On this day in history, May 15, 1800, President Adams moves federal government from Philadelphia to DC

President John Adams moved the federal government from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C., on this day in history, May 15, 1800.

The move was completed relatively quickly, according to History.com, with important documents brought to Washington by ships.

Adams had ordered his cabinet to ensure every office would be operating as usual in Washington, D.C., within one month, noted the same source.

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This happened as planned — and Philadelphia "officially ceased to serve as the nation's capital as of June 11, 1800." 

The move was swift due in part to the small size of the federal government at that period in time.

At the time, there were only about 125 people employed as federal employees, said the History Channel. 

Today, the federal government employs over two million people, according to the Office of Personnel Management's website. 

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On July 16, 1790, then-President George Washington signed the Residence Act, which established that a capital city would be built along the Potomac River, said the website of the Library of Congress.

As the city had not yet been constructed, Philadelphia was declared a temporary capital city for a 10-year period. 

Washington announced in a proclamation back on Jan. 24, 1791, the location of the capital now known as the District of Columbia. 

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"They were thereby authorized and required, on the behalf of the said State, to cede to the Congress of the United States, any District in the said state, not exceeding Ten miles square, which the Congress might fix upon and accept for the Government of the United States," said Washington in the proclamation. 

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In the proclamation, Washington explained where the District of Columbia would be located.

He articulated permissions to survey the land and create these boundaries.

Pierre-Charles L'Enfant, a French engineer, was tasked with designing and planning the new city, said the History Channel. 

Although the District of Columbia was officially the capital of the United States of America, many of its famous landmarks were still under construction at the time that the government moved in.

President Adams and his wife, Abigail Adams, didn't move into what is now known as the White House until later in 1800, said the White House website. (When Adams and his wife, Abigail, first moved on June 3, they lived temporarily at Union Tavern in Georgetown.)

Wrote Adams about the White House residence once he and his wife moved in, "I pray heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this house, and on all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but wise men ever rule under this roof!"

The Capitol at first was also similarly unfinished. 

Only the Senate side of the Capitol building was complete in 1800, says the website for the Capitol.

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The House of Representatives' portion of the building would not be finished until 1811, more than a decade later, said the site. 

Nevertheless, on Nov. 17, 1800, the House convened for the first time at the Capitol, according to History.com. By that time, enough space had been completed to receive the Senate, the House, the Supreme Court and the Library of Congress at the new permanent site of the federal government. 

Texas sends migrants to Naval Observatory near VP Harris' home, once again

A busload of migrants from Texas was unloaded at the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, where Vice President Kamala Harris’s home is located at Number One Observatory Circle, according to reports.

An ABC local news station in Washington, D.C. tweeted videos of migrants getting off the bus and grabbing their belongings from the storage area underneath.

This is not the first time Texas Governor Greg Abbott has sent a bus full of immigrants from the U.S.-Mexico border to the vice president’s home.

A bus of migrants was dropped off outside of Harris’s home on Christmas in 2022. Migrants were also bused to the Naval Observatory in September and October. 

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The governor began sending migrants from border cities to the nation’s capital in April 2022 to pressure the Biden administration to act on immigration enforcement and border security.

Abbott said in a letter to President Biden at the time that his policies "leave many people in the bitter, dangerous cold as a polar vortex moves into Texas."

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"Texas has borne a lopsided burden caused by your open border policies," Abbott added.

As Title 42 was getting ready to expire last Thursday, Abbott spoke with Fox News’s Jesse Waters, pledging to continue sending buses full of migrants to liberal northern municipalities, including New York and Chicago.

"There will be more coming," Abbott said of the buses his state particularly dispatches. "There will be more going to New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and other places across the country."

The governor also provided the latest stats from Operation Lone Star, saying Texas was doing what no other state has done before to protect communities as the president ends Title 42.

Those stats suggest there were 373,000 apprehensions, 28,000 criminal arrests, 402 million lethal fentanyl doses seized and over 17,600 migrants bused to sanctuary cities.

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