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Moving Destinations in District of Columbia
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Moving - Washington, District of Columbia
Our Nation's Capital City is
Washington, DC. The rules of government all flow from
here. Are you thinking about relocating to the fine city
of Washington, DC? Let Movers USA, a local full service
moving company, be your moving company of choice. We can
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in the Washington, DC, area today.
You'll enjoy this brief history of our Capital City,
Washington, DC.
A Brief History of Washington, DC
The location of the nation's capital was a source of
contention from the beginning. Just as cities now vie for
professional athletic teams or maybe the Olympics, in the
1780s the great prize among the states was the national
capital.
Philadelphia, the wartime capital, was the leading
contender. The powerful Virginia delegation wanted a
location on the Potomac, with numerous other alternatives
suggested.
Characteristically, the solution was
found in a compromise. Alexander Hamilton was floating a
scheme for the new Federal government to assume the war
debts of the individual states. Having hosted most of the
war, northern states had larger debts than their southern
cousins. Southern states were understandably reluctant to
take on debts they didn't see as their own. The compromise
came with the southern states agreeing to assume the debts,
and the northern delegations allowing a capital in the
south.
The city was of course named Washington, and placed in a
federal District of Columbia . The Constitution specifies a
10 mile square parcel, placed under direct control of the
Congress. George Washington selected the site, a few miles
up river from his home at Mt. Vernon.
The French born Pierre L'Enfant was chosen to design the new
city . The Baroque layout he adopted was primarily a grid
system, overlaid with diagonal streets that converge to form
spokes at important points in the city. Although the system
doesn't always lend itself to modern traffic flow, the
streets were, mercifully, made very wide.
Grandeur wasn't apparent to early residents coping with the
near wilderness of muddy streets and swarms of mosquitoes,
and the capital was derided as one of monumental open
spaces. Government officials and foreign delegations alike
frequently wished to be somewhere more civilized, like New
York or Philadelphia.
Washington suffered a potentially fatal
setback during the War of 1812 when it was burned by the
British. There were suggestions to build elsewhere. But the
buildings were replaced and the city grew, although slowly.
As late as the Civil War many considered Washington to be a
miserable little place.
The Civil War cemented Washington in the popular mind of the
country as the capital, and after the war great efforts were
made to make the city more accurately reflect that status.
Beginning in the late 19th century the federal government
began to assume a larger role in the life of the nation, and
the capital grew along with it.
Today Washington is the country's largest tourist
attraction, drawing twenty million visitors every year. It's
a political town, so expect that to be paramount in the air
and on everyone's mind. The city is a blossoming cherry,
like the trees that line its mall. There is much to do in
Washington, from the Smithsonian museums to the Kennedy
Center and Georgetown, so by all means, enjoy yourself.

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