Alexandria Archaeology Looks Back at 250 Years of Alexandria History
The 1790s
Points in Time
- 1790: The first U.S. census taken; Alexandria's population is 2748,
and nearly 22% are African Americans; Congress passes a naturalization
act; first successful water-powered cotton mill erected; first patent
granted
- 1790-1795: Warfare between the U.S. Army and the Indians of the old
Northwest
- 1791: First Bank of the United States founded; Bill of Rights is ratified;
first internal revenue tax; Vermont becomes a state
- 1792: Construction of the White House begins; U.S. mint established at
Philadelphia; Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin
- 1793: First federal fugitive slave law; Neutrality Act; Thomas Jefferson
invents the moldboard plow
- 1794: Whisky Rebellion
- 1795: First practical industrial steam engine in the U.S.
- 1797: First U.S. medical journal published
- 1798-1800: The Quasi-War with France
- 1799: George Washington dies
Points in Time
At the dawn of a new decade Alexandrians were delighted to fete Ambassador
Thomas Jefferson at Wise's Tavern (201 North Fairfax Street) upon his
return from France in March 1790. During the ceremony Mayor William
Hunter delivered these welcoming remarks: "As a commercial town, we
feel ourselves particularly indebted to you for the indulgences which
your enlightened representations to the Court of France have secured to
our trade. You have freed commerce from its shackles..." Jefferson's
reply acknowledged his guests' hospitality: "Accept my sincere thanks
for yourself and the worthy citizens of Alexandria, for their kind
congratulations on my return to my native country. I am happy to learn
that they have felt benefit from the encouragements to our commerce
which have been given by an allied nation...."
Jefferson's sentiments presaged the economic revitalization of the
1790s. This surge was fueled in part by the lucrative grain trade as
thousands of wagons wended their way to the port of Alexandria from
Fauquier, Loudoun, Prince William Counties to off-load their cargoes of
wheat, flour, rye and corn. Enormous quantities of grain were transshipped
to the Caribbean, Iberian Peninsula and Europe. The total exports from
Alexandria amounted to $381,000 in 1791 and to $948,000 in 1795.
By 1790, Alexandria had become the principal port on the Potomac. In
1796, it ranked as the third largest exporter of flour and the seventh
largest port in the United States. This growth is suggested by the
myriad goods and services available in town. No more was the town a
provincial depot. Alexandria in the 1790s was a grand cornucopia from
which almost any item from ostrich feathers to pianofortes could be
acquired. The town's streets and byways were dotted with silversmiths,
saddlers, blacksmiths, furniture makers, bakers, whitesmiths, tanners,
brewers, seamstresses and tobacconists to name a few.
The town's bustling "wharves could accommodate the storage of large
quantities of materials and the erection of large structures." Ships from
Spain, Britain, Portugal, the West Indies and the Caribbean unloaded their
precious cargoes of imported china, rum and molasses. On April 28, 1792,
Lund Washington, in a letter to George Washington wrote that the port
of Alexandria "has seldom less than twenty square-rigged vessels in it
and often more. The streets are crowded with wagons and the people all
seem to be busy." Indeed by 1795, "Alexandria's exports placed it second
behind Norfolk among Virginia's custom houses... Alexandria's share
of Virginia's exports rose from 12% of the total value in 1791 to 29%
in 1795." By the end of the decade nearly 1,000 vessels docked annually
at the city wharves. And, by annexation, the town had been increased in
size to incorporate all of the area we know as "Old Town."
In November 1792, the General Assembly incorporated the first bank
established in Virginia. Known as the Bank of Alexandria, it was first
situated at 305 Cameron Street until a new structure (133 North Fairfax
Street) was erected for its headquarters. It provided needed capital
for investment and regional development.
Visitors were generally very positive about Alexandria's
progress. According to Thomas Twinning, "What most struck me was the vast
number of houses which I saw building... The hammer and the trowel were at
work every where, a cheering sight." The Duc de la Rochefoucault noted:
"Alexandria is beyond all comparison the handsomest town in Virginia
and indeed is among the finest in the United States.
Some were more ambivalent: "[T]he situation of the town will soon make
it a very important post... there are about 3,200 inhabitants; the houses
are principally brick; the streets are not paved and being of clay, after
rain they are slippery, it is almost impossible to walk in them." But
the City Council was actively trying to remedy such problems. In 1794
Council passed an act to pave the principal streets with cobbles. But
there was no pleasing everyone. A European emigrant wrote to his friend
in London, rather unappreciative of Virginia culture. "Alexandria is one
of the most wicked places I ever beheld in my life; cockfighting, horse
racing, with every species of gambling and cheating, being apparently
the principal business going forward. As a proof of this you may judge
of the extent of this dissipation when I inform you, this little place
contains no less than between forty and fifty billiard tables...."
