Wisconsin State Capitol
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Wisconsin State Capitol | |
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(U.S. National Historic Landmark) | |
Location: | Madison, Wisconsin |
Built/Founded: | 1906 |
Architect: | George B. Post |
Architectural style(s): | Beaux-Arts |
Designated as NHL: | January 3, 2001 |
Added to NRHP: | October 15, 1970 |
NRHP Reference#: | 70000031 [1] |
Governing body: | State |
The Wisconsin State Capitol, in Madison, Wisconsin, houses both chambers of the Wisconsin legislature along with the state Supreme Court and the Office of the Governor. The current building, completed in 1917, is the fifth building to serve as the Wisconsin capitol since the first territorial legislature convened in 1836 and the third building since Wisconsin was granted statehood in 1848. The streets surrounding the building form the Capitol Square which is home to many restaurants and shops. The square is a major hub for the Madison Metro bus service
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[edit] First capitol
The first capitol was a prefabricated wood-frame council house hastily shipped to Belmont, Wisconsin with no heat or water. Legislators met there for 42 days after Belmont was designated the capital of Wisconsin Territory. The session chose Madison as the site of the capitol, and Burlington, Iowa as the site of further legislative sessions until Madison could be ready. The council house and an associated lodging house still stand and are operated by the Wisconsin Historical Society as the First Capitol Historic Site.
[edit] Second capitol
The second capitol was the first state house built in Madison, on the present site. Built in 1837 for $60,000 of stone cut from Maple Bluff and locally cut oak, it was small but typical of frontier state houses.
[edit] Third capitol
Growing government needs forced the state to construct a new capitol, also on the present site. This structure, with a similar U.S. Capitol-inspired dome, was built between 1857 and 1869. In 1882, the state expanded this capitol with two wings to the north and south at a cost of $900,000. In 1903, however, a commission began looking into replacing the structure.
[edit] 1904 fire
On the night of February 26, 1904, a gas jet ignited a newly-varnished ceiling in the third capitol building. A nearby university reservoir was empty, so water had to be brought in from Milwaukee to fight the blaze. The situation was further complicated by the bitter cold temperatures; by the time the water reached Madison, it had started to freeze. As a result, the entire structure except the north wing burned to the ground.
The fire occurred just five weeks after the State Legislature voted to cancel the capitol's fire insurance policy.
[edit] Current building
Construction of the present capitol building, the third in Madison, began in late 1906 and was completed in 1917 at a cost of $7.25 million. The architect was George B. Post & Sons from New York. Due to financial limitations and the need for immediate office space to house state government employees, the construction of the new building was extended over several years and focused on building one wing at a time.
The Capitol is 284 feet, 5 inches tall from the ground floor to the top of the statue on the dome, making the building 3 feet shorter than the nation's capitol in Washington D.C. The "Wisconsin" statue on the dome was sculpted by Daniel Chester French of New York in 1920. Her left hand holds a globe with an eagle on it and her right arm is outstretched to symbolize the state motto, “Forward.” She wears a helmet with the state animal, the badger, on top. She is made of hollow bronze covered with gold leaf.
"Wisconsin" is 15 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs three tons. The statue is commonly misidentified as "Lady Forward" or "Miss Forward", which is the name of another statue on the capitol grounds.
The Capitol was constructed out of 43 kinds of stone from six countries and eight states. The exterior stone is Bethel White granite from Vermont, and the exterior dome is the largest granite dome in the world. In the rotunda you can see marble from Greece, Algeria, Italy, and France along with Minnesota limestone, Norwegian syenite (Labradorite) and red granite from Waupaca, Wisconsin. Other Wisconsin granites are located throughout the public hallways on the ground, first, and second floors.
The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2001. A 1990 state law prevents any building within one mile of the capitol from being taller than the base of the columns surrounding and supporting its dome.[2]
[edit] Capitol Restoration/Renovation
The Capitol recently underwent a 14-year renovation and restoration project. The project was undertaken wing by wing mirroring the original construction of the Capitol. The renovation started in 1988 and was finished in 2002 at a total cost of $158.8 million. The purpose of the project was to convert the Capitol into a modern working building while restoring and preserving its original 1917 appearance. Remodeling projects of the 1960's and 70's had introduced features out of character with the architecture of the Capitol such as drop ceilings, movable partitions and fluorescent light fixtures, and many original decorative stencils were painted over. The restoration project returned public spaces to their original appearance. Original decorative stencils have been repaired or recreated; gold leaf was replaced or restored, and marble surfaces were cleaned. Murals were cleaned and conserved in the public spaces. Skylights over the third and fourth floor interior offices and stairs which had been sealed in the 1970's were uncovered. The exterior granite was cleaned and repaired by workers who rappelled down from the dome. The renovation plan also included integrating modern technology into the original architecture. Electrical, mechanical (such as plumbing and heating) and communications systems were upgraded; asbestos was removed, and air conditioning was added. The Capitol basement floor was actually lowered two feet to provide additional usable office space. Legislative offices were rebuilt as two-room suites (originally legislators did not have offices in the Capitol, only their desks in the Senate and Assembly Chambers). Modern office furniture was designed to look like the original oak furniture.
