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Admission: Free The Supreme Court Building, constructed
between 1932--1935, was designed by noted architect Cass Gilbert, who is
best known as the architect for the Woolworth Building in New York. The
first session of the Supreme Court was convened on February 1, 1790, but it
took some 145 years for the Supreme Court to find a permanent residence.
During those years the Supreme Court lived a nomadic existence. Initially
meeting in the Royal Exchange Building in New York, the Court established
chambers in Independence Hall and later in City Hall when the national
capitol moved to Philadelphia in 1790. The Court moved again when the
Federal government moved in 1800 to the permanent capital in Washington.
Since no provision had been made for a Supreme Court building, Congress lent
the Court space in the new Capitol building. The Court convened for a short
period in a private home after the British had used Supreme Court documents
to set fire to the Capitol during the War of 1812. Following this episode,
the Court returned to the Capitol and met from 1819 to 1860 in a chamber
that has been restored as the Old Supreme Court Chamber. Then from 1860 to
1935, the Court sat in what is now known as the Old Senate Chamber. Finally
in 1929, former President William Howard Taft, who was Chief Justice from
1921 to 1930, persuaded Congress to end this arrangement and authorize a
permanent home for the Court. http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/wash/dc78.htm http://www.supremecourtus.gov/ http://www.supremecourtus.gov/visiting/visiting.html
http://washington-landmarks.com/national_archives.html
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