighed facts in a juster scale, with larger equity, and firmer equanimity. He best applied to them the lessons of experience. With greater ascendency of character he held men to their ap- pointed tasks; with more inspiring virtue he commanded more implicit confidence. He bore a truer divining-rod, and through a wilderness of contention he alone was the unerring Pathfinder of the People. There can, indeed, be no right conception of Washington that does not accord him a great and extraordinary genius. I will not say he could have produced a play of Shakes- peare or a poem of Milton, handled with Kant the tangled skein of metaphyics, probed the secrecies of mind and mat- ter with Bacon, constructed a railroad or an engine like Stephenson, wooed the electric spark from Heaven to earth with Franklin, or walked with Newton the pathways of the spheres. But if his genius were of a different order, it was of as rare and high an order. It dealt with man in the con- crete — with his vast concerns of business stretching over a I02 Dedication of the Washington National Monument. continent and projected into the ages — with his seething passions; with his marvellous exertions of mind, body, and spirit to be free. He knew the materials he dealt with by intuitive perception of the heart of man — by experience and observation of his aspirations and his powers — by reflection upon his complex relations, rights, and duties as a social being. He knew just where, between nien and States, to erect the monumental mark to divide just reverence for authority from just resistance to its abuse. A poet of social facts, he interpreted by his deeds the harmonies of justice. Practical yet exalted, not stumbling in the pit as he gazed upon the stars, he would "put no man in any office of con- sequence whose political tenets were opposed to the meas- ures which the General Government were pursuing. ' ' Yet he himself, by the Kingliness of his nature, could act inde- pendently of part}^, return the confidence and affections, use the brains and have thrust upon him the unanimous suffrage of all parties — walking the dizz}' heights of power in the perfect balance of every faculty, and surviving in that rarefied atmosphere which lesser frames could only breathe to perish. Brilliant I will not call him, if the brightness of the rip- pling river exceed the solemn glory of old Ocean. Brilliant I will not call him, if darkness must be visible in order to display the light; for he had none of that rocket-like brill- iancy which flames in instant corruscation across the black brow of night — and then is not. But if a steady, unflicker- ing flame, slow rising to its lofty sphere, high hung in the Heavens of Contemplation, dispensing far and wide its rays, revealing all things on which it shines in due proportions and large relations, niakingRight, Duty, and Destiny so plain Dedication of the Washington National Mo/iument. 103 that in the vision we are scarce conscious of the light — if this be brillianc}' — then the genius of Washington was as full-orbed and luminous as' the god of day in his zenith. This is genius in rarest manifestation ; and, as life is greater than an}- theor}- of living, in so much does he who points the path of Destiny and brings great things to pass, exceed the mere dreamer of great dreams. . The work of Washington filled the rounded measure of his splendid faculties. Grandly did he illustrate the Anglo- Saxon trait of just resistance to the abuse of power — stand- ing in front of his soldier-husbandmen on the fields of Boston, and telling the general of earth's greatest Em- pire, who stigmatized them as "rebels" and threatened them "with the punishment of the cord," that "he could conceive of no rank more honorable than that which flows from the uncorrupted choice of a brave and free People, the original and purest fountain of all power," and that, ' ' far from making it a plea for cruelty, a mind of true mag- nanimity and enlarged ideas would comprehend and respect it." Victoriously did he vindicate the principle of the Declaration of Independence, that to secure the inalienable rights of man "governments are instituted amongst men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, and that whenever any form of government becomes de- structive of these ends, it is the right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its power in such forms, as to them shall seem most likely to efiect their safety and happiness." By these signs he conquered. And had his career ended here none other would have surpassed — whose could have equaled it? But where the fame of so I04 Dedication of the Washington National Monutnent. many successful warriors has found conclusion, or gone be- yond only to be tarnished, his took new flight upward. If I might venture to discriminate, I would say that it was in the conflicts of opinion that succeeded the Revolution that the greatness of Washington most displayed itself; for it was then that peril thickened in most subtle