C&O desk

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C&O desk
The C&O desk in the Oval Office during George Bush's presidency
The C&O desk in the Oval Office during George H. W. Bush's presidency
DesignerRorimer-Brooks
Datec. 1920
MaterialsWalnut
Style / traditionPartners desk

The C&O desk is one of only six desks ever used in the Oval Office by a sitting President of the United States. The C&O Desk was used there only by George H. W. Bush, one of two Oval Office desks (along with the Johnson desk) to be used by only one president. Prior to its use in the Oval Office by Bush, the desk had been used elsewhere in the White House. It is the shortest-served Oval Office desk to date, having been used for only one four-year term.

Built around 1920, the C&O desk is one of four desks built for the owners of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O). It was later donated to the White House by Chesapeake and Ohio's successor, CSX Transportation.

Design and markings[]

The C&O desk, constructed around 1920, is a walnut reproduction of an eighteenth-century Chippendale double pedestal desk (also known as a partners desk).[1] The desk features an inverted breakfront form and each of the two pedestals is veneered with burlwood and contains three graduated drawers on each of the two faces.[1][2] The narrow desktop consists of a narrow frieze tier of drawers recessed back from the rest of the furniture piece, and the whole desk sits on bracket feet.[1] The top of the desk is inlaid with burled maple.[3]

History[]

Van Sweringen brothers' Terminal Tower offices[]

Jimmy Carter in his study sitting at the C&O Desk on August 7, 1978

In 1930, the Van Sweringen brothers, Oris Paxton (O.P.) Van Sweringen and Mantis James (M.J.) Van Sweringen, completed construction of Terminal Tower, a 52-story, 708-foot tall skyscraper built over Union Terminal in Cleveland, Ohio. The tower, built at virtually the same time as the Chrysler Building and the Empire State Building was designed in a much more conservative, Beaux-Arts style than other towers of the time period. It took a decade to complete. This conservative styling extended to the interiors of the building with the Van Sweringen brothers constructing lavish offices on the 36th floor of the building in an old-world English style.[4] Featuring suites paneled in oak imported from Sherwood Forest the rooms were filled with furniture pieces designed and built in a variety of historic English styles by Rorimer-Brooks. Louis Rorimer, the sole head of Rorimer-Brooks, was a Cleveland based interior designer known for his knowledge of art and architectural history.[5] Designer James Irving states "I consider Louis Rorimer to be the Louis Comfort Tiffany of furniture."[6] Rorimer-Brooks' records were destroyed in 1957 by Irving and Co. who had acquired the company.[6] Rorimer-Brooks designed and built matching walnut partners desks for the offices on the 36th floor of Terminal Tower.[5] Sources conflict if there were six,[3]four,[1] or three[5] matching desks constructed. Many sources claim the desks were created around 1920.[7][8]

The Van Sweringen brothers built a vast and maze-like empire of real estate and railroad holdings, including the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O), out of this office and on these desks. This all came crashing down with the onset of the Great Depression. The Van Sweringen empire collapsed in May 1935 when they had to use all of their cash and equity to pay off creditors. Both of the brothers died shortly there after with M.J. dying on December 12, 1935, and O.P. dying less than a year later on November 23, 1936.[4] After the deaths of the brothers the C&O offices remained in Terminal Tower.[9]

Diplomatic Reception Rooms[]

