In 1804, Jefferson requested a survey of a meridian through the President's house while living in the house when serving as the
President of the United States. It is not known why Jefferson requested a survey of a new meridian after he had previously directed a survey of a different one while serving as Secretary of State eleven years earlier. In accordance with Jefferson's request,
Isaac Briggs used a
transit and equal altitude instrument to survey a new meridian line extending south from the center of the President's House that intersected a line extending due west from the planned center of the Capitol building. On October 15, 1804, Nicholas King, Surveyor of the City of Washington, erected at the intersection "a small pier, covered by a flat free stone, on which the lines are drawn." Most of the length of a surveying pier is buried vertically in the ground for stability. Free stone is fine grained stone soft enough to carve with a chisel, yet has no tendency to split in any preferential direction. Another stone, the
Capitol Stone, was erected where the north–south line from the President's house intersected a line extending west from the south end of the Capitol, and a third stone, the
Meridian Stone, was erected on the north–south meridian two miles north on Peters Hill, now Meridian Hill. Neither of the two latter stones survives. Due to errors either when the Jefferson Pier was initially surveyed or when it was replaced, its center is now south of the Capitol's centerline. The 1804 stone marker replaced one of two wooden posts driven into the ground in 1793 at its site. The marker was originally located on the south bank of
Tiber Creek, East of the marker, Tiber Creek was transformed into the
Washington City Canal. ==During Washington Monument's construction==