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The
cupola-crowned Royal Exchange in New York City housed
the first meeting of the Supreme Court on February 1,
1790, when New York was the nations temporary capital.
Justices deliberated on the second floor of the gambrel-roofed
hall. A brick arcade shades the ground floor, an open
air market where Broad and Waters Streets intersect in
what is now the financial district. The scene at the Courts
scheduled opening was uncommonly crouded,
according to the New York Daily Advertiser. Only
three of the six justices were present, however, so the
court was adjourned until the following day. Once a quorum
had assembled, the Justices' first order of business was
to appoint a court crier and a clerk, and to admit lawyers
to the bar. The Court heard no cases during its first
term. After two sessions in New York (February 1-10, and
August 2-3, 1790), the Court reconvened in Philadelphia,
joining the rest of the federal government there when
it became the new national capitol. |
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Philadelphias
Independence Hall sheltered the Justices for two days
in 1791 - all they needed for their February term since
they still had no cases to decide. In August they met
in Old City Hall, which served them for a decade. The
Justices met in the east wing of City Hall, which also
housed the state and municipal courts, while Congress
met in the west wing. |
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A
1789 Act of Congress, requiring Supreme Court Justices
to preside twice a year over circuit courts scattered
throughout the Union, meant months of ragged travel. Circuits
press hard on us all, moaned Chief Justice John
Jay. After jolting in a stagecoach many hours daily over
savage roads of ruts and rocks or helping lift the stagecoach
from quagmires of mud, the Justices passed restless nights
in crowded way stations. Battered and exhausted by the
rigors of travel, Justices often arrived at the circuit
courts too late or too sick to hold a session. Still,
their visits served to acquaint the people with the new
judiciary branch. |
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When
the seat of the federal government was transferred permanently
to Washington, D.C., in 1800, no provision was made for
housing for the Supreme Court. Less than two weeks before
the Court was to convene, Congress resolved to let the
Court use a room in the Capitol. The Court moved into
the Old North Wing (image above), meeting in various rooms
from February 1810 to December 1860. During the early
years when construction displaced the Justices, they had
to meet in nearby homes or taverns. Eventually the Court
occupied a courtroom that had been especially designed
for it in the basement beneath the new Senate chamber.
When the Court moved upstairs in 1861, the old courtroom
became the law library for both Congress and the Court,
seen here in this c. 1895 photograph. The Supreme Court
was housed in what is now called the restored Old Senate
Chamber from 1861 to 1935. Although the chamber was more
spacious and dignified than the basement one, there was
no dining room (the Justices lunched in the robing room),
and no individual office space for the Justices and their
staff (the Justices often worked at home). |
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The Old Courtroom, located in the Capitol, c. 1890 ~
Architect of the Capitol |

The Old Senate Chamber, located in the Capitol ~
Architect
of the Capitol
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Earliest known photograph of theU.S. Capitol, 1846 ~
Architect of the Capitol |
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Chief
Justice William Howard Taft (third from left) and the
Associate Justices admired architect Cass Gilberts
model for a new Supreme Court building in 1929. Taft had
begun lobbying for a separate building as early as 1912,
and redoubled his efforts when he became Chief Justice
in 1921. Taft not only persuaded Congress to fund the
nearly $10 million building, giving the Court its own
home for the first time, but he also oversaw its planning
and initial construction. When the cornerstone was laid
in 1932, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes said of Taft,
who had died two years before: This building is
the result of his intelligent persistence. To a
country sunk deep in the Great Depression, Chief Justice
Hughes added: The Republic endures and this is the
symbol of its faith.
Photo
credit: Supreme Court of the United States
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Gleaming
bone white and austere among its distinguished neighbors
on Capitol Hill, its stately façade evoking the
long-enduring glory of ancient Rome, the Supreme Court
Building imposes a mood of decorum. The aura of formality
is no accident.
When architect Cass Gilbert submitted his design in May,
1929, he planned a building of dignity and importance
suitable
for the permanent home of the Supreme Court
of the United States. Gilbert has been chosen by
a commission led by Chief Justice William Howard Taft.
Gilberts associates were Cass Gilbert, Jr., and
John R. Rockart, with executive supervision by David Lynn,
Architect of the Capitol.
Into the Building the architects put about three million
dollars worth of marble. For the exterior walls
alone a thousand freight car loads of flawless stone come
from Vermontalong with a 250-ton slab specifically
cut for sculptor James E. Frasers allegorical figures
at the entrance.
Georgia marble was chosen for the outer walls of four
courtyards that divide the building into a cross-shaped
center core and a gallery of offices and corridors. Nearly
square, the resulting structure is 92 feet high and stretches
385 feet on its longest side. The interior walls are faced
with marble quarried in Alabama.
Opposite the formal entrance, at the east end of the aptly
named Great Hall, is the Court Chamber proper82
by 91 feet, with a coffered ceiling 44 feet high. Gilbert
walled this imposing room with Ivory Vein marble from
Spain. For the 24 massive columns he insisted on marble
of a particularly delicate tint, called light Siena, from
the Old Convent quarry in the Italian province of Liguria.
From Italy the rough stone went to a firm of marble finishers
in Knoxville, Tennessee, who dressed and honed the blocks
into 72 slightly tapered cylinders, 11 feet in circumference
at the widest. Three sections went into each 30-foot column,
to be topped by an Ionic capital.
Darker marble from Italy and Africa gives color to the
floor. Against the marble the room gains richness from
its fittings: tones of red in carpet and upholstery and
heavy draperies, highly polished luster in solid Honduras
mahogany, gleaming bronze latticework in gates to the
side corridors. And in 1973, new lighting, new paint,
and new gilding restored the ornamented ceiling to a brilliance
time had since dimmed since its installation nearly 40
years before.
Like Taft, Gilbert did not live to see his dream building
completed. He died in 1934. The Court held its first session
in the new building on October 7, 1935.
Not everyone liked the new building. Associate Justice
Harlan Fiske Stone, who later became Chief Justice, at
first called it almost bombastically pretentious
wholly
inappropriate for a quiet group of old boys such as the
Supreme Court. One of the old boys reportedly said
that he and his brethren would be nine black beetles
in the Temple of Karnak. Anotherundoubtedly
thinking of exotic pomp rather than domestic party symbolsremarked
that the Justices ought to enter it riding on elephants.
Such comments suggest how different men have regarded
their own remarkable positions of power, prestige and
responsibility in the life of the Nation. Off the bench
their successors show a similar concernhow to maintain
a sense of human perspective in the marble temple.
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