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State Dining Room of the White House

Coordinates:38°53′51.35″N77°2′12.15″W / 38.8975972°N 77.0367083°W /38.8975972; -77.0367083
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American state room
White House State Floor showing the location of the State Dining Room.
The State Dining Room after renovation in 2015.

TheState Dining Room is the larger of twodining rooms on theState Floor of theExecutive Residence of theWhite House, the home of thepresident of the United States inWashington, D.C. It is used forreceptions,luncheons, larger formal dinners, andstate dinners for visitingheads of state onstate visits. The room seats 140 and measures approximately 48 by 36 feet (15 by 11 m).

Originally office space, the State Dining Room received its name during thepresidency of James Monroe, at which time it was first extensively furnished. The room was refurbished during several administrations in the early to mid 1800s, andgasified in 1853. Doors were cut through the west wall in 1877. The State Dining Room underwent a major expansion and renovation in 1902, transforming it from aVictorian dining room into a "baronial" dining hall of the early 19th century—complete with stuffed animal heads on the walls and dark oakpanelling. The room stayed in this form until the White House's complete reconstruction in 1952.

The 1952 rebuilding of the White House retained much of the 1902 renovation, although much of the "baronial" furnishings were removed and the walls were paintedceladon green. Another major refurbishment from 1961 to 1963 changed the room even further, more closely approximating anEmpire style room with elements from a wide range of other periods. Incremental changes to the room were made throughout the 1970s and 1980s, with major refurbishments of the furnishings in 1998 and 2015.

Early history

[edit]

The Adams administration

[edit]
White House State Floor plan, 1803.

The northern third of what is now the State Dining Room was originally the western part of the Cross Hall. Two flights of stairs (one against the north wall, one against the south wall) led from the State Floor to the Second Floor. A single, central stair then led up to theThird Floor (then an attic).[1] Not completed when the White House was occupied in 1800, theGrand Stairs were probably finished by architectBenjamin Henry Latrobe in 1803 or shortly thereafter.[1] To the south of the Grand Stair was a small room, designated by Hoban for use as a Cabinet Room or President's Library.[2][3]

John Adams's blessing was carved into the state dining room mantel in 1945, during the administration ofFranklin D. Roosevelt.[4]

PresidentJohn Adams was the first president to occupy the White House. The White House was far too large for their needs, and they had few furnishings with which to make it a home. The State Dining Room was temporarily partitioned in order to make it usable. The southwest corner became a "levee room", where the public could meet and mingle with the president, while the northwest corner became a dining room.[5]

The Jefferson office

[edit]

PresidentThomas Jefferson used the southwest corner of the State Dining Room as his primary office from 1801 to 1809.[6] The room was sparsely furnished at this time, with only a desk and chairs. He also kept his gardening tools and an assortment of potted plants in the room.[7] The floor was covered with canvas, painted green.[8] In time, charts, maps, and globes; six smallmahogany sets of shelves; three long mahogany tables with green cloth tops; two mahogany stools; two mahogany armchairs; a tall bookcase; a small set of mahogany steps (for reaching the top of the bookcase); and a desk,letterpress printer, and sofa.[9] For seating, Jefferson moved 12 of the black-and-gold painted mahogany chairs (purchased during the Adams administration) from the dining room to the office.[10]

Transformation into the State Dining Room

[edit]

Jefferson's successor,James Madison, wanted the room to be a dining room.First LadyDolley Madison worked with Jefferson's architect,Benjamin Henry Latrobe, to make some structural changes to the State Dining Room, which primarily meant closing off two windows in the west wall.[11]