In truth, many Alexandrians favored more refined pursuits. In 1799,
impresario Thomas Wade West built the town's first permanent theater at
406 Cameron Street. It was a "large three- story structure decorated
with handsome pediments and deep cornices, the window frames, tresses
and rustic work of stone." For many years it was the scene of plays by
Shakespeare, Moliere and other notable bards. To promote literary and
cultural awareness, a Society for the Promotion of Useful Knowledge was
formed in 1790. It served as a precursor to the private organization
which, in 1794, established the Alexandria Subscription Library, the
first private library company in Virginia.
As a seaport town Alexandria was vulnerable to epidemics including yellow
fever and malaria. To contain these contagions, in 1793 Dr. Elisha Cullen
Dick was appointed health office with authority to set up a quarantine
station at Jones Point for the inspection of ships. "By January 1, 1794,
Dick had entered a total of 55 vessels in quarantine and the contagion
did not reach Alexandria." [Shomette, Maritime Alexandria]
The year 1790 was the time of the first national census, a time when
the town's demographics were changing rapidly. The population was
growing very quickly in this prosperous era; between 1790 and 1798, the
town's population grew by about 2000 individuals or 41%. Some of these
new residents were members of the Society of Friends, who increasingly
migrated here from Pennsylvania and New Jersey in the 1780s. Many Quakers
became prominent businessmen and civic leaders. As early as 1796, Quakers
had founded an early abolition organization in Alexandria known as the
"Society for the Relief and Protection of Persons Illegally Held in
Bondage."
Alexandria's African American population was also increasing, particularly
in the numbers of free blacks or former slaves. These people had been
manumitted by their masters or had purchased their freedom through hard
work and careful savings. Many of the artisans who built Alexandria
were skilled African Americans, including free blacks. Skilled laborers
were in a better position to earn a little money toward the purchase of
their freedom. Being more valuable to their owners, however, the price
of their freedom was usually dear. One noteworthy individual who never
gained his freedom was "Negro Tom," a slave of Elizabeth Cox of Fairfax
County. A true prodigy, Tom was referred to in a newspaper obituary as a
"human calculator" for his prodigious mathematical abilities. Illiterate
from the denial of education, he nonetheless could perform amazing feats
of memory and calculation. An undeniable although qualified admiration is
apparent in the account despite the pervasive racism of the time.
National and international events
In 1789, Virginia and Maryland had joined in donating territory to
establish a new federal capital city on the banks of the Potomac
River. Expecting a bright future as part of a booming metropolis,
Alexandrians rejoiced when surveyor Andrew Ellicott and his assistant,
African American Benjamin Banneker, arrived in town in the spring of
1791 to lay out the new district. In a public display, Mayor Philip
Marsteller, the Commonality and free masons marched to Jones Point on
April 15, 1791 to lay the first cornerstone of the District.
The Federal government's internal revenue legislation of 1791 instituted
an excise tax on whiskey-the only form in which grain grown west of
the Allegheny Mountains could be transported and sold in the east.
The western settlers, otherwise largely ignored by the Federal and state
governments, irately and not unjustifiably charged the government with
enforcing "taxation without representation," the rallying cry of the
patriots of a generation earlier. With mob violence directed against
Federal officials in western Pennsylvania, the government concluded that
the insurrection was a real threat to the nation's security. President
Washington took personal command of an army mustered by the states to
pacify the affected area by force. Like forty years earlier, hundreds
of Virginia militia marched toward the Monongehela to secure the
frontier. This time, however, with the approach of the army, the "enemy"
melted away into the countryside, and only a handful were arrested and
tried.
Franco-American cooperation dissolved after Louis XVI was deposed. True,
many Americans were still strongly pro-French, but others were just
as staunchly mistrustful of the radical Jacobins and the consulate
and the empire which followed. The rivalry between Britain and France
continued unabated. The French were highly critical and suspicious of
the Jay Treaty which was concluded between England and the U.S. in 1794.
Congress passed an Act of Neutrality with respect to these great powers-
over the objections of the French and a minority of Americans who
considered it a violation of the Franco-American military alliance that
had been signed in 1778 and which was largely responsible for winning the
Revolution. Relations deteriorated rapidly with a series of high-handed
French diplomatic moves. Soon the French began to intercept American
shipping and, in the fall of 1798, the United States found itself in an
undeclared naval war. U.S. Naval personnel were recruited at Alexandria
and soon the town's shipyards were bustling as privateers were being
constructed for service against the enemy. The fledgling American Navy
acquitted itself well, but many commercial vessels were seized. At least
twenty Alexandria registered ships were captured; the National Archives
has several boxes of invoices of cargoes seized. American ground forces
(including the "Alexandria Blues") and military installations (including
the earth fort constructed at Jones Point by French engineer Jean de
Vermonnet) saw no action. The Adams administration finally smoothed over
differences with the French and signed a new commercial treaty.
