East Room
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The East Room is an event and reception room in the Executive Residence of the White House complex, the home of the president of the United States. The East Room is the largest room in the Executive Residence; it is used for dances, receptions, press conferences, ceremonies, concerts, and banquets. The East Room was one of the last rooms to be finished and decorated, and it has undergone substantial redecoration over the past two centuries. Since 1964, the Committee for the Preservation of the White House has, by executive order, advised the president of the United States and first lady on the decor, preservation, and conservation of the East Room and other public rooms at the White House.
Construction and early decoration
The White House was designed by architect James Hoban. Leinster House in Ireland was the main inspiration for the White House, and includes a large east room which may have inspired Hoban's East Room. But the newly added Large Dining Room at Mount Vernon may also have been a source for the design of the East Room.Template:Sfn As his drawings of the second and third floor do not exist, it is unclear what use Hoban intended for the room.Template:Sfn It is possible that Hoban intended it for use as a private gallery for the family.Template:Sfn It was the largest room in the White House, however, about Script error: No such module "convert". in size with a Script error: No such module "convert". ceiling.Template:Sfn The middle window in the north wall was designed to provide access to a terrace (never built).Template:Sfn
The East Room was first assigned a purpose in 1807. Architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe had been brought to the capital by Thomas Jefferson, who made him commissioner of public buildings. Latrobe surveyed the White House in 1803, and architectural drawings of the building (produced in 1807) are the earliest extant plans now known. On his sketches, Latrobe comments "Public Audience chamber entirely unfinished, the ceiling has given way."Template:Sfn Latrobe also proposed sealing the windows on the east side of the room based on an architectural theory about natural light. But this change was not made.Template:Sfn
Early furnishings
The East Room was among the last rooms on the State Floor to be completed and used. The White House was unfinished when President John Adams occupied it between 1800 and 1801. His wife, Abigail Adams, hung laundry in the bare East Room to dry.Template:Sfn Although much of the White House was finished and decorated during Adams administration, the East Room was not. The room's lone artwork was a copy of the Lansdowne portrait depicting George Washington, painted by Gilbert Stuart in 1797. It was purchased by the White House in 1800, and hung in the East Room. (Rescued from the 1814 fire, it still hangs there, with a companion portrait of Martha Washington painted by Eliphalet Frazer Andrews in 1878.)Template:Sfn There was extensive feeling in Congress that Adams had adopted too many of the trappings of monarchy, and Congress declined to appropriate funds to finish the room for fear it would look too much like a throne room.Template:Sfn During the Jefferson administration, 38 gold-and-black painted chairs were purchased and placed in the room,Template:Sfn but little else is known of the room's furnishings prior to 1814.Template:Sfn Jefferson also had the East Room partitioned (using canvas and sailcloth for walls) and the southern end used for a bedroom and office for Meriwether Lewis and Lewis Harvie (both Private Secretary to the President).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Jefferson's successor, James Madison, sought to make the partitions permanent and asked Latrobe to design bedrooms and office space across the southern part of the room. But these changes were not made, either.Template:Sfn Madison did use a portion of the East Room, however, for Cabinet meetings.Template:Sfn
Post-fire restoration and furnishings
The East Room, along with the rest of the White House, was burned in 1814 during the Burning of Washington in the War of 1812. The interior was gutted, although most of the exterior sandstone walls remained standing. The north facade of the White House was the most damaged. But because the East Room had so little furniture in it, the section of the north facade fronting the East Room was the least damaged.Template:Sfn Latrobe helped to reconstruct the White House. In 1814 and 1815, the rebuilt East Room received new door frames and inlaid mahogany doors that remain in the room today. New plaster work in the form of a gilded cornice-line frieze of anthemion (a flowerlike, traditional Greek decorative pattern) was installed,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and the walls plastered (and left unpainted) as well.Template:Sfn
Federal style furniture, made by Georgetown craftsman William King Jr., was added to the East Room by President James Monroe in 1818.Template:Sfn (First Lady Elizabeth Monroe's involvement was limited to choosing drapery fabric for the room).Template:Sfn King produced 24 armchairs and four sofas, all made of mahogany. The total cost was $1,408. The furniture was not upholstered, and sat along the walls largely unused.Template:Sfn In 1829, the first year of the Jackson administration,Template:Sfn the King furniture was finally upholstered in blue damask silk.Template:Sfn Monroe also purchased (for $80) a marble bust of George Washington by the Italian sculptor Giuseppe Ceracchi, which remained in the East Room probably until the Kennedy redecoration in 1962 (when it was moved to the Blue Room).[1]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn[2] Monroe also purchased in 1817 for the fireplace mantels four gilt bronze candelabra, designed and manufactured by the French bronzemaker Pierre-Philippe Thomire.Template:Sfn
By 1825, the room contained 24 unfinished mahogany armchairs, four large unfinished mahogany sofas, eight tables made of pine, a door screen, a paper partition, a three-shelf bookshelf, a mahogany map stand, a washstand (with basin and ewer), and a clothes press.Template:Sfn But for the most part, from 1818 to 1829 the East Room was unused. Occasionally it was cleared and used for dances, but usually its doors were locked and it served as storage space.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A widely reported story claims that for two months in the summer of 1825, the East Room housed at least one live alligator that belonged to the visiting Marquis de Lafayette,[3]Template:Efn but a lack of contemporary evidence suggests that the story might be apocryphal.[4][5] Congress appropriated $6,000 to finally finish the room in 1826, although the funds were not made available until 1825. President John Quincy Adams used the money to repair the White House rather than finish the room.Template:Sfn
1829 completion under Jackson
