To James Madison from Benjamin Henry Latrobe, 15 May 1809
From Benjamin Henry Latrobe
Capitol May 15h. 1809.
Sir,
The expenditure of the office of the Surveyor of the Public buildings prior to the death of the late clerk of the works were as follows:
Salary of the Clerk of the Works, Pr Annum | $1.400 | |
Office and house rent, from 150 to 250, say | 200 | |
A Subordinate clerk appointed at the commencement of the Year 1808 being found absolutely necessary at 1.25 pr Day, say 300 days in each Year |
375 | |
Total | $1.975.00. |
Since the death of Mr Lenthall, I have refrained from nominating a Successor to his office, in order to propose to you the following arrangement, by which a very heavy portion of the duties of the clerk of the Works will fall to my share, but I shall gain the advantage of retaining my Son, who has been educated in the theory, and made Some progress in the practice of the profession, near me; & in return the public will derive the benefit of a considerable Saving in the annual expenduture of the office.
Instead of the clerk of the Works, I propose that Henry S Latrobe be
given to me as an assistant at the Salary of | $600 |
The former clerk continued | 375 |
The office and house rent falls of course | |
975 |
Former establishment | 1.975 |
Proposed do | 975 |
Annual Saving 1809 | $1.000 |
The Salary of my Son should you approve of this arrangement, to commence from the 1st of Jany. 1809—since when he has done the duties contemplated.
From the day of the death of Mr Lenthall to the first of January 1809 his salary and rent would have amounted to $400 an addition to the Wages of the Master Carpenter was made in October last of 50 cts per day, say—150$ per annum and also to the Wages of the foreman of 25 cts or 75$ per annum in all 225.$—which in two years will exceed the saving by the delay of the apointment, by 50$.
Should this arrangement meet your approbation, I solicit that you will be pleased to signify the same to Mr Munroe,1 superintendant of the city of Washington, to whom the expenditures of the public buildings are entrusted. I have the honor to be With the highest respect,2
Letterbook copy (MdHi); Tr (DLC: Latrobe Letterbook). Letterbook copy in Latrobe’s hand.
1. Thomas Munroe had been clerk of the commissioners of the District of Columbia. After the commission expired, he served as superintendent of the city, 1802–16, in which capacity he disbursed the appropriations for Latrobe’s building projects. He was also postmaster of Washington, 1799–1829, a trustee of the Washington public school system from 1805, and president of the National Bank of Washington, 1830–35 (Bryan, History of the National Capital, 1:345–46, 417–18, 479; Fred A. Emery, “Banks and Bankers in the District of Columbia,” Records of the Columbia Historical Society, 46–47 [1944–45]: 283).
2. Below the complimentary closing, someone has written: “signed May 17th. by the President / James Madison.”