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Cutts–Madison House

The Cutts–Madison House (also known as the Dolley Madison House) is an American colonial-style[1] historic home, now used for offices located at 1520 H Street NW in Washington, D.C. The house is best known for being the residence of former First Lady Dolley Madison, who lived there from November 1837 until her death in July 1849.[2][6][7]

Cutts–Madison House
The west side of the Cutts–Madison House
General information
Architectural styleAmerican colonial[1]
Town or cityWashington, D.C.
CountryUnited States
Coordinates38°54′0.1″N 77°02′05.4″W / 38.900028°N 77.034833°W / 38.900028; -77.034833
Construction started1818
Completed1819
Costapproximately $5,750 (in 1828)[4]
ClientRichard Cutts[1][2]
Cutts–Madison House
Part ofLafayette Square Historic District (Washington, D.C.) (ID70000833)
Added to NRHPAugust 29, 1970[3]
Technical details
Sizeoriginally 3,900 (approximately);[4] 13,319 (2009)[5]

The Cutts–Madison House is part of the Lafayette Square Historic District, a National Historic Landmark District.[8] Now owned by the federal government, it is used as part of a federal courts complex.

Construction

 
Anna Payne Cutts, by Gilbert Stuart, 1804. Collection of The White House

On March 31, 1793, the U.S. Commissioners in charge of selling federally-owned lots in the District of Columbia agreed to sell square 221 to Samuel Davidson.[4] Davidson died in 1810, and his son and two daughters inherited the property.[4] Richard Cutts purchased lots 12, 13, 14, and 15 of square 221 from the Davidson heirs on October 3, 1818.[4]

The house was constructed in 1818–1819 by Richard Cutts, who built the house for himself and his wife, Anna Payne Cutts (Dolley Payne Madison's sister).[1][2][7][9][10] The house had two stories, a gabled roof, dormer windows, and chimneys at the north and south ends of the house.[4][11][12] The exterior was originally grey stucco.[13] The front of the house faced Lafayette Square.[12][14] The lot on which the house sat was a large one, with extensive space on all sides.[11] Dirt roads bordered the house on the west and north sides, and a large garden with flowers and fruit trees occupied the east and south sides of the house.[11][12] The garden extended south as far as the Tayloe House on the south end of the block.[4] The home was considered one of the more "pretentious" domiciles in the city at the time.[11][15]

The city gravelled the street in front of the house in 1823.[14]

Occupants

Dolley Madison

 
Dolley Madison by Gilbert Stuart, 1804

Cutts secured a mortgage to build the house, and on August 22, 1828, the bank holding the mortgage sold it to ex-President James Madison for $5,750.[1][4][15][16] When James Madison died in 1836, Dolley Madison held the mortgage.[12][15] Her husband's death had left Dolley Madison in a financially difficult position, so to reduce her expenses she took up residence in the house in November 1837.[1][2][6][7][11][15] Presidents James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, James K. Polk, and Zachary Taylor all visited her in the home, as did John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster.[15] Dolley Madison's financial difficulties continued, however. She also owned Montpelier, her husband's country estate and farm in the Piedmont of Virginia. But Montpelier's finances were in poor condition, and Dolley moved out of the Cutts–Madison House in 1839 to live once more at Montpelier and see if she could save the estate.[6][11] She rented out the Cutts–Madison house, but was unable to stabilize Montpelier.[6][11] She moved back to the Cutts–Madison House in 1843, and sold Montpelier in 1844.[6][11]

In 1844 or 1845, after her return to the Cutts–Madison House, arsonists put lit matches into the shutters in the rear of the house, and Dolley Madison had to be wakened and saved from death by a servant.[17] The fire was quickly put out, and the damage to the building was not extensive (Mrs. Madison returned to her bedroom the same night).[17]

Dolley Madison lived in the house on Lafayette Square until her death on July 12, 1849.[2][7] Her only surviving child, John Payne Todd (from her first marriage to Quaker lawyer John Todd), inherited the property.[4] On April 3, 1851, Todd sold the house and property to Charles Wilkes.[4]

Charles Wilkes

Rear Admiral Charles Wilkes purchased the house in 1851.[2][16][18][19] Wilkes moved the entrance from Madison Place NW to H Street NW, and turned the porch on the west side of the house (facing Madison Place NW) into a window.[2][18] The gable roof (which sloped east and west) was eliminated and a flat roof installed, an out-building added in the rear, and a bay window added on the south side.[4] Wilkes also cut all windows on the first floor down so that they now reached the floor.[4]

