Public Architect and Developer in the Nation’s Capital
After 1802 Hoban concentrated on
his successful business partnership
with Pierce Purcell in Washington,
distancing himself from the politics
and the lower pay of public improvement
projects. Except for the White
House, few of Hoban’s buildings still
stand. He also superintended the
Capitol, completing the North Wing
by 1800, when the seat of government
moved to Washington.
Hoban became the superintendent
of all Washington’s public
works in 1798. He directed the
construction of the Treasury and
War Department buildings, based
on the design of English architect
George Hadfield. Hoban and
William Lovering provided modifications,
and Leonard Harbaugh
was the contractor. Hoban rebuilt
the executive office buildings that
were destroyed in the 1814 fire,
with design changes. In 1818, he
designed two additional government
buildings facing Pennsylvania Avenue
north of the two original department
buildings. State to the east and War to
the west (the old War Department site
was used for the new Navy Department).
Hoban also designed the brick Georgian
"Great Hotel" for Samuel Blodget Jr., a
native of New Hampshire and an amateur
architect, who invested heavily in the real estate of the national capital.
Blodget offered the hotel as the first prize in a lottery scheme to boost
property sales. Before 1810, it was the largest privately owned building
in Washington. Hoban may have been the architect of the original
church for Saint Patrick's parish on the corner of 10th and F Streets,
N.W., and of stately Oak Hill, a fine residence
President James Monroe commissioned for his
retirement in Loudoun County, Virginia. Only
Oak Hill still stands.