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Wilson desk

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Oval Office desk

Wilson desk
Gerald Ford sitting at a large mahogany desk in the Oval Office
Gerald Ford sitting at the Wilson Desk withGeorge Meany in 1974, before his redesign of the Oval Office décor
Date1898
MaterialsMahogany
Sold byW. B. Moses and Sons
Height31 in (79 cm)
Width80.75 in (205.1 cm)
Depth58.25 in (148.0 cm)
CollectionUnited States Senate

The desk in theVice President's Room of theUnited States Capitol, colloquially known as theWilson desk and previously called theMcKinley-Barkley desk, is a largemahoganypartners desk used by U.S. PresidentsRichard Nixon andGerald Ford in theOval Office as theirOval Office desk. One of only six desks used by a President in the Oval Office, it was purchased in 1898 byGarret Augustus Hobart, the 24thVice President of the United States, for the Vice President's Room in the United States Capitol.

Nixon chose this desk for the Oval Office because of his mistaken belief that former PresidentWoodrow Wilson had used it there. In 1971 Nixon had five recording devices secretly installed in the Wilson desk by theUnited States Secret Service. These recordings constitute some of theWatergate tapes. UponJimmy Carter's ascent to the presidency, he moved the Wilson desk back to the Vice President's Room, preferring to work at theResolute desk.

Nixon referred to the desk in 1969 in his "silent majority" speech, stating: "Fifty years ago, in this room and at this very desk, President Woodrow Wilson spoke words which caught the imagination of a war-weary world."[1] In actuality, the desk was never used by Wilson in the Oval office. Nixon was informed by one of his speech writers,William Safire, that the desk was actually used by Vice PresidentHenry Wilson during PresidentUlysses S. Grant's administration. This is also untrue since the desk was purchased 23 years after the former's death.

Design and markings

[edit]
Nixon seated behind the Wilson desk and Ford seated next to it.
Richard Nixon andGerald Ford at the Wilson desk showing Nixon with his feet on the desk

The Wilson desk is amahogany double-pedestal desk with ornate carving.[2][3] The 31 in (79 cm) high desk has a workspace which is 80.75 in (205.1 cm) wide and 58.25 in (148.0 cm) deep.[4] The knee-hole extends all the way through the desk and both pedestals contain drawers on both the front and back of the units. During its time in the White House the desk featured a glass top which was placed to protect its work surface.[5]

The desk bears a property decal from theSergeant at Arms of the United States Senate and is numbered S-4966.[6] Within the kneehole area there is a small wooden box affixed to the desk where a button was installed that allowed Richard Nixon to turn on recording devices. The button no longer exists but its location is still apparent.[3]

According to the bookPresidential Anecdotes by Paul F. Boller, Nixon enjoyed working in the Oval Office with his feet propped up on the Wilson desk and, in spite of the glass cover, Nixon's "...heels began leaving scars on the top of it."[7] Someone at the White House noticed the marring of the historic desk and, while Nixon was out of the United States, had it refinished. When Nixon returned and saw what had been done he supposedly stated, "Dammit. I didn't order that. I want to leavemy mark on this place just like other Presidents!"[7]

History

[edit]
a three-quarter length portrait of Garret Augustus Hobart
Garret Augustus Hobart in theVice President's Room of theUnited States Capitol leaning on the Wilson desk
Thomas Marshall sitting at the Wilson desk surrounded by 8 people.
Thomas R. Marshall seated at the Wilson desk signing theNineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

Garret Augustus Hobart, the24thVice President of the United States, served from 1897 to 1899 under PresidentWilliam McKinley. While in office he purchased and ordered many lavish furnishings for theVice President's Room of theUnited States Capitol (room S–214), then the official office for the vice president.[2] The furnishings either purchased or ordered by Hobart includedPersian rugs,mohair carpeting,Neapolitansilk curtains, "a silk velour slumber robe" to match thevelour cushions on his office sofa, a $600 (equivalent to $22,678 in 2024)floor clock from Harris and Schaferjewelers, and a large mahogany desk, now known as the Wilson desk.[2][8]

