Ground Floor----
Ground Floor Corridor
Until 1902, the Ground Floor in the White House served as utilitarian space used by servants.
As a result, by the end of the 19th century, James Hoban's original groin vaulting in the wide corridor of this floor had been cut through in numerous places to accommodate pipes and ducts.
The furnace room (now the Diplomatic Reception Room) also jutted into the corridor. When McKim, Mead, & White created a new guest entrance in the East Wing during the 1902 renovation of the White House, they transformed much of the Ground Floor into public space.
All intrusions were removed, the vaulting was restored, and the refurbished corridor received rugs and seating furniture. At First Lady Edith Roosevelt's initiative, two cabinets were purchased for the corridor in 1904 to display pieces of dinner and dessert services used by former presidents. Mrs. Roosevelt also decided to hang portraits of first ladies in this space, inaugurating a tradition that has been retained to the present.
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