In
1802 the US federal government employed 3,905 people. By 1826 it grew to 10,415
federal employees.
They
were geographically distributed but administratively decentralized. For
example, as late as 1824 the State Department extended across the United States
and around the world, but employed only thirteen men in its central office in
Washington. The headquarters of the War and Navy Departments employed 32 and 21
people, respectively. The Treasury Department, which always employed the
largest central office, had 152 personnel.
On July 31, 1789, the
Fifth Act of the First Congress created a field organization of collectors
"to regulate the Collection of the Duties imposed by law on the tonnage of
ships or vessels, and on goods, wares and merchandises imported into the United
States." Fifty-nine customs districts were established in eleven states, each
with a collector appointed by the president. Custom houses were usually the
earliest federal buildings constructed in cities outside of the nation’s
capital.
The Judiciary Act of 1789 created thirteen district
courts, each with one judge, in major cities, and three regional circuit
courts. The Supreme Court, with one chief justice and five associate justices,
sat above the inferior courts as the only court of appeals. The act also
created the office of Attorney General.
The Residence Act of 1790 designated a site on the Potomac River
as the permanent capital of the United States. Philadelphia was named the
temporary capital, and assumed this role until the federal government relocated
to the District of Columbia in 1800.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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