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In photographs from the 1840s and 1850s, you can see it clearly. A brand new city — muddy streets, wooden storefronts, canvas tents. And somewhere in the frame, a building that doesn't belong. Stone. Columns. Proportions that suggest permanence. A structure that looks like it was built to last centuries, standing in the middle of a city that was built last week. Philadelphia City Hall: criticised for looking too old the day it opened. St. Louis Courthouse: a Greek Revival monument built in 1839 for a frontier city of 16,000 people. The Palais du Trocadéro: built for a World's Fair, looked ancient before it was finished. In city after city, across America and Europe, the same pattern. Buildings designed in styles that were already historical. Criticised — at the time — for looking like relics before they were complete. Not too new. Too old. The construction records, in too many cases, are incomplete or missing entirely. 🔍 Sources & Further Reading: — Philadelphia City Hall, Encyclopedia of Architecture: philadelphiabuildings.org — St. Louis Old Courthouse, National Park Service: nps.gov/jeff — Library of Congress 19th Century Photography Archive: loc.gov/pictures #ForgottenHistory #SuppressedHistory #RedactedHistory 0:00 The Building That Doesn't Belong 1:30 Philadelphia City Hall — Too Old to Be New 4:00 St. Louis 1839 — A Monument for 16,000 People 6:30 The Pattern Across Every City 8:30 The European Dimension 10:30 What the WPA Witnesses Said 12:00 The Missing Construction Records 13:30 The Shape of What Isn't There