forms ; that rival passions burned in intestine flames ; that crises came, demanding wider-reaching and more constructive faculties than may be exhibited in war, and higher heroism than may be avouched in battle. And it was then that the soldier uplifted the visor of his helmet and disclosed the countenance of the sage, and pass- ing from the fields of martial fame to the heights of civil achievement, still more resplendent, became the world-wide statesman, like Venus in her transit, sinking the light of his past exploits only in the sun of a new-found glory. First to perceive, and swift to point out, the defects in the Articles of Confederation, they became manifest to all long before victory crowned the warfare conducted under them. Charged by them with the public defense, Congress could not put a soldier in the field; and charged with defraying expenses, it could not levy a dollar of imposts or taxes. It could, indeed, borrow money with the assent of nine States of the thirteen, but what mockery of finance was that, when the borrower could not command any resource of payment. The States had indeed put but a scepter of straw in the legislative hand of the Confederation — what wonder that it soon wore a crown of thorns! The paper currency ere long dissolved to nothingness; for four days the Army was without food, and whole regiments drifted from the ranks of our hard-pressed defenders. "I see," said Washington, Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 105 "one head gradually changing into thirteen; I see one army gradually branching into thirteen, which, instead of looking up to Congress as the supreme controlling power, are con- sidering themselves as dependent upon their respective States. ' ' While yet his sword could not slumber, his busy pen was warning the statesmen of the country that unless Congress were invested with adequate powers, or should assume them as matter of right, we should become but thir-" teen States, pursuing local interests, until annihilated in a general crash — the cause would be lost — and the fable of the bundle of sticks applied to us. In rapid succession his notes of alarm and invocations for aid to Union followed each other to the leading men of the States, North and South. Turning to his own State, and ap- pealing to George Mason, "Where," he exclaimed, "where are our men of abilities? Why do they not come forth and save the country ? " He compared the affairs of this great continent to the mechanism of a clock, of which each State was putting its own small part in order, but neglecting the great wheel, or spring, which was to put the whole in motion. He summoned Jefferson, Wythe, and Pendleton to his as- sistance, telling them that the present temper of the States was friendly to lasting union, that the moment should be improved and might never return, and that "after gloriously and successfully contending against the usurpation of Brit- ain we may fall a prey to our own folly and disputes." How keen the prophet's ken, that through the smoke of war discerned the coming evil; how diligent the Patriot's hand, that amidst awful responsibilities reached futureward to avert it! io6 Dedication of the Washington National Monument. By almost a miracle the weak Confederation, "a barrel without a hoop," was held together perforce of outside press- ure ; and soon America was free. But not yet had beaten Britain concluded peace — not yet had dried the blood of Victory's field ere "follies and dis- putes" confounded all things with their Babel tongues and intoxicated Liberty gave loose to license. An unpaid Army with unsheathed swords clamored around a poverty-stricken and helpless Congress. And grown at last impatient even with their chief, officers high in rank plotted insurrection and circulated an anonymous address, urging it "to appeal from the justice to the fears of government, and suspect the man who would advise to longer forbearance." Anarchy was about to wreck the Arch of Triumph — poor, exhausted, bleeding, weeping America lay in agony upon her bed of laurels. Not a moment did Washington hesitate. He convened his officers, and going before them he read them an address, which, for home-thrust argument, magnanimous temper, and the eloquence of persuasion which leaves nothing to be added, is not exceeded by the noblest utterances of Greek or Roman. A nobler than Coriolanus was before them, who needed no mother's or wife's reproachful tears to turn the threatening steel from the gates of Rome. Pausing, as he read his speech, he put on his spectacles and said: "I have grown gray in )'our ser\-ice, and now find m)'self grow- ing blind." This unaffected touch of nature completed the master's spell. The late fomenters of insurrection gathered to their chief with words of veneration — the storm went by — and, says Curtis in his History of the Constitution, "Had the Commander-in-Chief been other than Washing- Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 107 ton, the land would have been deluged