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Demolition
work in the entrance hall in 1950 exposed Hobans
plaster cornice - National Park Service
Considering that it had taken nearly ten years to
build the first White House, it was remarkable that
James Hoban was able to direct a reconstruction
of the house (after the British torched the house
in 1814) in slightly less than three years. This
was possible in part because some of the stone walls
could be reused, but the main reason was that Hoban
altered the structural scheme of the house by substituting
timber for brick in some of the interior partitions.
The shortcut saved time, but produced a weaker structure
than the one George Washington watched over in the
1790s. The ill effects of this decision would cause
the virtual demolition and rebuilding of the White
House some 130 years later in 1948-1952. External
forces also contributed to the hasty rise of the
President's House: innovation, business prosperity,
and the success of manufacturing in the United States.
In the invoices of the 1790s, the names of individual
craftsmen and tradesmen abound, but in the reconstruction
records after 1814 were bills from manufacturers,
merchants, suppliers, contractors and other businessmen
predominate.
Source: William Seale, The President's House, 142-143.
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