During the 1850s and 1860s, the house had a number of notable occupants in addition to the Wilkeses. After being named Special Envoy to Central America, Sir William Gore Ouseley rented the house in 1858 on his way to the region and entertained lavishly while living at the Cutts–Madison House.[20] General George B. McClellan used the house as his Washington-based headquarters after the First Battle of Bull Run during the Civil War.[1][2][10] McClellan first occupied the house on July 26, 1861, and left in late October for new headquarters at a house at the corner of H Street NW and 15th Street NW (where the Sofitel Lafayette Square Hotel now stands).[4] After the Civil War, the Cutts–Madison House was briefly used by the French Claims Commission.[2]

Wilkes mortgaged the house in 1855, and the mortgage passed through several hands over the next 15 years until George B. Warren secured it in 1870.[4] Upon Warren's death in 1880, the mortgage was assigned to his daughter, Phebe Warren Tayloe.[4] She died in 1882, and her niece Elizabeth H. Price came to hold the mortgage.[4] Price sold the mortgage in December 1884 to Edward Tayloe Perry (a minor).[4] Meanwhile, Charles Wilkes deeded the house over to his wife and three daughters in 1870.[4] Wilkes died in 1877, and in 1886 the Wilkes family sold the house to the Cosmos Club for the sum of $40,000 (which sum paid the outstanding mortgage held in trust for Edward Tayloe Perry).[4]

Cosmos Club

 
Plans for the renovations of the first floor of the Cutts–Madison House, made by the Cosmos Club in 1886.

The Cosmos Club immediately improved the height of the third floor by raising the roof, and added a large meeting hall by building a single-story 23'8" (7.21 metre) extension to the south side of the house (with skylight).[4][10][16]

The Cosmos Club made further improvements in 1893. Electricity was installed, the heating system upgraded, and general refurbishing of commons areas completed.[4] Two additional stories were built over the assembly hall: The second story consisting of one large room, and a third story consisting of four meeting rooms.[4] A bathroom was added to the third floor of the old building, above the existing second-floor bathroom.[4] The eastern garden was removed, and a three-story addition built. The addition consisted of a ground floor with an entrance to the building on H Street NW, a cloakroom, and a connecting door to the assembly hall on the south side of the building; a second story with meeting rooms for the Cosmos Club as well as other societies which might use the premises; and a third story with lodgings and a meeting room for the Cosmos Club's board of directors.[4] The basement of the original building was renovated and upgraded to include a kitchen, a bathroom, and an underground passage to the new addition.[4] The goal of building the addition was to permit visiting societies (such as members of the National Geographic Society) to enter and use the building without disturbing members of the Cosmos Club.[16] The total cost of the renovations was $15,000.[4] Hornblower & Marshall were the architects of the addition, which was completed in January 1894.[4]

In 1903, the Cosmos Club purchased from Henry Reed Rathbone for $33,000 No. 25 Madison Place NW, the building immediately to the south of the Cutts–Madison House (against which its three-story assembly hall addition abutted).[4] This property (and the one to the south of it) were razed in 1909, and a five-story Cosmos Club lodging house built.[7]

The Cosmos Club vacated the Cutts–Madison House in 1952 to move to new headquarters in the Townsend Mansion at 2121 Massachusetts Avenue NW, at which time the building was purchased by the U.S. government and used for offices.[10][16][21]

Federal ownership

 
The Cutts–Madison House (corner), with the former Cosmos Club building (in tan) to the right and the National Courts building in the rear. These buildings were joined in a scheme to save the earlier historic structure in the 1960s and now serve as a courts complex.

In 1900, the United States Congress passed a resolution establishing the U.S. Senate Park Commission (also known as the " McMillan Commission" because it was chaired by Senator James McMillan [R-Mich.]).[22] The Park Commission's charge was to reconcile competing visions for the development of Washington, D.C., and in particular the National Mall and adjacent areas.[22] The Park Commission's proposals, which came to be known as the "McMillan Plan," proposed that all the buildings around Lafayette Square be razed and replaced by tall, Neoclassical buildings clad in white marble for use by executive branch agencies.[23] For a time, it appeared that the Cutts–Madison House would not survive. William Wilson Corcoran's Corcoran House at 1615 H Street NW was torn down in 1922 and replaced with the Neoclassical United States Chamber of Commerce headquarters.[23][24] The Hay-Adams Houses were razed in 1927 by real estate developer Harry Wardman, and the Hay–Adams Hotel built on the site.[24] At nearby 1616 H Street NW, the Brookings Institution purchased the rear garden from the private owners of the Decatur House and built an eight-story Modernist office building there.[7] Several million dollars were spent in the late 1950s on designs to raze all the buildings on the east side of Lafayette Square and replace them with a white, modernist office building which would house judicial offices.[25][26]

