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HISTORY
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A Brief History of
Decatur House
When Commodore
Stephen Decatur, Jr., and his wife, Susan, moved to the
new federal city in 1816, they purchased land on the northwest corner
of the President’s Park (today Lafayette
Square) with the prize money Decatur was awarded for his naval conquests
in the War of 1812. The Decaturs commissioned Benjamin
Henry Latrobe, America's first professional architect and engineer,
to design a home "fit for entertaining." In Washington, Latrobe
also designed St. John's Episcopal Church (better known as the President's
Parish) and parts of the White House.
Built
in 1818, Decatur's home was the first private residence on the President's
Park. Thereafter known as Decatur House, it was a nearly square three-story
town house constructed with red brick in the austere Federal fashion of
the day. In 1819, the Decaturs moved in with high expectations for the
Capital as well as their own social position. Already a celebrity from
his conquests in the Barbary Wars and the War of 1812, Stephen Decatur
became one of Washington’s most celebrated figures, and the couple
advanced their position by throwing a number of lavish parties
in their new house. Unfortunately, the couple only occupied the house
for a mere 14 months as Stephen was mortally wounded in a duel
against Commodore James Barron on March 22, 1820.
After Stephen's death, Susan
auctioned most of the home’s furnishings, moved to a small house
in Georgetown and rented the Decatur House for the next 15 years to a
string of foreign and American dignitaries. Henry
Clay, Martin Van Buren, and Edward
Livingston made Decatur House the unofficial residences for secretaries
of state from 1827 to 1833, each renting the house while they served that
post. In addition housing such prominent political figures in American
history, Decatur House was continuously occupied by numerous slaves and
servants who also played a pivotal role in shaping 19th century America.
In 1829 Charlotte Dupuy,
a women enslaved by Henry Clay, left an indelible mark on the history
of Decatur House when she sued Clay for her right to freedom while living
in the house.
Due
to her overwhelming debt, Susan Decatur was forced to sell the home in
1836. Decatur House was purchased as a retirement home by wealthy hotel
and tavern owner John Gadsby, who owned
the prestigious Washington Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue as well as Gadsby’s
Tavern in Alexandria. Among his most notable alterations to the house
was the addition of a large two-story depedency building
at the rear of the property, used as
quarters for the numerous enslaved individuals in his household. After
Gadsby's death in 1844, his wife Providence rented the house to Vice President
George M. Dallas and several members
of Congress. Her last tenant was Louisiana Senator
Judah P. Benjamin. During the Civil War, the federal
government
took over the building, using it among other things as the Headquarters
for the Army Subsistence Department and a storage space for Union Army
uniforms.
General
Edward Beale of California purchased the town house in 1872. A frontiersman,
diplomat and entrepreneur, Beale was the initiator of the U.S. Army's
Camel Corps in the deserts of New Mexico and Arizona and served as ambassador
to Austria-Hungary during the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant. Edward and
his wife, Mary, redecorated the house to create a more fashionable Victorian
home. They installed gaslights and added the impressive parquet floors
in the second floor parlors where they frequently hosted social gatherings
for Washington's elite. Upon Edward's death, the home was passed down
to his son, Truxtun Beale, who served
as ambassador to Persia and Romania. Truxtun and his wife, Marie, also
did their part to carry on the tradition of entertaining in style as they
hosted numerous soirees for diplomats and other prominent Washingtonians.
In 1956, after the home had
been in the Beale family for 84 years, Marie
Beale bequeathed the Decatur House to the National Trust for Historic
Preservation. Marie Beale's generosity not only saved Decatur House, but
many other
historic buildings surrounding Lafayette Square which were slated to be
demolished to make way for new government office buildings. Decatur House
was opened to the public as a museum in the early 1960s.
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