|  | Chapter 3
      The Building Campaign of 1819, Part 1
      Documentary History of the Construction of the Buildings at the University
       of Virginia, 1817-1828 |  | 
Jefferson's Design Approved
       At their meeting the visitors resolved to carry out the plans for the buildings along the lines
 
       that Jefferson indicated to Cabell a week earlier. They unanimously agreed that "the urgency
 
       of the advancing season, and the importance of procuring workmen before they become
 
       generally otherwise engaged for the season, render . . . that certain measures be forthwith
 
       taken."[174] "Certain measures" meant immediately advertising for workmen for the
 
       university and awarding contracts, a process which Jefferson started on 1 March.[175] After
 
       voting on Jefferson's initial goals for the buildings, the visitors supplemented their ruling by
 
       adding that "we approve of the propositions for covering with tin sheets the Pavilions and
 
       Hotels hereafter to be covered, and for bringing water to them by wooden pipes from the
 
       neighboring highlands." Also, the board appointed Alexander Garrett, treasurer of the
 
       Central College, to become Bursar of the University "until otherwise provided," and so that
 
       he could "meet the immediate and pressing calls for money," it authorized Garrett to receive
 
       the $15,000 public endowment for 1819.[176]
      
          174. Minutes of the Board of Visitors of the Central College, 26 February 1819, ViU:TJ; see
 
          also Cabell, Early History of the University of Virginia, 451-52.
         
          175. See Nelson Barksdale, Advertisement for Workmen, ca 1 March 1819, in James
 
          Oldham's "Memoriall to the bord of Visitors of the U.Va. Octobr 3. 1823," ViU:PP. For
 
          instance, Jefferson sent a copy of the advertisement to Thomas Cooper on 3 March with
 
          instructions for Cooper to place it in the Philadelphia paper "most read by the mechanics."
 
          In the postscript Jefferson requested Cooper to inquire into open stoves for the pavilions: "I
 
          believe they are called Rittenhouse stoves in Philadelphia. the largest for their larger rooms
 
          should be about 26. I. wide in the back, and a smaller size for the bedrooms. will you be so
 
          good as to select two of the handsomest forms, and desire the holder of them to mark them
 
          for us? we shall apply for 5. as immediately wanting, for half a dozen more towards the end
 
          of the year, & others subsequently as we advance in our buildings. I know there is a good
 
          deal of choice in forms, and wish to avail of your presence there to select" (ViU:TJ). Cooper
 
          succeeded in finding suitable stoves, and the university sent Louis Leschot to Philadelphia to
 
          arrange their shipment to Bernard Peyton in Richmond. See TJ to Cooper, 9 April, and
 
          Cooper to TJ, 11, 15, 22 April, 21 June, James Dinsmore to TJ, 1 July, Dinsmore to
 
          Brockenbrough, 2 July, and List of Items Lacking Vouchers, 9 April 1819, all in ViU:PP.
         
|  | Chapter 3
      The Building Campaign of 1819, Part 1
      Documentary History of the Construction of the Buildings at the University
       of Virginia, 1817-1828 |  | 