Opposition to the demolition of the Cutts–Madison House and other buildings on Lafayette Square began forming shortly after the plan to raze the structures was announced. Senators James E. Murray and Wayne Morse, several members of the House of Representatives, and citizens of the District of Columbia lobbied to defeat the legislation authorizing the demolition of the buildings.[27] The American Institute of Architects (AIA) devoted the February 1961 issue of its journal to a "Lament for Lafayette Square."[28] The AIA established a committee to develop plans to save the buildings and adapt the new structures so that they incorporated the style and feel of the older homes.[29]

The newly elected Kennedy administration indicated on February 16, 1961, that it was anxious to retain the existing historic homes on Lafayette Square.[30] In November, the Committee of 100 on the Federal City (an influential group of city leaders) asked President Kennedy to save and restore all the remaining buildings on Lafayette Square.[31] In February 1962, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy lobbied General Services Administration (GSA) director Bernard L. Boutin to stop the demolition and adopt a different design plan.[25][32][33] "The wreckers haven't started yet, and until they do it can be saved," she wrote.[34] Mrs. Kennedy enlisted architect John Carl Warnecke, a friend of her husband who happened to be in town that weekend,[33] to create a design that would incorporate the new buildings with the old.[35] Warnecke conceived the basic design over that weekend,[35] and worked closely with Mrs. Kennedy over the next few months to formalize the design proposal.[33] The design was presented to the public and the Commission of Fine Arts (which had approval over any plan) in October 1962, and with Mrs. Kennedy's backing the Commission adopted the revised Warnecke design proposal.[32][33][36]

Warnecke's design was based on the architectural theory of contextualism, where modern buildings are harmonized with the urban forms usual to a traditional city.[37] Not only did Warnecke's design build the first modern buildings on Lafayette Square, but they were the first buildings in the city to utilize contextualism as a design philosophy.[7] Warnecke's design for the National Courts Building was to create tall, flat structures in red brick which would serve as relatively unobtrusive backgrounds to the lighter-colored residential homes like the Cutts–Madison House.[7] The Cutts–Madison House, Cosmos Club building, and Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House were joined, and a courtyard built between them and the National Courts building.[7]

The Cutts–Madison House remains part of the courts complex, which houses various offices and chambers for the United States Court of Federal Claims and United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Reported haunting

