White House History #35: After the Fire
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After the Fire, issue #35 of White House History, marks the bicentennial of the burning of the White House, which took place on August 24, 1814. The fire calls up many stories-the flight of the President and Mrs. Madison, the published account of the slave youth, Paul Jennings, the presidential dinner consumed by the British officers, the javelins of fire. And, after the smoke cleared, and the worst was over, President Madison faced the question of what to do about the American capital now. The White House was a burnt-out shell. Rebuild it or not? Beauty had nothing to do with restoring the burned White House. When members of congress debated moving the capital further west, the alarmed administration called for "repairing" the public buildings, to anchor Washington where it was. Madison's colleagues achieved in congress a bill to rebuild. Proposals for improvements by the architect B. Henry Latrobe were noted, but, wrote Madison, "It will be best . . . not to deviate from the models destroyed." He summoned the original builder of the house, James Hoban. Work began at once. James Monroe came into the presidency in 1817 just in time to make only minute changes and the finished house was opened New Year's Day 1818, twenty-eight months after the fire. This issue of White House History revisits the burning and reconstruction of the White House from a variety of points of view, featuring individuals involved in the fire, rescues, dangers and aftermath, a little archaeology, and biography. In the auction inventory of Dolley Madison's possessions you will find the mementos she treasured from the great melodrama, of which she stands first in legend and memory.
Best prices to buy, sell, or rent ISBN 9780912308623
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