
Service Plate, Fish/Lunch Plate, and Tea Cup &
Saucer--Lenox, Inc., Trenton, New Jersey, 1981-82.
The design of the new state service commissioned
by Mrs. Reagan was based on the first American
service made for the White House in 1918, but
the color was changed to red, her favorite hue.
|
|
When
President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan came to the house
in 1981, they continued to add furnishings with
historic White House associations. Notably, two
1818 East Room chairs and a brass and ivory presidential
seal used by Abraham Lincoln were aacquired. The
first lady was a great force behind soliciting contributions
for an extensive redecoration of the private quarters
and the maintenance of public spaces. Over 150 collection
objects, the marble walls, wood doors and floors
in the public rooms were conserved.
First Lady Nancy Reagan commissioned a new state
dinner and dessert service that had 220 place settings,
each with nineteen pieces. The large and expensive
service was acquired with funds donated from a private
foundation, but it was widely criticized at a time
of federal budget cuts. Under the Ronald Reagan
administration, the first comprehensive conservation
survey of the White House furniture collection was
conducted, and the American Association of Museums
accredited the house as a museum in 1988.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 257-259.
|