07/23/2024
What’s up with all those dishes anyway?
The China Room as we know it today didn’t exist during the first century of the White House. It would take the combined efforts of three first ladies and one savvy journalist to make the idea a reality.
Enter Abby Gunn Baker: a notable journalist specializing in history. She was asked by a staff member at the White House to write an article about presidential china in order to gain public interest in its preservation. She spent four months in the White House in 1901 studying the china and its records. Her article was published in Munsey’s Magazine in 1903.
And who should read her article but First Lady Edith Roosevelt! Mrs. Roosevelt was enthusiastic about the history and preservation of the presidential china and ordered cabinets for it’s display on the ground floor corridor of the White House. Mrs. Baker and Mrs. Roosevelt publicized their search for more pieces in the press and designated the growing collection as government property.
Soon, the collection began to outgrow its four cabinets on the ground floor. It was first suggested by First Lady Ellen Wilson that a room on the ground floor be renovated to house the collection permanently. After her death in 1914, plans were abandoned. It wasn’t until First Lady Edith Wilson (Woodrow Wilson’s second wife) took up the plans in 1917 that the room would finally be constructed.
Thanks to the efforts of four remarkable women, visitors can enjoy viewing a timeline of presidential china when they tour the White House.
Who is a remarkable woman in your life?
Images: 1st China Room/WHHA, Abby Gunn Baker/WHHA, Edith Roosevelt/WHHA, Ellen Wilson/WHHA, Edith Wilson WHHA, China Room Today/WHHA