Since the mid-19th century, witnesses have claimed to have seen the ghost of Dolley Madison rocking in a chair in the space where the porch on the west side of the house used to be, smiling at passersby.[38][39][40][41]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Miller, Albert D. Distinguished Residents of Washington, D. C.: Science-Art-Industry. Washington, D.C.: National Capital Press, 1916.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Smith, Hal H. "Historic Washington Homes." Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington. 1908.
  3. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Cosmos Club. The Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the Founding of the Cosmos Club of Washington, D.C.: With A Documentary History of the Club From Its Organization to November 16, 1903. Washington, D.C.: Cosmos Club, 1904.
  5. ^ "Construction History & Space Inventory." Dolly Madison House (1520 H Street), Washington, DC. U.S. General Services Administration. No date. Accessed 2009-12-01.
  6. ^ a b c d e Allgor, Catherine. A Perfect Union: Dolley Madison and the Creation of the American Nation. Reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2007. ISBN 0-8050-8300-6
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bednar, Michael J. L'Enfant's Legacy: Public Open Spaces in Washington. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-8018-8318-0
  8. ^ "Lafayette Square Historic District." National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. No date. February 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2009-12-01.
  9. ^ Evelyn, Douglas E.; Dickson, Paul; and Ackerman, S.J. On This Spot: Pinpointing the Past in Washington, D.C. 3rd rev. ed. Dulles, Va.: Capital Books, 2008. ISBN 1-933102-70-5
  10. ^ a b c d Carrier, Thomas J. Washington D.C.: A Historical Walking Tour. Mount Pleasant, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0-7385-0049-6
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Côté, Richard N. Strength and Honor: The Life of Dolley Madison, Mt. Pleasant, S.C.: Corinthian Books, 2005. ISBN 1-929175-09-4
  12. ^ a b c d Zall, Paul M. Dolley Madison. New York: Nova Publishers, 2001. ISBN 1-56072-930-9
  13. ^ Barnard, Ella Kent. Dorothy Payne, Quakeress: A Side-Light Upon the Career of "Dolley" Madison. Philadelphia: Ferris & Leach, 1909.
  14. ^ a b Bryan, Wilhelmus Bogart. A History of the National Capital From Its Foundation Through the Period of the Adoption of the Organic Act. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1916.
  15. ^ a b c d e Peacock, Virginia Tatnall. Famous American Belles of the Nineteenth Century. New York: J.P. Lippincott Company, 1901.
  16. ^ a b c d e Wentzel, Volkmar Kurt. Washington by Night: Vintage Photographs From the 30s. Reprint ed. Golden, Colo.: Fulcrum Publishing, 1998. ISBN 1-55591-410-1
  17. ^ a b Madison, Dolley. Memoirs and Letters of Dolly Madison: Wife of James Madison, President of the United States. 2d ed. Lucia Beverly Cutts, ed. New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1887.
  18. ^ a b Washburn, Wilcomb E. The Cosmos Club of Washington: A Centennial History, 1878-1978. Washington, D.C.: The Club, 1978.
  19. ^ Symonds, Craig L. Lincoln and His Admirals. New York: Oxford University Press US, 2008. ISBN 0-19-531022-5
  20. ^ Poore, Benjamin Perley. Perley's Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis. Philadelphia, Pa.: Hubbard Brothers, 1886.
  21. ^ At least one source incorrectly places the dislocation of the Cosmos Club from the Cutts–Madison House in 1939. See: Bednar, L'Enfant's Legacy: Public Open Spaces in Washington, 2006, p. 105.
  22. ^ a b Peterson, Jon A. The Birth of City Planning in the United States, 1840-1917. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8018-7210-3
  23. ^ a b Luria, Sarah. Capital Speculations: Writing and Building Washington. Durham, N.H.: University of New Hampshire Press, 2006. ISBN 1-58465-502-X
  24. ^ a b Goode, James W. Capital Losses: A Cultural History of Washington's Destroyed Buildings. 2d ed. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books, 2003. ISBN 1-58834-105-4.
  25. ^ a b Anthony, Kathryn H. Designing for Diversity: Gender, Race, and Ethnicity in the Architectural Profession. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2001. ISBN 0-252-02641-1
  26. ^ Lindsay, John J. "Court Gets New Home All to Itself." Washington Post. February 25, 1960; "2 Federal Courts To Be Housed on Lafayette Square." Washington Post. September 17, 1960.
  27. ^ "3 Historic Buildings Befriended." Washington Post. March 2, 1960; "Senator Morse Joins Battle to Save Historic Sites on Lafayette Square." Washington Post. March 24, 1960; "Lafayette Sq. Razing Plan Termed Folly." Washington Post. April 12, 1960; "Group Formed to Save Lafayette Sq. Buildings." Washington Post. May 4, 1960.
  28. ^ "AIA Journal Laments Lafayette Square's End." Washington Post. January 29, 1961.
  29. ^ White, Jean. "Garden Atmosphere of Lafayette Sq. Can Be Preserved, Says Architect." Washington Post. March 3, 1961.
  30. ^ White, Jean. "Administration Anxious To Save Lafayette Park." Washington Post. February 17, 1961.
  31. ^ Jackson, Luther P. "Old Lafayette Sq. Restoration Sought." Washington Post. November 30, 1961.
  32. ^ a b Marton, Kati. Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History. New York: Random House, 2001. ISBN 0-375-40106-7
  33. ^ a b c d Anthony, Carl Sferrazza. As We Remember Her: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the Words of Her Family and Friends. Reprint ed. New York: HarperCollins, 2003. ISBN 0-06-054857-6
  34. ^ Marton, Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History, 2001, p. 122.
  35. ^ a b Time. December 13, 1963.
  36. ^ Abbott, James A. and Rice, Elaine M. Designing Camelot: The Kennedy White House Restoration. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley and Sons, 1997. ISBN 0-471-29242-7
  37. ^ Jencks, Charles. New Paradigm In Architecture. 7th ed. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-300-09512-0
  38. ^ "With Election Looming, Washington Is A Ghost Town -- Literally." 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine Reuters. October 24, 2000.
  39. ^ Apkarian-Russell, Pamela. Washington's Haunted Past: Capital Ghosts of America. Charleston, S.C.: The History Press, 2006. ISBN 1-59629-181-8
  40. ^ Thomsen, Brian M. Oval Office Occult: True Stories of White House Weirdness. Kansas City: Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2008. ISBN 0-7407-7386-0
  41. ^ Colombo, Robert N. To Save the Union: Volunteers in the Civil War from Centerville, Hume and Granger Townships, Allegany County, New York. Westminster, Md.: Heritage Books, 2007. ISBN 0-7884-4394-1