with the blood of civil war." But not yet was Washington's work accomplished. Peace dawned upon the weary land, and parting with his soldiers, he pleaded with them for union. ' ' Happy, thrice happy, shall they be pronounced," he said, "who have contrib- uted an)thing in erecting this stupendous fabric of freedom and empire; who have assisted in protecting the rights of human nature, and establishing an as}'lum for the poor and oppressed ofall nations and religions." But still the foun- dations of the stupendous fabric trembled, and no cement held its stones together. It was then, with that thickening peril, Washington rose to his highest stature. Without civil station to call forth his utterance, impelled by the in- trepid impulse of a soul that could not see the hope of a nation perish without leaping into the stream to save it, he addressed the whole People of America in a Circular to the Governors of the States : ' ' Convinced of the importance of the crisis, silence in me, ' ' he said, ' ' \yould be a crime. I will, therefore, speak the language of freedom and sincerity. " He set forth the need of union in a strain that touched the quick of sensibility; he held up the citizens of America as sole lords of a vast tract of continent; he portrayed the fair opportunity for political happiness with which Heaven had crowned them ; he pointed out the blessings that would at- tend their collective wisdom ; that in their fate was involved that of unborn millions; that mutual concessions and sacri- fices must be made; and that supreme power must be lodged somewhere to regulate and govern the general concerns of the Confederate Republic, without which the union would io8 Dedication of the Washington National Mofitiment. not be of long dnration. And he urged that happiness would be ours if we seized the occasion and made it our own. In this, one of the very greatest acts of Washington, was revealed the heart of the man, the spirit of the hero, the wisdom of the sage — I might almost say the sacred inspira- tion of the prophet. But still the wing of the eagle drooped; the gathering storms baffled his sunward flight. Even with Washington in the van, the column wavered and halted — States strag- gling to the rear that had hitherto been foremost for perma- nent Union, under an efficacious Constitution. And while three years rolled by amidst the jargon of sectional and local contentions, "the half-starved government," as Wash- ington depicted it, "limped along on crutches, tottering at every step." And while monarchical Europe with satur- nine face declared that the American hope of Union was the wild and visionary notion of romance, and predicted that we would be to the end of time a disunited people, suspi- cious and distrustful of each other, divided and subdivided into petty commonwealths and principalities, lo! the very earth yawned under the feet of America, and in that very region whence had come forth a glorious band of orators, statesmen, and soldiers to plead the caiise and fight the bat- tles of Independence — lo! the volcanic fires of Rebellion burst forth upon the heads of the faithful, and the militia were leveling the guns of the Revolution against the breasts of their brethren. ' ' What, gracious God ! is man? ' ' Wash- ington exclaimed: "It was but the other day that we were shedding our blood to obtain the Constitutions under which we live, and now we are unsheathing our swords to overturn them." Dedication of the Washington National Monument. log But see! there is a ray of hope, Maryland and Virginia had already entered into a commercial treaty for regulating the navigation of the rivers and great bay in which the>' had common interests, and Washington had been one of the Commissioners in its negotiation. And now, at the sugges- tion of Maryland, Virginia had called on all the States to meet in convention at Annapolis, to adopt commercial regu- lations for the whole country. Could this foundation be laid, the eyes of the Nation-builders foresaw that the per- manent structure would ere long rise upon it. But when the day of meeting came, no State north of New York or south of Virginia was represented ; and in their helplessness those assembled could only recommend a Constitutional Convention, to meet in Philadelphia in May, 1787, to pio- vide for the exigencies of the situation. And still thick clouds and darkness rested on the land, and there lowered upon its hopes a night as black as that upon the freezing Delaware; but through its gloom the dauntless leader was still marching on to the consummation of his colossal work, with a hope that never died; with a courage that never faltered; with a wisdom that never yielded that ' ' all is vanity. ' ' It was not permitted the Roman to despair of the Repub- lic, nor did he — our Chieftain. "It will all come right at last," he said. It did. And now let the historian, Ban- croft, speak: "From this state of despair the countr>' was lifted by Madison and Virginia. ' ' Again he says : ' ' We