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Johnson desk

The Johnson desk is a mahogany partners desk that was used by U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson in the Oval Office as his Oval Office desk. One of only six desks used by a president in the Oval Office, it was designed by Thomas D. Wadelton and built in 1909 by S. Karpen and Bros. in Chicago. The desk was built as part of 125 seven-piece office sets for senators' offices in the Russell Senate Office Building, and was used by Johnson during his terms as U.S. Senator, Vice President, and President. It is currently located at Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum as part of a replica Oval Office.

Johnson desk
Lady Bird Johnson listening to President Lyndon B. Johnson, at the desk, on the phone upon Robert Kennedy's death.
DesignerThomas D. Wadelton
Date1909
Made inChicago, Illinois
MaterialsMahogany, leather
Height30.25 in (76.8 cm)
Width75.5 in (192 cm)
Depth42.5 in (108 cm)
CollectionUnited States Senate

Design and markings

Green top added to desk
 
Meeting with Diosdado Macapagal on November 26, 1963
 
Meeting with representatives of Cambodia on November 27, 1963

The Johnson Desk is a mahogany partners desk. Built in 1909, the designs of the front and the back of the desk are mirrors of each other. Each face of the two pedestal desk has three drawers on one pedestal and a hinged-door cabinet on the other. The desk has four writing slides, two on each side, and each pedestal sits on four bun feet. Mahogany veneer covers the desk's top and sides as well as the drawer and cabinet fronts. A central foot stretcher was originally upholstered with leather. Each of the four corners of the desk is built with a rectangular, outset, console bracket with a stylized flower blossom carved into each side. The desk is 30.25 in (76.8 cm) tall with a work surface measuring 75.5 in (192 cm) wide and 42.5 in (108 cm) deep.[1] There is a manufacturer's tag on the interior of both top-right drawers which reads "GEO. W. COBB JR. / COMMERCIAL FURNITURE / NEW YORK, N.Y."[1]

The desk was designed as part of a seven-piece office furniture set for rooms in the Russell Senate Office Building. Hastings, one of the architects of the building, said the furniture pieces were designed to be "very American" in style, and inspiration for the design was drawn from "old books of the furniture of our forefathers".[2] After inspecting models of the furniture designs, Hastings said, "So far as I am capable of judging, I think it is going to be the swellest set of furniture of the time that I have ever seen. It is the real thing, and has all the character and dignity which it seems to me furniture for the United States senators should have".[2] He also commented on the "rich brown color" achieved on the furniture pieces as well as the "effects obtained by matching the veneers".[2]

Blocks were added under the feet of the desk to accommodate Johnson's legs.[3]

When in the Oval Office, Lyndon B. Johnson used a modified green vinyl helicopter seat, complete with built-in ashtray, as the chair at this desk.[4] A day after moving into the office, a matching green top was added to the desk, replacing a standard desk blotter.[5][6]

History

The Johnson desk was one of 125 identical desks designed by Thomas D. Wadelton, a New York cabinetmaker, and built by S. Karpen and Bros. in Chicago under contract with George W. Cobb, Jr., for the Russell Senate Office Building.[1] Opened on March 5, 1909, the Russell Building was designed by Carrère & Hastings and was created to alleviate overcrowding in the Capitol building. The new structure provided 98 new suites, 10 individual rooms, and 8 committee rooms for Senate offices.[1][2]

Each desk cost $80.00 (equivalent to $2,413 in 2021) and was part of a set of standard furniture for each Senator's office.[1] According to the Senate, besides the desk this set included "a swivel desk chair, a round arm chair, a square arm chair, a small side chair, an easy chair, and a davenport".[1] Ninety-two sets of furniture were created for the opening of the Russell Building, one set for each of the Senators from the then 46 states, with additional sets ordered after the building opened.[2] The building was expanded in 1933 and six additional desks were manufactured for the new rooms.[1] The furniture for the Russell Building was the largest single furniture contract issued by the Senate. Many of the pieces continue to be used in Senate offices to this day.[2]

In 1948, Lyndon B. Johnson was narrowly elected to the Senate and quickly moved up the ranks becoming Democratic whip in 1951, Democratic leader in 1953, and Senate majority leader in 1955.[7] Over this quick succession of positions, Johnson continually worked out of Room 231 in the Russell Senate Office Building, then simply known as the Senate Office Building.[8][9][10][11]

