Theodore Roosevelt desk
Designer | Charles Follen McKim |
---|---|
Date | 1903 |
Made in | Boston, Massachusetts by A. H. Davenport and Company |
Materials | Mahogany |
Style / tradition | Colonial Revival |
Height | 30 in (76 cm) |
Width | 90 in (230 cm) |
Depth | 53.5 in (136 cm) |
The desk in the Vice President's Ceremonial Office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, colloquially known as the Theodore Roosevelt desk, is a large mahogany pedestal desk in the collection of the White House. It is the first of six desks that have been used by U.S. presidents in the Oval Office, and since 1961 has been the used as the desk of the U.S. Vice President.
The desk was made in 1903 to a design by Charles Follen McKim for the newly constructed West Wing (then called the Executive Office Building) and was one of several pieces of furniture made specifically for the new interior spaces. In 1929, the desk survived a major fire in the West Wing and was subsequently placed in storage for over a decade. The desk was replaced by the Hoover desk in the Oval Office until after Franklin D. Roosevelt's death, with the next two presidents, Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, returning the Theodore Roosevelt desk to the office. After briefly using this desk in the Oval Office, John F. Kennedy switched to the Resolute desk and moved the Theodore Roosevelt desk to the Vice President's Ceremonial Office. Richard Nixon used this desk in his "working office" in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, where some of the Watergate tapes were recorded by microphones attached to it. After Nixon resigned, the desk was moved back to the Vice President's Ceremonial Office where it has been used by every Vice President since. Many of past users of the desk have signed their names on the bottom of the center drawer.
Design and markings
The Theodore Roosevelt desk is a mahogany pedestal desk and is owned by the White House.[1][2] The 30 in (76 cm) high desk has a workspace which measures 90 in (230 cm) wide and 53.5 in (136 cm) deep.[1] The understated design is marked by elegant and masculine lines and is detailed with brass pulls.[2] There are two alterations to the desk that both took place during the Nixon administration. A hole was drilled in the top so phone cords could be threaded through the desk out of sight, and a lock was placed on the left hand drawer to secure a recording device located there.[3] The desk was described in a 1949 article in Parade Magazine as being "time-worn, fire-scarred, [and] repainted".[4]
Beginning in the 1940s, each user of the desk signed the interior of the center drawer at the end of his term in office.[5] In 1974 it was noted in a memo that the signatures of Truman, Eisenhower, and Johnson (as well as Truman and Eisenhower's initials) were located in this drawer.[1] Since then the drawer has been signed by vice presidents Nelson Rockefeller, Walter Mondale, George H. W. Bush, Dan Quayle, Al Gore, Dick Cheney, Joe Biden, and Mike Pence.[6][7]
History
1902 White House renovation
In 1901, Vice President Theodore Roosevelt became President of the United States following the assassination of incumbent president William McKinley. Upon moving into the White House, the Roosevelts found the Victorian interiors crowded and dingy and generally too small for their large family.[8][9] A major renovation of the White House began in 1902 to remove this Victoriana and otherwise bring the building to modern standards. Roosevelt's wife, Edith Roosevelt, worked with Charles Follen McKim of McKim, Mead, and White to achieve this renovation which included the construction of a new Executive Office Building, now known as the West Wing.[9][10][11][12] As part of this renovation, all furniture in the White House was replaced with new pieces, including this desk.[13] This refurnishing was done with the stated aim to "design and furnish the interior in harmony with its neoclassical exterior architecture, in order that it would not be subject to changing fashion."[8]
These new furnishings were part of a widespread attempt to develop a national design identity which had been growing since the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition. Betty C. Monkman explained through the White House Historical Association that at this time, "Americans looked back to the nation's origins and an idealized past and sought representative antiques or reproductions of furnishings from the earliest periods of the country's history. Colonial Revival furnishings and copies of English and French neoclassical styles were selected for rooms at the same time that a growing emphasis on lighter spaces and a reaction away from pattern in wallpaper, fabrics, and carpets—and from a certain busyness and 'artistic' clutter".[13] A pamphlet explaining the renovations of the White House from the time claimed that before this new set of furniture was purchased there was "an inequality in the furniture of the whole house (owing to the unwillingness and piecemeal manner with which Congress votes any moneys for its decoration) which destroys its effect as a comfortable dwelling."[14] The pamphlet continued extolling the new furniture and interiors with, "It is to be hoped that Congress will not always consider the furniture of the President's House as the scapegoat of all sumptuary and aristocratic sins, and that we shall soon be able to introduce strangers not only to a comfortable and well-appointed, but to a properly served and nicely kept, Presidential Mansion."[14]