During the 1950s the new headquarters of the United States Department of State were planned and constructed at what is now called the Harry S Truman Building. Clement Conger, then an Assistant Chief of Protocol, recommended that a large area of the building be set aside for Diplomatic Reception Rooms as hotels and clubs had to be used for entertaining and receptions by the Vice President and Cabinet members as they could not use the spaces in the White House. Funds were appropriated by congress to build these sixteen rooms but no funds were set aside for furnishings or interior decoration. Opening with their first official event in January 1961, the rooms "looked like a 1950s motel: exterior walls made of floor-to-ceiling plate glass with exposed steel beams, openings without doors, support beams encased in fire-proofing material set out three feet from the walls, wall-to-wall carpeting on concrete floors, and acoustical-tile ceilings throughout" according to Conger.[10] After Conger gave a tour of the space to Mary Caroline Pratt Herter, wife of then-Secretary of State Christian Herter, who was hosting the first event in the rooms, Mrs. Herter began to cry due to the quality of the rooms. Conger explained that after this interaction he "volunteered to run a public campaign to furnish the rooms in a manner befitting America's heritage."[10] Conger founded the Office of Fine Arts in the State Department and after their first meeting on March 22, 1961, began acquiring furniture and objects to decorate the Diplomatic Rooms purely through donations. The only government funds were spent on salaries and office expenses.[10]

Because no federal funds were used to decorate the spaces Conger was creative in how he acquired pieces for the collection. Conger explains, "Early on, I learned that collectors overcollect and that the Diplomatic Reception Rooms are attractive homes for a family's superabundance of objects. One of my best methods for acquiring needed pieces has been to ask for them on loan. Once people see such pieces in place, they want to demonstrate their commitment to the nation and to international diplomacy by donating their possessions or by making a purchase possible at a reasonable price."[10] One of the objects collected in this manner was what we now call the C&O desk. A document listing objects loaned to the White House between 1969 and 1974 lists that the desk was loaned to the Diplomatic Reception Rooms some time before this by Mr. Hay Watkins of the Chessie System.[7]The Chessie System was the name for the new railroad conglomerate formed when the C&O acquired the Baltimore and Ohio in 1963.[9] The desk was subsequently loaned to the White House at some point between 1969 and 1974.[7]

The White House[]

In March 1975 Conger, who had by then become the White House Curator, placed the C&O desk in the Oval Office Study. He wrote a memo to Gerald Ford noting the new historic items recently placed in the room including the desk, which was still on loan.[11] Presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan all used the desk in this room just next to the Oval Office.[2]

After a series of mergers, the newly-named Chessie System merged with Seaboard Coast Line Industries on November 1, 1980, to form the new CSX Corporation.[12] CSX kept the Van Sweringen brothers' offices in Terminal Tower until finally vacating them in 1986.[13] In 1987, during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, the C&O desk was donated by the CSX Corporation to the White House.[1]

President Bush meeting with Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Brent Scowcroft, John H. Sununu and Robert Gates at the C&O desk.
President Bush meeting with Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Brent Scowcroft, John H. Sununu and Robert Gates at the C&O desk

On May 2, 1985, the desk was moved from the Oval Office study to then Vice President George H. W. Bush's main work space in the White House where he started using it. When Marlin Fitzwater, White House Press Secretary under both presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, was asked about Bush's use of the C&O desk, he stated that "... he got used to it, found it comfortable, [and] thought it was attractive".[8]

After his presidential inauguration on January 20, 1989, the C&O desk was used in the residential portion of the White House, and on June 13, 1989, it was moved into the newly decorated Oval Office.[8] The Resolute desk, the Oval Office desk removed for the C&O, was placed briefly in the White House storage room,[8] but found a final resting place for the Bush White House in the Treaty Room which Bush used as an ancillary office.[14]

Doro Bush Koch, one of George Bush's children, wrote that Bush chose to use the C&O desk due to a perceived tradition. Lyndon B. Johnson chose not to use the Resolute desk after Kennedy's assassination and instead moved the desk he used as vice president to the Oval Office. Koch claims that Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford also brought their vice-presidential desks to the Oval Office, Jimmy Carter used the Resolute desk because he was never a vice president, and Bush brought his vice-presidential desk as a way to continue this perceived tradition.[15]

On the desk Bush kept a pencil holder with a small American flag. This flag was given to him in 1989 by a nineteen year-old Army Ranger at a San Antonio hospital who lost both an arm and a leg during the United States invasion of Panama that year. Bush kept the flag prominently displayed as a reminder of the sacrifices soldiers make. When dignitaries from other countries visited the Oval Office, Bush asked that a small flag from their country be displayed in the pencil cup as well.[15]

