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In "Economica," the work just quoted, printed in 1806, the first work on political economy written in America, Blodget referred to the national university project as an accepted idea, held in temporary abeyance by legislative delays.

Blodget urged upon Congress various projects which he thought to be of national importance, and among the first of these was "To erect, or at least to point out the place for the statue of 1783, and either to direct or permit the colleges of the University formed by Washington to commence around this statue after the manner of the Timoleonton of Syracuse."

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In intimate connection with his plan for a university was that of Washington for a military academy at West Point. He had found during the Revolution a great want of engineers, and this want caused Congress to accept the services of numerous French engineers to aid our country in its struggle for independence.

At the close of the Revolution Washington lost no time in commending to Virginia the improvement of the Potomac and James rivers, the junction by canal of Chesapeake Bay and Albemarle Sound of North Carolina. He soon after proceeded to New York to see the plans of General Schuyler to unite the Mohawk with the waters of Lake Ontario, and to Massachusetts to see the plans of the Merrimac Navigation Company.

It was the want of educated engineers for work of this kind that induced Generals Washington, Lee, and Huntington, and Colonel Pickering, in the year 1783, to select West Point as a suitable site for a military academy, and at that

11806 Blodget, Samuel, Jr. Economica: | A Statistical Manual | for the | United States of America. | = | ..... The legislature ought to make the people happy | Aristotle on government | = | . . . . "Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas" | = | City of Washington: | Printed for the author. | | 1806, 128 i-viii, 1–202 i-xiv.

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The certificate of copyright is in this form :

Be it remembered that Samuel Blodget Jr. hath deposited in this office the title of a book the right whereof he claims as author, but for the benefit in trust for the free education fund of the university founded by George Washington in his last will," etc.

place such an institution was essayed, under the law of Congress, in 1794. But from the destruction of the building, and its contained books and apparatus by fire, the Academy was suspended until the year 1801, when Mr. Jefferson renewed the action of the law, and in the following year, 1802, a United States Corps of Engineers and Military Academy was organized by law, and established at West Point, with General Jonathan Williams, the nephew of Franklin, and one of the vice-presidents of the Philosophical Society at its head, and the United States Military Philosophical Society was established with the whole engineer corps of the army for a nucleus.

This society had for its object "the collecting and disseminating of military science." Its membership during the ten years of its existence included most of the leading men in the country, civilians as well as officers in the army and navy. Meetings were held in New York and Washington, as well as in West Point, and it seems to have been the first national scientific society."

The Patent Office also began under Washington, the first American patent system having been founded by act of Congress, April 10, 1790.

On the 8th of January, 1790, President Washington entered the Senate chamber, where both Houses of Congress were assembled, and addressed them upon the state of the new nation. In the speech of a few minutes, which thus constituted the first annual message to Congress, about a third of the space was given to the promotion of intellectual objects-science, literature, and arts. The following expression may perhaps be regarded as the practical origination of

At least three fascicles of "Extracts from the Minutes of the United States Military Society" were printed-one for the stated meeting, Oct. 6, 1806 [4°, 14 pp.]; one for an occasional meeting at Washington, Jan. 30, 1808 [4°, pp. 1-23 (1)]; and one for an occasional meeting at New York, Dec. 28, 1809 (4°, pp. 1-22]. The MS. Records, in four volumes, are said to be in the possession of the New York Historical Society.

I am indebted to Col. John M. Wilson, U. S. A., Supt. of the Military Academy, and to Gen. J. C. Kelton, U. S. A., for courteous and valuable replies to my letters of inquiry.

our patent system: "I cannot forbear intimating to you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement, as well to the introduction of new and useful inventions from abroad, as to the exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home."