A large dining table, capable of seating at least 40, was placed in the room,[12] surrounded by simplerush-bottomed chairs.[11]A silver service and a blue-and-goldchina service purchased from theLowestoft Porcelain Factory in England were used for dining,[13] and a simplesurtout de table (or "plateau")[a] was used as the centerpiece.[11] Other than the dining table, the largest piece of furniture in the room was a massivesideboard.[11] The windows were uncurtained, and wallspapered.[11] Paintings ofGeorge Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson were hung on the walls.[7] The Washington image was a copy of theLansdowne portrait, a full-length, life-size figure of the first President painted byGilbert Stuart in 1796.[12] The canvas flooring was removed, and aningrain carpet (an inexpensive, flatwoven textile) installed.[15] Otherwise, the room remained only sparsely furnished.[7]

Reconstruction of the State Dining Room

[edit]

TheWhite House was burned on August 24, 1814, by the British Army during theWar of 1812. The Landsdowne copy was saved from destruction by doorman Jean Pierre Sioussat and White house gardener Tom Magraw, who cut it from its elaborate frame and spirited it away from the White House just minutes before British troops arrived.[16][17]

The White House was reconstructed in 1817,[18] after which the Cabinet Room/Presidential Library was called the State Dining Room.[1] The reconstruction added an extensivechimney breast to the fireplace in the room's west wall.[19]

The State Dining Room was extensively furnished at this time. PresidentJames Monroe, rather than First LadyElizabeth Monroe (who was in fragile physical health), was primarily responsible for making decorative decisions for the White House.[15] Monroe decided to have the walls of the State Dining Room covered in green silk.[8] Two ItalianCarrara marblemantels, featuringNeoclassicalcaryatids on either side, were also bought by Monroe and installed over the two fireplaces in this room.[20][21]

One of Monroe's most important purchases were several ornamentalormolu (orbronze doré) pieces to furnish the State Dining Room.[7] Thesurtout de table, crafted byDenière et Matelin in France, was 14 feet (4.3 m) long when fully extended.[22] The piece had seven sections, each 24 inches (61 cm) long, which could be removed or inserted as needed to adjust the length.[23] It had a mirrored floor, and garlands of fruit and flowers formed the rim. Seventeenbacchantes (personifications of the female servants ofBacchus, theancient Roman god of wine) standing on orbs, their outstretched arms holding candleholders, could be inserted into small rectangular pedestals at equidistant points around the centerpiece.[23] Althoughsurtout de table were common in elegant English and French dining rooms, few Americans had seen them and the piece deeply impressed those who saw it.[24] Other ormolu items included three pedestals for crystal vases (one large, two small), consisting of theThree Graces holding up a basket; three porcelain vases in theEtruscan style and ornamented with festoons of flowers; and a pair of pedestal stands, ortrepieds, consisting ofsphinxes sitting on slender legs, their upraised wings supporting a shallow bowl.[21]

Monroe also ordered the White House's first tableware and dinnerware. These included 72 silver place-settings, which included an unknown number of serving dishes, platters,tureens,chafing dishes, and other items. These were manufactured by Jacques Henri Fauconnier ofParis.[21][b] Thirty-sixvermeil (gold-gilt silver) flatware settings, manufactured by J. B. Boitin of Paris, were also purchased.[21][c] A 30-setting giltporcelain china service was also purchased, although its design and manufacturer are not known as no pieces have survived.[21] A few items of the accompanying 166-piece, 30-setting dessert service, manufactured by Dagoty et Honoré in Paris, have survived. The dessert plates for thisamaranth-on-white china service feature a Napoleonic eagle in the center. Five vignettes, representing agriculture, strength, commerce, science, and arts, are set into the broad, red rim.[25]

Changes in the early to mid 1800s

[edit]
State Dining Room during the Pierce administration (1853 to 1857). Note the use of the Polk chairs.

