|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
passage between the West Colonnade and the White
House is glazed and used much as the orangery
(hothouse) was when it flourished from 1835-1857
and contained fruit trees and camellias.
Erik Kvalsik |
- John
Adams was the first president to occupy the White
House in 1800; one of his first additions was a vegetable
garden.
- In 1801,
Thomas Jefferson was active in planning improvements
for the Executive Mansion (White House) garden, including
a stone wall around the house. He also directed the
planting of numerous trees between 1802 and 1806.
- While
the White House was being rebuilt after the 1814 fire,
James Monroe increased tree plantings on the grounds
based on plans by architect Charles Bulfinch.
- Pennsylvania
Avenue did not originally cross in front of the White
House. The area was a public common used for fairs
and parades. In 1822 the avenue was cut through the
north side of the Presidents Park and soon thereafter
Lafayette Park was established.
- The federal
government used Charles Bulfinchs planting scheme
for a thick grove of trees for the square north of
the White House and named the park in honor of General
Lafayette in 1824-1825.
- In 1825,
John Quincy Adams developed the first flower garden
on the White House grounds and planted ornamental
trees.
- Andrew
Jackson created the White House orangery, an early
type of greenhouse where tropical fruit trees and
flowers can be grown, and added more trees, including
the famous Jackson magnolia, to the White House grounds
in 1835.
- President
James K. Polk placed a bronze statue of Thomas Jefferson
by P. J. David d'Angers on the
North Lawn in 1848. It stood there for 27 years before
being moved to the Capitol and was the only monument
to a president ever to stand within the immediate
enclosure of the White House.
- In 1850,
the noted landscape gardener Andrew Jackson Downing
developed a landscape plan for the Presidents
House and the Mall.
- Sculptor
Clark Millss famous equestrian statue of Andrew
Jackson was unveiled in the center of Lafayette Park
in 1853.
- In 1853,
during the administration of Franklin Pierce, the
White House orangery was expanded into a greenhouse.
- In 1857,
workers demolished the White House orangery to make
way for a new wing for the Treasury Department; a
replacement greenhouse was constructed on the west
side of the White House, adjoining the State Floor.
- East
and West Executive Avenues were built on each side
of the White House as public streets in 1866 and 1871.
- In 1867,
the West Wing conservatory was destroyed by fire;
government architect Alfred B. Mullet designed and
built a more fireproof iron frame and wood sash replacement.
- In the
1870s, President Grant had a billiard room built between
the greenhouse and the mansion.
- In the
1870s, Ulysses S. Grant directed the expansion of
the grounds to the south and built round pools on
the North and South lawns.
- From
1878 to 1880, during the administration of Rutherford
B. Hayes, hundreds of trees were planted and the tradition
of planting commemorative trees was inaugurated.
- In the
1870s and 1880s, the conservatory was expanded into
a rambling iron-glass structure off the West Wing
to provide an enclosed spring garden for White House
residents all year long.
- The ellipse
south of the White House was completed in 1880.
- In 1886,
the conservatory provided flowers for Grover Clevelands
wedding to Frances Folsom in the Blue Room.
- The
grounds and garden crew consists of 13 regular staff.
The Chief Horticulturalist is on the Executive Residence
staff. The other 12 are National Park Service staff
– 3 foreman, 8 gardeners, and 1 maintenance
operator. Additional Park Service personal can be
called in for more infrequent work on trees, roads
and trails, maintenance, and outdoor plumbing and
electrical service.
|
|
|