Planning for the interiors began in earnest in 1902 for the executive offices, state rooms, and family spaces. Because of delays in funds appropriation from Congress, the project had less than six months for the interiors to be designed, built, and installed. The goal was to finish the spaces for the Winter 1903 social season.[13] Mrs. Roosevelt was very hands on with the redesign of the White House and new office building and all fabrics and furniture had to be approved by her.[8] The budget for all of the furniture was $10,000 equivalent to $352,154 in 2023, though a total of$14,054.77 equivalent to $494,944 in 2023 was actually spent on "furniture, carpets, rugs, electric lighting and other fixtures".[15] Construction began on June 20, 1902,[15] wrapped up on September 29, and this building was eventually occupied in the middle of October.[16]
The desk, as well as all other furniture in the Executive Office Building, was designed by McKim and built by furniture-maker A. H. Davenport and Company in Boston, Massachusetts in 1903.[1][12][17][9] Davenport worked closely with McKim to create furniture that worked within their concept and may have contributed design ideas as well.[8]
Early use and 1929 fire
The desk was first used by Roosevelt in his Executive Office in the location where the Roosevelt Room is found in the modern West Wing.[18][19] Roosevelt's successor, President William Howard Taft, expanded the Executive Office Building further and added its first Oval Office.[9] He moved the Theodore Roosevelt desk into the new space, called the "President's Office" or "Executive Office" at the time, and paired it with green burlap wall coverings, brass light fixtures, and additional mahogany furniture.[20] The desk was the first one to be used in the Oval Office and remained in the room for twenty years, being used by Presidents Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover.[19][1] Hoover notably had the first telephone installed in the Oval Office on this desk on in March 1929.[21]
The West Wing suffered a major fire on December 24, 1929, during Herbert Hoover's presidency. This four-alarm fire was the most destructive to strike the White House since the Burning of Washington 115 years earlier.[22][23] The fire was noticed at approximately 8 p.m. by White House messenger Charlie Williamson, and immediate action was taken to save items in the building. Chief Usher Ike Hoover, the president's son Allan Hoover, the president's personal secretaries Lawrence Richey and George Akerson, and some Secret Service agents crawled into the building through a window just to the left of the Theodore Roosevelt desk.[23] The first things they saved were current papers, followed by completely clearing the top of the desk and removing the drawers which were passed through the windows to safety.[24] They then began removing steel cabinets full of files, the chair at the president's desk, and the presidential flag.[22] They later also saved the chairs the Cabinet used at cabinet meetings and more documents. All of these valuable objects and papers, including the Roosevelt desk drawers, were left on the White House Lawn and guarded all night by 150 infantrymen from the local Washington barracks.[23] Akerson later stated that all historically and sentimentally valuable items in the president's office were saved.[24]
While the desk drawers and their contents had been moved safely out of the building, the main body of the desk was still at risk, especially to water damage from the fire hoses on the freezing cold night. Ike Hoover acquired the tarpaulin awning that covered the White House's east entrance for the upcoming New Years Day reception and used it to cover and protect the desk. The fire was put out by approximately 10:30 p.m. leaving the executive offices, roof, attic, and floors heavily damaged and the press room completely ruined.[22] After the fire, President Hoover immediately started using the White House's Lincoln Study to conduct business in and after a few days moved his official offices to what is now the Vice President's Ceremonial Office.[24] No insurance had been taken out on the White House, so a special appropriation from Congress had to be made to repair the building. A contract was awarded on January 4, 1930 to Charles H. Tompkins Co. to do the repair work and it was completed on April 14 of the same year.[22] The new Oval Office was built slightly larger and in the Colonial Revival style.[9][25]
The desk survived this fire, was later fully repaired, and a duplicate of the desk was constructed. Both desks were placed in storage in December 1929.[1][5] An association of Grand Rapids, Michigan furniture-makers built a new suite of 17 furniture pieces in 1930 as a gift for the rebuilt Oval Office including a new desk, now known as the Hoover desk.[25] This desk was used by President Hoover for remainder of his term, and by Franklin D. Roosevelt during his presidency. After Franklin Roosevelt's death, the Hoover desk was given to his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, by then president Harry S. Truman.[26] The Theodore Roosevelt desk was brought back to the newly rebuilt Oval Office in 1945 by Truman, who placed a sign reading "The Buck Stops Here" on it.[1][27] The desk was also used by Dwight Eisenhower and briefly by John F. Kennedy before it was switched out in 1961 for the Resolute desk. Jacqueline Kennedy, John F. Kennedy's wife, thought the more ornately carved Resolute desk should be the most visible presidential desk.[28][29]