come now to a week more glorious for Virginia beyond any in her annals, or in the history of any Republic that had ever before existed. ' ' It was that week in which Madison, "giving effect to his 1 1 o Dedication of the Washington National Monument. own long-cherished wishes, and still earlier wishes of Wash- ington," addressing, as it were, the whole country, and mar- shaling all the States, warned them "that the crisis had arrived at which the People of America are to decide the solemn question, whether they would, by wise and magnani- mous efforts reap the fruits of Independence and of Union, or whether by giving way to unmanly jealousies and preju- dices, or to partial and transitory interests, they would re- nounce the blessings prepared for them by the Revolution," and conjuring them "to concur in such further concessions and provisions as may be necessary to secure the objects for which that Government was instituted, and make the United States as happy in peace as they had been glorious in war." In such manner, my countrymen, Virginia, adopting the words of Madison, and moved by the constant spirit of Wash- ington, joined in convoking that Constitutional Convention, in which he headed her delegation, and over which he pre- sided, and whose deliberations resulted in the formation and adoption of that instrument which the Premier of Great Britain pronounces ' ' the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man. " In such manner the State which gave birth to the Father of his Country, following his guiding genius to the Union, as it had followed his sword through the battles of Independ- ence, placed herself at the head of the wavering column. In such manner America heard and hearkened to the voice of her chief; and now closing ranks, and moving with re- animated step, the Thirteen Commonwealths wheeled and faced to the front, on the line of the Union, under the sacred ensign of the Constitution. 1 1 1 Dedication of the Washington National Moytument. Thus at last was the crowning work of Washington ac- complished. Out of the tempests of war, and the tumults of civil commotion, the ages bore their fruit, tlie long }-earning of humanity was answered. "Rome to America" is the eloquent inscription on one stone contributed to yon colossal shaft— taken from the ancient Temple of Peace that once stood hard by the Palace of the Caesars. Uprisen from the sea of Revolution, fabricated from the ruins of the battered Bastiles, and dismantled palaces of unhallowed power, stood forth now the Republic of Republics, the Nation of Nations, the Constitution of Constitutions, to which all lands and times and tongues had contributed of their wisdom. And the Priestess of Liberty was in her Holy Temple. When Salamis had been fought and Greece again kept free, each of the victorious generals voted himself to be first in honor; but all agreed that Themistocles was second. When the most memorable struggle for the rights of human nature, of which time holds record, was thus happily con- cluded in the muniment of their preservation, whoever else was second, unanimous acclaim declared that Washington was first. Nor in that struggle alone does he stand foremost. In the name of the people of the United States— their Presi- dent, their Senators, their Representatives, and their Judges, do crown to-day, with the grandest crown that veneration has ever lifted to the brow of glory, Him whom Virginia gave to America — whom America has given to the world and to the ages — and whom mankind with universal suffrage has proclaimed the foremost of the /ounders of empire in the fi.rst degree of greatness; whom Liberty herself has anointed ?s the first citizen in the great republic of Humanity. Encompassed by the inviolate seas stands to-day the Amer- 1 1 2 Dedication of the Washington National Monument. ican Republic which he founded — a freer Greater Britain — uplifted above the powers and principalities of the earth, even as his monument is uplifted over roof and dome and spire of the multitudinous city. Long live the Republic of Washington! Respected by mankind, beloved of all its sons, long may it be the asylum of the poor and oppressed of all lands and religions — long may it be the citadel of that Liberty which writes beneath the Eagle's folded wings, "We will sell to no man, we will deny to no man. Right and Justice." Long live the United States of America! Filled with the free, magnanimous spirit, crowned by the wisdom, blessed by the moderation, hovered over by the guardian angel of Washington's example; may they be ever worthy in all things to be defended by the blood of the brave who know the rights of man and shrink not from their assertion — may they be each a column, and altogether, under the Constitu- tion, a perpetual Temple of Peace, unshadowed by a Caesar's palace; at whose altar may freely commune all who seek the union of Liberty and Brotherhood. Long live our Country! Oh, long through the undying ages may it stand, far removed in fact as in space