The East Room was finally completed and decorated in 1829 by Andrew Jackson. New plaster work in the form of a cornice-line frieze of anthemion (a flowerlike, traditional Greek decorative pattern) was installed,Template:Sfn three Neoclassical plasterwork medallions affixed to the ceiling,Template:Sfn and the demi-lune over the east wall's Venetian window removed and turned into a wall.Template:Sfn Decorative wooden beams were added to the ceiling,Template:Sfn and two of the east-facing windows were blocked off and fireplaces with black Italian marble mantelpieces installed in their place.Template:Sfn The Jackson administration turned to French-born American importer Louis Véron of Philadelphia for assistance in furnishing the executive mansion. Véron was one of the first merchants to display items from a wide range of suppliers in a showroom, rather than manufacture the items himself. Nearly all the 1829 furnishings for the East Room were supplied by Véron.Template:Sfn Véron also added gilt rays and stars over the west door (the one the president usually used when entering the room).Template:Sfn
The bare walls were covered with yellow wallpaper with cloth edging, light-blue moreen drapes were added to the windows,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn and plaster cornices adorned with eagles were installed over the windows.Template:Sfn Véron covered the floor with a red-bordered blue, fawn, and yellowTemplate:Sfn Script error: No such module "convert". carpet woven in Brussels.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The 1818 Monroe furniture was upholstered,Template:Sfn three large mahogany tables topped with marble, and four white marble-topped pier tables placed in the room.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn For lighting, Véron provided several astral and mantel lamps.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Gilded bronze wall brackets for hanging lamps and candles were attached to the walls, and mirrors in gilt frames placed over the fireplace mantels.Template:Sfn
Jackson also purchased three cut-glass chandeliers to light the room.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Each chandelier, which featured 18 whale oil lamps, hung from the ceiling medallions and were complemented with whale oil wall sconces and table lamps.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn There were also 20 spittoons.Template:Sfn His expenditures totaled $9,358.27,Template:Sfn provided by a friendly Congress eager to make the White House a more elegant symbol of the nation.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
The East Room's original 18-lamp chandeliers were removed by Jackson in 1834 and placed in the State and Family Dining Rooms. Véron supplied the East Room with a more luxurious set.Template:Sfn
Mid to late 19th century refurbishments
Furniture upholstered in light blue, light blue curtains,Template:Sfn and imported French silver wallpaper with a gold border were added to the East Room by the Martin Van Buren administration in 1839.Template:Sfn At some point prior to the inauguration of President William Henry Harrison in March 1841, the East Room acquired eight floor-to-ceiling mirrors with broad, heavily carved frames.Template:Sfn President James K. Polk had the White House plumbed for gas heating and lighting in 1848. Cornelius & Company of Philadelphia retrofitted the 1834 chandeliers for gas, and Polk himself watched their first lighting.Template:Sfn By the end of the Polk administration in January 1849, the East Room was adorned with three chandeliers, three "pier glasses" (mirrors), red damask window drapes, white muslin window curtains, four new sofas, 24 new chairs, three large tables (placed in the center of the room), four pier tables with marble tops, a large carpet, four new hearthrugs, four fire fenders, four large candelabra, eight small candelabra, eight mantle ornaments, and a bust of George Washington.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
New draperies, lace curtains, and a carpet were added by Jane Pierce, wife of President Franklin Pierce, in 1853.Template:Sfn The Pierces also had the over-mantel mirrors and pier mirrors reframed by L. R. Menger of New York.Template:Sfn
1861 Lincoln refurbishment
Despite this redecoration, the East Room was nonetheless somewhat shabby by 1861.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On April 18, 1861, about 60 militiamen from Kansas took up temporary residence in the East Room pending construction of barracks for them in the city.Template:Sfn They did serious damage to the carpet, and sometimes shot bullets into the walls.Template:Sfn Mary Todd Lincoln refurbished the room with damask drapes, lace curtains, wallpaper, and a new $2,500 carpet later that year.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The wallpaper was heavy patterned velvet cloth paper from Paris in crimson, garnet, and gold,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and supplied by William H. Carryl & Brother of New York.Template:Sfn The floor covering was a carpet woven in Glasgow, Scotland. The largest loom in the world was needed to weave the carpet, which covered the entire floor. The drapes were crimson with heavy gold fringe and numerous gold tassels, while the lace curtains behind them were imported from Switzerland.Template:Sfn
The East Room under the Lincolns remained sparsely furnished, however, as befit a reception hall. The three chandeliers, which dated from the Jackson administration, were cleaned and reinstalled. They were so brilliant that the press assumed they were new. Mrs. Lincoln left the three large mahogany tables with black and gold marble inlays, which had long occupied the room, below each chandelier.Template:Sfn
Two funerals for Lincoln Family members were held in the East Room in the 1860s. The first was that of 11-year-old Willie Lincoln, President Abraham Lincoln's son, who died of typhoid fever on February 21, 1862.Template:Sfn Just over three years later, Lincoln's body lay in state in the East Room as well, and his funeral was held there on April 19.Template:Sfn
At the time of Lincoln's death in 1865, the East Room contained 24 chairs, four sofas, four tables, eight sets of drapes, eight sets of lace curtains, eight mirrors, and one carpet.Template:Sfn All the furniture was in poor shape.Template:Sfn During his administration, members of the public attending the weekly receptions in the room had heavily vandalized the room in seeking souvenirs, ripping down portions of the wallpaper and stealing cords and tassels from the drapes. Someone even cut a square yard from one of the damask drapes.Template:Sfn Others took scissors and knives to the carpet, gouging the oak floor beneath,Template:Sfn and gilded ornaments were stolen from the mantels.Template:Sfn