PresidentAndrew Jackson had the dining room wallpapered some time after 1829. The paper was purchased from French-bornLouis Véron, aPhiladelphia fine furnishings purveyor. This material, which was blue, green, yellow, and white and with a scattering of gold stars and gilt borders, was used in most of the rooms on the State Floor.[26] Some time during 1833 and 1834, Veron supplied mirrors as well,[27] and carpeting fromBelgium[28][29] and newmahogany[30] dining room chairs fromAlexandria, Virginia, cabinetmaker James Green also helped refurbish the room.[28] An 1829, 18-light chandelier (fueled bywhale oil and of unknown make) was moved from the East Room into the State Dining Room in 1834 to provide light.[31]

Heavy crowds in the White House during the Jackson administration left the mansion in shabby condition. PresidentMartin Van Buren purchased a new, 30-foot (9.1 m) table for the State Dining Room, and reupholstered the chairs in blue satin fabric.[32] Blue and yellow drapes and rugs complimented the chairs.[30] At some point, the mantels over the fireplace had been replaced with new ones of black marble, and threechandeliers now lit the room.[30]

Although little upkeep was made to the White House during the administrations ofWilliam Henry Harrison andJohn Tyler due to a national depression, PresidentJames K. Polk redecorated the State Dining Room in the summer of 1845.[33] New purple and gold drapes were hung in the room, and 42rosewood balloon-back[d]side chairs withcabriole legs and a heart-shaped crest were purchased. They were upholstered in purplevelvet and manufactured by New York City furniture makerCharles Baudouine.[35] The carpet was likely replaced with one ofTurkish make.[36]

PresidentFranklin Pierce completely refurbished the room in 1853. The chandeliers were converted tonatural gas, the wood moldings anddado rails replaced, the room replastered and repainted, and new carpets and drapes provided.[37] L. R. Menger & Co. of New York provided gilt plaster cornices for the windows, and new gilt frames for the mirrors in the room.[36] It is likely that Anthony and Henry Jenkins, furniture makers fromBaltimore, crafted fourwalnut side tables for Pierce, and that these were later used in the State Dining Room.[38]

A largegreenhouse was added to the west side of the White House by President Pierce in 1857, replacing one on the east side which had been torn down that year to make way for expansion of theTreasury Building.[39]

Although First LadyMary Todd Lincoln refurbished most of the rooms in the White House in 1861, there is scant evidence to indicate she did much to the State Dining Room. However, the room was used byFrancis Bicknell Carpenter as an artist's workshop as he paintedFirst Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln from February to July 1864.[40] In 1867, four walnutconsole tables were placed against the walls of the dining room.[41]

Changes in the mid to late 1800s

[edit]

The western greenhouse burned down in 1867, and in 1869 PresidentUlysses S. Grant built a larger, taller greenhouse in its place.[42] Grant also rebuilt the Grand Stair at this time, so that only a single staircase against the north wall led to the Second Floor. (A second stair on the south wall of the Second Floor led to the Third Floor.)[43] Later presidents expanded the greenhouse further,[42] and after it was turned into apalm court in 1877 by PresidentRutherford B. Hayes new doors were cut through the stone of the mansion's walls to provide access between the Palm Court and State Dining Room.[44]

Minor furnishing changes were also made in the last quarter of the 1800s. In 1880, First LadyLucy Webb Hayes installed a new carpet and lace curtains in the State Dining Room. She also purchased two Victoriancandelabra for $125 each ($4,073 in 2024 dollars) fromTiffany & Co. The three-tiered items, featuring floralgarlands and the heads ofsatyrs and reclining children at the base, were probably made in Europe (their manufacturer is not known) and have remained in the room ever since.[45]

In 1882, PresidentChester A. Arthur contracted withTiffany & Co. to redecorate the State Dining Room. Most of the work involved painting and regilding,[46] and it was at this time that the Monroesurtout du table was regilded.[47] A major redecoration of the State Dining Room occurred again about 1884, which received new carpets, curtains, draperies, and wall and ceiling paint. Paint scheme was a yellow-brown, and featured a 5-foot (1.5 m) highstencil frieze in various shades of yellow and gold.[48]

The room was electrified in 1891, which included the installation of bronze wall sconces.[49] By 1901, 40 dining room chairs were moved from the Family Dining Room to the State Dining Room.[47][e]

1902 Roosevelt renovation

[edit]
State Dining Room after the 1902 renovation.

