Michigan State Capitol
Information about Michigan State Capitol
| Michigan State Capitol | |
| Building information | |
|---|---|
| Location | Lansing, Michigan |
| Country | United States |
| Architect | Elijah E. Myers |
| Client | State of Michigan |
| Construction start date | 1872 |
| Completion date | 1878 |
| Cost | $1.2 million |
| Style | Neoclassical |
| Size | 139 rooms |
| Michigan State Capitol | |
|---|---|
| (U.S. National Historic Landmark) | |
| Location: | Lansing, Michigan |
| Built/Founded: | 1878 |
| Added to NRHP: | January 25 1971 |
| NRHP Reference#: | 71000396 |
The first state capitol was located in Detroit, the original capital of Michigan, and was relocated to Lansing in 1847, due to the need to develop the western portions of the state and for easy defense from British troops stationed in Windsor, Ontario. The present capitol building, preceded by a temporary wood frame structure, was dedicated in January 1879 and is designed in a Neoclassical style.[2] The capitol was rededicated in 1992 after a three-year restoration project.
History
First state capitol
On July 13 1787, the Second Continental Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance, creating the Northwest Territory which included Michigan. In 1805 the U.S. Congress created the Michigan Territory.<ref name="capitol" /> Michigan began applying for statehood as early as 1832, though it was rebuffed due to a dispute with Ohio over the Toledo Strip, a 468-square mile (1,210 km²) area that included the important port city of Toledo. By 1835, Michigan had formed a state government without receiving authorization from Congress to do so. The boundaries of the state included the contested area.The dispute culminated in what has become known as the Toledo War, as Michigan and Ohio militia took up arms in the area. As a condition for entering the Union, Michigan was forced to accept the western three quarters of the Upper Peninsula in exchange for ceding its claim to the Toledo Strip. After a state convention first rejected this condition, a second convention, assembled under some duress in December 1836, reluctantly accepted the terms and Michigan became the 26th state on January 26 1837, with Detroit as its first capital.
The first building to serve as the state capitol was built in 1832 to serve as the "territorial courthouse." This brick structure was one of the earliest Greek revival buildings in Michigan, with a portico of Ionic columns and a central tower of 140 feet (42 m). Built at a cost of $24,500, the building housed the territorial government and state legislatures until 1848, when a hastily-erected wood building was built in Lansing following a decision made March 17 1847, to move the capital from Detroit to Lansing. The building then became a public school (the Union School, at one time Detroit's only high school) and library until it burned in 1893.<ref name="capitolhistory" />
Second state capitol
The 1835 Michigan Constitution[3] provided that:- The seat of government for this state shall be at Detroit, or at such other place or places as may be prescribed by law until the year eighteen hundred and forty-seven, when it shall be permanently located by the legislature.<ref name="capitolhistory" />
Prior to 1847, Detroit had fought to maintain the capital within its jurisdiction, but communities in the growing western part of the state had many reasons for moving inland, including the need to increase defensibility by moving the state government away from the Canadian border.<ref name="capitolhistory" /> Detroit had been occupied during the War of 1812, and the border area of less than a mile between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, at the Detroit River continued to be occupied by troops on both banks. Proponents of moving the capital also sought to promote settlement and the economy in the interior, as well as making the government more accessible to the people throughout the state.<ref name="capitolhistory" />
Contenders seeking designation as the new capital included Ann Arbor, Jackson, and Grand Rapids. At one point during the debate, Marshall officials were so certain of its selection that they built a governor's mansion.<ref name="capitolhistory" /> After extensive debate, state senator Joseph H. Kilbourne of Ingham County proposed that the nearly-uninhabited Lansing Township be made the seat of government. The legislature agreed, with the location north of Ann Arbor, west of Detroit, and east of Grand Rapids being deemed a suitable compromise. The legislature renamed it as the Town of Michigan, though by 1848 the original name of Lansing was restored.<ref name="capitol" />
Construction began in 1847 on a state capitol building in Lansing, a temporary structure on the block bordered by Washington Avenue and Capitol Avenue. It was a simple two-story wood frame structure, painted white with green wooden shutters and topped by a tin cupola. The total cost for construction was $22,952.01.<ref name="capitolhistory" /> The building was sold when the permanent capitol building opened in 1879. It was then used as a factory until, like the first capitol, it was destroyed by a fire in 1882.<ref name="capitolhistory" />
Third state capitol
In the early 1870s, Governor Henry P. Baldwin urged the legislature to fund a new, permanent capitol. On March 31 1871, a bill was adopted "for the erection of a new state capitol, and a building for the temporary use of the state officers." The new capitol was to cost $1.2 million, to be raised by a six-year state income tax.<ref name="capitolhistory" />In 1872, architect Elijah E. Myers of Springfield, Illinois, was selected to design the new capitol building. His design, named "Tuebor" (which means "I will defend"), was selected.<ref name="capitol" /> Myers used the central dome and wing design found in the United States Capitol in his design and subsequently went on to design two other state capitol buildings, the statehouses of Colorado and Texas, as well as the former territorial capitol building of Idaho, the most by any architect.[4] The cornerstone was laid on October 2, 1873, with about 7,000 Lansing residents and some 30,000 to 50,000 visitors attending.<ref name="capitolhistory" /> Construction and finishing work were completed by late 1878. The new capitol, with 139 rooms, was dedicated at the same time as the inauguration of Governor Charles Croswell on January 1 1879.<ref name="capitolhistory" />