President Andrew Johnson had the public rooms on the State Floor refurbished in 1866. His wife, Eliza McCardle Johnson, was in frail health and did little in the way of entertaining or overseeing the White House. Johnson instead relied on his daughter, Martha Patterson (wife of Senator David T. Patterson).Template:Sfn In May, the East Room was cleared of furnishings. Mrs. Patterson oversaw the selection of new yellow wallpaper with a black and gold border, lace curtains, and reupholstered furniture. The ceiling was repainted and frescoes added, and the ceiling centerpieces and cornices were regilded. Only once did Mrs. Johnson intervene, and that was to request that the paint applied to ceiling be of the highest quality.Template:Sfn Patterson also had the three large marble-topped tables removed from the East Room and placed in the family private quarters, and two of the four pier tables added to the Family Dining Room.Template:Sfn The East Room was finished in early 1867.Template:Sfn
1873 Grant refurbishment
The East Room was radically redecorated in 1873 during the administration of Ulysses S. Grant. Architects Orville Babcock (Commissioner of Public Buildings and Grounds), Richard Ezdorf, William J. McPherson, and Alfred Mullett were faced with both a decorative and structural task. The heavy walls above the East Room as well as inadequate structural support had caused the ceiling to sag appreciably. Furthermore, the Grants wanted to renovate the East Room into a far more modern space reflective of their Midwest tastes. The architects added new load-bearing beams across the ceiling, which made the room appear to be more intimate in sectional spaces. Corinthian columns were added to support these beams. To integrate the beams into the room, they extended the 1815 frieze decoratively across the beams.Template:Sfn The ceiling, divided into three sections by the beams, was refrescoed as well.Template:Sfn Elaborately carved new fireplaces painted in white and gold replaced the simpler 1829 fireplaces.Template:Sfn To help integrate the load-bearing columns into the room, white and gold painted pilasters were added to the room.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn White-painted carved paneling with Greek Revival designs;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn massive, low-hanging, cut-glass chandeliers (replacing those which had hung since 1834);Template:Sfn pearl gray and gilt wallpaper,Template:Sfn and wall-to-wall carpeting in a floral pattern completed the redecoration.Template:Sfn Much of the furniture in the room was sold at public auction (a common and unremarkable practice until the 20th century).Template:SfnTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn The architects called the style "Pure Greek",Template:Sfn and architectural historian Patrick Phillips-Schrock called it "sumptuous",Template:Sfn but it was widely derided as "Steamboat Gothic".Template:Sfn Nellie Grant's lavish wedding took place in the East Room on May 21, 1874.Template:Sfn
Late 19th century changes
President Chester A. Arthur hired the Washington, D.C., firm of W. B. Moses & Son to redecorate much of the White House in 1881, including the East Room.Template:Sfn Moses & Son added new window curtains and drapes, and a suite of ebony furniture carved in a Japanese style. This suite included sofas, arm chairs, side chairs, and corner chairs.Template:Sfn Arthur then auctioned off an immense quantity of older White House furnishings in April 1882, including some amount of undescribed older furniture from the East Room.Template:Sfn Desiring an even grander approach to the public rooms, Arthur hired Tiffany & Co. in 1882 to redecorate the East Room yet again. Most of this work involved painting and regilding, however. No new furniture was ordered, and the over-mantel and pier mirrors reframed or regilded.Template:Sfn
President Grover Cleveland made no changes to the East Room, although a divan upholstered in gold was added below the main chandelier. It was supplied by W. H. Houghton & Co. of Washington, D.C.Template:Sfn
Cleveland's successor, Benjamin Harrison, refurbished most of the State Floor rooms again in 1891 after the White House was wired for electricity. W. H. Post & Co. of Hartford, Connecticut, did the work. The ceiling was repainted, the wallpaper replaced, and new silk damask curtains installed. The furniture in the East Room was reupholstered as well in a gold brocatelle (a brocade with the design in high relief). A new Axminster carpet, Script error: No such module "convert". in size, was also laid down.Template:Sfn When Caroline Harrison died on October 25, 1892 (two weeks before the presidential election), her funeral was held in the East Room.Template:Sfn
Two Sèvres vases (on marble pedestals) were added to the East Room in 1897. They were a gift of the government of France to mark the laying of the Franco-American transatlantic telegraph cable that year.Template:Sfn
1902 Roosevelt restoration
In 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt engaged the architectural firm of McKim, Meade & White to renovate and expand the White House. Their intention was three-fold: To modernize the White House, to establish a decorating motif that would never have to be altered, and to recreate the White House's early American interiors. Although this last guideline was followed in most rooms, it was not in the East Room. McKim, Meade & White drew their inspiration for the East Room from British and French manor house interiors of the 1790s. Nonetheless, the Colonial Revival style was more of an idealized than historically accurate aesthetic, and McKim, Mead & White's interiors reflected a tendency toward light-filled spaces and away from patterns and "busy" or cluttered spaces.Template:Sfn
As the East Room had not been decorated until 1829, the architects took some liberties, devising a room based on the 1780 Louis XVI style salon de famille in the Château de Compiègne.Template:Sfn For the walls, the designers chose pilasters carved by Herter Brothers of New York City,Template:Sfn which appeared to support Neoclassical entablatures.Template:Sfn There were 12 faux entablatures, each made of marble and depicting scenes from Aesop's Fables.Template:Sfn They were designed by Leon Marcotte of L. Marcotte & Co. of New York,Template:Sfn and carved by the Piccirilli Brothers of New York City.Template:Sfn The rest of the walls were painted cream white,Template:Sfn and adorned with gilded sconces (supplied by the lighting firm of Edward F. Caldwell & Co.) and gold wall hangings.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn McKim, Meade & White strongly disliked the East Room's four fireplaces, which divided the area into three spaces. The fireplaces and mantels, which projected about Script error: No such module "convert"., were considerably reduced in depth to just Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:Sfn The mantels were replaced with Script error: No such module "convert".Template:Sfn new ones in the Georgian style.Template:Sfn The marble for each mantel came from a different state, and each was a different color.Template:Sfn
