Church in the U.S. Capitol
David Barton
Many people are surprised to learn that the United States
Capitol regularly served as a church building; a practice that
began even before Congress officially moved into the building
and lasted until well after the Civil War. Below is a brief
history of the Capitol's use as a church, and some of the
prominent individuals who attended services there.
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CAPITOL IN 1800
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The cornerstone of the Capitol was laid by President
George Washington
in 1793., but it was not until the end of 1800 that Congress
actually moved into the building. According to the congressional
records for late November of 1800, Congress spent the first few
weeks organizing the Capitol rooms, committees, locations, etc.
Then, on December 4, 1800, Congress approved the use of the
Capitol building as a church building.
1
The approval of the Capitol for church was given by both the
House and the Senate, with House approval being given by Speaker
of the House, Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg, and Senate approval
being given by the President of the Senate, Thomas Jefferson.
Interestingly, Jefferson's approval came while he was still
officially the Vice- President but after he had just been
elected President.
Significantly, the Capitol building had been used as a church
even for years before it was occupied by Congress.
The cornerstone for the Capitol had been laid on September 18,
1793; two years later while still under construction, the July
2, 1795, Federal Orrery newspaper of Boston reported:
City of Washington, June 19. It is with much pleasure that we
discover the rising consequence of our infant city. Public
worship is now regularly administered at the Capitol, every
Sunday morning, at 11 o'clock by the Reverend Mr. Ralph.
2
The reason for the original use of the Capitol as a church might
initially be explained by the fact that there were no churches
in the city at that time. Even a decade later in 1803, U. S.
Senator John Quincy Adams confirmed: "There is no church of any
denomination in this city."
3 The absence of churches in Washington
eventually changed, however. As one Washington citizen reported:
"For several years after the seat of government was fixed at
Washington, there were but two small [wooden] churches. . . .
Now, in 1837 there are 22 churches of brick or stone."
4 Yet, even after churches began
proliferating across the city, religious services still
continued at the Capitol until well after the Civil War and
Reconstruction.
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Jefferson attended church at the Capitol while he was Vice
President
5 and also throughout his presidency.
The first Capitol church service that Jefferson attended as
President was a service preached by Jefferson's friend, the Rev.
John Leland, on January 3, 1802.
6 Significantly, Jefferson attended that
Capitol church service just two days after he penned his famous
letter
containing the "wall of
separation between church and state"
metaphor.
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MANASSEH CUTLER
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U. S. Rep. Manasseh Cutler, who also attended church at the
Capitol, recorded in his own diary that "He [Jefferson] and his
family have constantly attended public worship in the Hall."
7 Mary Bayard Smith, another attendee at
the Capitol services, confirmed: "Mr. Jefferson, during his
whole administration, was a most regular attendant."
8 She noted that Jefferson even had a
designated seat at the Capitol church: "The seat he chose the
first Sabbath, and the adjoining one (which his private
secretary occupied), were ever afterwards by the courtesy of the
congregation, left for him and his secretary."
9 Jefferson was so committed to those
services that he would not even allow inclement weather to
dissuade him; as Rep. Cutler noted: "It was very rainy, but his
[Jefferson's] ardent zeal brought him through the rain and on
horseback to the Hall."
10 Other diary entries confirm
Jefferson's attendance in spite of bad weather.
11
In addition to Mary Bayard Smith and Congressman Manasseh
Cutler, others kept diaries of the weekly Capitol church
services "" including Congressman Abijah Bigelow and statesman
John Quincy Adams. (Adams served in Washington first as a
Senator, then a President, and then as a Representative; and his
extensive diaries describe the numerous church services he
attended at the Capitol across a span of decades.) Typical of
Adams' diary entries while a U. S.
Senator under President Jefferson were these:
Attended public service at the Capitol where Mr. Rattoon, an
Episcopalian clergyman from Baltimore, preached a sermon.
12
[R]eligious service is usually performed on Sundays at the
Treasury office and at the Capitol. I went both forenoon and
afternoon to the Treasury.
