
Side Chair--Philadelphia, c. 1760-85. Acquisitions
for the permanent White House collection under
the Clintons included a pair of chairs that may
have been from a group of "plain" mahogany
chairs purchased in 1789 for George Washington
from cabinetmaker and merchant Thomas Burling.
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President
and Mrs. George H. W. Bush resided in the White
House for the 1992 bicentennial of the laying of
its cornerstone. First Lady Barbara Bush appointed
curators and art historians to a revived Committee
for the Preservation of the White House. The committee
established procedures to review objects for the
collection and recommended the acquisition of a
mahogany card table with Charles-Honore Lannuier's
label. A sample of the Lincoln state porcelain service
was donated, as were pieces of the Lincoln glassware.
Barbara Bush also worked to activate the White House
Endowment Fund under the White House Historical
Association. The goal was to raise an endowment
for acquisitions, the refurbishing of the public
rooms, and conservation of the collection.
President and Mrs. William Jefferson Clinton moved
to the White House in 1993. First Lady Hillary Rodham
Clinton continued to support the White House Endowment
Fund, and through her efforts its 25 million-dollar
goal was met in 1998. President Clinton appointed
members to the preservation committee to broaden
its expertise, and Mrs. Clinton sought its advice
for the 1995 refurbishment of the Blue Room and
the East Room. The Entrance Hall, Cross Hall and
Grand Staircase were refurbished in 1997, and the
State Dining Room in 1998. Many objects came into
the collection during the Clinton years, including
a pair of eighteenth-century mahogany chairs with
a history of having been purchased in 1789 for George
Washington's first presidential residence in New
York.
Betty C. Monkman, The White House: Its Historic
Furnishings and First Families, 259-262.
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