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White
House Washington DC
Location: 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC
The White House, one of the most recognizable buildings
in Washington, DC, was designed by James Hoban, an Irish-born and-trained architect
who won a competition organized by President George Washington and Secretary of
State Thomas Jefferson in 1792. The competitions were held to determine who would
design the nation's two most important buildings, the President's House and the
Capitol.
It is believed that Jefferson, competing under a pseudonym,
submitted designs and lost both competitions. Hoban's inspiration for the house
was drawn from an Anglo-Irish villa called the Leinster House in Dublin. Although
President Washington oversaw construction, he never lived in the house. President
John Adams, elected in 1796 as the second President, was the first resident of the
White House. Abigail Adams, President Adams' wife, was known to have complained
about the largely unfinished new residence.
President Thomas Jefferson, upon moving to the house in
1801, was also not impressed, and dismissed the house as being too big. Jefferson
made several structural changes under architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe such as the
addition of terrace-pavilions on either side of the main building and single-story
wings for storage.
In addition to replacing the slate roof with one of sheet
iron, Jefferson further improved the grounds by landscaping them in a picturesque
manner. While James Madison was President from 1809 to 1817, the White House was
torched by the British in the War of 1812. Although the fire was put out by a summer
thunderstorm, all that remained were the outside, charred walls and the interior
brick walls. Madison brought Hoban back to restore the mansion, which took three
years.
It was during this construction that the house was painted
white. Hoban later added the South and North Porticos, using a slightly altered
design by Latrobe. Expansion and further alterations were made when President Theodore
Roosevelt declared the house unsafe to inhabit. He had the original building remodeled.
By making the third-story attic into habitable rooms and adding the Executive Office
wing and the East Gallery, Roosevelt separated his work space from his family life.
In 1909, architect Nathan C. Wyeth extended the office wing adding the well-known
oval office. Although used informally for some time, it was President Theodore Roosevelt
who gave the White House its official name. Finally, the last major renovation took
place when President Harry Truman decided that again the building was unsafe and
had to be gutted.
Steel replaced the original frame and paneling, and a
balcony was added to the South Portico. The White House, an architectural symbol
of the American presidency and the nation's power, remains a stylistically simple
residence and an example of the stolid republican ideals of the Founding Fathers.
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