External links

  • Dolly Madison House (1520 H Street), Washington, DC. U.S. General Services Administration.[permanent dead link]

cutts, madison, house, also, known, dolley, madison, house, american, colonial, style, historic, home, used, offices, located, 1520, street, washington, house, best, known, being, residence, former, first, lady, dolley, madison, lived, there, from, november, 1. The Cutts Madison House also known as the Dolley Madison House is an American colonial style 1 historic home now used for offices located at 1520 H Street NW in Washington D C The house is best known for being the residence of former First Lady Dolley Madison who lived there from November 1837 until her death in July 1849 2 6 7 Cutts Madison HouseThe west side of the Cutts Madison HouseGeneral informationArchitectural styleAmerican colonial 1 Town or cityWashington D C CountryUnited StatesCoordinates38 54 0 1 N 77 02 05 4 W 38 900028 N 77 034833 W 38 900028 77 034833Construction started1818Completed1819Costapproximately 5 750 in 1828 4 ClientRichard Cutts 1 2 Cutts Madison HouseU S Historic districtContributing propertyPart ofLafayette Square Historic District Washington D C ID70000833 Added to NRHPAugust 29 1970 3 Technical detailsSizeoriginally 3 900 approximately 4 13 319 2009 5 The Cutts Madison House is part of the Lafayette Square Historic District a National Historic Landmark District 8 Now owned by the federal government it is used as part of a federal courts complex Contents 1 Construction 2 Occupants 2 1 Dolley Madison 2 2 Charles Wilkes 2 3 Cosmos Club 3 Federal ownership 4 Reported haunting 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksConstruction Edit Anna Payne Cutts by Gilbert Stuart 1804 Collection of The White HouseOn March 31 1793 the U S Commissioners in charge of selling federally owned lots in the District of Columbia agreed to sell square 221 to Samuel Davidson 4 Davidson died in 1810 and his son and two daughters inherited the property 4 Richard Cutts purchased lots 12 13 14 and 15 of square 221 from the Davidson heirs on October 3 1818 4 The house was constructed in 1818 1819 by Richard Cutts who built the house for himself and his wife Anna Payne Cutts Dolley Payne Madison s sister 1 2 7 9 10 The house had two stories a gabled roof dormer windows and chimneys at the north and south ends of the house 4 11 12 The exterior was originally grey stucco 13 The front of the house faced Lafayette Square 12 14 The lot on which the house sat was a large one with extensive space on all sides 11 Dirt roads bordered the house on the west and north sides and a large garden with flowers and fruit trees occupied the east and south sides of the house 11 12 The garden extended south as far as the Tayloe House on the south end of the block 4 The home was considered one of the more pretentious domiciles in the city at the time 11 15 The city gravelled the street in front of the house in 1823 14 Occupants EditDolley Madison Edit Dolley Madison by Gilbert Stuart 1804Cutts secured a mortgage to build the house and on August 22 1828 the bank holding the mortgage sold it to ex President James Madison for 5 750 1 4 15 16 When James Madison died in 1836 Dolley Madison held the mortgage 12 15 Her husband s death had left Dolley Madison in a financially difficult position so to reduce her expenses she took up residence in the house in November 1837 1 2 6 7 11 15 Presidents James Monroe John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson Martin Van Buren William Henry Harrison John Tyler James K Polk and Zachary Taylor all visited her in the home as did John C Calhoun Henry Clay and Daniel Webster 15 Dolley Madison s financial difficulties continued however She also owned Montpelier her husband s country estate and farm in the Piedmont of Virginia But Montpelier s finances were in poor condition and Dolley moved out of the Cutts Madison House in 1839 to live once more at Montpelier and see if she could save the estate 6 11 She rented out the Cutts Madison house but was unable to stabilize Montpelier 6 11 She moved back to the Cutts Madison House in 1843 and sold Montpelier in 1844 6 11 In 1844 or 1845 after her return to the Cutts Madison House arsonists put lit matches into the shutters in the rear of the house and Dolley Madison had to be wakened and saved from death by a servant 17 The fire was quickly put out and the damage to the building was not extensive Mrs Madison returned to her bedroom the same night 17 Dolley Madison lived in the house on Lafayette Square until her death on July 12 1849 2 7 Her only surviving child John Payne Todd from her first marriage to Quaker lawyer John Todd inherited the property 4 On April 3 1851 Todd sold the house and property to Charles Wilkes 4 Charles Wilkes Edit Rear Admiral Charles Wilkes purchased the house in 1851 2 16 18 19 Wilkes moved the entrance from Madison Place NW to H Street NW and turned the porch on the west side of the house facing Madison Place