Marcotte & Co. also designed, manufactured, and installed gilded ceiling decorations.Template:Sfn The central section of the ceiling was decorated with a large plaster panel featuring an intricate medallion flanked by swags, acanthus, escutcheons, and scrollwork. A border of acanthus, scrollwork, and egg-and-dart moldings bordered the section. On the narrow ends of the room were smaller sections, similarly decorated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Hanging from the ceiling were three large Bohemian crystal chandeliers.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These replaced the larger, out-of-style chandeliers placed there in 1873 during the Grant administration.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The tent-and-bowl chandeliers were also provided by Caldwell & Co.Template:Sfn but manufactured by Christoph Palme & Co. of Parchen, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary.[6][7] Their design was copied from 18th century English and French chandeliers.Template:Sfn Each chandelier weighed more than Script error: No such module "convert"., was Script error: No such module "convert". high, and had 7,000 glass pieces.[7]Template:Sfn[8]Template:Efn Caldwell & Co. also designed four gilded bronze floor lamps in the Louis XVI style, and four Script error: No such module "convert". floor candelabra in the Empire style with Egyptian Revival elements (such as winged lions).Template:Sfn
The floor of the East Room was replaced with oak parquet, and trimmed in red Numidian marble from North Africa.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn (A box made from the old parquet floor was donated to the White House during the Jimmy Carter administration.)Template:Sfn
In addition to the wall hangings, McKim, Meade & White commissioned a wide range of other furnishings more in line with their Louis XVI style salon de famille style. Marcotte and Co. supplied heavy velvet gold drapes, and topped each window with carved and gilded cornices of the company's own design.Template:Sfn The existing pier tables were removed, and four richly carved and gilded Louis XVI Revival style console tables, also designed by Marcotte & Co., were placed between the pilasters.Template:Sfn The existing seating was also removed,Template:Efn and Marcotte & Co. replaced it with 13 Louis XVI Revival gilded banquettes (upholstered benches).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Marcotte & Co. also supplied new ornate gilded frames for each over-mantel mirror.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A few items in the room were reused, however. These included the mantel candelabra, manufactured by Russell & LaFarge and purchased in the Monroe administration in 1817.Template:Sfn
A personal inspection by Charles Follen McKim also found the East Room clearly sinking.Template:Sfn The problem, not rectified until 1952, was that the interior walls rested on brick columns in the basement, which themselves were sitting on loose rubble footings atop soft soil. The columns were sinking into the soil under the mansion's weight. But forced by Roosevelt to finish the restoration as quickly as possible, McKim was unable to make any structural changes to solve the problem.Template:Sfn
Post-1902 early 20th century changes
The East Room chandeliers were altered in 1903 to reduce their diameter slightly to Script error: No such module "convert"., leaving them with just 6,000 glass pieces.[7]Template:Sfn[9] The renovated chandelier weight dropped to Script error: No such module "convert"..[7] That same year, the Steinway & Sons piano company donated an ornate gilded grand piano to the White House. This piano (serial number 100,000) was placed in the East Room.Template:Sfn During Roosevelt's term, the government of France donated Limoges porcelain busts of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Benjamin Franklin to the White House. These were also placed in the East Room.[10]Template:Efn
Slight changes were made to the East Room during the Woodrow Wilson administration. Ellen Axson Wilson, the president's first wife, made almost no changes to the room.Template:Sfn She died in 1914, just two years into Wilson's first term. Wilson remarried a year later, and the new First Lady, Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, had the 1902 drapes replaced.Template:Sfn
In the early 1930s, First Lady Lou Henry Hoover purchased a number of gilt upholstered dining room chairs in something approaching an Art Deco style for use in the East Room.Template:Sfn
President Franklin D. Roosevelt did little to either renovate or maintain the White House during his unusually long tenure. Roosevelt believed that the White House should "do its part" during the Great Depression and World War II, and economize by minimizing expenditures. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt had little interest in redecorating, and little in the way of social engagements occurred during the war.Template:Sfn One of the few revisions came in the East Room, where the Vollmer suite of furniture was moved from the Blue Room.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Steinway & Sons donated a second grand piano to the White House in 1938. Steinway historians Miles Chapin and Rodica Prato call it the "best-known art-case Steinway" in the world. Architect Eric Gugler designed the Script error: No such module "convert"., mahogany case piano (serial number 300,000). The case is decorated with scenes depicting American music and dance, each gilded in gold leaf. The tableaux, designed by artist Dunbar Beck, depict people dancing the Virginia reel, chanting by Native Americans, cowboys singing during a cattle drive, a barn dance, and African American slaves singing in the fields. The legs of the piano feature gilded eagles, designed and carved by Albert Stewart. (Steinway & Sons completely refurbished the piano in 1992.)Template:Sfn Eleanor Roosevelt also changed the draperies in the East Room from gold to crimson.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
1952 Truman restoration
By the late 1940s, the East Room—along with the rest of the White House—was in such poor shape that its structural integrity was at risk. President Harry S. Truman was attending a concert in the East Room on February 11, 1947, when he was informed that the ceiling of the room was being pulled down by the weight of the chandeliers. The following day, the chandeliers were taken down.Template:Sfn On October 26, 1948, plaster fell from the ceiling of the East Room, exposing a Script error: No such module "convert". crack in the ceiling. Engineers discovered that the ceiling had also dropped by Script error: No such module "convert".. The East Room was cleared of all furniture, and floor-to-ceiling X-shaped wooden braces erected in the room to stabilize it. The room was then sealed off. Engineers with the Public Building Administration and White House staff feared the entire building could collapse.Template:Sfn President and Mrs. Truman left the White House on September 27, 1948, for a 45-day nationwide political barnstorming tour.Template:Sfn When they returned to the White House on November 5,[11] they were immediately informed that the White House had to be evacuated.Template:Sfn The White House was closed to the public on November 7,[12] and after a two-week vacation in Key West, Florida, the Trumans moved into Blair House on November 21, 1948.[13]