[edit] Wisconsin Capitol sculpture program
Architect Post designed an elaborate sculpture program for the building. Initially the statue of Wisconsin on the top of the dome was promised to Helen Farnsworth Mears but when Daniel Chester French agreed to produce the finial figure, the commission was switched to him. This work, often referred to as the "Golden Lady," consists of an allegorical figure reminiscent of Athena, dressed in Greek garb, and wearing a helmet topped by a badger, the Wisconsin state totem. In the left hand she holds a globe with an eagle perched on top of it. Across her chest is a large W, for Wisconsin, a detail probably only viewable from an airplane.
Post's original concept for the building called for four small domes to be placed at the foot of the large one, but at some point the plans were changed and the domes were replaced by four sculptural groups by Karl Bitter. These groups (again, in Greek clothing) symbolized Faith, Strength, Prosperity and Abundance.
Each of the four wings of the building is fronted by a pediment whose figures relate to the principal activities that were to take place within. Thus the east wing, housing the Supreme Court, features a pediment by Bitter entitled Law, the south has Adolph Alexander Weinman's Virtues and Traits of Character, for the wing containing the State Senate. Bitter's other pediment, the west, is Agriculture, while Attilio Piccirilli's Wisdom and Learning of the World adorns the north pediment.
The carving of all these sculptures is attributed to the Piccirilli Brothers.
East pediment by Bitter |
South pediment by Weinman |
West pediment by Bitter |
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North pediment by Piccirilli |
Knowledge, NE group, Bitter |
Faith, SE group, Bitter |
Strength, SW group, Bitter |
Prosperity and Abundance, NW group, Bitter |
[edit] Trivia
- Some of the stones used in the building contain fossils. The second flight of stairs in the north wing, on the left side of the grand staircase, fourth step from the bottom, contains a starfish fossil. [1]
- The remains of Old Abe, the Civil War eagle of the 8th Wisconsin regiment, now depicted on the shoulder patch of the 101st Airborne, were destroyed in the 1904 fire. A replica tribute sits above the Wisconsin State Assembly floor.
- The wings' pillars are draped in wire meshing to prevent birds from nesting in the ornate carvings.
- The Capitol has: 705 rooms, 714 exterior windows, 1608 doors, and 2782 steps.
- On May 5, 2008 the Capitol was used as a location for the film Public Enemies starring Johnny Depp and Christian Bale.
[edit] References
- ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2006-03-15).
- ^ 1989 Wisconsin Act 222. State of Wisconsin (April 12, 1990). Retrieved on 2006-10-03.
- Dennis, James M., Karl Bitter Architectural Sculptor: 1867 - 1915, University of Wisconsin Press 1967
- Lombardo, Josef Vincent, Atilio Piccirilli: Life of an American Sculptor, Pitman Publishing Corporation, New York 1944
- Kvaran, Einar Einarsson, Architectural Sculpture in America, unpublished manuscript
- Landau, Sarah Bradford, George B. Post: Picturesque Designer and Determined Realist, The Montacelli Press, New York, NY, 1998
- Rajer, Anton and Christine Style, Public Sculpture in Wisconsin: An Atlas of Outdoor Monuments, Memorials and Masterpieces in the Badger State, SOS! Save Outdoor Sculpture, Wisconsin, Madison Wisconsin, 1999
- Schevill, , Ferdinand, Karl Bitter – A Biography, University of Chicago Press, Chicago Illinois, 1917
- Wisconsin State Capitol: Guide and History, State of Wisconsin Department of Administration, Division of Buildings and Grounds, 1991
[edit] External links
- Wisconsin State Capitol Historic Structure Report (1995-2005)
- Information on the State Capitol from the State of Wisconsin
- Wisconsin State Capitol is at coordinates Coordinates:
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