Photo, Print, Drawing Arlington National Cemetery, Ord-Weitzel Gate, Arlington, Arlington County, VA North Gateway
About this Item
Title
- Arlington National Cemetery, Ord-Weitzel Gate, Arlington, Arlington County, VA
Other Title
- North Gateway
Names
- Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
- Hadfield, George
- Hoban, James
- Meigs, Montgomery C.
- Casey, Thomas Lincoln
- Smithmeyer, John L.
- Charles A. Schneider & Son
- Rockwell, A. F.
- Batchelder
- Schara, Mark, project manager
- Price, Virginia Barrett, transmitter
- Price, Virginia Barrett, historian
- Davidson, Paul, field team
- Pierce, Ryan, field team
- Hill, Jobie, field team
- Rosenthal, James W., photographer
- Lowe, Jet, photographer
- Boucher, Jack E., photographer
- Ortiz, Jarob J., photographer
- McPartland, Mary, transmitter
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 1933
Headings
- - gates
- - moving of structures
- - building deterioration
- - national cemeteries
- - Virginia--Arlington County--Arlington
Latitude / Longitude
- 38.88745,-77.067595
Notes
- - Significance: After the August 1814 fire, architect James Hoban was responsible for restoring the President's Mansion and nearby Executive Department office buildings. He used masons from Scotland to do the stonework. Several years later, Hoban employed the same stonemasons to carve the ornamental, Ionic porticoes gracing the north elevation of the State Department and War Department buildings. In 1879, Montgomery C. Meigs initiated the transfer of the six columns from the north portico of the War Department building to Arlington National Cemetery for the construction of the Sheridan and Ord-Weitzel gateways. He did so to "[preserve] these historic columns, among which have moved the chief soldiers of the Army and the chiefs of the War Department during the last sixty years, and they have [since] furnished very handsome gates to the principal cemetery [of the United States]." As formal points of entry into the park-like cemetery, the gateways represented the influence of neoclassicism in federal America and its resurgence as a stylistic revival late in the nineteenth century.
- - Survey number: HABS VA-1348-C
- - Building/structure dates: 1818- 1820 Initial Construction
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1879 Subsequent Work
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1971 Demolished
- - Building/structure dates: 2022 Subsequent Work
- - National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 14000146
Medium
- Photo(s): 30
- Measured Drawing(s): 1
- Data Page(s): 17
- Photo Caption Page(s): 6
Call Number/Physical Location
- HABS VA,7-ARL,11C-
Source Collection
- Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- va1846
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://aj.sunback.homes/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
- image
Part of
Format
Contributor
- Batchelder
- Boucher, Jack E.
- Casey, Thomas Lincoln
- Charles A. Schneider & Son
- Davidson, Paul
- Hadfield, George
- Hill, Jobie
- Historic American Buildings Survey
- Hoban, James
- Lowe, Jet
- McPartland, Mary
- Meigs, Montgomery C.
- Ortiz, Jarob J.
- Pierce, Ryan
- Price, Virginia Barrett
- Rockwell, A. F.
- Rosenthal, James W.
- Schara, Mark
- Smithmeyer, John L.