from the Old World's feuds and follies — alone in its grandeur and its glory — itself the immortal monument of Him whom Provi- dence commissioned to teach man the power of Truth, and to prove to the nations that their Redeemer liveth. The delivery of the above was repeatedly interrupted with loud applause. The President of the Senate. In accordance with the programme. Benediction will now be pronounced by Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 113 Rev. Dr. Lindsay, Chaplain of the House of Representa- tives. The Rev. John S. Lindsay, D. D. , then pronounced this benediction : The blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, be among you and remain with you always. Amen. At 5 o'clock p. m. the President of the United States, the Supreme Court, the Senate, and the invited guests retired from the Hall. 8 W M CORRESPONDENCE. "S CORRESPONDENCE. Brookline, Mass., June 24, 1884. Hon. John Sherman, C/iainna/i, dr'c. : My Dear Sir: Your favor of the 19th instant, addressed to me at Boston, has reached me at my summer home, and I have not found it easy to reply. It brings me face to face with an appointment which I hardly know how either to accept or to decline. I am most highly honored by the resolution of Congress, naming me as the orator on the completion of the Monument to Washington, and I thank you sincerely for the friendly and flattering terms in which you have communicated the resolution. Nothing would afford me greater gratification, in these closing years of my life, than to perform the distinguished service thus assigned to me, and I wish I could feel emboldened to accept the appointment without reserve. But I cannot be wholly unmindful of the disabilities and uncertainties of advanced age. Should life and health be spared me, I shall not fail to be with you on the 2 2d of February next, to unite in the congratulations of the hour and to do homage to the memory of the Father of his Country. Nor can I decline to give some expression to the remembrances and emotions awakened by the completion of a monument, of which I was privileged to speak at length at the laying of its corner-stone so many years ago. But I dare not render myself respon.sible for a long, elaborate oration. The effort would exceed my strength, and in all sincerity, but with great reluctance, I must beg your Commission to excuse me from the attempt. 117 1 1 8 Dedication of the Was/ii?igton National Monument. A brief commemorative address is the most that I can promise. Meantime the Commission must feel at perfect hberty to leave me altogether out of their programme, and to make such arrangements as may seem to them most likely to secure the success of the occa- sion. I desire them only to understand, that if, within the limitations which my age enjoins, I can lend any assistance or interest to the proposed ceremonial, I shall take pride and pleasure in placing my- self at their disposal. Believe me, dear Senator Sherman, with great respect and regard, Your friend and servant, ROBT. C. WINTHROP. 90 Marluorougii vStreet, Boston, February 13, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, Chair juan, dfc. : Dear Senator Sherman : It is with deep regret that I find my- self compelled to abandon all further hope of being at the Dedication of the Washington Monument on the 21st instant. I have been looking forward to the possibility of being able to run on at the last moment, and to pronounce a few sentences of my oration before handing it to Governor Long, who has so kindly consented to read it. But my recovery from dangerous illness has been slower than I anticipated, and my physician concurs with my family in forbidding me from any attempt to leave home at present. I need not assure the Commissioners how great a disappointment it is to me to be deprived of the privilege of being present on this most interesting occasion. I am sure of tlieir sympathy without asking for it. Please present my respectful apologies to your associates, and be- lieve me, With great regard, very faithfully, yours, ROBT. C. WIN riTROP. P. S. — This is the first letter I have attempted to write with my own pen since my illness. Dedication of the Washington National Monument. 1 1 g New York City, yanuary 27, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, Chairman^ dr'c. : Dear Sir: I regret very much that my physical condition pre- vents my accepting the invitation of the Commissioners appointed by Congress to provide suitable ceremonies for the Dedication of the Washington Monument, to be present to witness the same, on the 2ist of February next. My throat still requires the attention of the physician, daily, though I am encouraged to believe that it is im- proving. Very respectfully, yours, U. S. GRANT. Fremont, Ohio, February 16, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, Chairman : My Dear Sir: I regret that it is not practicable for me to accept the invitation" to attend the ceremonies at the Dedication of the Washington Monument, on the 21st