The Vice President's Room was initially furnished in a modest style. Few of those original pieces exist today, but the marble mantel and colorful Minton floor tiles manufactured in England are both part of the room's first decoration. Many of the room's present furnishings, such as the gilded mirror and the matching Victorian window cornices, date to the late 19th century. Of all the 19th century vice presidents who occupied this room, none affected its style and decoration as significantly as
Garret Augustus Hobart, who won election in 1896. Senate vouchers detail his purchases of imported silk mohair carpeting, Neapolitan silk curtains, numerous Persian throw rugs, and "a silk velour slumber robe" made to order to match the velour cushions on his office sofa. The double-pedestal, mahogany desk in the room is called the
Wilson desk, due to once considered associations with Vice President Henry Wilson and President
Woodrow Wilson. Every vice president from Hobart to
Lyndon Johnson used it. In 1969, it was loaned to the White House as the
Oval Office desk for presidents
Nixon and
Ford. It was returned in 1977. The Senate purchased the floor clock in 1898 from Washington jewelers Harris and Schafer for $600. Vice President
John Nance Garner used it to time his entrance into the Senate chamber. As the chimes rang fifteen seconds before twelve, he stopped what he was doing and reached his seat precisely at noon. The small gilded mirror has been displayed in the room since the completion of the Senate extension in 1859. It was most likely transferred from the old Senate wing. Although various legends attribute the mirror's original ownership to
John Adams or
Dolley Madison, but no documentation exists, and the mirror's origin remains a mystery. The ornately carved rosewood cabinet dates from the late 19th century, later some call it the "
John Nance Garner Liquor Cabinet", because he invited visitors to "strike a blow for liberty" with its contents. Among the objects displayed on its shelves is a sterling silver desk set that was presented by the Senate to Vice President
Adlai Stevenson in 1897, and recently donated to the Senate by former Illinois Senator
Adlai E. Stevenson III. In 1885, the Senate voted to place a marble bust of Henry Wilson in the Vice President's Room, to honor one of the Senate's most popular presiding officers. Before being elected vice president, Wilson had served as a senator from Massachusetts from 1855 to 1873. He played an important role during the Civil War, as chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, and throughout his career championed legislation to aid the working class. The Wilson bust served as the genesis for the
Senate's Vice Presidential Bust Collection, displayed in the Senate chamber gallery and on the second floor of the Capitol's Senate wing. ==References==