
Soup Tureen & Stand, Preserves Stand--Royal
Porcelain Manufactory of Sèvres, France,
1782. John and Abigail Adams may have acquired
this family service for official entertaining
while he was American minister to France in 1785.
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John
Adams spent the majority of his presidency in Philadelphia,
but later occupied the President's House in Washington,
D.C., which officially became the new federal city
on November 1, 1800. The house was unfinished, yet
habitable, and the president and First Lady Abigail
Adams made six rooms comfortable, and had others
prepared for official entertaining using furniture
shipped from Philadelphia. They purchased a portrait
of George Washington for $800, the only object remaining
in the White House from the Adams period.
Thomas Jefferson succeeded Adams and moved into
a home that was still unfinished. Jefferson spent
the majority of a $25,000 appropriation on structural
improvements to make the house habitable and purchased
items that were utilitarian in nature: crockery
ware, kitchen furniture, floor cloths, and window
blinds.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 26-37.
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