Use by Nixon and by vice presidents
When the Resolute desk was placed in the Oval Office, the Theodore Roosevelt desk was moved to the Vice President's Ceremonial Office, where Vice President Lyndon Johnson began using it. The desk has remained in this building since and used by all vice presidents but one since Johnson in this room.[30] Following the 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson did not vacate the Vice President's Ceremonial Office. He continued using room 274 as his working office out of respect for Kennedy, leaving his Vice President, Hubert Humphrey, to work out of room 180 in the same building.[3]
When President Richard Nixon ascended to the presidency in 1969 he decided to use the Oval Office as a ceremonial office and turned room 180 of the Old Executive Office Building into his "working office" for the duration of his presidency. Nixon chose to use the Theodore Roosevelt desk in this room.[3] As part of a larger installation of microphones across the president's spaces in the White House and associated buildings, four microphones were installed in the Theodore Roosevelt desk in April 1971. Three microphones were attached to the edges of the desk and one was placed in the open knee hole.[31] The microphones were wired to an adjoining room where an audio mixer and sound recorder were housed. The telephone in this room was also tapped as part of a separate recording system.[31][32] As part of this installation a hole was drilled in the desktop to feed phone cables through and a recording apparatus was concealed in the left hand drawer of the desk. A lock was installed on this drawer to keep the device hidden and some of the Watergate tapes were made by these recording devices.[19][3] The entire taping system was removed on July 18, 1973 at the orders of Alexander Haig, Nixon's Chief of Staff, due to its existence being made public during testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee two days before.[32] A total of 204 recordings were made with these microphones while the system was in existence.[31]
The desk was moved back to the Vice President's Ceremonial office following Nixon's resignation, where it has remained since, and has been used by all subsequent vice presidents. A tradition rose where each vice president signs the interior of the center drawer at the end of their time in office. Every vice president since Nelson Rockefeller has signed it, and signatures of presidents Truman, Eisenhower, and Johnson are also found in the drawer.[5][6]
In 2007 a two-alarm fire broke out in the Eisenhower Executive Office centered on an electrical closet, or telephone room, near the Vice President's Ceremonial Office. There were no serious injuries. It is unclear if the desk suffered any damage but the office suffered smoke and water damage with the floors described as being "under water."[33]
Timeline
The following table shows the location and users of the Theodore Roosevelt desk from its 1902 installation in the Executive Office Building through to the present.
Tenant | Location | Dates | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Theodore Roosevelt | White House Executive Office | 1902–1909 | |
William Howard Taft | Oval Office White House |
1909–1929 | |
Woodrow Wilson | |||
Warren G. Harding | |||
Calvin Coolidge | |||
Herbert Hoover | |||
Storage | 1929–1945 | ||
Harry S. Truman | Oval Office White House |
1945–1961 | |
Dwight D. Eisenhower | |||
Lyndon B. Johnson | Vice President's Ceremonial Office Eisenhower Executive Office Building |
1961–1969 | |
Richard Nixon | Room 180 Eisenhower Executive Office Building |
1969–1974 | |
Nelson Rockefeller | Vice President's Ceremonial Office Eisenhower Executive Office Building |
1974–present | |
Walter Mondale | |||
George H. W. Bush | |||
Dan Quayle | |||
Al Gore | |||
Dick Cheney | |||
Joe Biden | |||
Mike Pence | |||
Kamala Harris |
Replicas
The Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Independence, Missouri has a replica of the Theodore Roosevelt desk as part of a full-scale replica of the Oval Office as it was during Truman's presidency. The objects on the desk include both originals and reproductions as seen in a series of images taken in August 1950.[35] A second replica of the desk in White House Storage. This duplicate was made between 1929 and 1930 after the original desk was damaged in the 1929 Christmas Eve West Wing fire.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Memo, Frank Pagnotta to Robert Hartmann" Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Gerald R. Ford Presidential Handwriting File, retrieved January 25, 2017
- ^ a b Serratore , Angela. The presidential desk: A brief history. Curbed. November 8, 2016. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Room 180. George W Bush whitehouse.gov archives. Retrieved December 3, 2020.
