Shortly after the end of the 1875 Indiana legislative
session, a state senator, Andrew J. Boone, died at his home in Lebanon,
Indiana. The death of this one lawmaker was of more than usual concern to his
constituents and fellow legislators because some argued that Boone’s fatal
illness was due to the structure where state’s laws were being made—the Indiana State Capitol.
The original Indiana Statehouse, constructed in 1830 at a
cost of approximately $60,000, had deteriorated enough over the years that one
representative, Richard R. Stephenson of Hamilton County, likened the building
to the “Black Hole of Calcutta.”
A New State House Committee, appointed by the general
assembly in 1873, had warned lawmakers that the building was “totally inadequate
to the public service.” Something had to be done before more legislators were
felled by the structure’s leaky roof, poor ventilation, and crumbling walls.
On March 14, 1877, the Indiana General Assembly finally
acted to rectify the situation, approving an act authorizing the construction
of a new statehouse at a cost not to exceed $2 million. Despite losing the
original architect for the project, Edwin May, who died only a few years after
work had started, construction on the new state capitol, an example of the
Renaissance Revival style, was completed on October 2, 1888, at a total expense
of $1,980,969, well within the state’s original budget. The statehouse, with
architecture reminiscent of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., remains the
seat of Indiana’s government, serving as home to the House of Representatives,
Senate, Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, and a host of state agencies and
offices. Thanks to an approximately $11 million restoration projected completed
in time for the building’s 1998 centennial, today’s Hoosiers can walk through
its skylighted, marble-topped corridors and marvel at the structure’s classic
features.
Of course, as with many government-sponsored projects,
erecting such a stately edifice took plenty of time and generated a great deal
of paperwork. Overseeing the building of the new statehouse in 1877 was a
five-member Board of State House Commissioners, which consisted of the governor
and two members of each political party. The commission engaged the services of
an architect, civil engineer, and builder to examine four designs for the new
capitol that had been received by the state prior to March 1877. They were to
judge if the designs could be completed according to plans and specifications
within the $2 million limit, whether dangers from fire were sufficiently
guarded against, if ample provisions were made for safely heating the building,
and if the materials of the superstructure were “in kind and quality such as to
insure stability and permanence.”
All the plans were rejected for not meeting the requirements
imposed by the commissioners. As well as ridding itself of old plans, the board
had to clean its own house, firing its secretary, W. C. Tarkington, in January
1878 because he attempted to influence the selection of a design for which he
would receive money.
Hoping to spark some ideas, the commissioners visited
Springfield, Peoria, and Chicago, Illinois; Hartford, Connecticut; Lansing,
Michigan; Washington, D.C.; and Cincinnati, Ohio, to examine their public
buildings. Thus armed, the commissioners held an open competition for the statehouse
design and received twenty-four plans. On April 11, 1878, the board accepted
the design submitted by May, a Boston native who had come to Indiana in 1840
and was known for his work on the Northern Indiana Prison at Michigan City and
county courthouses in Allen, Decatur, Hamilton, and Knox Counties. May called
his plans for the capitol “Lucidus Ordo,” Latin for “a clear arrangement.” For
his work, May was to receive 2 percent of the building’s cost as his fee.
Although the project was delayed for a bit due to lawsuits brought
by architects whose designs failed to win the competition, construction bids
were finally opened by the commissioners on August 15, 1878. The contract was
awarded to Kanmacher and Denig of Chicago, and work began on the new building
that fall. The cornerstone, a ten-ton block of Indiana limestone inscribed with
“A.D. 1880,” was laid in ceremonies on September 28, 1880. Along with a keynote
address by Governor Thomas Hendricks, poet Sarah Bolton read a piece she had
written for the occasion. The public took such a keen interest in the project
that there were several accidents at the site, as well as incidents of people
damaging materials and interfering with work. To halt the problems, the board
ordered the statehouse grounds close to the public.
A bigger problem had occurred in February 1880 when May, who
was in Jacksonville, Florida, recuperating from an illness, died. To keep the
project running smoothly, the commissioners appointed Adolph Scherrer, who had
been working by May’s side for the past seven years, as supervising architect
for the new statehouse. The commissioners also had to find a new contractor
when, in 1883, Kanmacher and Denig had trouble with its Chicago financier. New
bids were solicited for the building, and the commissioners awarded the
contract to Elias F. Gobel and Columbus Cummings of Chicago.
The Indiana General Assembly held its first session in the
new statehouse on January 6, 1887, but work continued at the site until
September 1888. The Board of State House Commissioners concluded its work and
closed its accounts on October 2, 1888.
Through the years, the statehouse underwent extensive
renovations to bring it up to modern conditions. During that time, much of the
building’s original character was lost. In 1986 the legislature approved
funding to return the building to its 1888 appearance in time for its
centennial. The restoration, under the direction of Indianapolis’s Cooler
Group, Inc., included stripping, painting, and decorating with the original
1886 designs approximately four acres of plaster walls and ceilings; using
approximately 1,500 gallons of paint to re-create the original plans and
refinish the area above the rotunda; cleaning approximately 124,500 square feet
of interior marble and limestone; and removing 2,920 two-feet-square pieces of
marble floor so that new electrical wiring could be installed.
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