Harrisburg has been the Capital city of Pennsylvania since October 1812. In 1822, the impressive brick Capitol building was completed for $200,000. As of 2011, the city's population made it the ninth-largest city in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg is also the county seat of Dauphin County and lies on the east bank of the Susquehanna River.
Harrisburg played a notable role in American history during the Westward Migration, the American Civil War, and the Industrial Revolution. During part of the 19th century, the building of the Pennsylvania Canal and later the railroad allowed Harrisburg to become one of the most industrialized cities in the Northeastern United States.
Harrisburg hosts "The Pennsylvania Farm Show", the largest free indoor agriculture exposition in the United States.
Pennsylvania’s Capitol is, first and foremost, a public building belonging to the citizens of the Commonwealth. It is also a priceless architectural and artistic treasure, a majestic symbol of history and power, and an icon of democracy and freedom.
When President Theodore Roosevelt attended the dedication of the building on October 4, 1906, he said, “This is the handsomest building I ever saw.” The Capitol was designed in the American Renaissance style by Philadelphia architect Joseph Huston (1866-1940), who envisioned the building as a “Palace of Art.”
Built and furnished at a cost of $13 million, the Capitol features paintings, stained glass and furnishings by some of the best artisans of the day. The building incorporates various Renaissance designs in some of its largest rooms: Italian in the House Chamber, French in the Senate Chamber, and English in the Governor’s Reception Room. It also reflects Greek, Roman and Victorian influences in its art and ornamentation. Throughout the building, Huston blended the various styles with motifs featuring Pennsylvania’s achievements in labor, industry and history, making the Capitol uniquely American. Its five-story exterior is faced with handsome Vermont granite, and the roof is composed of green glazed terra cotta tile.
The Capitol’s centerpiece is a spectacular 272-foot, 52 million-pound dome inspired by Michelangelo’s design for St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Following its completion, the building was the tallest structure between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh for 80 years. While the building has been modernized over time, efforts to blend form and function continue today, and a special Capitol Preservation Committee ensures that as the building evolves, the artistic elements are never lost. The seat of Pennsylvania’s government continues to inspire visitors with its wealth of art, its outstanding architecture, and its strong connection to the vision of the Commonwealth’s founder, William Penn, who sought to establish a land that would be governed by just laws and tolerant of all religious faiths.
THROUGHOUT THE CAPITOL BUILDING, HUSTON BLENDED THE VARIOUS STYLES WITH MOTIFS FEATURING PENNSYLVANIA'S ACHIEVEMENTS IN LABOR, INDUSTRY AND HISTORY, MAKING THE CAPITOL UNIQUELY AMERICAN....IT'S FIVE-STORY EXTERIOR IS FACED WITH WHAT ????......AND THE ROOF IS COMPOSED OF WHAT ????
VERMONT GRANITE...GREEN-GLAZED TERRA COTTA TILE = N 40 46.803 W 078 55.317
SHOHOLA BLUE STONE...BLACK-GLAZED TERRA COTTA TILE = N 40 48.025 W 078 54.900
CONGRATULATIONS TO schmuck&puttz FOR THE FTF