NW into a window 2 18 The gable roof which sloped east and west was eliminated and a flat roof installed an out building added in the rear and a bay window added on the south side 4 Wilkes also cut all windows on the first floor down so that they now reached the floor 4 During the 1850s and 1860s the house had a number of notable occupants in addition to the Wilkeses After being named Special Envoy to Central America Sir William Gore Ouseley rented the house in 1858 on his way to the region and entertained lavishly while living at the Cutts Madison House 20 General George B McClellan used the house as his Washington based headquarters after the First Battle of Bull Run during the Civil War 1 2 10 McClellan first occupied the house on July 26 1861 and left in late October for new headquarters at a house at the corner of H Street NW and 15th Street NW where the Sofitel Lafayette Square Hotel now stands 4 After the Civil War the Cutts Madison House was briefly used by the French Claims Commission 2 Wilkes mortgaged the house in 1855 and the mortgage passed through several hands over the next 15 years until George B Warren secured it in 1870 4 Upon Warren s death in 1880 the mortgage was assigned to his daughter Phebe Warren Tayloe 4 She died in 1882 and her niece Elizabeth H Price came to hold the mortgage 4 Price sold the mortgage in December 1884 to Edward Tayloe Perry a minor 4 Meanwhile Charles Wilkes deeded the house over to his wife and three daughters in 1870 4 Wilkes died in 1877 and in 1886 the Wilkes family sold the house to the Cosmos Club for the sum of 40 000 which sum paid the outstanding mortgage held in trust for Edward Tayloe Perry 4 Cosmos Club Edit Plans for the renovations of the first floor of the Cutts Madison House made by the Cosmos Club in 1886 The Cosmos Club immediately improved the height of the third floor by raising the roof and added a large meeting hall by building a single story 23 8 7 21 metre extension to the south side of the house with skylight 4 10 16 The Cosmos Club made further improvements in 1893 Electricity was installed the heating system upgraded and general refurbishing of commons areas completed 4 Two additional stories were built over the assembly hall The second story consisting of one large room and a third story consisting of four meeting rooms 4 A bathroom was added to the third floor of the old building above the existing second floor bathroom 4 The eastern garden was removed and a three story addition built The addition consisted of a ground floor with an entrance to the building on H Street NW a cloakroom and a connecting door to the assembly hall on the south side of the building a second story with meeting rooms for the Cosmos Club as well as other societies which might use the premises and a third story with lodgings and a meeting room for the Cosmos Club s board of directors 4 The basement of the original building was renovated and upgraded to include a kitchen a bathroom and an underground passage to the new addition 4 The goal of building the addition was to permit visiting societies such as members of the National Geographic Society to enter and use the building without disturbing members of the Cosmos Club 16 The total cost of the renovations was 15 000 4 Hornblower amp Marshall were the architects of the addition which was completed in January 1894 4 In 1903 the Cosmos Club purchased from Henry Reed Rathbone for 33 000 No 25 Madison Place NW the building immediately to the south of the Cutts Madison House against which its three story assembly hall addition abutted 4 This property and the one to the south of it were razed in 1909 and a five story Cosmos Club lodging house built 7 The Cosmos Club vacated the Cutts Madison House in 1952 to move to new headquarters in the Townsend Mansion at 2121 Massachusetts Avenue NW at which time the building was purchased by the U S government and used for offices 10 16 21 Federal ownership Edit The Cutts Madison House corner with the former Cosmos Club building in tan to the right and the National Courts building in the rear These buildings were joined in a scheme to save the earlier historic structure in the 1960s and now serve as a courts complex In 1900 the United States Congress passed a resolution establishing the U S Senate Park Commission also known as the McMillan Commission because it was chaired by Senator James McMillan R Mich 22 The Park Commission s charge was to reconcile competing visions for the development of Washington D C and in particular the National Mall and adjacent areas 22 The Park Commission s proposals which came to be known as the McMillan Plan proposed that all the buildings around Lafayette Square be razed and replaced by tall Neoclassical buildings clad in white marble for use by executive branch agencies 23 For a time it appeared that the Cutts Madison House would not survive William Wilson Corcoran s Corcoran House at 1615 H Street NW was torn down in 1922 and replaced with