The White House was extensively renovated in 1902 after theWest Wing was completed, which allowed a number of government offices to vacate the Executive Residence.[50] PresidentTheodore Roosevelt selected theNew York City architectural firm ofMcKim, Mead & White to oversee the renovations and redecoration.[51] The Grand Stair was demolished and a newGrand Staircase built east of theEntrance Hall. The State Dining Room expanded northward into the space formerly occupied by the Grand Stair.[52][53] The small fireplaces in the east and west walls of the State Dining Room were removed, and the northern door leading west to the Palm Court sealed. (Another door to the Palm Court, beneath the former Grand Stairs, was also sealed.) Where the old Palm Court door existed, a new, massive stone fireplace and oversize mantel (the famous "Buffalo mantel")[54] were added,[f] to match the enlarged room's size and grandeur.[58] McKim, Mead & White implemented a decorative style for the room similar to that of an Englishmanor house.[57] This mixed style has been described asearly Elizabethan with elements ofItalian Renaissance,[56]Beaux-Arts,[58]early 19th century Georgian,[57] late Victorian,[59] and "baronial".[55][60]Herter Brothers ofNew York City designed and installed newplasterwork ceiling andcornice.[61][62] The ceiling was white, while the cornice was painted a delicate gray.[63][g] Below the cornice was a delicately carved frieze featuring (at Roosevelt's insistence) taxidermied animal heads.[64] Dark English oak panelling carved in aRenaissance Revival style,[58] with Corinthianpilasters,[59] was also crafted and installed by Herter Brothers.[65] A baseboard of whitemarble ran around the room,[61] and a new oak floor was installed.[56]

The furnishing of the White House (including the State Dining Room) was overseen by First LadyEdith Roosevelt, and carried out byCharles Follen McKim.[57] The creation of "baronial" hall look included the hanging of tapestries and 11 stuffed animal heads[h] on the wall and cooking racks over the fireplace.[58][57] The Monroe mantels were moved to the Green Room and Red Room to make way for the "Buffalo mantel".[8]

To furnish the room,Stanford White designedWilliam and Mary oak armchairs withcaned backs andQueen Anne stylemahogany side chairs. The chairs were then manufactured by theA. H. Davenport and Company of Boston.[66] Based on furniture in his own home, he also designed two small and one large mahogany side tables with marble tops and carved wooden eagle pedestals.[67][7][i] All these pieces of furniture were manufactured byA. H. Davenport and Company ofBoston.[67] Large, heavyChiavari chairs were also used in the room.[69]

A silver-platedchandelier and eight, silver-plated, six-branch wallsconces were designed by McKim and manufactured and installed byEdward F. Caldwell & Co.[63][70] The chandelier was of a unique design, as it contained no glass or crystal. Instead, it consisted of individual candelabra, each supported by curved piping (a gooseneck). Each gooseneck was attached to the central body, and the entire chandelier hung from the ceiling by a chain.[71] The chandelier proved 6 inches (15 cm) too wide, and had to be taken down and altered.[72] What other furnishings were needed were drawn from the pre-1902 items in the room.[58]

Limited changes were made to the State Dining Room after the Roosevelt renovation. First LadyEllen Axson Wilson had the taxidermied heads removed in March 1913, shortly after occupying the White House.[73] Ellen Wilson died in August 1914. President Woodrow Wilson then marriedEdith Bolling Galt in December 1915. Mrs. Wilson disliked the two square tables in the State Dining Room, and had them removed in favor of a round table (capable of seating 14 to 16 people) which she found in the White House kitchen. Mrs. Wilson also had the drapes replaced and chairs reupholstered.[74]

1952 Truman reconstruction

[edit]