After becoming majority leader, Johnson appropriated a room on the third floor of the Capitol Building as the majority leader's working office. This space, being one floor above the Senate Chamber, turned out to be inconvenient for Johnson. In 1958, a new office building was built to house Senate committees, freeing up highly sought-after space in the Capitol building.[12] In 1959, Johnson moved his majority leader's office to Rooms S-211 and S-212, which were originally designed for the Senate Library but used for the Senate District of Columbia Committee instead.[12][13] Johnson was particularly fond of Room S-211 where he placed his desk, and which was later renamed "The Lyndon Baines Johnson Room".[13] Johnson had the room refurbished in vibrant colors and it picked up the nickname "Taj Mahal".[12] Johnson continued to use these rooms even after becoming Vice President in 1961, forcing the then majority leader, Mike Mansfield, to open a new office across the hall.[12] Johnson stopped using these rooms only once he ascended to the office of President.[13]

After President John F. Kennedy's assassination, Johnson did not move into the Oval Office for several days, possibly at the request of Robert Kennedy.[14] He finally did begin using the room on November 26, 1963.[15] When he entered the Oval Office, a series of changes were made to the room that were planned by Jacqueline Kennedy, but not completed until that point due to updates to an air-conditioning system, including a new red rug and white drapes. Johnson had the Resolute desk, the desk Kennedy used in the office, removed and replaced with the desk that he had used throughout his time in the Senate and as Vice President.[15][16] The Resolute desk went on tour around the country at this time to help raise funds for the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum and was subsequently put on view at the Smithsonian Institution.[17]

During Johnson's presidency he was known for having extramarital affairs, with what Robert Dallek in his book Lone Star Rising: Lyndon Johnson and His Times called a harem of women.[18] Ronald Kessler in his book Inside the Whitehouse describes multiple sexual encounters between Johnson and his secretaries in the Oval Office including one where his wife, Ladybird Johnson, walked in on Johnson and a secretary in the midst of having sex, leading to the installation of a buzzer system to warn him if Ladybird was on her way.[19] Dallek describes an encounter Johnson had with an unnamed White House secretary where they "had casual sex on an office desk."[18] Wesley O. Hagood notes in his book Presidential Sex that while it has been documented Johnson had sex with at least one secretary on a desk in the White House it was never specified if that desk was the Johnson desk in the Oval Office or not.[20] John M. Berecz disagrees in his book All the Presidents' Women: An Examination of Sexual Styles of Presidents Truman through Clinton, stating "One White House secretary is reported to have had sex with him on the desk in the Oval Office."[21]

 
The Johnson desk in the replica Oval Office at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum

Johnson called Gordon Bunshaft, the architect for the forthcoming Johnson Library and Museum, on October 10, 1968, to discuss the presidential library he was designing and his desire to have the Johnson desk moved to it. He stated, "I hate to build me a little one out there at the side and say, this is the way the President's office looked. And here's his desk and here's his chair. Here's his FDR picture... maybe we don't have to have the same height ceiling... and maybe we can't have the same oval room... But it seems to me that if we could, we ought to take this rug out of here and this—just as the Kennedys are doing and have done, just as the Trumans did—and ought to take the desk and ought to take the chairs..."[22]

