| QUERY XV
The colleges and public establishments, the roads, buildings, &c.? Colleges, Buildings, Roads, &c. The college of William and Mary is the only public seminary of learning in this state. It was founded in the time of king William and queen Mary, who granted to it 20,000 acres of land, and a penny a pound duty on certain tobaccoes exported from Virginia and Maryland, which had been levied by the statute of 25 Car. 2. The assembly also gave it, by temporary laws, a duty on liquors imported, and skins and firs exported. From these resources it received upwards of 3000 l. communibus annis. The buildings are of brick, sufficient for an indifferent accommodation of perhaps an hundred students. By its charter it was to be under the government of twenty visitors, who were to be its legislators, and to have a president and six professors, who were incorporated. It was allowed a representative in the general assembly. Under this charter, a professorship of the Greek and Latin languages, a professorship of mathematics, one of moral philosophy, and two of divinity, were established. To these were annexed, for a sixth professorship, a considerable donation by Mr. Boyle of England, for the instruction of the Indians, and their conversion to Christianity. This was called the professorship of Brafferton, from an estate of that name in England, purchased with the monies given. The admission of the learners of Latin and Greek filled the college with children. This rendering it disagreeable and degrading to young gentlemen already prepared for entering on the sciences, they were discouraged from resorting to it, and thus the schools for mathematics and moral philosophy, which might have been of some service, became of very little. The revenues too were exhausted in accommodating those who came only to acquire the rudiments of science. After the present revolution, the visitors, having no power to change those circumstances in the constitution of the college which were fixed by the charter, and being therefore confined in the number of professorships, undertook to change the objects of the professorships. They excluded the two schools for divinity, and that for the Greek and Latin languages, and substituted others; so that at present they stand thus: A Professorship
for Law and Police:
And it is proposed, so soon as the legislature shall have leisure to take up this subject, to desire authority from them to increase the number of professorships, as well for the purpose of subdividing those already instituted, as of adding others for other branches of science. To the professorships usually established in the universities of Europe, it would seem proper to add one for the antient languages and literature of the North, on account of their connection with our own language, laws, customs, and history. The purposes of the Brafferton institution would be better answered by maintaining a perpetual mission among the Indian tribes, the object of which, besides instructing them in the principles of Christianity, as the founder requires, should be to collect their traditions, laws, customs, languages, and other circumstances which might lead to a discovery of their relation with one another, or descent from other nations. When these objects are accomplished with one tribe, the missionary might pass on to another. The roads are under the government of the county courts, subject to be controuled by the general court. They order new roads to be opened wherever they think them necessary. The inhabitants of the county are by them laid off into precincts, to each of which they allot a convenient portion of the public roads to be kept in repair. Such bridges as may be built without the assistance of artificers, they are to build. If the stream be such as to require a bridge of regular workmanship, the court employs workmen to build it, at the expence of the whole county. If it be too great for the county, application is made to the general assembly, who authorize individuals to build it, and to take a fixed toll from all passengers, or give sanction to such other proposition as to them appears reasonable. Ferries are admitted only at such places as are particularly pointed out by law, and the rates of ferriage are fixed. Taverns are licensed by the courts, who fix their rates from time to time. The private
buildings are very rarely constructed of stone or brick; much the greatest
proportion being of scantling and boards, plaistered with lime. It
is impossible to devise things more ugly, uncomfortable, and happily more
perishable. There are two or three plans, on one of which, according
to its size, most of the houses in the state are built. The poorest
people build huts of logs, laid horizontally in pens, stopping the interstices
with mud. These are warmer in winter, and cooler in summer, than
the more expensive constructions of scantling and plank. The wealthy
are attentive to the raising of vegetables, but very little so to fruits.
The poorer people attend to neither, living principally on milk and animal
diet. This is the more inexcusable, as the climate requires indispensably
a free use of vegetable food, for health as well as comfort, and is very
friendly to the raising of fruits. -- The only public buildings worthy
mention are the Capitol, the Palace, the College, and the Hospital for
Lunatics, all of them in Williamsburg, heretofore the seat of our government.
