Merchants' Exchange Building (Baltimore) Explained

Coordinates:39.2886°N -76.6088°W
Alternate Names:Baltimore Custom House, Old Custom House
Architectural Style:"Greco-Roman" (American Neoclassical)
Years Built:1815–1820
Est Completion:-->
Demolition Date:1901–1902
Cost:$200,000
Size:1,275,610 ft3
Architect:Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Maximilian Godefroy

The Baltimore Exchange Building, also known as the first Baltimore Custom House, the Merchants' Exchange Building, and the Baltimore Government Building was a structure in Maryland, United States that housed an eclectic array of commercial enterprises and government offices during the 19th century. The Merchants' Exchange Building site was bounded by Water Street, Gay Street, and Lombard Street.

Construction

The H-shaped Exchange Building was designed by Benjamin Latrobe and Maximilian Godefroy,[1] and constructed under the supervision of Jacob Small beginning in 1815.[2] The U.S. government paid for the erection of the custom-house wing in 1817. The building opened to the public in 1820.

1830s and 1840s

The Irish comedic actor Tyrone Power visited Baltimore in the 1830s and described the building as a handsome failure:[3]

An 1845 advertisement marketing the hotel within the building promised "large and airy" rooms, and that it was "located convenient to all the PRINCIPAL STEAMBOAT LANDINGS and RAILROAD DEPOTS."[4]

Property of the federal government

In its day it was "the most important structure in Baltimore," even hosting the offices of Baltimore City Hall for a time.[5] The federal government acquired most (but not all) of the building with purchases in 1853 and 1857. Before the American Civil War there was a hotel on the Gay Street side. In 1884 a newspaper reporter interviewed an old American slave trader named Jack Campbell, and asked if he knew of any surviving remnants of the slave trade in the United States, and Campbell replied, "More than you'd think...Go into any Southern hotel that was built before the war and ask them to let you go down into the cellars. See if you don't find these old cells where the servants of travelers were shut up at night. The Baltimore Custom House was once a hotel, and there are more than two dozen cells under it now."[6]

Funeral procession of Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln's body lay under the dome on April 21, 1865, during his multi-day funeral procession from Washington, D.C. to Springfield, Illinois.[7] According to a history of U.S. federal buildings, the dome was "decorated with paintings of the Maryland coat of arms and seals, and representations of commerce and the 'Dignity of the United States,' and supported by 12 Ionic marble columns, quarried, cut, and polished in Italy."[8]

Post office building

Circa 1869, a directory of Baltimore described the Merchants' Exchange, located on Second and Gay Streets, and Exchange Place, as "a large and elegant structure...The whole is surmounted by an immense dome, the apex of which is 115 feet above the street. In the reading room, newspapers from all parts of the world may be found." Part of the building housed the post office, and the customs office occupied the south wing, at Gay and Lombard.[9] Circa 1874, the building hosted the offices of the U.S. customs collector, U.S. surveyor, and the U.S. internal revenue office.[10]

Demolition

At the turn of the century, it was "heated by hot water, open grates, and stoves. The number of rooms occupied is fifty-eight, assigned principally to the customs service, pension office, subtreasury, civil service, and Light-House Board." The building was demolished in 1901 or 1902, and replaced with the new Customs House.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Representation of the Merchants Exchange, Baltimore, Maryland . 2023-09-11 . Maryland Center for History and Culture . en-US.
  2. Jackson . Joseph . Development of American Architecture: VII, South of Mason Dixon's Line . Building: A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Building Industry . 17–19 . 1924 . Builders' Exchange and Employers' Association . en . Google Books.
  3. Web site: Baltimore as seen by visitors, 1783-1860. . 2023-09-11 . HathiTrust . 125 (Power), 170 (hotel) . 2027/uc1.c106078721?urlappend=%3Bseq=149 . en.
  4. News: 1845-01-10 . Exchange Hotel, Exchange Place, Baltimore . 2024-06-21 . Advertiser and Register . 3.
  5. Book: Brugger, Robert J. . Maryland, A Middle Temperament: 1634-1980 . 1996-09-25 . JHU Press . 978-0-8018-5465-1 . 188 . en.
  6. News: 1884-05-24 . The Last of His Kind: Talk with an Old Slave-Seller Who Lags Superfluous on the Stage . 12 . St. Louis Globe-Democrat . 2023-09-11 . Newspapers.com .
  7. Book: Picone, Louis L. . The President Is Dead!: The Extraordinary Stories of Presidential Deaths, Final Days, Burials, and Beyond . 2020-02-04 . Simon and Schuster . 978-1-5107-5454-6 . 119 . en . Updated .
  8. Book: A history of public buildings under the control of the Treasury Department . 2023-09-11 . HathiTrust . 258–259 . 2027/nyp.33433065919171?urlappend=%3Bseq=267 . en.
  9. Book: 1869 . A guide to the book of Baltimore : its public buildings, places of amusement, commercial, benevolent, and religious institutions ... with a map of the city. ... . 2023-09-11 . HathiTrust . 2027/osu.32435012300935?urlappend=%3Bseq=100 . en.
  10. Web site: 1874 . Strangers' hand guide to Baltimore city. . 2023-09-11 . HathiTrust . 7–13 . 2027/loc.ark:/13960/t25b0js27?urlappend=%3Bseq=17 . en.
  11. Book: Fazio . Michael W. . The Domestic Architecture of Benjamin Henry Latrobe . Snadon . Patrick A. . 2006-06-19 . JHU Press . 978-0-8018-8104-6 . 580 . en.