A number of items located around the Senate chamber are steeped in tradition.
Senate desks In 1819 new desks were ordered for the senators to replace the original set which was destroyed in the British attack on Washington in the
War of 1812. The Daniel Webster desk has the oldest design as it lacks a 19th-century modification to add extra storage space to the top. When
Daniel Webster acquired this seat, he pronounced that if his predecessor could organize himself to work with the reduced desk space, so could he. Every subsequent senator who has sat at that desk has also declined to have it improved. In keeping with a 1974 Senate resolution, this desk is assigned to the senior Senator from Webster's birth state,
New Hampshire.
Jeanne Shaheen has been the occupant of this desk since 2011.
Etching In the early twentieth century, a tradition of senators engraving their own name on the bottom of the desk drawers emerged.
Candy desk In 1965,
California senator
George Murphy began a tradition of keeping a desk near the back of the chamber stocked with
candy. This continues today.
Senate gavel The Senate uses three
gavels, each of which has an
hourglass shape with no handle. The first gavel, which had been used since at least 1789, cracked during the 1954 Senate session when then
Vice President Richard Nixon (acting as
President of the Senate) used it during a heated debate. Prior to this, an attempt to further prevent damage to the old gavel was done by adding
silver plates to both ends. A replacement gavel made of ivory was presented to the Senate by the
Republic of India and first used on November 17, 1954. In response to widespread awareness of elephant poaching and illegal
ivory trades, a white marble gavel has been in use since at least 2021. All three gavels are kept in a
mahogany box that is carried to the senate floor by a
page; at the adjournment of a senate session the gavels are taken to the
Sergeant at Arms' office for safekeeping. ==Bean soup==