Bush was defeated by Bill Clinton in the 1992 United States presidential election. Before leaving office on Jan. 20, 1993 Bush wrote a note to Clinton and left it on his desk in the Oval Office. This note began a tradition where outgoing presidents leave private messages to incoming presidents on the Oval Office desk.[16] Clinton moved the Resolute desk back into the Oval Office for his presidency.[17]

Timeline[]

The location of the desk from its construction to present day and each tenant of the desk is as follows:

Tenant Location Dates Ref.
Van Sweringen brothers offices Terminal Tower 36th floor
Cleveland, Ohio
1930 – sometime between 1969 and 1974 [5]
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway offices
Chessie System offices
United States Department of State Diplomatic Reception Rooms, Harry S Truman Building
Washington, DC
sometime between 1969 and 1974 – 1975 [7]
Gerald Ford Oval Office Study
White House
1975 – 1985 [11][2]
Jimmy Carter
Ronald Reagan
George H.W. Bush Vice president's Office
White House
1985 – 1989 [8]
White House Residence 1989 [8]
Oval Office
White House
1989 – 1993 [8]

Replicas[]

Replica Oval Office at the George Bush Presidential Library

A replica of the C&O desk is located in the George Bush Presidential Library, in College Station, Texas, as a part of a full-scale replica of the Oval Office furnished as it was during Bush's presidency.[18]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e The White House: The Ronald W. Reagan Administration, 1981-1989. Office of the Chief Usher. The White House. 1989. Retrieved January 22, 2021.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Hess, Stephen. "What Now? The Oval Office". Brookings Institution. January 8, 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2021.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b The Chesapeake & Ohio Historical Magazine, Volumes 20-21. , 1988. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Beatty, Pete.Train Dreams. Belt Magazine. May 8, 2014. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Piña, Leslie.Louis Rorimer: Nonresidential Interior Design. Winterthur Portfolio 25, no. 2/3 (1990): 157-76. Accessed January 23, 2021.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Theiss, Evelyn. Louis Rorimer's elegant, original designs defined public and private places: Elegant Cleveland. Cleveland.com. January 10, 2010. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Loans to the White House: 1969-1974. Gerald R. Ford Library. 1974. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g NATION : Bush Replaces Kennedy's Desk. Los Angeles Times. June 16, 1989. Accessed December 22, 2011.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad. Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Conger, Clement E. Diplomatic Reception Rooms: History. Clement E. Conger. United States Department of State. 1991. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b Conger, Clem. Memorandum for the President RE: Historic Items in the President's Study. Curator's Office - General (2). Gerald R. Ford Library. March 5, 1975. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  12. ^ Interactive timeline Archived 2011-10-10 at the Wayback Machine CSX. Accessed December 22, 2011.
  13. ^ Harwood, Herbert H. Jr. Invisible Giants: The Empires of Cleveland's Van Sweringen Brothers. Indiana University Press, February 7, 2003. pp. 299-300. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  14. ^ Bush Koch, Doro (October 6, 2006). My Father, My President: A Personal Account of the Life of George H.W. Bush. Hachette Digital. ISBN 9780759569096. Retrieved December 24, 2011.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b Bush Koch, Doro..My Father, My President: A Personal Account of the Life of George H. W. Bush. Grand Central Publishing. October 6, 2006. Retrieved December 27, 2020.
  16. ^ Horton, Alex. George H.W. Bush left a note to Bill Clinton. It's an artifact of political humility. The Eagle. December 1, 2018. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  17. ^ Oval Office Tour and Presidential Interview. C-SPAN. Program ID 51953-1. September 29, 1993. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  18. ^ "List of Areas". George Bush Presidential Library. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved December 21, 2011.

External links[]

  • Media related to C&O desk at Wikimedia Commons
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