
Garden Settee--Attributed to Janes, Beebe &
Co., New York, c. 1852, Fillmore administration.
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During
his short term as president, Zachary Taylor refurbished
the second-floor family quarters, the area where
Margaret Taylor, his ill wife, spent her time. Congress
provided the standard $14,000 for furnishings and
Taylor purchased dressing bureaus, mahogany washstands,
wardrobes, and beds for the family. When he died
in July 1850, Millard and Abigail Fillmore moved
into the house and successfully gained a special
appropriation to establish a library in the second-floor
oval room. Washington cabinetmaker William Cripps
made mahogany bookcases, rosewood desks and other
pieces for the new space. Fillmore loved gardening
and also purchased a group of Rococo Revival cast
iron garden settees.
Franklin Pierce arrived at the house in 1853, and
received $25,000 for the furniture fund, a larger
than normal sum. Architect Thomas U. Walter supervised
decorative work throughout the staterooms: new marble
mantels, new wallpapers, gilded frames for various
mirrors, and decorative fresco paintings on the
ceilings. The Pierces also ordered a French porcelain
dinner and dessert service with blue and gilt decoration,
a large service of cut glassware, and several pieces
of walnut and mahogany furniture among other things.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 111-119.
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