During the Truman White House reconstruction that began in 1949, the East Room was found to be in very poor condition. Previous renovations had seriously damaged the interior walls. In one Script error: No such module "convert". section of wall, no fewer than five doors had been cut through the masonry, severely weakening it.Template:Sfn Paneling, windows, and furnishings were dismantled, numbered, and stored. Although great care was taken in removing the plasterwork, there was no way to avoid cracking it during removal. Molds were made from the originals, and new plasterwork installed.Template:Sfn Even so, architect Lorenzo Winslow simplified many of the designs before they were cast, allegedly to make them look less Renaissance Revival and more "American".Template:Sfn Less care was taken in removing the woodwork, some of which was damaged when pried loose. Other pieces were too brittle to be reused, and what could be reused had to be restored (often by removing many layers of paint). But by late 1951, with the White House renovation months behind, costs soaring, and President Truman demanding that the work be sped up, workers found it easier to machine new pieces than restore old wood. All of the paneling for the East Room was condemned as unfit for reuse, whether it was actually unusable or not, and replaced with new wood.Template:Sfn (Although some of the East Room woodwork would be chopped up for souvenirs, most of it was used as landfill at Fort Myer in Arlington County, Virginia.)Template:Sfn The new panelling was also simpler and had considerably less presence,Template:Sfn and was covered in a somewhat lighter color than the 1902 paint.Template:Sfn A simpler crown molding and ceiling medallions were also installed.Template:Sfn
The Herter pilasters and Piccirilli marble panels were either lost or too damaged to be reused during removal, and their fate remains unclear.Template:Sfn To cut costs, the replacement entablature was made of a composite glue and sawdust mixture pressed into forms rather than carved from wood.Template:Sfn While the feeling was similar, the robust architectural effect was diminished.Template:Sfn Red marble mantels were installed, and the remaining Venetian window in the room was narrowed to help create the "American" feel.Template:Sfn (The 1902 mantels were given away.)Template:Sfn
The East Room's chandeliers were rewired and cleaned.Template:Sfn The size of the large chandeliers was reduced by several inches,Template:Sfn assuming their correct size (Script error: No such module "convert". wide and Script error: No such module "convert". high).Template:Sfn They were also outfitted with softer internal illumination,Template:Sfn and the chains holding the chandeliers shortened.[7] The East Room also had a new parquet floor in a style taken from a design at the Palace of Fontainebleau, and silk curtains over the windows.Template:Sfn
The Truman administration did not seek, nor did it receive, many donations of furniture for the White House during the 1952 renovation. But two items were received which made it into the East Room. These were mid-17th century Adam camelback sofas,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn which were placed beneath the George and Martha Washington paintings.Template:Sfn
Post-1952 refurbishments
Kennedy refurbishment
Jacqueline Kennedy made extensive renovations to the White House in 1961 and 1962. Her renovation was overseen by American antiques autodidact Henry Francis du Pont and French interior designer Stéphane Boudin and his company, Maison Jansen.Template:Sfn Although many rooms were extensively altered by du Pont and Boudin, the Kennedy restoration made few changes to the East Room.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The biggest change to the room was in the window treatments.Template:Sfn Jacqueline Kennedy specifically asked for new curtains for the East Room consisting of opaque silk undercurtains and yellow drapes.Template:Sfn Boudin oversaw the design of new draperies,Template:Sfn with silk provided by Maison Jansen.Template:Sfn A draft design of the drapes and valances was not ready until mid-1963. Boudin, apparently wishing to draw attention to the center window between the fireplaces, designed a valance for the center window while putting all other drapes behind window boxes. For the drapes, Boudin suggested a braid border and tie-backs made of ball fringe covered in satin.Template:Sfn Kennedy disapproved of Boudin's proposal for the valance and window boxes, as it did not make use of the historic 1902 gilt window cornices. She did, however, approve of the fabric and tie-backs.Template:Sfn Made of a custom-manufactured gold and cream silk lampas, the fabric contained a non-repetitive design of birds, butterflies, cupids, flowers, medallions, roosters, and wheat and featured heavy fringe at the bottom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The drapes were hung in straight panels from the carved and gilded 1902 wooden cornices.Template:Sfn The design of the valances was not finalized until April 1964. First Lady Lady Bird Johnson asked Jacqueline Kennedy to assist her in finalizing the design.Template:Sfn Originally, they were to be of brocatelle, a jacquard weave fabric similar to brocade but thicker and heavier and with designs in high relief. But this design was countermanded by Boudin.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Instead, gold lampas, trimmed with braid and hemmed with gilt, spun-metal twisted fringe at the bottom, was installed in flat panels from behind each cornice.Template:Sfn The curtains and valances took nearly three years to design and manufacture, and were not hung in the room until the Johnson administration in 1965.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The drapes and valances cost $26,149.Template:Sfn The cost was covered by sales of Jacqueline Kennedy's guidebook to the White House, which by 1965 was in its fourth edition.Template:Sfn
Another major change involved the fireplace mantels, which were painted at Boudin's requestTemplate:Sfn to appear like white marble, unifying the look of the room.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn
The Kennedy administration was the first to permit smoking in rooms on the State floor.Template:Sfn To accommodate smoking, Jacqueline Kennedy wanted portable ashtrays for the East Room. She initially considered modified versions of ashtrays seen at the home of her friend, Bunny Mellon, but rejected this idea in favor of a unique design.Template:Sfn Maison Jansen designed stands which featured brass legs shaped like bamboo, brass handles, and Carrara glass tops. The ashtrays cost $280,Template:Sfn were manufactured in Maison Jansen's New York City office,Template:Sfn and delivered in January 1963.Template:Sfn Finding the cost too high (and without any economy of scale cost-savings), Kennedy then designed her own portable standing ashtrays.Template:Sfn Twenty were eventually manufacturedTemplate:Sfn out of dark wood by White House carpenters, although the gray granite tops for the Kennedy-designed ashtrays were made by Jansen at a cost of $310.Template:Sfn
