Collection The Working White House
For more than two centuries, the White House has been the home of American presidents. A powerful symbol of the...
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Coinciding with the 200th anniversary of the White House, the Festival of American Folklife featured a program entitled "Workers at the White House" on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Between June 25 and July 5, 1992, more than thirty former White House employees participated in small panel discussions, and took questions from delighted audiences of Festival visitors.
The group's chain of living memory extended as far back as 1909. Contributing stories about their White House experiences were plumbers, maids, chefs, butlers, ushers, and doormen, as well as calligraphers, stonecarvers, and police officers on the White House beat. Panelists recounted amusing anecdotes about the presidential families, and about world leaders such as Winston Churchill; and they recalled serious matters such as racial discrimination in the White House, and the making of blackout curtains during World War II.
"Workers at the White House" grew into a traveling exhibition, circulated by the Smithsonian Institution during 1993. It also resulted in a video, and an illustrated booklet. Marjorie A. Hunt, who coordinated these efforts, summarized their theme as an examination of "the relationship between occupational culture and place, [and] the distinctive ways in which the White House, as a unique occupational setting, shapes work experience."1
For more than two centuries, the White House has been the home of American presidents. A powerful symbol of the...
For more than one hundred years, White House Social Secretaries have demonstrated a profound knowledge of protocol and society in...
President Andrew Jackson was a slaveholder who brought a large household of slave domestics with him from Tennessee to the...
Animals -- whether pampered household pets, working livestock, birds, squirrels, or strays -- have long been a major part of...
A group of physicians and surgeons meeting in Washington 1891 was treated to a reception at the White House on the...
Thomas F. Pendel was a White House doorman from the Abraham Lincoln administration to the turn of the 20th century....
1862-1863: Mary Todd Lincoln, grieving over her son Willies death in February, began to participate in spirit circles or seances...
John Quincy Adams hired Antoine Michel Giusta as his valet after they met in Belgium in 1814. Giusta was a deserter...
For most of the 19th century, the structure of the White House staff remained generally the same. At the top...
White House staff who lived at the President’s House during the nineteenth century, including enslaved and free African Americans, us...
Prior to the 1939 visit of the queen and king of England, Eleanor Roosevelt received a State Department memorandum, listing various...
"Largely through television," notes historian William Seale, the White House "is the best known house in the world, the instantly...