Posted on Monday, October 13, 2025
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by The Association of Mature American Citizens
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8 Comments
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On October 13, 1792, a defining moment in the history of the young United States unfolded: the cornerstone for what would become the White House was ceremonially laid, marking the formal beginning of the nation’s executive mansion.
In the years following the Revolution, the new nation was striving not just for political stability but for symbolic permanence. With the Residence Act of 1790, Congress authorized the creation of a federal capital along the Potomac River, on land ceded by Maryland and Virginia, and work began in 1791 on what would become Washington, D.C. To house the country’s chief executive, a design competition was held, and the Irish–born architect James Hoban was selected to design the presidential residence in a neoclassical style.
The October 13 ceremony itself was steeped in symbolic and fraternal overtones: led by Master Mason Pedro Casanave, the event was carried out with the customary Masonic rites. Marching lodges processed from Georgetown to the prepared site, and beneath the stone was placed a brass plate inscribed:
“This first stone of the President’s House was laid the 12th day of October 1792, and in the 17th Year of the Independence of the United States of America.”
From that ceremonial moment onward, the physical and symbolic foundations of the White House were laid. In its early construction, enslaved and free African Americans and European immigrant laborers all played a role—quarrying, masonry, carpentry, plastering, and more. The exterior stone came from quarries along Aquia Creek in Virginia, and the white-gray Virginia freestone contrasted sharply with the red brick buildings of the surrounding new capital.
By November 1800, President John Adams became the first to occupy the completed executive mansion. Over the decades that followed, the building bore witness to trials and transformations: burned during the War of 1812 (when British forces set fire to both the White House and U.S. Capitol), rebuilt and enlarged under Hoban’s guidance, and repainted its charred stone walls in stark white—a visual mark that led to its enduring name.
Through expansions, restorations, and political upheavals, the White House has remained more than just a residence. It stands today as a potent symbol of the U.S. presidency, of continuity and change, of the aspirations—and contradictions—of American history. In commemorating the laying of its cornerstone on October 13, 1792, we are reminded not just of bricks and mortar, but of the ambitions, labor, and vision that undergird that iconic structure.
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