Much of the furniture in the East Room was removed by BoudinTemplate:Sfn to make the room appear to be of a single historic era.Template:Sfn The 1902 console tables were removed from the piers between the windows, and the 1902 Louis XVI style floor lamps moved out of the corners and in front of the piers.Template:Sfn The 1952 Adam-style camelback sofas were removed at the instigation of du Pont, and replaced with gilt benches.Template:Sfn Research conducted by White House Curator Lorraine Waxman Pearce and Jacqueline Kennedy identified the four Monroe-era candelabra (which had been moved), and restored them to the mantels in the room's southern wall. Early 19th-century crystal candelabra (of an indeterminate manufacture) were placed on the mantels on the room's northern wall.Template:Sfn To complement the paintings of George and Martha Washington, Jacqueline Kennedy was loaned portraits of a young Bushrod Washington (George Washington's nephew and an Associate Supreme Court Justice) and his wife, Julia Ann Blackburn Washington. These portraits by Chester Harding were hung on the east wall.Template:Sfn Kennedy's friend, Jayne Wrightsman, donated two early 19th-century wall sconces, which were wired for electricity by White House staff and hung on either side of the center window.Template:Sfn
Jacqueline Kennedy also conceived the idea of constructing a portable stage for use in the East Room.Template:Sfn Designed by ballet impresario Lincoln KirsteinTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and constructed by White House carpenters,Template:Sfn the stage was clad in red velvet,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn small, and easily portable. It was stored off-site in a government warehouse, and took three men eight hours to retrieve, set up, clean, and prepare for performances.Template:Sfn
The Kennedys often provided entertainment in the East Room after formal dinners, which necessitated finding seating for these events. The Hoover Art Deco dining room chairs (which by 1961 had been moved to the White House theater) were used for this purpose. Additional seating was provided by cushioned bentwood chairs with canework backs (which had long been owned by the White House but whose provenance was unclear).Template:Sfn
Johnson and Carter administration alterations
While the Kennedy stage was fine for the small, intimate performances in the East Room which the Kennedys favored, President Lyndon B. Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson favored larger, more elaborate performances. Ballet patron Rebekah Harkness learned of the Johnsons' desire for a larger stage, and contacted noted ballet and theatrical designer Jo Mielziner to design something. Mielziner crafted a stage which took up a full third of the East Room, and featured cream white-painted pilasters matching the room's architecture.Template:Sfn Mileziner originally wanted the stage's curtains to have the same fabric used for the East Room drapes. But when he learned of the cost, he settled for American-made gold silk curtains instead.Template:Sfn The larger stage took eight men three days to set up.Template:Sfn
In 1964, President Johnson issued an executive order creating a new Committee for the Preservation of the White House. This body was tasked with advising the President and First Lady on the decor, preservation, and conservation of the East Room and other public rooms at the White House.Template:Sfn The committee has met continuously since then, except for the period 1981 to 1988.Template:Sfn
In 1967, the government of Italy donated a late 18th-century carved wood and terra cotta nativity scene to the White House. This 30-piece creche, manufactured in Naples and with the figures clad in original hand-sewn fabrics, was placed on view in the East Room during the Christmas season, and it has been erected there every holiday season since.Template:Sfn Ten additional antique Italian nativity figures were donated to the East Room creche set during the Carter administration.Template:Sfn
The East Room flooring was replaced in 1978 during the Carter administration. Years of wear and tear had nearly worn through the parquet.Template:Sfn
Reagan, Clinton, and Bush refurbishments
In 1981, the Reagan administration undertook a private fund-raising campaign to extensively renovate the White House. Hoping to raise $200,000, the project raised $822,641, and Nancy Reagan oversaw a $730,000 project which largely renovated the private living quarters and restored hundreds of antique furniture items throughout the Executive Mansion.[14] The floors, paneling, and plasterwork in the room all were assessed and underwent conservation to ensure their longevity.Template:Sfn Mrs. Reagan made only minor improvements to the East Room, however. These included repainting the room (it retained its warm cream color),[14] and adding gold silk swag valances over the draperies.[15] Over-draperies, ordered in the Carter administration, were also replaced in the East Room during the Reagan administration, at a cost of $130,000.[16]
During the Clinton administration, the faux white marble finish painted on the mantels and baseboards in the 1960s was removed to reveal the original "rouge antique" (reddish) marble from Vermont installed during the White House's renovation in 1951.Template:Sfn[17][18] Although the East Room's oak floors had been bare since 1903, three matching $259,330 wool carpets were installed in February 1995. These carpets, ordered in 1990, were designed to reflect the plaster ceiling moldings created during the John Quincy Adams administration in the late 1820s. Woven by Edward Fields Inc. of New York and paid for with private donations raised by the White House Endowment Fund, the carpets were designed to cover most of the floor to protect it from dirt and the occasional pebble stuck in the tread of a shoe.[18]
Minor refurbishment was made to the East Room in September 2003 during the administration of George W. Bush. The Committee for the Preservation of the White House had become dissatisifed with the golden silk swag valances installed during the Reagan presidency. The Kennedy-era Empire-style gold draperies were replaced with nearly identical ones, but the swags were made Script error: No such module "convert". deeper to make them appear more substantial. The room was repainted in the same warm cream color it had for the last century. The refurbishment cost $200,000, and was paid for by private donations to the White House Endowment Fund.[15]
Notable events in the East Room
The East Room is used for a wide range of events, which include the swearing-in of Cabinet members and justices of the Supreme Court, press conferences, the signing of legislation, receptions for foreign dignitaries.