The Johnson desk was moved to the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum in Austin, Texas, and sits in the 78-scale replica Oval Office there. Johnson was known to sit at the desk on occasion to surprise visitors.[23][16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Desk, Flat-Top Partner". United States Senate. from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Russell Senate Office Building: furniture. U.S. Senate Commission on Art by the Office of Senate Curator. Senate Publication 110–26. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  3. ^ "The Oval Office Permanent Exhibitions". Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
  4. ^ Saffo, Paul (June 11, 2008). "Obama's 'Cybergenic' Edge" (opinion). ABC News. from the original on November 6, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  5. ^ Enlargement, Nov. 26, 1963, 1963-11-26-CA10-1. May 16, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. White House Photo Office. Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
  6. ^ Enlargement, Nov. 27, 1963, 1963-11-27-CA18-1. April 2, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. White House Photo Office. Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library.
  7. ^ "Lyndon B. Johnson: A Featured Biography". United States Senate. from the original on November 26, 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  8. ^ Official congressional directory. 81st congress 1st session 1949. United States Government printing Office. 1949. p. 299. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  9. ^ Official Congressional Directory. United States Congress. 1951. p. 325. retrieved December 1, 2020.
  10. ^ Official Congressional Directory. United States Congress.1953. p. 340. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  11. ^ Official congressional directory. 84th congress lst session. United States Government printing Office. 1955. p. 344. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d "The Senate's Taj Mahal". United States Senate. from the original on October 10, 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  13. ^ a b c The Lyndon Baines Johnson Room. Office of Senate Curator. Senate Publication 105–60. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  14. ^ Ball, Moya Ann (Winter 1994). "The Phantom of the Oval Office: The John F. Kennedy Assassination's Symbolic Impact on Lyndon B. Johnson, His Key Advisers, and the Vietnam Decision-Making Process". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 24 (1): 105–119. JSTOR 27551197.
  15. ^ a b "Johnson Moves Into White House's Oval Office; Also Installs Own Rocker, Pictures and Desk as Red Carpet Is Rolled Out". The New York Times. November 27, 1963. p. 16. Retrieved December 12, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) ProQuest URL
  16. ^ a b Artifacts in the Oval Office. Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  17. ^ Historic Desk Loaned to President Carter. Smithsonian Institution. 1977. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  18. ^ a b Dallek, Robert. lone Star Rising: Lyndon Johnson and his times. Oxford University Press. 1991. p. 189. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  19. ^ Kessler, Ronald. Inside the Whitehouse. Pocket Books. 1995. pp 1, 37. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  20. ^ Hagood, Wesley O. Presidential SexCarol Pub. 1998. p.181. Retrieved Januar 12, 2022.
  21. ^ Berecz, John M. All the Presidents' Women: An Examination of Sexual Styles of Presidents Truman through Clinton. Green Dragon Publishing Group. April 1999. Retrieved January 12, 2022/
  22. ^ A Conversation between LBJ and Gordon Bunshaft. Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum. November 10, 1968 8:57 p.m. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  23. ^ Hess, Stephen (January 8, 2009). "What Now? The Oval Office". Brookings Institution. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved November 30, 2020.


External links

  • Senate website for the Russell Senate Office Building desks
  • Senate pamphlet for Russell Senate Office Building Furniture
  • Clip from The President: January 1969. MP904. showing the Johnson desk being moved out of the Oval Office and the Theodore Roosevelt desk being moved in.

