
Service Plate, Dessert Plate, and Cream Soup Cup
and Saucer--Castleton China, Inc., New Castle,
Pennsylvania, 1968-72; designed by Tiffany &
Co., New York. Lady Bird Johnson's interest in
the natural world is reflected in the designs
on the Johnson state service.
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In
1960, President and Mrs. Eisenhower accepted a donation
of early 19th century American federal furniture
for the Diplomatic Reception Room. This was the
first successful attempt to furnish a White House
room in the period of its earliest occupancy, and
set the precedent of obtaining museum-quality collection
of furnishings for the White House.
When President and Mrs. Kennedy came to the White
House in 1961, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy was
dismayed to find so few historic furnishings. She
began an extensive program to revive the historic
character of the White House. She formed a Fine
Arts Committee to advise her on the acquisition
of authentic period furnishings, and Lorraine Waxman
Pearce was hired as the curator of the growing collection.
Pearce authored the first guidebook published by
the White House Historical Association. A call for
donations by Mrs. Kennedy led to a great influx
of authentic furnishings, among them three original
chairs from Monroe’s Oval Room and a chair
made for the East Room in 1818. An Act of Congress
in 1961 extended legal protection to these and all
White House objects.
After the 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy,
President and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson inherited a
White House whose state rooms were largely furnished
with early 19th century pieces. In 1964, to continue
the efforts of Jacqueline Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson
issued an Executive Order establishing the advisory
Committee for the Preservation of the White House
and a permanent position for a White House curator.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 226-252.
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