The desk was likely ordered in 1898 from W. B. Moses and Sons by Hobart.[9] According to the United States Senate Curator's Office, W. B. Moses and Sons was, at the time, "the largest exclusively retail furniture, carpet, and drapery business in the nation."[10] W. B. Moses and Sons also provided other furniture for the Senate around this time including eight benches for theUnited States Senate Reception Room.[10]

Over the next few decades the desk remained in the Vice President's Room and continued to be used by each Vice President of the United States there.[8] The Vice President's Room saw many ceremonial functions, caucuses, press briefings, and meetings during this time. On June 4, 1919, Vice PresidentThomas R. Marshall signed theNineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution on this desk, which grantedwomen the right to vote, and in 1937 Vice PresidentJohn Nance Garner set aside April 6 as National Army Day by signing a resolution on the Wilson desk.[2][9]

Alben W. Barkley, the U.S. vice president from 1949 to 1953, asserted in his 1954autobiography that the desk in the Senate office for the vice president was once used by presidents McKinley andWoodrow Wilson, referring to it as the "Mc-Kinley-Wilson desk".[11][12]

In 1953,Richard Nixon succeeded Barkley as vice president and used this desk throughout his tenure, believing likewise it had been previously used by presidents McKinley and Wilson. Nixon was an admirer of Woodrow Wilson and believed this desk was used by him during his term as president.[5][13] He had traced the provenance to President Wilson based on an assumption that it was a desk originally used by McKinley but withdrawn after hisassassination; afterwards, the desk was asserted to have been used by President Wilson for his two terms before finally being moved to the vice president's office.[14][15]

A 1974 document created by theWhite House Office of the Curator states in 1965 the Vice Presidents Room was handed over toHubert Humphrey who refurbished the space and had the desk placed in storage for the four years he used the room.[16] This official accounting of the history of the desk is in conflict with a 1963 television interview withLady Bird Johnson where she shows the desk in then vice presidentLyndon B. Johnson's office athis ranch inTexas.[17]

In this interview Lady Bird discusses how the desk ended up at the ranch. She explains the desk, "was used in the Capitol for a great many years, then his office force went in together and bought it for him when it was declared surplus available."Richard Reeves also states in his bookPresident Nixon: Alone in the White House that Johnson had the desk shipped to Texas to use in his office there.[18]

James Davies, the gardener at the Johnsons' house in Texas, stated in an oral history of the office, within the 1987 Historic Structure Report of the building, that when Johnson was inaugurated as vice president a new desk was moved into the office, and a different desk was moved in when he became president.[19] This recalling of desks is in conflict with a picture theLyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum has of Johnson sitting at the desk in his office on April 17, 1965, which was after hissecond inauguration.[20] In 1967 theGeneral Services Administration refinished a desk and chair in Johnson's office at his ranch. It is unclear which desk this was.[21]

On January 20, 1969, when he became president, Nixon called then-Senate Minority LeaderEverett Dirksen requesting the "Wilson desk" from the Capitol.[22] The desk was placed on loan to theWhite House, was returned to Washington from Texas, and became theOval Office desk for his presidency.[2][18] It was known at that point as the McKinley-Barkley desk.[6]

Nixon had a secret audio recording system installed in the Wilson desk in February 1971. The president's offices in the White House,Camp David, and theOld Executive Office Building all had hidden microphones installed by theUnited States Secret Service. Some of the recordings created by this system make up theWatergate tapes, a series of secret tape recordings revealed to exist during the 1973-74Watergate scandal.[23] Nixon's refusal to release the tapes formed one of thearticle of impeachment against him.[24]

There were seven microphones in total installed in the Oval Office, one on either side of the fireplace and five located within the Wilson desk. These microphones, as well as recording devices in theCabinet Room, were all wired to central mixers and recorders in "an old locker room in the White House basement."[23] Not long after April 9, 1973, a switch was installed in the desk to allow Nixon to turn the microphones on and off at will. Previously they turned on automatically whenever someone began talking.[25] A total of 502 tapes were recorded on these microphones, as well as two by the Oval Office fireplace, while the system was in existence, between February 16, 1971, and July 12, 1973.[26]

