by
Gilbert Stuart, now housed at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York City for Sunday's painting of the Octagon depicted in a reproduction of Gilbert Stuart's original portrait by
Thomas Sully John Tayloe III John and Anne (
Ogle) Tayloe were considering
Philadelphia as a place to build a town house, since
Baltimore and Philadelphia were the nearest metropolitan centers to
Mount Airy.
George Washington, whose half-brother
Augustine Washington Jr.'s son, Capt William Augustine Washington married Tayloe's sister, Sarah 'Sally' Tayloe, on May 11, 1799, found out and persuaded the Tayloes to build their house in the new capital city in an outlying section. The plan was to establish a node of development to stimulate fill-in growth. Col. Tayloe had been considering building his new home in Philadelphia under the expert hands of architect
Benjamin Latrobe. Instead, he chose the primitive wilds of the new federal city and the architect
William Thornton, the man who designed the new
United States Capitol with the help of
James Hoban, who was awarded the job of designing the White House. Tayloe went with the wishes of George Washington. On April 19, 1797, Tayloe paid $1,000 (~$ in ) to Gustavus W. Scott for lot 8 in Square 170, at the corner of New York Avenue and 18th Street NW, as laid out in a plan of the city by
Pierre Charles L'Enfant and surveyed by
Andrew Ellicott. Scott was one of the first purchasers of lots in the newly platted capital. The lot was in open country west of the partly built President's House, about 1 mi. from
Georgetown, and about .5 mi. northeast of Hamburgh, which was absorbed into the new city plan. The Tayloes had 15 children, 13 of whom survived to adulthood (2 died in infancy: Anne, born and died in 1800, and Lloyd, born 1815, died 1816). The children were all born between 1793 and 1815. The oldest son, John Tayloe IV, served in the US Navy during the
War of 1812 aboard the . His early death in 1824 was possibly connected to wounds received during the war. His parents provided for his wife and child after his death.
Edward Thornton Tayloe,
George Plater Tayloe and
Henry Augustine Tayloe were all born at the Octagon.
The War of 1812 and temporary presidential residence John Tayloe III was a Federalist, and not terribly supportive of
President James Madison and the war with England that began in 1812, but he was active in the Virginia militia and commanded a regiment of DC cavalry. When
British forces marched into Washington in August 1814, there was a
French Flag flying outside the Octagon. Ann Ogle Tayloe had offered the house to the French consul, in the hopes of sparing the house from
being burnt, who was occupying the house when the British arrived in the city. The house probably would have been spared even if it hadn't been effectively a "diplomatic residence", since the British were under strict orders not to damage private property. When First Lady
Dolley Madison fled the city as the British approached, she sent her pet parrot to the French consulate at the Octagon for safekeeping.
President James Madison and his wife,
Dolley moved into the Octagon on September 8, 1814, after the burning of the
White House by British forces. President Madison ratified the
Treaty of Ghent, which ended the
War of 1812, in the upstairs study at the Octagon on February 17, 1815. Dolley was also known to throw parties on Wednesday nights known as 'squeezes' while in the Octagon. The Tayloes received $500 in rent for the Madisons' 6-month residency at the Octagon.
1815–1960s , where John Tayloe III served as organizer, trustee, and vestryman While a resident of Washington, Tayloe helped found and organize
St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square in 1814, served as a trustee in 1816 during its construction and upon completion served on the vestry and donated to the parish a communion service of silver, which Bishop
William Meade, in his work on the old Churches of Virginia, says had been purchased by Col. Tayloe at a sale of the effects of the Lunenburg Parish Church in Richmond County, VA., to prevent its desecration for secular use.
Killian K. Van Rensselaer,
American lawyer and
Federalist politician who served in the
United States Congress as a
Representative from the
state of New York dined at The Octagon House. "Another invitation recalls one of
General Washington's closest friends, whom he persuaded to become a resident of
Washington in its infancy, and who built the spacious mansion on the corner of New York Ave and Eighteenth Street, which is one of the surviving relics of the primitive city, not having been destroyed by the British in 1814 - Col. Tayloe: "Mr. Tayloe requests the favor of Mr. Van Rensselaer to dine with him on Sat next at 4 o'clock. The favour of an answer is requested. Wed 9th feb."" John Tayloe III died in 1828 while staying at the Octagon. Ann Ogle Tayloe lived in the Octagon until her death in 1855. Both John and Ann were buried at
Mount Airy. After Ann's death, the Tayloe children began renting out the house. It was rented to a girls' school in the 1860s, and the Federal government in the 1870s, when it served as office space for the Hydrographic Office of the U.S. Navy. By the 1880s, the house was occupied by 10 families, probably one living in each room, tenement-apartment-style. The residents were probably mostly workers in the factories that populated Foggy Bottom. In 1898, the
American Institute of Architects (AIA) selected the Octagon to be their new national headquarters. They rented the building for 4 years, and then purchased it outright in 1902. The Octagon would continue to serve as AIA's headquarters until the construction of the current headquarters building in the 1960s. ==Museum==