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Monday, April 27, 1789.
The committees of both Houses of Congress appointed to take order for conducting the ceremonial for the formal reception, etc., of the President of the United States on Thursday next have agreed to the following order thereon, viz:
That General Webb, Colonel Smith, LieutenantColonel Fish, Major Franks, Major L'Enfant, Major Bleeker, and Mr. John R. Livingston be requested to serve as assistants on the occasion.
That a chair be placed in the Senate Chamber for the President.
That a chair be placed in the Senate Chamber for the VicePresident, to the right of the President's chair, and that the Senators take their seats on that side of the Chamber on which the VicePresident's chair shall be placed. That a chair be placed in the Senate Chamber for the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the left of the President's chair, and that the Representatives take their seats on that side of the Chamber on which the Speaker's chair shall be placed.
That seats be provided in the Senate Chamber sufficient to accommodate the late President of Congress, the governor of the Western Territory, the five persons being the heads of the great Departments, the minister plenipotentiary of France, the encargado de negocios of Spain, the chaplains of Congress, the persons in the suite of the President, and also to accommodate the following public officers of the State, viz: The governor, lieutenant governor, the chancellor, the chief justice of the supreme court and other judges thereof, and the mayor of the city.
That one of the assistants wait on these gentlemen and inform them that seats are provided for their accommodation, and also to signify to them that no precedence of seats is intended, and that no salutation is expected from them on their entrance into or their departure from the Senate Chamber.
That the members of both Houses assemble in their respective chambers precisely at 12 o'clock, and that the Representatives, preceded by their Speaker and attended by their Clerk and other officers, proceed to the Senate Chamber, there to be received by the VicePresident and Senators rising.
That the committees attend the President from his residence to the Senate Chamber, and that he be there received by the VicePresident, the Senators and Representatives rising, and by the VicePresident conducted to his chair.
That after the President shall be seated in his chair and the Vice President, Senators, and Representatives shall be again seated, the VicePresident shall announce to the President that the members of both Houses will attend him to be present at his taking the oath of office required by the Constitution.
To the end that the oath of office may be administered to the President in the most public manner and that the greatest number of the people of the United States, and without distinction, may be witnesses to the solemnity, that therefore the oath be administered in the outer gallery adjoining to the Senate Chamber.
That when the President shall proceed to the gallery to take the oath he be attended by the VicePresident, and be followed by the chancellor of the State, and pass through the middle door; that the Senators pass through the door on the right, and the Representatives pass through the door on the left, and such of the persons who may have been admitted into the Senate Chamber and may be desirous to go into the gallery are then also to pass through the door on the right.
That when the President shall have taken the oath and returned into the Senate Chamber, attended by the VicePresident, and shall be seated in his chair, that Senators and Representatives also return into the Senate Chamber, and that the VicePresident and they resume their respective seats.
That when the President retire from the Senate Chamber he be conducted by the VicePresident to the door, the members of both Houses rising, and that he be there received by the committees and attended to his residence.
That immediately as the President shall retire the Representatives do also return from the Senate Chamber to their own.
That it be intrusted to the assistants to take proper precautions for keeping the avenues to the hall open, and for that purpose they wait on his excellency the governor of this State, and in the name of the committees request his aid by an order or recommendation to the civil officers or militia of the city to attend and serve on the occasion as he shall judge most proper.