
Vase--American, c. 1884. Tiffany placed earthenware
vases from his shop on either side of Arthur's
Red Room mantel.
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James
and Lucretia Garfield moved into the Executive Mansion
in 1881. With $30,000 from Congress, Mrs. Garfield
made plans to refurbish the Green Room and ordered
a set of ebony furniture. However, by the time it
arrived President Garfield had been shot by a disgruntled
office seeker and then died a few months later.
His successor, Chester Arthur, did not occupy the
White House until the house was redecorated to suit
his tastes. The rooms were cleared of all damaged
and unfashionable furniture. Twenty-four wagonloads
of furniture and thirty barrels of old china were
sent to auction. Arthur commissioned Associated
Artists, of which Louis Comfort Tiffany was a partner,
to makeover the house. No furniture was commissioned
but stained glass, lighting fixtures, and mantels,
over mantel mirrors and decorative painting using
gold and silver leaf in the style of the Aesthetic
Movement were designed for the rooms.
Grover Cleveland and his young bride Frances Folsom
bought a private home in the suburbs of Washington,
D.C. to protect their privacy and only lived at
the White House during the official social season.
The Clevelands had the northwest corner room, their
bedroom, repapered and ordered some chairs, a wardrobe,
and a ladies writing desk to furnish it. Also, a
special plush sofa was ordered for the space under
the Palladian west window in the second-floor corridor
where Frances Cleveland spent time relaxing and
entertaining friends.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 156-172.
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