The room remained largely unchanged until 1952. One of the few changes made was the addition of a painting,Abraham Lincoln byGeorge P.A. Healy, hung over the fireplace by PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt in 1937. The 1869 oil-on-canvas painting byGeorge Peter Alexander Healy depicts a seated, thoughtful Abraham Lincoln, and has remained over the State Dining Room fireplace ever since.[75][j] Roosevelt also added an inscription to the "Buffalo mantel".[78] The inscription was taken from a letter byJohn Adams to his wifeAbigail written the second night he lived in the White House:[78] "I pray Heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this House, and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof."[59]

Systematic failure of the internal wood beam structure required reconstruction during the administration ofHarry S. Truman.[citation needed] The building was dismantled and an internal steel superstructure was constructed within the sandstone walls.[citation needed] While providing critically needed repairs, much of the original interior materials were damaged or not reinstalled.[citation needed] The State Dining Room, more than any room, had the majority of its wall and ceiling materials reinstalled.[citation needed]

During the 1948-to-1952 reconstruction of the White House, the State Dining Room was completely redecorated. The "Buffalo mantel" was replaced with a simpleneo-Georgian style mantel of dark green marble.[citation needed] The upscale New York City department store,B. Altman and Company, was selected as the chief interior design consultant and supplier for decor and furnishings. Charles T. Haight, director of Altman's design department, chose new fabrics for the carpet and chairs in the room.[79] The "Buffalo mantel" was given to President Truman (who had it installed it in hispresidential library).[54] The oak panelling, heavily damaged during its removal, was reinstalled and given a coat of bright celadon green to hide the flaws.[80] (Some of the frieze had to be recarved where it had been sanded down to accommodate the stuffed animal heads.)[81] KingGeorge VI of the United Kingdom donated a late 17th-century carved and gilded overmantel mirror and painting frame, and a pair of 1770 bronze and blue candelabra designed and manufactured by the renowned metalsmith,Matthew Boulton. Edith Wilson's round dining table was removed, and replaced with a mahogany dining table in the style ofGeorge Hepplewhite.[82]

Kennedy renovation

[edit]

First LadyJacqueline Kennedy worked with American antiques expertHenry Francis du Pont and French interior designerStéphane Boudin on the restoration of the State Dining Room.[83] Du Pont and Boudin both recommended that changes should emphasize the earlier work of McKim.[84] Most of Boudin's suggestions for the room mirrored changes he had made to the dining room atLeeds Castle inKent,England.[85]

On Boudin's recommendation,[83] the panelling was repainted bone white[86][87][k] and the silver platedchandelier and wallsconces were regilded[87] to match the Monroe-erasurtout du table.[90] The pilaster-mounted sconces were reinstalled on the side panels at the suggestion ofHenry Francis du Pont, who chaired the Fine Arts Committee for the White House.[88] Boudin and du Pont were in agreement that the 1952 mantel should be replaced. Boudin designed a replacement mantel,[91] but du Pont wanted the original 1902 "Buffalo mantel" and asked the Truman presidential library to return it. The library declined, so a reproduction "Buffalo mantel" was made and installed. This mantel was of white marble (rather than unpolished grey stone) to match the room's new color scheme.[92][l]

At Boudin's suggestion, McKim's mahogany side and console tables were painted to mimick white marble with gold veining,[95][96] and the eagle supports and bowknots were gilded.[7][m] The new color scheme for those pieces were intended to make them blend into the panelling.[96] A new carpet, a copy of one Boudin designed for Leeds Castle,[85] was woven by Stark Carpet Co. ofNew York City[98] and installed.[85] The "Healy Lincoln" portrait was restored,[citation needed] reversing conspicuous damage.[99] The Chippendale reproduction side chairs were removed and replaced by the Chiavari chairs by McKim, Mead & White.[citation needed]

The golddamask draperies installed during the Truman administration were retained until 1967, when new, straight-falling drapes and scallopedwindow valances were installed. These window treatments had been designed by Boudin in 1963, based on work at Leeds Castle.[85] The fabrics were supplied byMaison Jansen, Boudin's firm.[85]