The century ended on a sad note with the death of George Washington
December 14, 1799. His funeral was virtually an Alexandria affair;
perhaps a quarter of the townspeople participated in some fashion,
and many streamed to Mount Vernon to pay homage their hero and beloved
friend and neighbor. Washington's death appropriately marked the end of
the Revolutionary era and the beginning of the passing of the generation
which had triumphed in that struggle.
Place in Time
We walk through Jones Point Park today enjoying the pastoral scene
within the city and under the shadow of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge.
As dogs romp and children play soccer, it is incredible to imagine how
this boot of land became the starting point for America's capital, the
District of Columbia. The Residence Act was passed on July 15, 1790,
authorizing President Washington to locate the ten-mile-square capital
on the Potomac River between the Eastern Branch (Anacostia River)
and the Connogocheque, near Williamsport, Maryland. On the advice of
Andrew Ellicott, the director of the D.C. survey, Washington altered his
initial plan to include the thriving port of Alexandria the southeastern
and southwestern sides of the District would "Begin...at Jones Point,
being the upper cape of Hunting Creek."
The survey team crossed the marshy western end of Jones Point and set up
camp near shore. Mathematician Benjamin Banneker maintained the high-tech
astronomical and surveying instruments and did the calculations to assure
proper alignment of the boundaries. The team indicated the precise spot
where the first of forty stones would be put to demarcate the boundaries
of the District.
The stones marking the boundary are unbelievably still extant in today's
urban environment. Walk to the seawall near the lighthouse and look down
into the opening to see what remains of the southern cornerstone. Although
the original stone was erected with grand ceremony on April 15, 1791,
it is possible that it was replaced in 1794. Other boundary markers
can be viewed along the southwestern line of the District of Columbia
that cuts across Alexandria: Southwest Mile Marker 1 at the southeast
corner of Wilkes and Payne streets; Southwest Mile Marker 2 at the
east side of Russell Road north of King Street; Southwest Mile Marker
3 at the north end of the First Baptist Church parking lot, 2900 King
Street. They are protected by fences placed by the Daughters of the
American Revolution. Southwest Mile Marker is just north of Alexandria
near Fairlington Village at Wakefield and King streets, but is broken
and partly covered by the pavement.
Artifacts: Piercy Pottery
In 1974, a five-foot deep privy was excavated at 406 King Street. In
1795-1796, this was the rear of Piercy and Graham's china and glass
shop. The privy produced more than 80 vessels of Piercy's coarse red
earthenware, including several dishes decorated with spiral or concentric
bands of slip (see below). Also found were a large assortment of English
ceramics and glass, lead bale seals, a watch fob, buttons, eyeglass
frames, and a folding rule.
Piercy, Alexandria's best known earthenware potter, came to Alexandria
from Philadelphia in 1792. His pottery was located on South Washington
Street, beneath what is now Lloyd's Row. He advertised his redware pottery
as "equal to any work in Philadelphia or elsewhere." It is indeed very
similar to forms and styles produced in Philadelphia, distinguished
only by our local clay, which is lighter in weight and color than that
of the Philadelphia wares.
Architecture
With the close of the Revolution and the adoption of the Constitution,
Americans sought to establish their own national identity apart from
their primarily British roots. As in politics, architectural taste at
once reflected both English precedents and an independent streak. The
"Federal period" called for a new, "Federal style" of architecture.
Sharing many of the elements of its predecessor, the Georgian style,
Federal architecture was more chaste, refined and attenuated. The
two buildings of Gadsby's Tavern, 134 North Royal Street, provide a
side-by-side comparison of the styles (see below). The smaller, south
building, built ca. 1770 is clearly Georgian, with its center hall,
horizontality, heavy cornice, prominent jack arches and water table. The
large 1792 building has a much plainer (and more "planar") facade; it too
has jack arches, but of rubbed, gauged brick and not Renaissance-inspired
stone voussoirs. There is no stone belt course between stories. While
symmetry is still very important, it is not as rigid as the Georgian;
the entry has now been put off-center in a four-bay facade. The cornice
and door surround are somewhat simpler and lighter. The door is flanked
by fluted neoclassical columns instead of engaged pilasters. The height
of the structure reflects both a different sense of proportion, but
also the prosperity of the town in the 1790s and the need to accommodate
more travelers.