13
Jefferson was not the only President to attend church at the
Capitol. His successor,
James Madison,
also attended church at the Capitol.
14 However, there was a difference in
the way the two arrived for services. Observers noted that
Jefferson arrived at church on horseback
15 (it was 1.6 miles from the White
House to the Capitol). However, Madison arrived for church in a
coach and four. In fact, British diplomat Augustus Foster, who
attended services at the Capitol, gave an eloquent description
of President Madison arriving at the Capitol for church in a
carriage drawn by four white horses.
From Jefferson through
Abraham Lincoln,
many presidents attended church at the Capitol; and it was
common practice for Members of Congress to attend those
services. For example, in his diary entry of January 9, 1803,
Congressman Cutler noted: "Attended in the morning at the
Capitol. . . . Very full assembly. Many of the Members present."
16 The church was often full "so
crowded, in fact, one attendee reported that since "the floor of
the House offered insufficient space, the platform behind the
Speaker's chair, and every spot where a chair could be wedged
in" was filled.
17 U. S. Representative John Quincy
Adams (although noting that occasionally the "House was full,
but not crowded"
18) also commented numerous times on the
overly-crowded conditions at the Capitol church. In his diary
entry for February 28, 1841, he noted: "I rode with my wife,
Elizabeth C. Adams, and Mary, to the Capitol, where the Hall of
the House of Representatives was so excessively crowded that it
was with extreme difficulty that we were enabled to obtain
seats."
19 Why did so many Members attend Divine
service in the Hall of the House? Adams explained why he
attended: "I consider it as one of my public duties- as a
representative of the people- to give my attendance every Sunday
morning when Divine service is performed in the Hall."
20
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Interestingly, the Marine Band participated in the early Capitol
church services. According to Margaret Bayard Smith, who
regularly attended services at the Capitol, the band, clad in
their scarlet uniforms, made a "dazzling appearance" as they
played from the gallery, providing instrumental accompaniment
for the singing.
21 The band, however, seemed too
ostentatious for the services and "the attendance of the
marine-band was soon discontinued."
22
From 1800 to 1801, the services were held in the north wing;
from 1801 to 1804, they were held in the "oven" in the south
wing, and then from 1804 to 1807, they were again held in the
north wing. From 1807 to 1857, services were held in what is now
Statuary Hall. By 1857 when the House moved into its new home in
the extension, some 2,000 persons a week were attending services
in the Hall of the House.
23 Significantly, even though the U. S.
Congress began meeting in the extension on Wednesday, December
16, 1857, the first official use of the House Chamber had
occurred three days earlier, when "on December 13, 1857, the
Rev. Dr. George Cummins preached before a crowd of 2,000
worshipers in the first public use of the chamber. Soon
thereafter, the committee recommended that the House convene in
the new Hall on Wednesday, December 16, 1857."
24 However, regardless of the part of
the building in which the church met, the rostrum of the Speaker
of the House was used as the preacher's pulpit; and Congress
purchased the hymnals used in the service.
The church services in the Hall of the House were
interdenominational, overseen by the chaplains appointed by the
House and Senate; sermons were preached by the chaplains on a
rotating basis, or by visiting ministers approved by the Speaker
of the House. As Margaret Bayard Smith, confirmed: "Not only the
chaplains, but the most distinguished clergymen who visited the
city, preached in the Capitol"
25 and "clergymen, who during the
session of Congress visited the city, were invited by the
chaplains to preach."
26
In addition to the non-denominational service held in the Hall
of the House, several individual churches (such as Capitol Hill
Presbyterian, the Unitarian Church of Washington, First
Congregational Church, First Presbyterian Church, etc.) met in
the Capitol each week for their own services; there could be up
to four different church services at the Capitol each Sunday.
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IN 1867, OVER 2,000 PER WEEK ATTENDED CHURCH SERVICES AT
THE CAPITOL
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The Library of Congress provides an account of one of those
churches that met weekly at the Capitol: "Charles Boynton
(1806-1883) was in 1867 Chaplain of the House of Representatives
and organizing pastor of the First Congregational Church in
Washington, which was trying at that time to build its own
sanctuary. In the meantime, the church, as Boynton informed
potential donors, was holding services- ˜at the Hall of
Representatives' where- ˜the audience is the largest in town. .