the Neoclassical United States Chamber of Commerce headquarters 23 24 The Hay Adams Houses were razed in 1927 by real estate developer Harry Wardman and the Hay Adams Hotel built on the site 24 At nearby 1616 H Street NW the Brookings Institution purchased the rear garden from the private owners of the Decatur House and built an eight story Modernist office building there 7 Several million dollars were spent in the late 1950s on designs to raze all the buildings on the east side of Lafayette Square and replace them with a white modernist office building which would house judicial offices 25 26 Opposition to the demolition of the Cutts Madison House and other buildings on Lafayette Square began forming shortly after the plan to raze the structures was announced Senators James E Murray and Wayne Morse several members of the House of Representatives and citizens of the District of Columbia lobbied to defeat the legislation authorizing the demolition of the buildings 27 The American Institute of Architects AIA devoted the February 1961 issue of its journal to a Lament for Lafayette Square 28 The AIA established a committee to develop plans to save the buildings and adapt the new structures so that they incorporated the style and feel of the older homes 29 The newly elected Kennedy administration indicated on February 16 1961 that it was anxious to retain the existing historic homes on Lafayette Square 30 In November the Committee of 100 on the Federal City an influential group of city leaders asked President Kennedy to save and restore all the remaining buildings on Lafayette Square 31 In February 1962 First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy lobbied General Services Administration GSA director Bernard L Boutin to stop the demolition and adopt a different design plan 25 32 33 The wreckers haven t started yet and until they do it can be saved she wrote 34 Mrs Kennedy enlisted architect John Carl Warnecke a friend of her husband who happened to be in town that weekend 33 to create a design that would incorporate the new buildings with the old 35 Warnecke conceived the basic design over that weekend 35 and worked closely with Mrs Kennedy over the next few months to formalize the design proposal 33 The design was presented to the public and the Commission of Fine Arts which had approval over any plan in October 1962 and with Mrs Kennedy s backing the Commission adopted the revised Warnecke design proposal 32 33 36 Warnecke s design was based on the architectural theory of contextualism where modern buildings are harmonized with the urban forms usual to a traditional city 37 Not only did Warnecke s design build the first modern buildings on Lafayette Square but they were the first buildings in the city to utilize contextualism as a design philosophy 7 Warnecke s design for the National Courts Building was to create tall flat structures in red brick which would serve as relatively unobtrusive backgrounds to the lighter colored residential homes like the Cutts Madison House 7 The Cutts Madison House Cosmos Club building and Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House were joined and a courtyard built between them and the National Courts building 7 The Cutts Madison House remains part of the courts complex which houses various offices and chambers for the United States Court of Federal Claims and United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Reported haunting EditMain article Reportedly haunted locations in the District of Columbia Since the mid 19th century witnesses have claimed to have seen the ghost of Dolley Madison rocking in a chair in the space where the porch on the west side of the house used to be smiling at passersby 38 39 40 41 See also EditArchitecture of Washington D C References Edit a b c d e f g Miller Albert D Distinguished Residents of Washington D C Science Art Industry Washington D C National Capital Press 1916 a b c d e f g h i Smith Hal H Historic Washington Homes Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington 1908 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Cosmos Club The Twenty Fifth Anniversary of the Founding of the Cosmos Club of Washington D C With A Documentary History of the Club From Its Organization to November 16 1903 Washington D C Cosmos Club 1904 Construction History amp Space Inventory Dolly Madison House 1520 H Street Washington DC U S General Services Administration No date Accessed 2009 12 01 a b c d e Allgor Catherine A Perfect Union Dolley Madison and the Creation of the American Nation Reprint ed New York Macmillan 2007 ISBN 0 8050 8300 6 a b c d e f g h i Bednar Michael J L Enfant s Legacy Public Open Spaces in Washington Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press 2006 ISBN 0 8018 8318 0 Lafayette Square Historic District National Register of Historic Places National Park Service U S Department of the Interior No date Archived February 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2009 