Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol

Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol

by Christopher Hardaker
Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol

Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol

by Christopher Hardaker

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Overview

National Symbols In The Streets Of Washington, D.C.

Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol is a ride through the streets of the Capital City. National symbols from the Great Seal of the United States were embedded into the 1792 design for Washington, D.C. Included among a surprising number of geometric features, you will discover the following hiding in plain sight:

• A 13 city-block long Pyramid sitting in the middle of the National Mall, stretching from the White House to the Capitol
• The ‘Eye of the God of Reason’ is the Capitol’s Western Terrace, the stage of the Presidential Inauguration since Ronald Reagan
• The six-pointed star above the Eagle’s head is east of the Capitol
• A Freemasonic square and compass symbol enveloping the Capitol.

Using the strict rules of Sacred Geometry, Christopher Hardaker unlocks a hidden dimension of the city’s design, introducing the reader to an unsolved national mystery.

Who embedded the Great Seal of the United States into the streets and avenues of Washington, D.C?

The Great Seal’s symbols were laid out along the east-west axis of the city. They are in the modern city. Some have been enhanced, others possibly added. The Star north of the White House held its own secrets. The ‘street symbols’ are scientific facts - mathematically accurate features within a degree of perfection. This approach to city design is simply unprecedented.

WHO inserted these national symbols into the original design for Washington, D.C? President George Washington? Thomas Jefferson? Alexander Hamilton? Andrew Ellicott, the President’s surveyor? It was certainly not Major Pierre L’Enfant, who originally mapped out the design in 1791. When he first looks upon the Planning Commission’s revision of his design, this is what he writes to President Washington.

“[The plan is] now in a state in which it is most unmercifully spoiled and altered from the original plan to a degree indeed evidently tending to disgrace me and ridicule the very undertaking.”

This “unmercifully spoiled and altered” revision became Washington, D.C. L’Enfant’s role was not known until the 1880s. His name had been removed from the 1792 document and credit was given to Andrew Ellicott. Why? And does the answer to that question lead to the much larger and incredible question: Who inserted national symbols from the Great Seal of the United States into the central core of Washington, D.C?

With over 70 pages of illustrations, Washington DeCoded: A New View Over the Capitol offers an unforgettable tour of Washington, D.C, and introduces a new national mystery of grand proportions: Who really designed the National City, and what is the design’s true creative dimension?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781623092610
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication date: 05/11/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 144
File size: 27 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

What People are Saying About This

Allan N. Spreen

Having recently read Chris Hardaker's Washington DeCoded, I have to say that anyone interested in an historical quandary is in for a treat with this one. I had heard for years that Washington, D.C., not only had considerable links to Freemasonry, but also contained somewhat 'in your face' images within the design plan of the District that were sacred to the Masons (if not the 'Ancients', whoever they may be!).

I was not, however, prepared for the totality of images that leap from the layout of the city, and the fact that 'stretches of the imagination', and 'leaps of faith' are not required to appreciate their presence: they're there, and when they're shown to you, there's almost no doubt that mere coincidence is not involved.

What really sets this work off, however, is the incredible detail put into what I'd have to call a 'beginner's guide to sacred geometry' (Sacred Geometry for Dummies?).
While the figures of the city are clearly shown, the examples of basic sacred geometry are almost more stimulating. It's a down-right tutorial, in the simplest techniques, of understanding this area of mathematics, and it does an excellent job of showing that geometry can be anything but what many would ordinarily call 'dry'.

Historians (or just history 'buffs'), mathematicians (or just math 'buffs'), mystery-seekers, or those just looking for a stimulating read, it's all here. --Allan N. Spreen, MD

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