Treaty Room

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the Treaty Room as decorated by Stéphane Boudin during the administration of John F. Kennedy.
Floor plan of the White House second floor showing location of the Treaty Room.

The Treaty Room is located on the second floor of the White House, home of the president of the United States. The room is a part of the first family's private apartments, and is used as a study by the president.

Before construction of the White House West Wing, working offices were located on the east side of the second floor. The Treaty Room has been used as a waiting room, a cabinet room, and the president's office. President Andrew Johnson used the room for his cabinet meetings. Ulysses S. Grant continued this use and acquired a large Renaissance Revival style table to be used by his cabinet. The table remained in the room for many years, and President William McKinley oversaw the signing of the peace treaty with Spain which concluded the Spanish-American War on it on August 12, 1898.

Old photographs and sterographs show a sucession of ornate printed wall and ceiling papers, highly figured axminster carpets, and ornate gas lighting fixtures. During the administration of Theodore Roosevelt this room was greatly simplified as a part of an overall refurbishment of the house directed by Charles Follen McKim. Victorian decoration was removed, and the underlying wood floor was exposed. Low bookcases were constructed, and the room began use as the president's in-residence study.

During the administration of Herbert Hoover, the room was used as a parlor or sitting room and was termed the Monroe Room. James Monroe's French Empire center table was moved to the room, and a copy of the desk he wrote the Monroe doctrine upon was placed in the room. Additional efforts were made during the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt to furnish to room somewhat as it might have been when the house was built. Following the Truman reconstruction of the White House, the room was furnished by the interior design department of the New York department store B. Altman. Nearly all the furniture was contemporary, generaly in a traditional style.

During the administration of John F. Kennedy, Jacqueline Kennedy worked with Stéphane Boudin of the House of Jansen to create a room that would represent a part of the house's victorian era history. A palette of deep greens, burgundy ad gold was adopted. President Grant's table was returned to the room along with an electrified gas chandelier once located in the East Room. The walls recreated a mid-nineteenth century treatment of ornamental frames of decorative paper. A large gilded Rococ revival overmantel mirror wih the shiled of the United States which had once been hung in the Green Room was installed. Theobald Chartran's painting Signing of the Peace Protocol Between Spain and the United States, August 12, 1898 was hung in the room along with copies of several treaties signed at the White House. Drapery was based on a design of Lincoln's era. President Kennedy signed the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty in the room in 1963. Boudin's design survived into the administration of George H.W. Bush when he had the room painted a light green and simple panel drapes installed.

During the administration of William Jefferson Clinton interior designer Kaki Hockersmith furnished the room in a mix of late American Empire and Victorian. Walls were painted a deep claret red and a gilded chandelier with an American eagle, one of several purchased during Theodore Roosevelt's administration for the residence and West WIng era was hung. President George W. Bush has had the walls painted off-white, and an electrified crystal gasolier hung.