Located north of the
Capitol rotunda on the second floor of the north wing (the Senate side) of the Capitol, the semicircular two-story room is wide and long, with a half-domed ceiling. The chamber is overlooked by two visitors' galleries. The gallery on the east is "supported by eight
Ionic columns of
variegated marble quarried along the
Potomac River", inspired by the
Erechtheum of the
Acropolis of Athens. Directly above this gallery hangs an 1823 "porthole portrait" of
George Washington by
Rembrandt Peale, which was purchased for display in the chamber in 1832 upon the centennial of Washington's birth. The second gallery is the Ladies' Gallery, which follows the curved western wall and is much larger. The Ladies' Gallery is supported by 12
steel columns "encased in
cast-iron forms with
Corinthian capitals, which were designed to simulate the cast-iron originals." The gallery has a "
wrought-iron balcony
railing [that] follows the contour of the gallery and is backed by
crimson fabric that accentuates the decorative
metalwork." On the
dais in the center of the room is a curved table with "richly turned and
carved legs and a crimson
modesty screen" which serves as the desk of the
president of the Senate (the
vice president of the United States). The crimson fabric is hung from a
mahogany valence from a canopy overhead. The valence is below a carved
gilt eagle and shield. Directly in front of the vice president's desk one tier down is "a larger desk of similar design," which was used by the
secretary of the Senate and
chief clerk. A glass screen between the dais and a small lobby allowed senators to relax but remain within earshot of the floor. In addition, there are two
fireplace mantels on the east wall behind the screen, which are among the original pieces of the chamber that remain today. Two other mantels on the lobby's north and south ends are
replicas, as the originals were replaced with
stoves when the chamber was converted for the use of the
Supreme Court of the United States. Radiating off the dais are desks and chairs for 64 senators, which was the number of senators at the time the Senate moved to its current quarters. The desks and chairs are located on four semicircular graduated platforms. When the Senate moved to its current chamber in 1859, it took the original furniture with it. Many of the
original desks remain in use today, including the
Daniel Webster and
Jefferson Davis desks. The desks and chairs that are in the chamber today are replicas reproduced from a circa 1819 design by the
New York City cabinetmaker Thomas Constantine. Like the originals, the furniture is
mahogany. Behind the last row of desks is a low paneled wall separating the center of the chamber from a visitors' area (the third visitor area in the chamber, along with the two visitors' galleries). The area has red-upholstered sofas and was originally "reserved for privileged visitors who gained admittance to the Chamber through the special invitation of a senator." On either side of the main doorway are
niches for coal- or
wood-burning stoves; the current stoves are reproductions. The
color scheme of crimson and gold, seen in the dais' decorations, can be seen elsewhere in the chamber as well, as in the "crimson
drapery swags secured with gilt stars" in the visitors' galleries, crimson
window treatments, and the
carpet on the chamber floor, which is
woven from
long-staple virgin wool and has a "gold star pattern on a red background". The domed
ceiling of the chamber is painted white. The Architect of the Capitol describes it as "elaborately
coffered and enriched by
decorative moldings." In the center of the ceiling is a semicircular
skylight, and around it are five smaller circular skylights. The skylight originally allowed
natural light in the chamber, but today they are artificially lit. A large
brass chandelier made by
Philadelphia's Cornelius and Company also provided light; a reproduction now hangs above the vice president's desk. ==Use by the Senate and Supreme Court==