A Chinesecoromandel screen was set up in the State Dining Room in 1961. This screen was on loan from Anne McQuarrie Hatch, wife of Lorenzo Boyd Hatch (co-founder ofAtlas Corporation). It was later donated to the White House, and eventually moved to theSecond Floor.[100] The Monroe administrationsurtout de table, long absent from the room, was retrieved from storage and placed on the table.[90] New vermeil baskets were purchased and used for floral arrangements on the other rounds, while plain tulip-shaped crystal glasses were purchased from the Morgantown Glassware Guild ofWest Virginia to augment the existing china service.[100][n]

The way the State Dining Room was set for events was also fundamentally changed by the Kennedys. All previous administrations had set the tables in an E-shaped[102] or horseshoe arrangement.[86] The Kennedys changed this to rounds,[86][o] which made for more socializing and relaxed protocol.[102] On occasion, tables were also set up in the adjacentBlue Room as well.[102][p]

Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, and George H.W. Bush refurbishments

[edit]

In 1967, Lady Bird Johnson oversaw the installation of new draperies, based on a design created by Stephane Boudin shortly before President Kennedy's assassination,[85] as well as reupholstery of the 1902 chairs.[citation needed] First LadyPat Nixon worked with White House curator Clement Conger to refresh the room in 1971. She had the room painted antique white in 1971 after the Kennedy-era paint proved too bright,[86] and she replaced the Kennedy-era carpet with one ofIndian manufacture.[citation needed]

In 1973, a man and woman broke away from the public tour of the White House and splashed six vials of blood on the walls and some of the furniture in the State Dining Room. The couple said they were protesting the status of oppressed people everywhere.[104]

First LadyNancy Reagan hung new goldsilk draperies designed by interior designer Ted Graber.[105] She initially had the room repainted antique white in 1981, but in 1985, the room was painted off-white with anumberglaze.[86]

During thepresidency of George W. Bush, the badly worn 1952 floor of the State Dining Room was removed. New flooring made ofwhite oak, manufactured by Kentucky WoodFloors,[106] was installed by Mountain State Floors (aWest Virginia company) in aherringbone pattern.[107]

Clinton renovation

[edit]
The State Dining Room after the Clinton renovation, set for a state dinner during the administration of George W. Bush.

By the early 1990s, more than 50,000 people a year were being entertained in the State Dining Room. The heavy use left the room shabby and in need of significant repair and conservation.[105]

In December 1998, First LadyHillary Clinton unveiled a renovated State Dining Room.[108] She was advised byinterior designer Kaki Hockersmith (a long-time friend of the Clintons), interior designer Mark Hampton ofNew York City (who had worked on the White House for PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush and First LadyBarbara Bush), and theCommittee for the Preservation of the White House.[105] The room's walls were repainted a light stone color,[69] with architectural details lightly highlighted.[108] The pedestal console tables were stripped of paint which mimicked white marble with gold veining, and their original mahogany finish was restored.[95] The gilded chandelier and wall sconces were polished and brightened.[108] The room's 66 chairs were reupholstered in a gold damask.[105] Newivory silk draperies, manufactured byF. Schumacher & Co.,[95] with printed full-color baskets, flowers, and ribbons replicating a 1901 damask design used by the firm, replaced the solid gold fabric drapes of the 1980s.[109] The drapes were designed to reflect the color pattern of theWhite House china.[105] A $113,031 ($218,054 in 2024 dollars), 43-by-28-foot (13.1 by 8.5 m) carpet with a floral medallion pattern was also installed.[105] The Colonial Revival-style[108] carpet was woven by Scott Group Custom Carpets inGrand Rapids, Michigan.[105] The 1902 silver-plated chandelier and the wall sconces—last gilded in 1961—were refinished, repaired, rewired, and cleaned.[95] Sources differ as to the cost, with one putting it at $270,507[105] ($521,850 in 2024 dollars) and another at $341,000[69] ($657,842 in 2024 dollars), but the cost was paid for by theWhite House Endowment Trust.[105] The Clinton refurbishment was not as successful as hoped.White House CuratorWilliam G. Allman noted that at night, the lack of backlighting from outside tended to make the drapes fade into the walls.[69]