. . nearly 2000 assembled every Sabbath' for services, making
the congregation in the House the ˜largest Protestant Sabbath
audience then in the United States.' The First Congregational
Church met in the House from 1865 to 1868."
27
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OLD SUPREME COURT CHAMBER
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With so many services occurring, the Hall of the House was not
the only location in the Capitol where church services were
conducted. John Quincy Adams, in his February 2, 1806, diary
entry, describes an overflow service held in the Supreme Court
Chamber,
28 and Congressman Manasseh Cutler
describes a similar service in 1804.
29 (At that time, the Supreme Court
Chamber was located on the first floor of the Capitol.) Services
were also held in the Senate Chamber as well as on the first
floor of the south wing.
Church In The Capitol Milestones
*
1806. On January 12, 1806, Dorothy Ripley (1767-1832) became the
first woman to preach before the House. One female attendee had
noted: "Preachers of every sect and denomination of Christians
were there admitted- Catholics, Unitarians, Quakers, with every
intervening diversity of sect. Even women were allowed to
display their pulpit eloquence in this national Hall."
30 In attendance at that service were
President Thomas Jefferson and Vice President Aaron Burr. Ripley
conducted the lengthy service in a fervent, evangelical,
camp-meeting style.
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JOHN ENGLAND
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*
1826. On January 8, 1826, Bishop John England (1786-1842) of
Charleston, South Carolina (Bishop over North and South Carolina
and Georgia) became the first Catholic to preach in the House of
Representatives. Of that service, President John Quincy Adams (a
regular attendee of church services in the Capitol) noted:
Walked to the Capitol and heard the Bishop of Charleston, [John]
England -" an Irishman. He read a few prayers and then delivered
an extemporaneous discourse of nearly two hours' duration. . . .
He closed by reading an admirable prayer. He came and spoke to
me after the service and said he would call and take leave of me
tomorrow. The house was overflowing, and it was with great
difficulty that I obtained a seat.
31
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HARRIET LIVERMORE
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*
1827. In January 1827, Harriet Livermore (1788-1868) became the
second woman to preach in the House of Representatives. (Three
of her immediate family members: " her father, grandfather, and
uncle" had been Members of Congress. Her grandfather, Samuel
Livermore, was a Member of the first federal Congress and a
framer of the Bill of Rights; her uncle was a Member under
Presidents Thomas Jefferson and James Madison; her father was a
Member under President James Monroe.) The service in which she
preached was not only attended by President John Quincy Adams
but was also filled with Members of Congress as well as the
inquisitive from the city. As Margaret Bayard Smith noted,
"curiosity rather than piety attracted throngs on such
occasions."
32 Livermore spoke for an hour and a
half, resulting in mixed reactions; some praised her and were
even moved to tears by her preaching, some dismissed her.
Harriet Livermore preached in the Capitol on four different
occasions, each attended by a different President.
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HENRY H. GARNET AND HIS DISCOURSE
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*
1865. On February 12, 1865, Henry Highland Garnet (1815- 1882)
became the first African American to speak in Congress. Two
weeks earlier, on January 31, 1865, Congress had passed the
Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery, and Garnet was invited
to preach a sermon in Congress to commemorate that event. In his
sermon, Garnet described his beginnings: 'I was born among the
cherished institutions of slavery. My earliest recollections of
parents, friends, and the home of my childhood are clouded with
its wrongs. The first sight that met my eyes was my Christian
mother enslaved."
33 His family escaped to the North; he
became a minister, abolitionist, temperance leader, and
political activist. He recruited black regiments during the
Civil War and served as chaplain to the black troops of New
York. In 1864, he became the pastor of the Fifteenth Street
Presbyterian Church in Washington, D. C. (where he served at the
time of this sermon). He later became president of Avery College
and was made Minister to Liberia by President Ulysses S. Grant.
