Lucy Hayes (born August 28, 1831, Chillicothe, Ohio, U.S.—died June 25, 1889, Fremont, Ohio) was an American first lady (1877–81), the wife of Rutherford B. Hayes, 19th president of the United States, and the first presidential wife to graduate from college.
Lucy Webb was the daughter of James Webb, a physician and ardent abolitionist, and Maria Cook Webb, who raised Lucy and her two older brothers by herself after her husband’s death in 1833. Education was a high priority in the household: Lucy’s brothers attended Ohio Wesleyan University, and in 1850, at the age of 18, Lucy graduated from Wesleyan Female College in Cincinnati, Ohio.
In that year Lucy met Rutherford B. Hayes, then a young lawyer in Cincinnati, and they were married on December 30, 1852, at her mother’s home. In the first two decades of their marriage Lucy gave birth to eight children, five of whom survived infancy, and she managed to care for them while keeping a close eye on her husband’s career. She supported his decision to volunteer for the Union army in the American Civil War, and she visited him in camp and later left her young children to care for him while he was wounded. After Rutherford entered Congress in 1865 she attended congressional debates, and during his governorship of Ohio (1868–76) she performed many of the charitable and social-service activities that would later become routine for first ladies, such as visiting schools, hospitals, and institutions for the mentally ill and lobbying for funding for orphanages and veterans’ families. In doing so she became very popular with Ohio voters.
As first lady Lucy was widely heralded for her simplicity and good sense. Although family inheritances had made her very wealthy, she retained her humble style and frugal habits, a fact that endeared her to those who had tired of the extravagant lifestyle favoured by her predecessor, Julia Grant. Lucy’s decision to serve only nonalcoholic beverages in the White House was applauded by proponents of prohibition but ridiculed by others, including reporters who insisted that at White House parties there was always one punch bowl with something stronger in it. In fact “Lemonade Lucy,” as she was nicknamed by her critics, did not object to drinking by others and was far more interested in education and health care than in the national prohibition of alcohol. She supported the White House ban because it was popular, and her husband observed in his diary that it had won him votes. When she invited children to roll Easter eggs on the White House lawn, she initiated a popular tradition that her successors continued.
In 1880 Lucy accompanied her husband on a train trip to the west coast, the first such journey by an incumbent president, and her presence drew large crowds. Partly as a result of her popularity, the title first lady, formerly rarely used, became more common during her tenure.
Rutherford refused nomination for a second term, and the Hayeses retired to Spiegel Grove, their home in Fremont, Ohio, where they lived happily until Lucy died of a stroke in 1889. She was buried near her home.
The White House is the official office and residence of the president of the United States. It is located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W. in Washington, D.C.
How much land does the White House and its grounds cover?
The White House and its landscaped grounds occupy 18 acres (7.2 hectares).
Does the president live in the White House?
The White House is both the home and workplace of the president of the United States, and it is the headquarters of the president’s principal staff members.
Who was the first president to live in the White House?
The second president of the United States, John Adams, moved into the still-unfinished presidential mansion on November 1, 1800.
How many rooms are there in the White House?
The White House building complex has more than 130 rooms.
What is the architectural style of the White House?
The White House is a Georgian mansion in the Palladian style.
White House, the official office and residence of the president of the United States at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W. in Washington, D.C. It is perhaps the most famous and easily recognizable house in the world, serving as both the home and workplace of the president and the headquarters of the president’s principal staff members. The term White House is also commonly used to refer to the presidential administration currently in charge of the executive branch of the federal government.
White House, drawing by James HobanDrawing of the elevation of the White House by James Hoban, 1792; in the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore.
The White House and its landscaped grounds occupy 18 acres (7.2 hectares). Since the administration of George Washington (1789–97), who occupied presidential residences in New York and Philadelphia, every American president has resided at the White House. Originally called the “President’s Palace” on early maps, the building was officially named the Executive Mansion in 1810 in order to avoid connotations of royalty. Although the name “White House” was commonly used from about the same time (because the mansion’s white-gray sandstone contrasted strikingly with the red brick of nearby buildings), it did not become the official name of the building until 1901, when it was adopted by Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (1901–09). The White House is the oldest federal building in the nation’s capital.
The building’s history begins in 1792, when a public competition was held to choose a design for a presidential residence in the new capital city of Washington. Thomas Jefferson, later the country’s third president (1801–09), using the pseudonymous initials “A.Z.,” was among those who submitted drawings, but Irish American architect James Hoban won the commission (and a $500 prize) with his plan for a Georgian mansion in the Palladian style. The structure was to have three floors and more than 100 rooms and would be built in sandstone imported from quarries along Aquia Creek in Virginia. The cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1792. Labourers, including local enslaved people, were housed in temporary huts built on the north side of the premises. They were joined by skilled stonemasons from Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1793.
In 1800 the entire federal government was relocated from Philadelphia to Washington. John Adams, the country’s second president (1797–1801), moved into the still unfinished presidential mansion on November 1 and the next night wrote in a letter to his wife, Abigail Adams:
I Pray Heaven Bestow the Best of Blessings on This House and All that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but Honest and Wise Men ever rule under this Roof.
