on paper.
The oval salon During the administration of
John Adams, the Blue Room served as the south entrance hall, though it has always functioned as the principal reception room of the White House. During the administration of
James Madison, architect
Benjamin Latrobe designed a suite of
classical-revival furniture for the room, but the furnishings were destroyed in the fire of 1814 (see
War of 1812). When the White House was rebuilt, President James Monroe redecorated the room in the French
Empire style.
Martin Van Buren had the room carpeted and wallpapered in blue in 1837, and it has remained the tradition ever since. However, many administrations have made changes to the decoration. During the administration of
James Buchanan, the room was refurbished in a Victorian style called
Rococo Revival. Buchanan was a lifelong bachelor. His niece,
Harriet Lane, acted as hostess and
de facto First Lady. Lane focused primarily on her hosting duties rather than maintaining the White House. Although Congress allotted President Buchanan $20,000 ($ in dollars) to refurbish the White House when he moved in, Buchanan spent nearly all these funds building a glass
conservatory adjacent to the mansion to replace an
orangery on the east side of the White House (built during the
Jackson administration but torn down to make way for an expansion of the
Treasury Building). Rococo Revival furniture, a purchase of Harriet Lane's, financed by the auction of older White House furniture, arrived in December 1859. The centerpiece of this suite was a large circular
settee with a central table for flowers.
1902 Roosevelt renovation A series of increasingly complex, highly patterned styles followed until 1902, when the room was returned to an Empire style by the firm of
McKim, Mead & White during the administration of
Theodore Roosevelt. The company fabricated a suite of chairs (painted white and gold) based on chairs made for
Napoleon by
François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter. Two new doorways were also cut into the walls to provide more access to the room.
1950 Truman reconstruction The White House was completely gutted and rebuilt from 1950 to 1952 during the
Harry S. Truman administration. When it came time to redecorate the Blue Room, Truman's designers selected for wall coverings a deep blue
silk, which contained a pattern of gold urns draped with flowers. The addition of the
Truman Balcony provided shade to the oval
portico outside the Blue Room.
1961 Kennedy restoration In 1961, First Lady
Jacqueline Kennedy began a major refurbishment of the White House, including the Blue Room. An advisory Committee on Fine Arts composed of museum professionals and wealthy individuals interested in antiques technically oversaw her renovation. American antiques
autodidact Henry Francis du Pont (an expert in
Federal furniture) led this committee. Mrs. Kennedy also brought in French interior designer
Stéphane Boudin (an advocate of French interior design) and his company,
Maison Jansen, to oversee the refurbishment. Although du Pont and Boudin often competed with one another to control a space's redecoration in the White House, the Blue Room was an area where Boudin had almost exclusive control. Jacqueline Kennedy determined the style of the Blue Room. While researching the history of the White House in early January 1961, she came across a 1946 French magazine article that mentioned a suite of
French Empire-style gilt wood furniture made in 1817 by French furniture maker
Pierre-Antoine Bellangé for use in the
Yellow Oval Room. Kennedy asked the White House staff to locate pieces from this suite, and one piece was found: a battered
pier table. Kennedy then asked Maison Jansen if they would restore the table. Jansen agreed to do so and donate the work and materials for free. The pier table received a new white marble top and new giltwork. The pier table was placed opposite the
fireplace, its historic location. Deciding where to place other furniture and what sort of colors, window treatments, and other design elements should be made, Maison Jansen created a
maquette of the Blue Room. Tiny paintings, pieces of furniture, and window treatments in a wide range of colors and designs were manufactured and placed in the maquette to demonstrate to Jacqueline Kennedy how the room might be put together. The French Empire pier table dictated the style of the room. Boudin initially retained the 1902 suite of chairs for the room. When one of the original 1817
armchairs was found in Pennsylvania, it was donated to the White House and added to the Blue Room. Two
side chairs from the suite were located at the
Adams National Historical Park in
Massachusetts.