12 01 Evelyn Douglas E Dickson Paul and Ackerman S J On This Spot Pinpointing the Past in Washington D C 3rd rev ed Dulles Va Capital Books 2008 ISBN 1 933102 70 5 a b c d Carrier Thomas J Washington D C A Historical Walking Tour Mount Pleasant S C Arcadia Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7385 0049 6 a b c d e f g h Cote Richard N Strength and Honor The Life of Dolley Madison Mt Pleasant S C Corinthian Books 2005 ISBN 1 929175 09 4 a b c d Zall Paul M Dolley Madison New York Nova Publishers 2001 ISBN 1 56072 930 9 Barnard Ella Kent Dorothy Payne Quakeress A Side Light Upon the Career of Dolley Madison Philadelphia Ferris amp Leach 1909 a b Bryan Wilhelmus Bogart A History of the National Capital From Its Foundation Through the Period of the Adoption of the Organic Act New York The Macmillan Company 1916 a b c d e Peacock Virginia Tatnall Famous American Belles of the Nineteenth Century New York J P Lippincott Company 1901 a b c d e Wentzel Volkmar Kurt Washington by Night Vintage Photographs From the 30s Reprint ed Golden Colo Fulcrum Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 55591 410 1 a b Madison Dolley Memoirs and Letters of Dolly Madison Wife of James Madison President of the United States 2d ed Lucia Beverly Cutts ed New York Houghton Mifflin and Company 1887 a b Washburn Wilcomb E The Cosmos Club of Washington A Centennial History 1878 1978 Washington D C The Club 1978 Symonds Craig L Lincoln and His Admirals New York Oxford University Press US 2008 ISBN 0 19 531022 5 Poore Benjamin Perley Perley s Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis Philadelphia Pa Hubbard Brothers 1886 At least one source incorrectly places the dislocation of the Cosmos Club from the Cutts Madison House in 1939 See Bednar L Enfant s Legacy Public Open Spaces in Washington 2006 p 105 a b Peterson Jon A The Birth of City Planning in the United States 1840 1917 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2003 ISBN 0 8018 7210 3 a b Luria Sarah Capital Speculations Writing and Building Washington Durham N H University of New Hampshire Press 2006 ISBN 1 58465 502 X a b Goode James W Capital Losses A Cultural History of Washington s Destroyed Buildings 2d ed Washington D C Smithsonian Books 2003 ISBN 1 58834 105 4 a b Anthony Kathryn H Designing for Diversity Gender Race and Ethnicity in the Architectural Profession Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press 2001 ISBN 0 252 02641 1 Lindsay John J Court Gets New Home All to Itself Washington Post February 25 1960 2 Federal Courts To Be Housed on Lafayette Square Washington Post September 17 1960 3 Historic Buildings Befriended Washington Post March 2 1960 Senator Morse Joins Battle to Save Historic Sites on Lafayette Square Washington Post March 24 1960 Lafayette Sq Razing Plan Termed Folly Washington Post April 12 1960 Group Formed to Save Lafayette Sq Buildings Washington Post May 4 1960 AIA Journal Laments Lafayette Square s End Washington Post January 29 1961 White Jean Garden Atmosphere of Lafayette Sq Can Be Preserved Says Architect Washington Post March 3 1961 White Jean Administration Anxious To Save Lafayette Park Washington Post February 17 1961 Jackson Luther P Old Lafayette Sq Restoration Sought Washington Post November 30 1961 a b Marton Kati Hidden Power Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History New York Random House 2001 ISBN 0 375 40106 7 a b c d Anthony Carl Sferrazza As We Remember Her Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the Words of Her Family and Friends Reprint ed New York HarperCollins 2003 ISBN 0 06 054857 6 Marton Hidden Power Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History 2001 p 122 a b Lafayette He Is Here Time December 13 1963 Abbott James A and Rice Elaine M Designing Camelot The Kennedy White House Restoration Hoboken N J John Wiley and Sons 1997 ISBN 0 471 29242 7 Jencks Charles New Paradigm In Architecture 7th ed New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2002 ISBN 0 300 09512 0 With Election Looming Washington Is A Ghost Town Literally Archived 2011 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Reuters October 24 2000 Apkarian Russell Pamela Washington s Haunted Past Capital Ghosts of America Charleston S C The History Press 2006 ISBN 1 59629 181 8 Thomsen Brian M Oval Office Occult True Stories of White House Weirdness Kansas City Andrews McMeel Publishing 2008 ISBN 0 7407 7386 0 Colombo Robert N To Save the Union Volunteers in the Civil War from Centerville Hume and Granger Townships Allegany County New York Westminster Md Heritage Books 2007 ISBN 0 7884 4394 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cutts Madison House Dolly Madison House 1520 H Street Washington DC U S General Services Administration permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cutts Madison House amp oldid 1124058788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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