The Lansing capitol building inspired a national trend after the American Civil War for fireproof buildings, large enough to house expanding government as well as serving as a durable repository for artifacts of the war[5] (including battle flags that were subsequently moved to the Michigan Historical Museum in 1990<ref name="capitol" />).Over the years the dome, which had at first matched the light tan of the building, was repainted a bright white. The legislature funded an extensive historical restoration starting in 1989 which was completed in 1992.<ref name="capitol" /> The restoration returned the dome to an off-white shade and made improvements to the interior, providing for access to people with disabilities as well as restoring many of the original interior designs. The capitol building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 25 1971, and was designated as a National Historic Landmark on October 5 1992.[6]
The capitol today
Building
The Michigan State Capitol is 267 feet (81.3 m) from the ground to the tip of finial/spire above the dome. The building is 420 feet and two inches (128 m) long and 273 feet and 11 inches (83.4 m) wide (including approaches). The capitol occupies 1 and 1/6 acres (4,700 m²), has a perimeter of 1,520 feet (463 m).<ref name="capitol_nhs" /> There are four stories in the building, with public entrances on the ground floor. Two grand staircases in the north and south corridors go up to the top floor.<ref name="capitol" />At one point, the Capitol structure was large enough to host all the state agencies and departments. Due to the growth of state government, however, only the offices and chambers of the Michigan Legislature, governor, and lieutenant governor remain within the building. The former Supreme Court chambers are now used by the Senate Appropriations Committee.<ref name="capitol" /> The Michigan Library and Historical Center and State Library are located at the other end of the Capitol mall. Two legislative office buildings stand across from the front of the Capitol building.
The ground floor corridors led to "store rooms" designed by the architect in the original building plans. This includes an armory in the southwest corner of the south corridor. The original wood floor has been replaced by gray tiles. The rooms were originally lit with gas fixtures, though by 1900 the entire building had been refitted with electric lights.<ref name="capitol" /> Today the ground floor is home to several different offices, including the Secretary of the Senate, the Clerk of the House, and the Capitol Tours and Information Service.<ref name="capitol" />
Starting with the first floor and continuing to the third, black and white floor tiling is made of Vermont marble and limestone. The doorknobs are mostly made of a brass and bronze alloy (most of the original brass doorknobs have been stolen). The present doorknobs and hinges, locked for protection, display the state coat of arms. Though the building appears to have walnut woodwork, the wood is actually Michigan white pine that has been wood grained to give the appearance of walnut.<ref name="capitol" />
The first floor gives visitors their first view of the interior of the rotunda. Below the cast-iron dome, the ceiling displays eight muses painted in 1886. For more than a century, the muses' artist remained anonymous; it is now known to have been Tommaso Juglaris, who created them in his Boston studio and never came to Michigan.<ref name="capitol" /> On the north wall of the first floor is a large clock, called a long-drop clock. It was once the building's master clock and is at least as old as the capitol. The clock was restored in 1990 and is currently in working condition.<ref name="capitol" />
The second floor, in addition to hosting the gubernatorial offices, features the Gallery of Governors with portraits of former Michigan governors; the gallery extends up to the third floor as well. The governor's offices were among the most extensively restored during the 1989–1992 restoration. The office features a suite of original furnishings manufactured in 1876 by the Feige Brothers Company of Saginaw.<ref name="capitol" /> The former chambers of the Michigan Supreme Court are located on the south side of the building. The court vacated its chambers in 1970 for larger quarters, eventually moving to its current location at the Michigan Hall of Justice.<ref name="capitol" />
Public access to Michigan's legislative bodies is through the third floor. The capitol building holds the chambers and offices of the bicameral state legislature, which is comprised of the Michigan House of Representatives and Michigan Senate. Public galleries are at both ends of the third floor. The Senate, with 38 members, has its chambers on the south side of the building, while the House of Representatives, with 110 members, has its chambers in the north wing. House sessions are normally held on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 1:00 PM and Thursdays at 10:30 AM, while Senate sessions begin at 10:00 AM on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. Both houses occasionally convene on Mondays and Fridays.[7] Senate and House sessions are taped by Michigan Government Television, a public service body transmitted to local cable television systems. Similar to C-SPAN, MGTV has made live coverage of the legislative proceedings available since July 15, 1996.[8]
Although having the same basic floor plan, the House and Senate chambers are decorated very differently, with the former in terra cotta and teal colors and the latter in blue and gold. An oval cartouche in the carpet at the entrance to the House chamber features the state flower. Presiding over the house is the speaker, whose chair is behind a desk in the center with a plaster and paint version of the state coat of arms. The Senate chambers are somewhat smaller than the House. The president of the Senate is the lieutenant governor, who presides over sessions from a walnut rostrum at the front of the chambers. Both the House and the Senate use computerized voting systems, including wall-mounted screens that allow visitors to follow the voting. Both the House and the Senate also contain glass tiled ceilings that allow natural light to shine through etched glass panels in order to better light the room. These ceiling tiles feature the coats-of-arms of each state in America.<ref name="capitol" />
Grounds
A statue of Austin Blair, Michigan's popular Civil War governor, is located in front of the capitol building.
