Bob Arnebeck has been writing about Washington history for fifteen years. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, Leslie Kuter, and their son, Ottoleo.
To judge from the colorful, hugely entertaining, irreverent
history, it's a wonder Washington, D.C., got built at all. George
Washington welcomed Congress's decisions to move from Philadelphia
to the Potomac, but just before his death in 1799, the first
president vented his spleen at nine years of inept financing,
lawsuits, builders' inflated costs, real estate sharks' greed and
other roadblocks that impeded the capital's developement. Obstinate
French architect Pierre Charles L'Enfant jockeyed for total control
of the city's construction, spreading confusion in his wake. His
successor, Samuel Blodget, an ingratiating Bostonian, frittered
away seven years trying to salvage a $350,000 lottery he organized
to finance an unfinished hotel. Land speculator Thomas Jefferson,
charmed by the capital's rural character, cultivated more botanists
than he did investors in the city. Arnebeck draws on reams of
previously untapped archival material for this exhaustive
year-by-year chronicle.
*Publishers Weekly*
To judge from this colorful, hugely entertaining, irreverent history, it's a wonder Washington, D.C., got built at all. George Washington welcomed Congress's decision to move from Philadelphia to the Potomac, but just before his death in 1799, the first president vented his spleen at nine years of inept financing, lawsuits, builders' inflated costs, real estate sharks' greed and other roadblocks that impeded the capital's develoment. Obstinate French architect Pierre Charles L'Enfant jockeyed for total control of the city's construction, spreading confusion in his wake. His successor, Samuel Blodget, an ingratiating Bostonian, frittered away seven years trying to salvage a $350,000 lottery he organized to finance an unfinished hotel. Land speculator Thomas Jefferson, charmed by the capital's rural character, cultivated more botanists than he did investors in the city. Arnebeck ( Proust's Last Beer: A History of Curious Demises ) draws on reams of previously untapped archival material for this exhaustive year-by-year chronicle. (Jan.)
To judge from the colorful, hugely entertaining, irreverent history, it's a wonder Washington, D.C., got built at all. George Washington welcomed Congress's decisions to move from Philadelphia to the Potomac, but just before his death in 1799, the first president vented his spleen at nine years of inept financing, lawsuits, builders' inflated costs, real estate sharks' greed and other roadblocks that impeded the capital's developement. Obstinate French architect Pierre Charles L'Enfant jockeyed for total control of the city's construction, spreading confusion in his wake. His successor, Samuel Blodget, an ingratiating Bostonian, frittered away seven years trying to salvage a $350,000 lottery he organized to finance an unfinished hotel. Land speculator Thomas Jefferson, charmed by the capital's rural character, cultivated more botanists than he did investors in the city. Arnebeck draws on reams of previously untapped archival material for this exhaustive year-by-year chronicle. * Publishers Weekly *
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