
Tea Box--China, c. 1811 (box); Jacquemart et Bérnard,
Paris, France c. 1809-11 (wallpaper). A rare surviving
artifact from the pre-1814 President's House.
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In
1809, James and Dolley Madison moved into the completed
President’s House that contained worn furnishings
from past administrations. Mrs. Madison employed
Surveyor of Public Buildings Benjamin H. Latrobe
to refurbish the state floor, and he custom-designed
furniture for the Oval Room.
On August 24, 1814, British forces invaded Washington,
D.C. and set fire to the public buildings. The conflagration
destroyed Latrobe’s interior design for the
state parlors along with all of the furnishings
that had been purchased for presidential use since
1789. Dolley Madison saved the Washington portrait
and some of the silver service. The responsibility
of rebuilding and refurnishing the house fell to
the new president, James Monroe, who took office
in March 1817. His goal was to restore the dignity
and grandeur of the President’s House as a
conspicuous symbol of a strong, united country.
He ordered the elegant French Empire furnishings
that are integral to the historic White House collection
today.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 43-53.
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