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United States Supreme Court building

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The Supreme Court building is the seat of the Supreme Court of the United States. It is situated in Washington D.C. at One First Street Northeast, one block from the United States Capitol.

Historical

Prior to the establishment of the Federal City, the United States government resided briefly in New York City (where the Supreme Court met for the first time, in the Merchants Exchange Building) and Philadelphia (where the court met in first Independence Hall, and latterly, in the City Hall).[#endnote_1.1]

After the federal government was established in Washington, the court was housed in a small, basement room in the United States Capitol.[#endnote_1.2] It remained in the Capitol until 1935, with the exception of a period from 1812 to 1817, during which the Court was absent from Washington due to the War of 1812.

As the Senate expanded, it progressively outgrew its quarters, and the Court twice moved in to occupy a chamber abandoned by the Senate, first in 1810[#endnote_1.3] (a space it was to share "with several other courts, among them the United States Circuit Court and the Orphans' Court of the District of Columbia"[#endnote_1.4]), and again in 1860 when the Court moved to The [Old Senate Chamber] (as it is now known) where it remained until its move to the current Supreme Court building.[#endnote_1.5] In 1929, Chief Justice William Howard Taft argued, successfully, for the Court to have its own building, to distance itself from Congress as an independent branch of government.

The \"temple of justice\"

Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C.
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Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C.
The Supreme Court building, located at 1, 1st Street, Washington D.C., across the street from the U.S. Capitol, was designed by architect Cass Gilbert, and rises four stories (92 feet) above grade. The cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1932 and construction completed in 1935, having cost $9,740,000 — $94,000 under budget. "The building was designed on a scale in keeping with the importance and dignity of the Court and the Judiciary as a coequal, independent branch of the United States Government, and as a symbol of “the national ideal of justice in the highest sphere of activity.”"[#endnote_2.1]

The public façade of the Supreme Court building is made of marble quarried from Vermont, and that of the non-public-facing courtyards, Georgian marble. Most of the interior spaces are lined with Alabama marble, but for the Courtroom itself, which is lined with Spanish Ivory Vein marble.[#endnote_2.2] For the Courtroom's 24 columns, "Gilbert felt that only the ivory buff and golden marble from the Montarrenti quarries near Siena, Italy" would suffice. To this end, in May 1933, he petitioned the Italian premier, Benito Mussolini, "to ask his assistance in guaranteeing that the Siena quarries sent nothing inferior to the official sample marble".[#endnote_2.3]

Not all the justices were thrilled by the new arrangements, the courtroom in particular. Harlan Fiske Stone complained it was "almost bombastically pretentious...Wholly inappropriate for a quiet group of old boys such as the Supreme Court." Another justice observed that he felt the court would be "nine black beetles in the Temple of Karnak," while still another complained that such pomp and ceremony suggested the Justices ought to enter the courtroom riding on elephants.[#endnote_2.4]

The west facade of the building (essentially, the "front" of the court, being the side which faces the Capitol) bears the motto "Equal Justice Under Law," while the east facade bears the motto "Justice, the Guardian of Liberty."

The building's facilities include:

The Supreme Court building is under the jurisdiction of the Architect of the Capitol, but maintains its own police force, separate from the Capitol Police, created in 1935 to look after the building and its personnel. The Court operates on an annual budget of approximately $15m, and requested a budget of $16.7m for FY2006.[#endnote_2.6]

Miscellaneous

Ten Commandments in the Courtroom
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Ten Commandments in the Courtroom

Notes

Footnotes & references

  1.   [About the Supreme Court Building], Supreme Court publication.
  2.   W. Rehnquist, The Supreme Court, p.24.
  3.   [Senate Virtual Tour], part 1.
  4.   Skefos, [The Supreme Court Gets a Home].
  5.   [Senate Virtual Tour], part 2.
  6.   [SCOTUS building], supra n1.
  7.   [Homes of the Court], Supreme Court Historical Society.
  8.   Skefos, supra n4.
  9.   Homes, supra n7.
  10.   Rose, [Inside the Supreme Court, Literally]; Jungle Law, 12/8/05
  11.   Justices Kennedy & Thomas, Testimony to the House Appropriations Subcommittee, 4/12/2005.
  12.   Yahoo News, [Pieces Fall From Supreme Court Facade] (and [photographic supplement]) 11/28/05.
  13.   Legal Times, Tony Mauro, "[The Supreme Court's Own Commandments]," 03-02-2005.

External links

United States Capitol Complex
  United States Capitol
House: Cannon | Ford | Longworth | O'Neill | Rayburn
Senate: Dirksen | Hart | Russell
Library of Congress: John Adams Building | Thomas Jefferson Building | James Madison Memorial Building
Others: Botanic Garden | Capitol Power Plant | Supreme Court | Capitol Visitor Center

Coordinates: [38°53′27″N, 77°00′16″W]

 


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All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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