Charles Francis Adams IV declined to donate these chairs but agreed to pay for seven reproduction armchairs and six reproduction side chairs. After extensive research into designs, the American fabrics firm
Scalamandré discovered a historical painting of the original Monroe-era upholstery for the furniture. Scalamandré was unable to produce a fabric of high enough quality to satisfy Mrs. Kennedy, so Boudin selected the French firm of Tassinari et Châtel to manufacture the coverings. The Blue Room had long been decorated with a table in the center and other furniture around the edge. Boudin continued this historic decorative scheme, which required him to find a new centerpiece. Although he could locate a
mahogany round table with a white marble top purchased during the Monroe administration, he disliked its heavy look and asked that it be covered.
Sister Parish, an interior decorator and Kennedy friend who had refurbished the private rooms of the White House, designed a gold-colored
silk damask cloth with
tassels to cover the table. Mrs. Kennedy was unhappy that the Monroe table was concealed, and Boudin soon swapped it out for a modern table (retaining the Parish covering). Replacing the Truman-era wall covering, Boudin selected a silk upholstery with cream stripes, plain alternating with
satin. To soften the
cornice line of the room, Boudin chose blue silk
taffeta with black and gold trim in a
Baroque Revival design which he formed into a continuous
valance hung just below the cornice molding. For the drapes in the room, Boudin chose straight panels of blue silk taffeta. He then replaced Parish's gold cloth on the table with a blue velvet covering with a long gold fringe. The fabrics for the walls, valance, drapes, and tablecloth were all produced by Scalamandré. To finish unifying the scheme of the Blue Room, Boudin had the
dado rail and the cornice molding painted gold and white. Painter and craftsman Peter H. Guertler, widely known as an expert on the restoration of historical interior paintwork, repainted these parts of the room for free. Life-size portraits of George Washington, John Adams, James Madison, and John Quincy Adams had long hung in the Blue Room. Boudin retained these works of art, adding three new works (of Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and Andrew Jackson) purchased by the White House. Boudin purchased and installed black and gilt French Empire
sconces on the
piers and hung four of the paintings beneath them. A French Empire gilt bronze and crystal
chandelier was mounted in the center of the ceiling. Additional lighting was provided by a pair of
caryatid torchères. An early 19th-century rectangular blue, gold, and pink French Empire carpet manufactured at
Savonnerie in France was chosen for the floor, and a pair of French Empire gilt bronze
andirons for the fireplace. Redecoration of the Blue Room was funded by oil company executive
Charles Bierer Wrightsman and his wife, Jayne (a close friend of Mrs. Kennedy's). The Blue Room was chosen as the subject of a 1964 print that the Kennedys intended to present to White House staff for Christmas. Edward Lehman was commissioned to do the painting. (Lehman had also been commissioned to paint the Red Room and the Green Room for 1962 and 1963 perspective gift prints.) In August 1963, Lehman visited the White House to show the Kennedys his painting. The Kennedys approved of the work, and President Kennedy told Lehman then that the Blue Room was his favorite. Because President Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963, the Blue Room print was never distributed. However, about 1,000 prints were made, numbered, and signed, and some of these were obtained by collectors.
Nixon and Clinton refurbishments When the completed Blue Room was opened to the public in January 1963, there was little criticism of Boudin's efforts. In 1973, First Lady
Pat Nixon again refurbished the room. At that time, several critics were very vocal about Boudin's choices for the room. In 1985,
White House Curator Clement Conger, in declaring Boudin's Blue Room a failure, said Boudin demonstrated no expertise in period American houses. It followed a complete redecoration by First Lady
Pat Nixon in 1971, which retained the Bellange pieces of Monroe but saw the walls covered with wallpaper for the first time since the early 19th century. The current appearance of the Blue Room is the result of a renovation and refurbishing completed in 1995 by the
Committee for the Preservation of the White House, the
White House Office of the Curator, and funded by the
White House Endowment Trust.
Obama second term inaugural As January 20, 2013, fell on a Sunday, President
Barack Obama was sworn in for his second term by
Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts in a brief semi-private ceremony in the Blue Room, accompanied by the First Lady and their two daughters. A larger public ceremony, including Obama's second inaugural address, followed at the
U.S. Capitol the next day. ==See also==