Throughout Nixon's presidency he referred to the Wilson desk hundreds of times in official speeches, such as the"silent majority" speech, and in talks with high ranking visitors. During official White House tours, guides wrongly told of how Woodrow Wilson used the desk.[13] This misconception was first discovered to be untrue by an assistant curator at the White House.[13] This assistant curator came to yet another incorrect conclusion about who had previously used the desk. This curator wrongly stated[2][8] that the desk was not used by Woodrow Wilson, but instead by Vice PresidentHenry Wilson, under PresidentUlysses S. Grant's administration. The assistant curator informed Cecilia Bellinger, a chief researcher in the writing operation at the White House, about the mistake. Belinger in turn toldWilliam Safire, one of Nixon's speech writers. It fell to Safire to inform Nixon about the mistake in the desk's provenance.[13]

Fifty years ago, in this room and at this very desk, President Woodrow Wilson spoke words which caught the imagination of a war-weary world.

– Richard Nixon, "Silent majority" speech[1]

Later research indicated that the desk had not been Woodrow Wilson's as had long been assumed but was used by Vice President Henry Wilson during President Grant's Administration.

– Footnote on page 909 of 1969 edition ofPublic Papers of the Presidents[1]

Safire was chosen to inform the President of the issue because he was "the most frequent Wilson-quoter on the writing staff".[13] Safire wrote a memo to Nixon explaining that it was Henry Wilson, not Woodrow Wilson, who sat at the desk, and listed a litany of Henry Wilson's character traits and virtues. Safire heard nothing back from the White House about the memo.[13] The only recognition Nixon's White House gave to their major mistake in the provenance of the desk was in 1969 when on page 909 of that year's edition ofPublic Papers of the Presidents there is a footnote to Nixon's "silent majority" speech which states, "Later research indicated that the desk had not been Woodrow Wilson's as had long been assumed but was used by Vice President Henry Wilson during President Grant's Administration."[13] This is also untrue as the desk was purchased 23 years after Henry Wilson's death.[2][8]

After Nixon's resignation from office on August 9, 1974,Gerald Ford redecorated the Oval Office. The redesign extended to changing out artworks, rugs, window treatments, and he even oversaw the removal of secret sliding door entrances into the room.[27] On August 16, 1974, a memo was sent from Frank R. Pagnotta toCounselor to the PresidentRobert Hartmann explaining the various desks in the White House that were at the presidents disposal for the Oval Office. This memo erroneously claimed that, "President Grant's Vice President, Henry Wilson, fell ill... and died on the couch next to the desk in 1875. From its use by Vice President Wilson it took the name 'Wilson desk.'"[4] On the 28th a response was made to this memo quoting Ford saying, "Let's keep what we have presently."[4]

In February 1975 the Senate asked for the desk to be returned, not realizing it was being used by President Ford. Once informed it was being used in the Oval Office the request was delayed until Ford left office.[6] WhenJimmy Carter became president in 1977 he replaced the Wilson desk with the more widely knownResolute desk.[2] According to Carter the first decision he made in the Oval Office was to replace the Wilson desk with the Resolute desk. Carter states, in hismemoir, "On the first day... I sat down at the President's desk and looked it over. It was a surprise to see that it was not the same one which had been photographed when John Kennedy was there, with his little son peeping out from the door underneath. My first decision: to replace this desk with the one I remembered."[28] The Wilson desk was returned to the Vice President's Room at this time, where it has remained in use since.[2][9]

Gerald Ford sits behind the Wilson Desk talking with George H. W. Bush who sits beside it
PresidentGerald Ford meeting with CIA Director-designateGeorge H. W. Bush at the Wilson desk

The Vice President's Room and the Wilson desk are now used infrequently by vice presidents, largely when they must come to the Senate floor to cast a tiebreaking vote.[29] These votes are so rare that since the desk was returned to the Vice Presidents Room, two vice presidents,Dan Quayle andJoe Biden, did not have the opportunity to cast any tie breaking votes.[30] While not a popular room, it is still in use.Walter Mondale was known to crawl under the desk with visitors to show the screw holes and other markings left by the controls to Nixon's recording system.[29]Dick Cheney saw working with the Senate as a much higher priority than previous vice presidents and used the Vice President's Room and the Wilson desk every week.[3]