At the insistence of Pres. Franklin Roosevelt (1933–45), the quotation was inscribed on the fireplace of the State Dining Room immediately below the portrait of Abraham Lincoln, by George Healy.
When Abigail Adams finally arrived in Washington several days later, she was disappointed with the inadequate state of the residence. The first lady wrote,
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There is not a single apartment finished. We have not the least fence, yard, or other convenience outside. I use the great unfinished audience room [East Room] as a drying room for hanging up the clothes.
The White House in the 19th century
White House planPlan of the principal story of the White House in 1803, original drawing by Benjamin Latrobe, 1807.
The mansion quickly became a focal point of the new federal city and was symbolically linked to the United States Capitol by way of Pennsylvania Avenue. Following his inauguration in March 1801, Jefferson became the second president to reside in the executive mansion. In keeping with his ardent republicanism, he opened the house to public visitation each morning, a tradition that was continued (during peacetime) by all his successors. He personally drew up landscaping plans and had two earthen mounds installed on the south lawn to remind him of his beloved Virginia Piedmont. Meanwhile, construction continued on the building’s interior, which still lacked ample staircases and suffered from a persistently leaky roof. During Jefferson’s tenure, the White House was elegantly furnished in Louis XVI style (known in America as Federal style).
The Taking of the City of Washington in AmericaThe Taking of the City of Washington in America, wood engraving by G. Thompson, 1814. The work depicts the night of August 24, 1814, when British troops marched into Washington, D.C., and set fire to federal buildings, including the Capitol and the Executive Mansion (now known as the White House).
During the War of 1812 the building was burned by the British, and Pres. James Madison (1809–17) and his family were forced to flee the city. The Madisons eventually moved into the nearby Octagon House, the Washington mansion of John Tayloe, a Virginia plantation owner. Reconstruction and expansion began under Hoban’s direction, but the building was not ready for occupancy until 1817, during the administration of Pres. James Monroe (1817–25). Hoban’s reconstruction included the addition of east and west terraces on the main building’s flanks; a semicircular south portico and a colonnaded north portico were added in the 1820s.
During the 19th century the White House became a symbol of American democracy. In the minds of most Americans, the building was not a “palace” from which the president ruled but merely a temporary office and residence from which he served the people he governed. The White House belonged to the people, not the president, and the president occupied it only for as long as the people allowed him to stay. The idea of a president refusing to leave the White House after losing an election or an impeachment trial was unthinkable.
The inauguration of Andrew Jackson (1829–37), the “people’s president,” attracted thousands of well-wishers to the nation’s capital. As Jackson rode on horseback down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House, he was surrounded by a frenetic throng of 20,000 people, many of whom attempted to follow him into the mansion to get a better look at their hero. A contemporary, Margaret Bayer Smith, recounts what happened next: “The halls were filled with a disorderly rabble…scrambling for the refreshments designed for the drawing room.” While friends of the new president joined arms to protect him from the mob, “china and glass to the amount of several thousand dollars were broken in the struggle to get at the ices and cakes, though punch and other drinkables had been carried out in tubs and buckets to the people.” Said Supreme Court JusticeJoseph Story, “I was glad to escape from the scene as soon as possible.” During his administration Jackson spent more than $50,000 refurbishing the residence, including $10,000 on decorations for the East Room and more than $4,000 on a sterling silver dinner and dessert set decorated with an American eagle.
In 1842 the visit to the United States of the English novelist Charles Dickens brought an official invitation to the White House. After his calls at the White House door went unanswered, Dickens let himself in and walked through the mansion from room to room on the lower and upper floors. Finally coming upon a room filled with nearly two dozen people, he was shocked and appalled to see many of them spitting on the carpet. Dickens later wrote, “I take it for granted the Presidential housemaids have high wages.” Until the Civil War, however, most White House servants were enslaved people. Moreover, the wages of all White House employees—as well as the expenses for running the White House, including staging official functions—were paid for by the president. Not until 1909 did Congress provide appropriations to pay White House servants.
Dickens was not the only foreign visitor to be disappointed with the White House. On a trip to Washington just before the Civil War, Aleksandr Borisovich Lakier, a Russian nobleman, wrote that “the home of the president…is barely visible behind the trees.” The White House, he said, was “sufficient for a private family and not at all conforming to the expectations of a European.” Subsequent changes to the building in the 19th century were relatively minor. The interior was redecorated during various presidential administrations and modern conveniences were regularly added, including a refrigerator in 1845, gas lighting in 1849, and electric lighting in 1891.
The White House was the scene of mourning after the assassination of Pres. Abraham Lincoln (1861–65). While Mary Todd Lincoln lay in her room for five weeks grieving for her husband, many White House holdings were looted. Responding to charges that she had stolen government property when she left the White House, she angrily inventoried all the items she had taken with her, including gifts of quilts and waxworks from well-wishers.
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