Presidential funerals and lying in repose
Eight presidents have died in office. All but one (James A. Garfield) lay in repose or had a funeral in the East Room.Template:Efn Presidential funerary events held in the East Room comprise:
- William Henry Harrison – Harrison's body lay in repose for just under three days in the East Room. An Episcopal funeral service was read over Harrison's body on April 7, 1841.Template:Sfn
- Zachary Taylor – Taylor's body lay in repose for slightly more than three days in the East Room. An Episcopal funeral service was read over Taylor's body on July 13, 1850.Template:Sfn
- Abraham Lincoln – Lincoln's body lay in repose for four days in the East Room. A Presbyterian funeral service was read over Lincoln's body on April 19, 1865.Template:Sfn
- William McKinley – McKinley's body arrived in the East Room about 9:00 p.m. on September 16, 1901. He lay in repose until about 8:00 a.m. on September 17, when his remains were removed to the United States Capitol rotunda for a funeral.[19]
- Warren G. Harding – Harding's body lay in repose in the East Room beginning about 11:00 p.m. on August 7, 1923. At 10:00 a.m. on August 8, his remains were removed to the Capitol rotunda for a funeral.[20]
- Franklin D. Roosevelt – Roosevelt's body lay in repose in the East Room beginning about 11:00 a.m. on April 14, 1945. An Episcopal funeral service was read over his body at 4:00 p.m. that same day. The service lasted 25 minutes, and Roosevelt lay in repose from 4:30 p.m. until about 9:00 p.m., when his casket was removed to Union Station for the train ride to Hyde Park, New York.Template:Sfn[21]
- John F. Kennedy – Kennedy's body lay in repose in the East Room beginning about 4:40 a.m. on November 23, 1963. A blessing was said by a Roman Catholic priest at 5:00 a.m. on November 23, but the Mass at 10:00 a.m. was held in the State Dining Room rather than East Room. A second Mass (not a funeral Mass), for Kennedy family members and close friends, occurred in the East Room at 11:15 a.m. on November 24. Kennedy's casket was removed from the East Room at about 1:00 p.m.Template:Sfn[22]
First Family funerals
In addition to Presidents, several members of First Families have died while living in the White House. Funerals held in the East Room for family members include:
- Letitia Tyler – An Episcopal funeral service for her was held in the East Room on September 12, 1842.Template:Sfn
- Willie Lincoln – Lincoln's body lay in repose in the Green Room of the White House until his burial. A Presbyterian funeral service for him was held in the East Room on February 21, 1862. (Pointedly, his family asked that his casket not be moved to the East Room for the service.)Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn[23]
- Caroline Harrison – A Presbyterian funeral service for her was held in the East Room on October 27, 1892.Template:Sfn[24]
- Ellen Axson Wilson – A Presbyterian funeral service for her was held in the East Room on August 10, 1914.Template:Sfn
- Calvin Coolidge Jr. – A Congregationalist funeral service for him was held in the East Room on July 9, 1924.[25]
- Robert Trump - A funeral service was held for him in the East Room on August 21, 2020.[26]
Weddings
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". As of 2007, the White House had seen 17 weddings.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Seven have occurred in the Blue Room, seven in the East Room, two in the Rose Garden, and one in the Yellow Oval Room.[27] The East Room weddings include:
- Mary A. Eastin, niece of First Lady Rachel Jackson, to Lucius J. Polk, a Tennessee cotton planter and state legislator, on April 10, 1832.Template:Sfn
- Mary Anne Lewis, daughter of one of President Jackson's U.S. Army friends, married Alphonse Pageot, chargé d'affaires at the Embassy of France, on November 29, 1832.Template:Sfn
- Elizabeth Tyler, daughter of President John Tyler, married William Waller, Virginia businessman, on January 31, 1842.Template:Sfn
- Nellie Grant, daughter of President Grant, married Algernon Sartoris, wealthy English singer and son of Adelaide Kemble, on May 21, 1874.[28]
- Alice Roosevelt, daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, married Representative Nicholas Longworth, on February 17, 1906.[29]
- Jessie Wilson, daughter of President Wilson, married diplomat Francis Bowes Sayre Sr. on November 25, 1913.[30]
- Lynda Bird Johnson, daughter of President Lyndon B. Johnson married Chuck Robb, a captain in the United States Marine Corps and future Senator from Virginia, on December 9, 1967.[31]
Other important East Room events
East Room has served as the site of many important ceremonies, legislation and treaty signings, and other events. Some of these are:
- 1860 – 15th President James Buchanan received the first diplomatic mission from Japan in the East Room on May 18.Template:Sfn
- 1861 – The funeral of Colonel Elmer E. Ellsworth, the first Union Army soldier to die in the American Civil War, was held in the East Room on May 25. Ellsworth, commander of the 11th New York Infantry ("Fire Zouaves"), had become a close friend of Lincoln's, who wept when he learned of Ellsworth's death.Template:Sfn
- 1890 – The funerals of Mrs. Delinda Catlin Tracy, 57 and Miss Mary Farrington Tracy, 35, were held in the East Room on February 3. They were the wife and daughter of Secretary of the Navy Benjamin F. Tracy, and died in a fire at their home two blocks from the White House on February 3. Tracy himself would have died of smoke inhalation trying to rescue them had not President Benjamin Harrison rushed to the scene and revived him.Template:Sfn
- 1929 – President Calvin Coolidge signed the Kellogg–Briand Pact in the East Room on January 17.Template:Sfn President Herbert Hoover then met with representatives of the governments that ratified the Kellogg-Briand Pact in the East Room on July 24.Template:Sfn
- 1936 – President Franklin D. Roosevelt presided over a state funeral in the East Room for his long-time advisor Louis Howe on April 21.Template:Sfn
