Dodona Manor is unique among historic houses because over 90% of the furnishings and memorabilia in the house were owned and used by the Marshalls and were obtained from Mrs. Marshall's heirs. Another reproduction is
Evening, by Russian artist Vassily Baksheyev. The original was a gift to Marshall from
Vyacheslav Molotov,
foreign minister of the Soviet Union, in 1947 in appreciation for Marshall's efforts in World War II. Dodona Manor also has an original black and white landscape painted by
Soong Mei-ling, wife of the president of the
Republic of China,
Chiang Kai-shek. She and the Marshalls became close friends when Marshall was President
Harry Truman’s special envoy to China in 1946–47, and Madame Chiang visited Dodona Manor on at least one occasion. Other pieces of Chinese art in the house include a painting by Wen Xuan Dai, a gift from the Chiangs to Katherine on her 64th birthday in 1946, and a fish painting by Tzulu Shen gifted by the Chinese Cultural Enterprise as a thank you for Marshall's efforts in China. For Christmas 1959, two months after Marshall died, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower sent a print of his watercolor painting of
Mount Eisenhower, currently Castle Mountain, located in
Alberta, Canada, to Mrs. Marshall, with a handwritten note. Both are on display in Dodona Manor. Also on display is Marshall's favorite red
La-Z-boy next to his
General Electric radio and television combination set, where he would listen to his favorite baseball team, the
Brooklyn Dodgers, and watch his favorite TV shows including
I Love Lucy, Gunsmoke, and
American Bandstand in one of the most comfortable rooms in the house, the library. This room includes many treasured items including figurines of a Chinese wedding procession given to Marshall by
Madame Chiang Kai-chek, a portrait of Colonel
Robert E. Lee, and scores of the Marshalls' books, usually historical biographies. Although Lee attended
West Point and Marshall attended
VMI, Marshall considered General Lee and George Washington brilliant military strategists, which is evident by the multiple portraits seen throughout the house. Due to her fondness for the Marshalls, Madame Chiang was a guest at Dodona Manor many times throughout the 1940s and 1950s. The original master bedroom was converted to a guest bedroom, while George and Katherine occupied the two original guest bedrooms connected by a
Jack and Jill bathroom. The use of separate bedrooms suited their different habits: George was a military man who woke up early and enjoyed his own space, similar to the days of military barracks living, whereas Katherine enjoyed sleeping late and having breakfast in bed. Madame Chiang brought with her three to five servants who stayed in the grandchildren's nursery. == Grounds ==