As usual, I’m going to tackle the past, present and future of The Speaker’s House all at once in my Get Out The Vote campaign.
Help determine the future by voting now!
Posted on our website (www.speakershouse.org) is a link to a short survey. Please participate in the planning of The Speaker’s House by voicing your opinion. It will only take five minutes, but your input will help shape the future of The Speaker’s House.
Have even more to say? Sign up to be part of a focus group by contacting us at info@speakershouse.org. You will be serving a crucial role in planning for the future of Trappe’s most valuable historic resource.
The Past and the Present – and Vice Versa
And now those other two stages of time, past and present. In less than a week, we will mark an important election in our nation’s history. I speak, in this case, not of the election next Tuesday, November 4th (although I’ve heard rumors over the past two years that may be an important one too,) but the 228th anniversary of Frederick Muhlenberg’s election to Speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly on Monday, November 3rd.
Hold on a second, you’re thinking. Didn’t you mean, Mr. Muhlenberg’s election to be Speaker of the House? No, you did hear me right – his election to Speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly and it was an important moment in both our nation’s history and Trappe’s history. Muhlenberg’s first election victory is significant not only because it served as a stepping stone to becoming the first Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, but because it led to his decision to purchase a house – now The Speaker’s House – in Trappe.
Like his father, Muhlenberg was a minister until he switched to a political career in 1779, not realizing he was lowering his earning potential as well as his moral standing. “I have no horse, nor can I afford to keep one,” he lamented. “Believe me, I am not so well off now as when I left the Swamp [New Hanover, his last place of ministry], and if I had not been induced by the urgent appeal of the Germans to accept membership in the Assembly, a resolution in which the large majority of votes I received further confirmed me, I might have been tempted to take again to the apostolate.”1. New Hanover may have been a swamp, but it was an inexpensive one.
Houses in Trappe must have been less costly than those in the big city of Philadelphia because Muhlenberg bought the large stone house on the main road between Philadelphia and Reading. His decision to settle his family in Trappe was pragmatic for other reasons as well: both Muhlenberg’s and his wife Catherine’s families lived in Trappe and could support Catherine and the children while Muhlenberg lived in a rented apartment and carried out his political duties in Philadelphia. His Trappe residence also served as a place of refuge from his busy (and often tedious) political work in a noisy, crowded city. During a vacation in Trappe in 1782, Muhlenberg wrote his brother:
I enjoy my life; it is true, in the sweat of my brow, yet far from the noise of the City and of the restless political life. Here I am not troubled with clients, petitioners, and the hundred other curious inquirers with whom my house in the City was all the time swarming; but I can comfortably attend to my work in the garden, the field, or the store, – my constitution begins to improve in the wholesome air. 2.
Muhlenberg thought he would soon return to the “wholesome,” bucolic Trappe full-time, believing 1782 would be his last year of public service. But as we know, his political career had just begun taking off.
Next Monday, November 3rd, please take a moment to recognize the anniversary of Frederick Muhlenberg’s election to Speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly and its significance today. And when you vote next Tuesday, November 4th in the presidential and congressional elections, please remember Frederick Muhlenberg’s and our founders’ roles in creating our democracy. With all of its imperfections, we are lucky to have such a government.