Presidential Designs
Re-created at the Smithsonian, the White House's Cross Hall tells a tale of changing styles
- By Valerie Jablow
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2000, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The scale of this re-creation may be smaller than that of its model, but this work is no less original. Terry Conable, the Smithsonian’s chief of historic restoration, used McKim’s masters for the moldings, along with molds and profiles he himself took of the Cross Hall’s door frames and egg-and-dart ceiling molding. He also took an impression of the 1902 Presidential seal and placed it above the hall’s center doors.
That seal, it turns out, holds special meaning for Robert Giannetti, a master plasterer who collaborated with Conable on this project. According to family legend, Giannetti’s father, George, had been working on the Presidential seal in another part of the White House when President Franklin Roosevelt came by to survey his work. Why, asked George Giannetti of the chief executive, did the eagle on the seal face the arrows in its left talons and not the olive branches in its right? Wouldn’t facing the symbol of peace be better than facing the symbol of war?
In October 1945, President Truman ordered the change in the seal. It still graces the Cross Hall today.
By Valerie Jablow
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