(For
more information on this topic please see "Religion and the
Founding of the American Republic:
Religion and the Federal Government (Part 2)"
on the Library of Congress website.)
NOTES
[1]
Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States
(Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1853), p. 797, Sixth Congress,
December 4, 1800.
[2]
Federal Orrery, Boston, July 2, 1795, p. 2.
[3]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Charles
Francis Adams, editor (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott and
Company, 1874), Vol. I, p. 268, October 30, 1803.
[4]
Mrs. Samuel Harrison Smith (Margaret Bayard), The First Forty
Years of Washington Society, Galliard Hunt, editor (New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1906), p. 16.
[5]
Bishop Claggett's (Episcopal Bishop of Maryland) letter of
February 18, 1801, reveals that, as vice- President, Jefferson
went to church services in the House. Available in the Maryland
Diocesan Archives.
[6]
William Parker Cutler and Julia Perkins Cutler, Life,
Journal, and Correspondence of Rev. Manasseh Cutler
(Cincinnati: Colin Robert Clarke & Co., 1888), Vol. II, p. 66,
letter to Joseph Torrey, January 4, 1802. Cutler meant that
Jefferson attended church on January 3, 1802, for the first time
as President. Bishop Claggett's letter of February 18, 1801,
already revealed that as Vice-President, Jefferson went to
church services in the House.
[7]
Cutler and Cutler, Life, Journal, and Correspondence,
Vol. II, p. 119, in a letter to Dr. Joseph Torrey on January 3,
1803; see also his entry of December 12, 1802 (Vol. II, p. 113).
[8]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 13.
[9]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 13.
[10]
Cutler and Cutler, Life, Journal, and Correspondence,
Vol. II, p. 119, in a letter to Dr. Joseph Torrey on January 3,
1803; see also his entry of December 26, 1802 (Vol. II, p. 114).
[11]
Cutler and Cutler, Life, Journal, and Correspondence,
Vol. II, p. 114, December 26, 1802.
[12]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. I, p. 268, October 30,
1803.
[13]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. I, p. 265, October 23,
1803.
[14]
Abijah Bigelow to Hannah Bigleow, December 28, 1812. "Letters of
Abijah Bigleow, Member of Congress, to his Wife,"
Proceedings, 1810-1815, American Antiquarian Society (1930),
p. 168.
[15]
See, for example, Cutler and Cutler, Life, Journal, and
Correspondence, Vol. II, p. 119, from a letter to Dr. Joseph
Torrey on January 3, 1803.
[16]
Cutler and Cutler, Life, Journal, and Correspondence,
Vol. II, p. 116, January 9, 1803.
[17]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 14.
[18]
See, for example, John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. VII,
pp. 437-438, February 17, 1828; Vol. XI, pp. 160-161, May 22,
1842; and others.
[19]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. X, p. 434, February 28,
1841.
[20]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. XI, p. 169, June 5,
1842.
[21]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 14.
[22]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 16.
[23]
James Hutson (Chief of the Manuscript Division of the Library of
Congress), Religion and the Founding of the American Republic
(Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1998), p. 91.
[24]
William C. Allen (Architectural Historian of the Capitol), A
History of the United States Capitol, A Chronicle of Design,
Construction, and Politics (Washington, D. C.: Government
Printing Office, 2001), p. 271.
[25]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 14.
[26]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 15.
[27]
Fundraising brochure, Charles B. Boynton. Washington, D.C.:
November 1, 1867, Rare Book and Special Collections Division,
Library of Congress; available at Library of Congress at
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel06-2.html.
[28]
Hutson, Religion and the Founding of the American Republic,
p. 90.
[29]
From the Library of Congress, at
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel06-2.html.
[30]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 15.
[31]
John Quincy Adams, Memoirs, Vol. VII, p. 102, January 8,
1826.
[32]
Smith, The First Forty Years, p. 15.
[33]
Henry Highland Garnet, Memorial Discourse (Philadelphia:
Joseph M. Wilson, 1865), p. 73.
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