- 1943 – The agreement establishing the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration was signed in the East Room by representatives from 44 nations on November 9.Template:Sfn
- 1957 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower took the presidential oath of office in the East Room on January 20. The Constitution of the United States requires the oath to be administered at noon on January 20. But since this was a Sunday, Eisenhower took the oath in private at the required time. A public inauguration was held the following day.Template:Sfn
- 1964 – President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in the East Room on July 2. The ceremony was nationally televised, and more than 100 Senators and civil rights leaders attended the event.Template:Sfn
- 1973 – President Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev, leader of the Soviet Union, signed the Scientific and Technical Cooperation Agreement in the Field of Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. in the East Room on June 21.Template:Sfn
- 1974 – President Nixon gave a farewell address to the White House staff in the East Room at 9:00 a.m. on August 9. His resignation as President of the United States became effective at 11:35 a.m. when it was received by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.[32] Vice President Gerald Ford took the presidential oath of office in the East Room at 12:03 p.m. the same day.[33]
- 1976 – President Ford signed the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty in the East Room on May 28 while, simultaneously, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the treaty in Moscow.[34]
- 1978 – President Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin signed the Camp David Accords in the East Room on September 17 at 11:00 p.m.Template:Sfn
- 1987 – President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF Treaty) in the East Room on December 8.[35]
- 1990 – President George H. W. Bush and Soviet President Gorbachev signed five treaties in the East Room on June 2: the 1990 Chemical Weapons Accord, the USSR–USA Maritime Boundary Agreement, new protocols governing the 1974 Threshold Test Ban Treaty and Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty, and the Agreement on Trade Relations Between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (which provided for reciprocal Most Favored Nation status for the Soviet Union, improved market access in the Soviet Union for U.S. goods and services, freer operation of U.S. commercial representations in the USSR, and stronger intellectual property rights protection).[36]
- 2011 – President Barack Obama announced the death of Osama bin Laden in the East Room on May 2.[37]
- 2025 - President Donald Trump announced that Operation Midnight Hammer, a series of US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites, was a 'spectacular military success' from the East Room on the evening of June 21st from the East Room.[38][39]
In popular culture
The East Room has appeared in a number of motion pictures about the president of the United States. It is one of the most commonly depicted spaces in the White House, along with the Entrance Hall, Cross Hall, and West Sitting Hall. Accuracy in its depiction has generally been good. One outstanding example is the 1944 biographical picture Wilson, which was extremely accurate (even down to the style of paneling). The film's art director Wiard Ihnen and set decorator Thomas Little won an Academy Award for their work on the film. Many recent films have used Zuber wallpaper to depict the East Room—the same wallpaper purchased by Jacqueline Kennedy during the East Room's 1963 redecoration. President Bill Clinton gave the producers of the 1995 film The American President extensive access to the White House, which allowed them to create a superb replica of the East Room as well. Far less successful was the 2005 television series Commander in Chief, which depicted the East Room as a kind of shabby hotel lobby.Template:Sfn
A life-size replica of the East Room was built at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. It is slightly larger in size and, while very similar, not completely accurate in its details.Template:Sfn
The East Room made the news on September 29, 2014, after The Washington Post revealed that Omar J. Gonzalez had run through the room during his September 19, 2014, intrusion at the White House. Initially, the United States Secret Service reported that Gonzalez, who jumped the fence at the North Lawn and raced to the mansion, had only gotten a few steps into the Entrance Hall. But the Post revealed that the knife-wielding Gonzalez knocked down a Secret Service agent, ran into the Cross Hall, and ran through the East Room before being tackled by a counter-assault agent at the door leading to the Green Room.[40]
References
Notes
Citations
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- ↑ https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/videos/c93k8nvdnqpo
- ↑ https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/6/22/full-speech-donald-trumps-address-to-nation-after-attack-on-iran
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Bibliography
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Further reading
- Abbott, James A. A Frenchman in Camelot: The Decoration of the Kennedy White House by Stéphane Boudin. Boscobel Restoration Inc.: 1995. Template:ISBN.
- Clinton, Hillary Rodham. An Invitation to the White House: At Home with History. Simon & Schuster: 2000. Template:ISBN.
- Seale, William. The President's House. White House Historical Association and the National Geographic Society: 1986. Template:ISBN.
- Seale, William, The White House: The History of an American Idea. White House Historical Association: 1992, 2001. Template:ISBN.
- The White House: An Historic Guide. White House Historical Association and the National Geographic Society: 2001. Template:ISBN.
External links
- White House Museum: East Room floor plan and historical photographs
Template:White House Template:Lain in State (USA)
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