- ^ The President's Desk. Parade magazine. May 22, 1949. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Vice President's Ceremonial Office. George W Bush whitehouse.gov archives. Retrieved December 3, 2020.
- ^ a b Liptak, Kevin. Biden signs desk in farewell tradition. CNN. January 6, 2017. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ Linge, Mary Kay. "Pence says to 'hold your heads high' in emotional meeting with staffers". New York Post. January 9, 2021. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
- ^ a b c d WHITE HOUSE. An archive of drawings and blue prints from Davenport Co. and McKim, Mead & White, 1902. Christie's. December 3, 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e The East and West Wings of the White House: history in architecture and building. White House Historical Association. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ Roosevelt, Edith Kermit Carow. Theodore Roosevelt Center. Dickinson State University. Retrieved December 4, 2020
- ^ The White House Building. White House. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ a b Restoration. p. 7.
- ^ a b c Monkman, Betty C. The White House Collection: The Beaux Arts Furnishing of 1902. White House Historical Association. Retrieved December 4, 2020
- ^ a b Restoration. pp. 45–46.
- ^ a b Restoration. pp. 11–13
- ^ Restoration. p. 13.
- ^ a b c The President's Office, Theodore Roosevelt Administration. White House Historical Association. Retrieved December 4, 2020
- ^ Tour the West Wing. Barack Obama whitehouse.gov archives. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Hess, Stephen. "What Now? The Oval Office". Brookings Institution. January 8, 2009. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ Postcard view of the Oval Office. White House Historical Association. Retrieved December 4, 2020
- ^ Herbert Hoover has telephone installed in Oval Office. History. March 26, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Treese, Joel D. Phifer, Evan. The Christmas Eve West Wing Fire of 1929. White House Historical Association. Retrieved June 4, 2020
- ^ a b c "Fire Wrecks The White House Offices; Hoover Rushes from Party to Watch it; Aides Brave Smoke to save his papers". The New York Times. December 25, 1929. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c "President Chooses White House Study for Use as Office". The New York Times. December 26, 1929. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ a b President Hoover's Executive Office Suite. Grand Rapids Historical Commission. Grand Rapids Spectator. June 28, 1930. Retrieved December 5, 2020
- ^ Artifact Highlight: FDR's Oval Office Desk. Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. May 27, 2020. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ "The Buck Stops Here" Desk sign. Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ Mrs. Kennedy's decision to move the Resolute Desk into the Oval Office. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. March 27, 2020. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ McNamara, Robert. The Resolute Desk – Elaborately Carved Presidential Desk Was a Gift From Queen Victoria. ThoughtCo. October 31, 2019. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
- ^ a b The Vice President's Ceremonial Office. Virtual Tour of the Eisenhower Executive office Building. Google Arts and Culture. Retrieved December 4, 2020
- ^ a b c Nixon Secret White House Recordings: Collection Specifications. Miller Center of Public Affairs. University of Virginia. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- ^ a b History of the White House Tapes. Archived October 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Richard Nixon Presidential Library. Retrieved December 5, 2020
- ^ Stolberg, Sheryl Gay. "Fire Breaks Out on White House Grounds". The New York Times. December 20, 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
- ^ Lakritz, Talia. Check out Kamala Harris' new vice presidential offices, which are full of historic White House artifacts. Insider. February 4, 2021. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
- ^ Davenport, Jerry. President Truman's Desk. Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2020
Bibliography
- Restoration of the White House: Message of the President of the United States Transmitting the Report of the Architects. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1903. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
External links
- Media related to Theodore Roosevelt desk at Wikimedia Commons
- Clip from The President: January 1969. MP904. showing the Johnson desk being moved out of the Oval Office and the Theodore Roosevelt desk being moved in.