During the two time periods the Wilson desk was located in the Vice President's Room, before and after it was loaned to the White House, no vice president had the last name of "Wilson". Because of this, the "Wilson desk" has never had a "Wilson" use it on a regular basis, but a marble bust of Henry Wilson, the vice president mistakenly believed to have used the Wilson desk, does sit in the Vice President's Office near the Wilson desk. This bust, commissioned in 1885, "served as the genesis for theSenate's Vice Presidential Bust Collection".[2]

Timeline

[edit]
the Wilson desk sitting in front of an ornate fireplace and mirror.
The Wilson desk in theVice President's Room of theUnited States Capitol, 1920
A view of President Nixon at the Wilson desk as seen though a window into the Oval Office.
President Nixon at the Wilson desk giving a televised address explaining release of edited transcripts of theWatergate tapes, April 29, 1974
Cheney and Addington stand in front of the Wilson desk in a room with cream colored walls. A painting, and two busts hand on the wall.
Dick Cheney andDavid Addington stand in front of the Wilson desk, 2008.

Below is a table with the location of the desk from its purchase by Garret Augustus Hobart to present day and each tenant of the desk.

TenantLocationDatesRef.
Garret HobartVice President's Room
United States Capitol
c. 1898–1963[2]
Theodore Roosevelt
Charles W. Fairbanks
James S. Sherman
Thomas R. Marshall
Calvin Coolidge
Charles G. Dawes
Charles Curtis
John Nance Garner
Henry A. Wallace
Harry S. Truman
Alben W. Barkley
Richard Nixon
Lyndon B. JohnsonTexas White House
Johnson City,Texas
1963–1969[17][18]
Richard NixonOval Office
White House
1969–1977[2]
Gerald Ford
Walter MondaleVice President's Room
United States Capitol
1977–present[3]
George H. W. Bush
Dan Quayle
Al Gore
Dick Cheney
Joe Biden
Mike Pence
Kamala Harris
JD Vance

Replicas

[edit]
replica oval office featuring the Wilson desk replica
The replica Wilson desk at theRichard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum

There are two replicas of the Wilson desk, both of which reside in replica Oval Offices inpresidential libraries. TheRichard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, located inYorba Linda,California features a replica of the Wilson desk as part of their full-scale recreation of President Nixon's Oval Office. Visitors can approach the replica and have their picture taken with it.[31] A second replica of the Wilson desk is located in theGerald R. Ford Presidential Museum, inGrand Rapids,Michigan, as a part of a full-scale replica of the Oval Office furnished as it was during Ford's presidency.[32]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcPublic Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Richard M. Nixon. United States Government Printing Office. Washington. 1971. p. 909. Retrieved December 3, 2020.
  2. ^abcdefghijklThe Vice President's Room. Page 6. U.S. Senate Commission on Art by the Office of Senate Curator. Senate Publication 106–7. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  3. ^abcdVice President's Ceremonial Office.C-SPAN. Program ID 192302-5. JUNE 2, 2006. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  4. ^abc"Memo, Frank Pagnotta to Robert Hartmann"Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Gerald R. Ford Presidential Handwriting File, retrieved January 25, 2017
  5. ^abNixon.The Virgin Islands Daily News. January 23, 1969. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  6. ^abcPresident - Oval Office Desk, 3/75.Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. John Marsh Files. Box 28. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  7. ^abBoller, Paul F.Presidential Anecdotes. pp. 328.Oxford University Press. 1996.
  8. ^abcdHatfield, Mark O. with theSenate Historical Office.Vice Presidents of the United States 1789-1993 : Garret A. Hobart (1897-1899).Archived January 19, 2012, at theWayback Machine.U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 289-293. 1997. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  9. ^abcDesk, Flat-Top.United States Senate. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  10. ^abSenate Reception Room Benches.United States Senate. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  11. ^Barkley, Alben William (1954). "Chapter 15: At Last, the "Veep"!". In Shalett, Sidney (ed.).That Reminds Me (1st ed.).Garden City, New York:Doubleday & Company, Inc. p. 210.ISBN 978-0-59-875444-8.LCCN 54010775.OCLC 456611.OL 6156719M. Retrieved2025-05-26. p. 210:I was proud to occupy the historic room in the Capitol assigned to the Vice President... I enjoyed being surrounded by the priceless relics which enhanced the office:... a desk once used by McKinley and Wilson, and so on...One day, alas, I unwittingly defiled—or maybe enhanced?—the Mc-Kinley-Wilson desk.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  12. ^Libbey, James K. (2016-03-03). "Chapter 15: The Iron Man Becomes a Veep".Alben Barkley: A Life in Politics.Lexington, Kentucky:University Press of Kentucky. p. 257.ISBN 978-0-8131-6713-8.LCCN 2015044831.OCLC 922631955.OL 20477883W. Retrieved2025-05-26. p. 257:Barkley occupied an office reserved historically for the Senate president in the Capitol Building. The room was adorned with...a hand-me-down desk formerly used by several presidents, including Barkley's hero T. Woodrow Wilson.
  13. ^abcdefgSafire, William.Before the Fall: an inside view of the pre-Watergate White House. Pages 104-106. Transaction Publishers, 2005.
  14. ^Ballard, Leonard H. (2004-04-03)."Leonard Ballard: Oral History Transcript"(PDF) (Interview). Interviewed by Baker, Richard A. Washington D.C.: US Senate Historical Office. p. 165.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2025-05-11. Retrieved2025-05-26.
  15. ^Nichols, Harman W. (1956-07-26)."Visitors at Vice-President's Office Receive Little Memo". Washington D.C.:The Bulletin. United Press International. p. 14. Retrieved2025-05-26.
  16. ^White House - Oval Office.Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Series: Sheila Weidenfeld's General Subject Files, 1974 - 1977. p. 10. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
  17. ^abThe Johnsons of Johnson City (1963).KPRC-TV. 27:12 - 27:32. 1963. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  18. ^abcReeves. p. 27.
  19. ^Bearss, Edwin C. "Historic Structure Report: Texas White House, Lyndon B. Johnson National Historical Park, Texas". Division of Conservation, Southwest Cultural Resources Center,National Park Service,U.S. Department of the Interior. 1986. p. 23. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  20. ^LBJ Library,@LBJLibrary."Wherever LBJ was is where work was. But, it looks like one of the beagles wasn't too into #TakeYourDogToWorkDay. Sleeping symbol Face with tears of joy Camera President Johnson works in his office at the LBJ ranch as one of his beagles sleeps under his desk, April 17, 1965." Twitter. June 22, 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  21. ^Expenditure of Federal Funds in Support of Presidential Properties.United States Congress. House. Government Operations Committee. 1973. pp. 419-420. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  22. ^Ketchum, James Roe (2004-04-03)."Senate Curator"(PDF)."Interview with James Ketchum by U.S. Senate Historical Office"(PDF) (Interview). Interviewed byRitchie, Donald. Washington D.C.: US Senate Historical Office. pp. 180–181.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2025-05-26. Retrieved2025-05-26.I remember Nixon calling Dirksen in 1969, saying that he wanted the "Wilson desk" from the vice president's Capitol office sent down to the White House. He wanted to have the same desk that Woodrow Wilson had. And Nixon, I don't know what happened, but he obviously missed a beat during those eight years that he was in the Capitol, because the desk that he had requested was attributed to the administration of Vice President Henry Wilson, not Thomas Woodrow Wilson.
  23. ^abHistory of the White House tapes.Archived February 20, 2012, at theWayback Machine
  24. ^"Nixon impeachment articles".academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu. RetrievedJune 1, 2021.
  25. ^Reeves. p. 593.
  26. ^Nixon Secret White House Recordings: Collection Specifications.Miller Center of Public Affairs.University of Virginia. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
  27. ^Sidey, Hugh.Subtle Changes in the Oval OfficeArchived January 22, 2011, at theWayback Machine.Time magazine. January 13, 1975. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  28. ^Carter, Jimmy.Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a President.University of Arkansas Press. 1995. p. 26. Retrieved January 3, 2020
  29. ^abCalmes, Jackie.Desk Jockeying: The Senate Chamber Is Hotbed of Intrigue --- It Isn't Just Where You Sit, But Who Once Sat There; One Stray Dog: Nixon's.Wall Street Journal. January 7, 2003. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  30. ^Occasions When Vice Presidents Have Voted to Break Tie Votes in the Senate.Senate Historical Office. December 21, 2018
  31. ^Visit the Nixon Library.Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
  32. ^At Work in the Oval Office.Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved November 18, 2020.

Works cited

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