The Capitol is a light and airy structure, with a portico in front of two
orders, the lower of which, being Doric, is tolerably just in its proportions
and ornaments, save only that the intercolonnations are too large.
The upper is Ionic, much too small for that on which it is mounted, its
ornaments not proper to the order, nor proportioned within themselves.
It is crowned with a pediment, which is too high for its span. Yet,
on the whole, it is the most pleasing piece of architecture we have.
The Palace is not handsome without: but it is spacious and commodious within,
is prettily situated, and, with the grounds annexed to it, is capable of
being made an elegant seat. The College and Hospital are rude, mis-shapen
piles, which, but that they have roofs, would be taken for brick-kilns.
There are no other public buildings but churches and court-houses, in which
no attempts are made at elegance. Indeed it would not be easy to
execute such an attempt, as a workman could scarcely be found here capable
of drawing an order. The genius of architecture seems to have shed
its maledictions over this land. Buildings are often erected, by individuals,
of considerable expence. To give these symmetry and taste would not increase
their cost. It would only change the arrangement of the materials,
the form and combination of the members. This would often cost less
than the burthen of barbarous ornaments with which these buildings are
sometimes charged. But the first principles of the art are unknown,
and there exists scarcely a model among us sufficiently chaste to give
an idea of them. Architecture being one of the fine arts, and as
such within the department of a professor of the college, according to
the new arrangement, perhaps a spark may fall on some young subjects of
natural taste, kindle up their genius, and produce a reformation in this
elegant and useful art. But all we shall do in this way will produce
no permanent improvement to our country, while the unhappy prejudice prevails
that houses of brick or stone are less wholesome than those of wood.
A dew is often observed on the walls of the former in rainy weather, and
the most obvious solution is, that the rain has penetrated through these
walls. The following facts however are sufficient to prove the error
of this solution. 1. This dew on the walls appears when there is
no rain, if the state of the atmosphere be moist. 2. It appears on
the partition as well as the exterior walls. 3. So also on pavements
of brick or stone. 4. It is more copious in proportion as the walls
are thicker; the reverse of which ought to be the case, if this hypothesis
were just. If cold water be poured into a vessel of stone, or glass, a
dew forms instantly on the outside: but if it be poured into a vessel of
wood, there is no such appearance. It is not supposed, in the first
case, that the water has exuded through the glass, but that it is precipitated
from the circumambient air; as the humid particles of vapour, passing from
the boiler of an alembic through its refrigerant, are precipitated from
the air, in which they were suspended, on the internal surface of the refrigerant.
Walls of brick or stone act as the refrigerant in this instance.
They are sufficiently cold to condense and precipitate the moisture suspended
in the air of the room, when it is heavily charged therewith. But
walls of wood are not so. The question then is, whether air in which
this moisture is left floating, or that which is deprived of it, be most
wholesome? In both cases the remedy is easy. A little fire
kindled in the room, whenever the air is damp, prevents the precipitation
on the walls: and this practice, found healthy in the warmest as well as
coldest seasons, is as necessary in a wooden as in a stone or a brick house.
I do not mean to say, that the rain never penetrates through walls of brick.
On the contrary I have seen instances of it. But with us it is only
through the northern and eastern walls of the house, after a north-easterly
storm, these being the only ones which continue long enough to force through
the walls. This however happens too rarely to give a just character of
unwholesomeness to such houses. In a house, the walls of which are
of well-burnt brick and good mortar, I have seen the rain penetrate through
but twice in a dozen or fifteen years. The inhabitants of Europe,
who dwell chiefly in houses of stone or brick, are surely as healthy as
those of Virginia. These houses have the advantage too of being warmer
in winter and cooler in summer than those of wood, of being cheaper in
their first construction, where lime is convenient, and infinitely more
durable. The latter consideration renders it of great importance
to eradicate this prejudice from the minds of our countrymen. A country
whose buildings are of wood, can never increase in its improvements to
any considerable degree. Their duration is highly estimated at 50
years. Every half century then our country becomes a tabula rasa,
whereon we have to set out anew, as in the first moment of seating it.
Whereas when buildings are of durable materials, every new edifice is an
actual and permanent acquisition to the state, adding to its value as well
as to its ornament.
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