The cornerstone, located at the northeast corner of the building, is a large stone with dates carved on it. On one side is "1872", which marks the start of construction of the capitol. On the other side is "1878", marking the year of completion. The stone was opened during ceremonies on November 15 1978, the centennial of the building's completion. Various documents enclosed within the stone had been damaged by weather, although several coins from the era were recovered. It was closed and resealed with 38 new items depicting Michigan's history, people, and lifestyles. Another stone located on capitol grounds is the GAR Stone, a memorial to American Civil War veterans who fought for the Union. It was erected in 1924.<ref name="capitol" />
A few notable trees are located on the grounds. An Eastern White Pine, the state tree of Michigan, is located in the front of the building. The Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Tree was planted in memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1984. The oldest tree on the grounds is a catalpa that was present at the time the Capitol was dedicated in 1873. The American Forestry Association has certified that this catalpa is the largest living tree of its kind in the United States.[9]<ref name="capitol_nhs" /> The most recently dedicated tree is a blue spruce called "the Freedom Tree", planted in 1973 as a memorial to the Vietnam War's missing-in-action and prisoners of war.<ref name="capitol" />
Notes
1. ^ The Michigan State Capitol. Michigan Senate (original material from Michigan Department of Management and Budget) (1988). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
2. ^ Your State Capitol, A Walking Tour. Michigan Historical Center (1999). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
3. ^ Constitution of the State of Michigan of 1835. Archives of Michigan, Michigan Library and Historical Center (2005). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
4. ^ Elijah E. Myers. Michigan Senate (original material from Michigan Department of Management and Budget) (1988). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
5. ^ National Historic Landmarks Nomination—Michigan State Capitol. United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service (January 25 1971). Retrieved on 2007-10-19.
6. ^ Michigan State Capitol. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service (2007-09-18). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
7. ^ Citizen's Guide to State Government. Michigan Capitol Committee (2005). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
8. ^ The MGTV Story. Michigan Government Television (1999). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
9. ^ Gangloff, Deborah (January-February 1992). "Introduction: the 1992 edition, national register of big trees". American Forests. Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
2. ^ Your State Capitol, A Walking Tour. Michigan Historical Center (1999). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
3. ^ Constitution of the State of Michigan of 1835. Archives of Michigan, Michigan Library and Historical Center (2005). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
4. ^ Elijah E. Myers. Michigan Senate (original material from Michigan Department of Management and Budget) (1988). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
5. ^ National Historic Landmarks Nomination—Michigan State Capitol. United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service (January 25 1971). Retrieved on 2007-10-19.
6. ^ Michigan State Capitol. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service (2007-09-18). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
7. ^ Citizen's Guide to State Government. Michigan Capitol Committee (2005). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
8. ^ The MGTV Story. Michigan Government Television (1999). Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
9. ^ Gangloff, Deborah (January-February 1992). "Introduction: the 1992 edition, national register of big trees". American Forests. Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
References
- Cupolas of Capitalism - State Capitol Building Histories/States from MI to MO (2005). Cupolas.com. Accessed December 8, 2005.
- William Seale (1995). Michigan's Capitol. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-06573-4.
- William Seale (1995). Michigan's Capitol: Construction and Restoration. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-09573-0.
External links
- Michigan State Capitol homepage
- Virtual tour of the State of Michigan Capitol
- Michigan's Civil War Flags (displayed in rotunda)
- * Maps and aerial photos for Coordinates:
- Maps from , Google Maps, Live Search Maps, Yahoo! Maps, or MapQuest
- Topographic maps from TopoZone or TerraServer-USA
City of Lansing
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
Coordinates:
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State Michigan
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
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State Michigan
Counties Ingham, Eaton
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Elijah E. Myers (b. December 22, 1832, Philadelphia - d. March 5, 1909, Detroit) was a leading architect of government buildings in the latter half of the 19th century, and the only architect to design the capitol buildings of 3 U.S.
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State of Michigan
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The Great Lakes State,
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Winter Water Wonderland
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Motto
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"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
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National Historic Landmark (NHL) is a building, district, site, structure, or object, almost always within the United States, officially recognized by the United States government for its historical significance.
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City of Lansing
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
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State Michigan
Counties Ingham, Eaton
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
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State Michigan
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
Coordinates:
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State Michigan
Counties Ingham, Eaton
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Location in Ingham County, Michigan1
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Country United States
State Michigan
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Ingham County is a county in the U.S. state of Michigan. The 2000 census recorded its population at 279,320; a 2006 estimate placed the population at 276,898. The county seat is Mason6. Lansing, the state capital of Michigan, is also within the county.
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Houses Michigan State House of Representatives, Michigan Senate
Speaker of the House Andy Dillon, Democratic
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