The Clintons were also the first to use theEast Room for most state dinners, rather than the much smaller State Dining Room. The reason was size: The State Dining Room could accommodate only about 136 people, while the East Room sat 260. The Clintons also usedmarquees, set up on theSouth Lawn of the White House, for state dinners, which allowed seating to run as high as 700 individuals. PresidentGeorge W. Bush, however, returned to the practice of hosting state dinners almost exclusively in the State Dining Room.[110] The gold-upholstered chairs[109] were often removed for meals and replaced with smaller chairs from elsewhere in the White House, as they proved too bulky to accommodate large numbers of guests around dining tables.[69]

Obama renovation

[edit]

By 2011, the heavy wear and tear on the State Dining Room had taken a toll on the rugs and drapes in State Dining Room.[69]

On June 25, 2015, a renovated State Dining Room was unveiled by First LadyMichelle Obama.[69] Mrs. Obama and the Committee for the Preservation of the White House began planning the renovation in 2012.[69][q] The first element of the renovation, a 28-by-43-foot (8.5 by 13.1 m) carpet, was installed in 2012.[69] Thewool rug,[r] woven by Scott Group Custom Carpets, features a border of wreaths surrounding a field of mottled light blue accented by clusters ofoak leaves.[69][112] The carpet's design mimics the plaster molding of the ceiling.[69][112]

The new silk window draperies areecru in color, accented with stripes of peacock blue intended to mimic the Kailua blue color of the White House china (which in turn mimics the waters of President Obama's home state ofHawaii).[109] Fabric for the draperies was manufactured by an undisclosed firm inPennsylvania.[69] The window valances feature heavyswags, with goldbullion fringe, and reflect similar window treatments from the 1800s.[69] The drapes hang from carved andgilded poles[111] whose design echoes that of similar drapery poles in theRed Room andGreen Room.[112] The walls andmoldings were repainted in various shades of white andglazed, to highlight their details.[69]

A new set of 34 mahogany chairs replaced the Theodore Roosevelt-era Chiavari chairs, which had proved too large and cumbersome.[69] The set includes six armchairs and 28 side chairs.[112] The new chairs were designed to be multifunctional, and fit with both the heavy, main dining table as well as smaller dining rounds.[69] The look of the Obama armchairs is based on chairs designed byGeorgetown cabinetmaker William King, Jr. in 1818 for President James Monroe.[69][112] The side chairs are an adaptation of this design.[112] All the chairs are upholstered in brownhorsehair fabric in a grid-like pattern, and trimmed with brass nailheads.[109] The chairs were manufactured by Baker Furniture inHickory, North Carolina, and the fabric byBrunschwig & Fils.[69]

The White House Endowment Trust paid for the $590,000 renovation.[69][109]