instant. When the work on the Monument was resumed under the act of 1876, as a member of the Commission in charge of it I was much interested in the plan for strengthening the foundation recommended by the engineer, Colonel Casey, and have ever since watched with solicitude the progress of the structure towards completion. It is a pleasure to have an opportunity to congratulate Colonel Casey and his associates, that after so many anxious years of devotion to their task they are now gladdened by the successful termination of their skillful and hazardous labors. The fame of Washington needs no monument. No work of human hands can adequately illustrate his character and services His countrymen, however, wishing to manifest their admiration and gratitude, a hundred years ago decided to build a monument in honor of his deeds and virtues. Having undertaken the work, they could not neglect it or allow it to fail. The friends of liberty and good government in all other lands will unite with patriotic Ameri- cans in rejoicing that a monument so fitting and majestic has now been erected in memory of Washington. Sincerely, R. 15. HAYES. I20 Dedication of the IVas/ii/ig/o/i National Mouiimeiit. Albany, yanuary 31, 1885. Hon. Jf)HN Sherman, C/inirnian, ds-'e. .■ Deai! Sir: 1 regret very imu li that it will be imj)Ossible for me to be present at the ceremonies attending the Dedication of the Wash- ington Monument, on the 21st of February. Many engagements and occupations, which you can well imagine admit of no postponement, oblige me to forego the pleasure of taking I)art in the interesting exercises. Yours, very truly, GROVKR CLEVELAND. Bangor, January 29, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, C/iair/nan of Co/n/nission, d^c. .■ I have been honored in the receipt of the invitation of the Com- mission in relation to the Dedication of the Washington Monument, to be present at the same on the 21st day of Eebruarv. I have also received \f)ur invitation for the same purpose, in which you express the hope that 1 will accept the invitation tendered to me. In view of the importance of the event and its national character, 1 do not feel at liberty to decline your invitation, and I cordially accept the same. 1 will be present at the Dedication, unless prevented by some cause not now known or anticipated. I have the honor to be, very truly, yours, HANNIBAL HAMLIN. Malone, N. Y., fanuary 28, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, C/iairnian, cfe. .- Sir: I am in receipt, through you as its chairman, of the invita- tion of the "Cduimittee appointed by Congress to provide suitable ceremonies for the Dedication of the Washington Monnnu-nt." lo be present at those cereuKJUies. Dedicalion of the Washington National Monument. 121 I greatly regret to say that the condition of my health will deprive me of the pleasure of being present on that occasion. Very respectfully, yoiirs, W. A. WHEELER. 912 Garrison- Avenue, Saint Louis, Mo., yauuary 28, 1SS5. Hon. John Sherman, Chairman of Committee, Washington, D. C: Dear Sir: I beg to acknowledge the compliment of your invita- tion to share in the ceremonial of the Dedication of the Washins- ton Monument on the 21st of February next, and to express regret that I cannot be present. With great respect, W. T. SHERMAN, General, Oak Knoll, Danvers, Mass., Second Month 8, 1885. Hon. John Sherman, Chairman of Committee: Dear Friend: The state of my health will scarcely permit me to avail myself of the invitation of the Commission to attend the cere- monies of the Dedication of the Washington Monument. In common with my fellow-citizens I rejoice at tl^e successful com- pletion of this majestic testimonial of the reverence and affection which the people of the United States, irrespective of party, section, or race, cherish for the Father of his Country. Grand, however, and imposing as that testimonial may seem, it is, after all, but an inade- quate outward representation of that mightier monument, unseen and immeasureable, builded of the living stones of a nation's love and gratitude, the hearts of forty millions of people. But the world has not outlived its need of picture-writing and symbolism, and the great object-lesson of the Washington Monument will doubtless prove a large factor in the moral and political education of present and future generations. Let us hope that it will be a warning as well 12 2 Dedicatio7i of ilie Was/iini^ton National Alomimeiit. as a benediction; and that while its sun-Ht altitude may fitly symbol- ize the truth that "righteousness exalteth a nation," its shadow falling on the dome of the Capitol may be a daily reminder that "sin is a reproach to any people." Surely it will not have been reared in vain if, on the day of its dedication, its mighty shaft shall serve to lift heavenward the voice of a united people that the principles for which the fathers toiled and suffered shall be maintained inviolate by their children. With sincere respect, I am thy friend, JOHN G. WHITTIER.