
Armchair--Herter Brothers, New York, c. 1875.
Herter Brothers made thirteen pieces for the Grant
Red Room, including two lady's chairs, one of
which survives.
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War-hero
Ulysses S. Grant, elected after a bitter war and
the emotional impeachment of Andrew Johnson, spent
two terms in the Executive Mansion. First Lady Julia
Grant, with an initial $25,000 appropriation, concentrated
on refurnishing the family quarters and executive
offices at the east end of the second floor. The
Grants purchased Renaissance Revival style furniture
with heavy crests, rounded pediments and angular
scrolls. For the second term Congress appropriated
$100,000 for a major renovation project. In 1873-1874,
the Grants supervised a major redecoration of the
White House in preparation of their daughter Nellie’s
wedding to Englishman Algernon Sartoris. This makeover,
epitomized by the Grant’s East Room with its
grand gas globe chandeliers became one of the premier
interiors of the American Gilded Age (1877-1901).
Throughout the staterooms, Herter Brothers, a renowned
New York furniture maker, supplied sophisticated
furnishings.
Rutherford B. Hayes controversial election in 1876
strained his relations with Congress and two years
passed before they appropriated any money for furnishings.
In the meantime, Hayes and his wife Lucy, both antiquarians,
restored pieces of furniture they discovered in
the attic and basement and purchased furnishings
at auctions with their own money. The main expenditure
of their administration was for a unique state dinner
and dessert service decorated with American plants
and animals purchased in 1879 for $3,120.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 143-156.
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