References

[edit]
Notes
  1. ^Asurtout de table was a richly detailed centerpiece used to hold fruit, desserts,savories, orliqueurs. They were usually made of gold-giltbronze orbrass, but silver orporcelain ones were also common. The centerpiece usually stood on small legs, and its floor was often mirrored. It had a finely wrought rim, usually depicting fruit, leaves, vines, animals,bacchantes, orputti. The plateau often came in sections, so it could be expanded or reduced as needed. The centerpice also usually had slots in the rim or floor where removable statuettes, candelabra, or pedestals on which small serving plates could be inserted.[14]
  2. ^Only two soup tureens have survived into the late 20th century.[21]
  3. ^Only a few pearl-handled fruit knives survived into the 20th century.[21]
  4. ^The balloon-backed chair is so named because its back resembles the shape of a hot air balloon: Curved around a center point, moving vertical and then back and outward.[34]
  5. ^Eighteen of these leather-upholstered dining room chairs were ordered in 1882 from Hertz Brothers of New York, and another 12 more in 1883. A few years later, 22 copies of these chairs were manufactured by Daniel G. Hatch & Company of Washington, D.C.[47]
  6. ^This mantel, of unpolished gray stone[55] fromWorcester,England,[56] was originally carved with lion's heads. Roosevelt wanted animals more representative of the United States, and ordered them recarved into bison heads.[57]
  7. ^McKim ordered the ceiling painted seven times in order to achieve the correct shade of gray.[63]
  8. ^These includedAmerican bison,elk,moose, andwhite-tailed deer, among others.[57]
  9. ^The exact style of these side tables is not clear.White House CuratorBetty C. Monkman said they were Italian in design,[67] but theBrooklyn Museum says they are in the style of English architectWilliam Kent.[68]
  10. ^The "Healy Lincoln" and the "Healy Quincy Adams" were moved to the East Room in June 1973. It was replaced by a newly-acquired 1895 work,Under the Palisades in October, byJasper Francis Cropsey.[76] The "Healy Lincoln" was returned to the State Dining Room in August 1974.[77]
  11. ^Jacqueline Kennedy's good friend, the interior decoratorSister Parish, convinced painter and craftsman Peter H. Guertler, widely known as an expert on restoration of historic interior paintwork, to repaint the room for free.[88][89]
  12. ^The reproduction mantel was smaller than the 1902 original.[93] It was a gift of the Marble Industry of New York and the architectural firm Steinmann, Cain, and White (successor to McKim, Mead & White).[94]
  13. ^Guertler also oversaw the painting and gilding of these items, work and materials which he also donated.[97]
  14. ^The Morgantown Glass Guild eventually went out of business. Replacement glassware was ordered in 1974 from the Fostoria Glass Company of West Virginia, and in 1994 from Lenox Crystal of Pennsylvania.[101]
  15. ^The rounds were manufactured by White House carpenters.[103]
  16. ^The State Dining Room can seat 120 people at rounds, while the Blue Room can seat about 30 at rounds.[103]
  17. ^Michael S. Smith, an interior designer and friend of the Obamas, is a member of the Committee for the Preservation of the White House.[69]
  18. ^There are two identical rugs, which are regularly switched to reduce wear and tear and allow for cleaning.[111]
Citations
  1. ^abcPhillips-Schrock 2013, p. 120.
  2. ^Peatross et al. 2005, p. 93.
  3. ^Harris 2002, p. 87.
  4. ^John Adams's blessing in 1945
  5. ^Monkman 2000, p. 29.
  6. ^Monkman 2000, p. 35.
  7. ^abcdefBuckland & Culbert-Aguilar 1994, p. 35.
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Bibliography

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Further reading

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toState Dining Room (White House).
  • Abbott, James A.A Frenchman in Camelot: The Decoration of the Kennedy White House by Stéphane Boudin. Boscobel Restoration Inc.: 1995.ISBN 0-9646659-0-5.
  • Clinton, Hillary Rodham.An Invitation to the White House: At Home with History. Simon & Schuster: 2000.ISBN 0-684-85799-5.
  • McKellar, Kenneth, Douglas W. Orr, Edward Martin, et al.Report of the Commission on the Renovation of the Executive Mansion. Commission on the Renovation of the Executive Mansion, Government Printing Office: 1952.
  • Seale, William.The President's House. White House Historical Association and the National Geographic Society: 1986.ISBN 0-912308-28-1.
  • Wolff, Perry.A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy. Doubleday & Company: 1962.
  • The White House: An Historic Guide. White House Historical Association and the National Geographic Society: 2001.ISBN 0-912308-79-6.

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