This of course was in direct pursuance of the constitutional enactment, bethought and inserted toward the closing days of the Convention in September, 1787, empowering Congress with such authority. Each House, the Senate on the 11th and the Representatives on the 12th, sent a cordial response to the President's address, reciting the particulars of his discourse, and promising, especially to his suggestions for encouragement of science and arts, "such early attention as their respective importance requires"; and the lower House proceeded rapidly with the work. January 15th it was resolved that the various measures indicated by the President should be referred to select committees respectively; and on the 25th, such a committee was formed to consider the encouragement of the "useful arts." It consisted of Edamus Burke, of South Carolina, a Justice of the Supreme Court of that State, and native of Ireland; Benjamin Huntington, of Connecticut; and Lambert Cadwalader, of New Jersey. On the 16th of February, Mr. Burke reported his bill, which passed to its second reading the following day. It was copiously discussed and amended in Committee of the Whole, particularly March 4th, when "the clause which gives a party a right to appeal to a jury from a decision of referees, it was moved should be struck out." After a good deal of pointed and profitable remark as to the true sphere and function of juries, the motion for striking out was carried.

The next day, March 5th, the bill was ordered to be engrossed, and on the 10th, after third reading, it passed, and was carried to the Senate. Here, in a few days, it was referred to a committee of which Charles Carroll, of Maryland, was chairman, and reported back the 29th of March, where it passed, with twelve amendments, on the 30th. On the 8th of April it went forward with the signatures of

Speaker and Vice-President to the President, who approved it April 10, 1790.' The first patent was granted on the 31st of the following July, to Samuel Hopkins, of Vermont, for making "pot and pearl ashes"; and two more during that year.❜

Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State at this period, under which department especially the patent system grew up for more than half its first century, took so keen an interest in its aim and workings, and gave such searching personal attention to the issue of the several patents, that he has been quite naturally reputed as the father of our Patent Office, and it seems to have been supposed that the bill itself creating it proceeded from his own suggestion. But by a comparison of dates this appears hardly possible. Jefferson returned from Europe to Norfolk and Monticello toward the end of 1789, his mind deeply occupied with the stirring movements of revolution abroad; during the winter months he was debating whether he should accept the charge of the State Department offered him by Washington, making his way by slow stages from Virginia to New York, receiving innumerable ovations, paying his last visit to the dying Franklin, and he only reached the seat of government March 21st, when the legislative work on this act was practically finished. More than to any other individual probably the American patent system looks for its origin to the Father of the Country."

Jefferson took great pride in it, and gave personal consideration to every application that was made for patents during the years between 1790 and 1793, while the power of revision and rejection granted by that act remained in force. It is a matter of tradition, handed down to us from generation to generation, that, when an application for a patent was made, he would summon Mr. Henry Knox, of Massa"Statutes at Large," vol. i., pp. 109-112.

'Among the treasures of the National Museum is a patent dated 1796, signed by Washington as President and Pickering as Secretary of State.

3 The foregoing paragraphs concerning the history of the Patent Office were kindly supplied by Mr. Edward Farquhar, for many years its Assistant Librarian.

chusetts, who was Secretary of War, and Mr. Edmund Randolph, of Virginia, who was Attorney-General, these officials being designated by the act, with the Secretary of State, a tribunal to examine and grant patents; and that these three distinguished officials would examine the application critically, scrutinizing each point of the specification and claims carefully and vigorously. The result of this examination was that, during the first year, a majority of the applications failed to pass the ordeal, and only three patents were granted. Every step in the issuing of a patent was taken with great care and caution, Mr. Jefferson thinking always to impress upon the minds of his officers and the public that it was a matter of no ordinary import

ance.

The subsequent history of the office is very interesting, especially since it contains a record of Mr. Jefferson's vigorous opposition to the change effected by the act of 1793, which he held, by a promiscuous granting of exclusive privileges, would lead to the creation of monopoly in the arts and industries, and was against the theory of a popular government, and would be pernicious in its effects.

In 1812 a building was put up for the accommodation of the office, but this was destroyed in 1836, and with it most of the records which would be necessary for a proper understanding of the early history of American invention.

In the Patent-Office building, and with it destroyed, there was gathered a collection of models, which was sometimes by courtesy called the "American Museum of Art," and which afforded a precedent for the larger collection of models and natural products, which remained under the custody of the Commissioner of Patents until 1858, when it was transferred to the Smithsonian Institution, and became a part of the present National Museum.

In 1836 the patent system was reorganized, and most of the methods at present in use were put in operation. As it now stands, it is one of the most perfect and effective in the world, and the Patent Office, judged by the charac

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