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The Johnson desk is a mahogany partners desk that was used by U S President Lyndon B Johnson in the Oval Office as his Oval Office desk One of only six desks used by a president in the Oval Office it was designed by Thomas D Wadelton and built in 1909 by S Karpen and Bros in Chicago The desk was built as part of 125 seven piece office sets for senators offices in the Russell Senate Office Building and was used by Johnson during his terms as U S Senator Vice President and President It is currently located at Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum as part of a replica Oval Office Johnson deskLady Bird Johnson listening to President Lyndon B Johnson at the desk on the phone upon Robert Kennedy s death DesignerThomas D WadeltonDate1909Made inChicago IllinoisMaterialsMahogany leatherHeight30 25 in 76 8 cm Width75 5 in 192 cm Depth42 5 in 108 cm CollectionUnited States Senate Contents 1 Design and markings 2 History 3 References 4 External linksDesign and markings EditGreen top added to desk Meeting with Diosdado Macapagal on November 26 1963 Meeting with representatives of Cambodia on November 27 1963 The Johnson Desk is a mahogany partners desk Built in 1909 the designs of the front and the back of the desk are mirrors of each other Each face of the two pedestal desk has three drawers on one pedestal and a hinged door cabinet on the other The desk has four writing slides two on each side and each pedestal sits on four bun feet Mahogany veneer covers the desk s top and sides as well as the drawer and cabinet fronts A central foot stretcher was originally upholstered with leather Each of the four corners of the desk is built with a rectangular outset console bracket with a stylized flower blossom carved into each side The desk is 30 25 in 76 8 cm tall with a work surface measuring 75 5 in 192 cm wide and 42 5 in 108 cm deep 1 There is a manufacturer s tag on the interior of both top right drawers which reads GEO W COBB JR COMMERCIAL FURNITURE NEW YORK N Y 1 The desk was designed as part of a seven piece office furniture set for rooms in the Russell Senate Office Building Hastings one of the architects of the building said the furniture pieces were designed to be very American in style and inspiration for the design was drawn from old books of the furniture of our forefathers 2 After inspecting models of the furniture designs Hastings said So far as I am capable of judging I think it is going to be the swellest set of furniture of the time that I have ever seen It is the real thing and has all the character and dignity which it seems to me furniture for the United States senators should have 2 He also commented on the rich brown color achieved on the furniture pieces as well as the effects obtained by matching the veneers 2 Blocks were added under the feet of the desk to accommodate Johnson s legs 3 When in the Oval Office Lyndon B Johnson used a modified green vinyl helicopter seat complete with built in ashtray as the chair at this desk 4 A day after moving into the office a matching green top was added to the desk replacing a standard desk blotter 5 6 History EditThe Johnson desk was one of 125 identical desks designed by Thomas D Wadelton a New York cabinetmaker and built by S Karpen and Bros in Chicago under contract with George W Cobb Jr for the Russell Senate Office Building 1 Opened on March 5 1909 the Russell Building was designed by Carrere amp Hastings and was created to alleviate overcrowding in the Capitol building The new structure provided 98 new suites 10 individual rooms and 8 committee rooms for Senate offices 1 2 Each desk cost 80 00 equivalent to 2 413 in 2021 and was part of a set of standard furniture for each Senator s office 1 According to the Senate besides the desk this set included a swivel desk chair a round arm chair a square arm chair a small side chair an easy chair and a davenport 1 Ninety two sets of furniture were created for the opening of the Russell Building one set for each of the Senators from the then 46 states with additional sets ordered after the building opened 2 The building was expanded in 1933 and six additional desks were manufactured for the new rooms 1 The furniture for the Russell Building was the largest single furniture contract issued by the Senate Many of the pieces continue to be used in Senate offices to this day 2 In 1948 Lyndon B Johnson was narrowly elected to the Senate and quickly moved up the ranks becoming Democratic whip in 1951 Democratic leader in 1953 and Senate majority leader in 1955 7 Over this quick succession of positions Johnson continually worked out of Room 231 in the Russell Senate Office Building then simply known as the Senate Office Building 8 9 10 11 After becoming majority leader Johnson appropriated a room on the third floor of the Capitol Building as the majority leader s working office This space being one floor above the Senate Chamber turned out to be inconvenient for Johnson In 1958 a new office building was built to house Senate committees freeing up highly sought after space in the Capitol building 12 In 1959 Johnson moved his majority leader s office to Rooms S 211 and S 212 which were originally designed for the Senate Library but used for the Senate District of Columbia Committee instead 12 13 Johnson was particularly fond of Room S 211 where he placed his desk and which was later renamed The Lyndon Baines Johnson Room 13 Johnson had the room refurbished in vibrant colors and it picked up the nickname Taj Mahal 12 Johnson continued to use these rooms even after becoming Vice President in 1961 forcing the then majority leader Mike Mansfield to open a new office across the hall 12 Johnson stopped using these rooms only once he ascended to the office of President 13 After President John F Kennedy s assassination Johnson did not move into the Oval Office for several days possibly at the request of Robert Kennedy 14 He finally did begin using the room on November 26 1963 15 When he entered the Oval Office a series of changes were made to the room that were planned by Jacqueline Kennedy but not completed until that point due to updates to an air conditioning system including a new red rug and white drapes Johnson had the Resolute desk the desk Kennedy used in the office removed and replaced with the desk that he had used throughout his time in the Senate and as Vice President 15 16 The Resolute desk went on tour around the country at this time to help raise funds for the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum and was subsequently put on view at the Smithsonian Institution 17 During Johnson s presidency he was known for having extramarital affairs with what Robert Dallek in his book Lone Star Rising Lyndon Johnson and His Times called a harem of women 18 Ronald Kessler in his book Inside the Whitehouse describes multiple sexual encounters between Johnson and his secretaries in the Oval Office including one where his wife Ladybird Johnson walked in on Johnson and a secretary in the midst of having sex leading to the installation of a buzzer system to warn him if Ladybird was on her way 19 Dallek describes an encounter Johnson had with an unnamed White House secretary where they had casual sex on an office desk 18 Wesley O Hagood notes in his book Presidential Sex that while it has been documented Johnson had sex with at least one secretary on a desk in the White House it was never specified if that desk was the Johnson desk in the Oval Office or not 20 John M Berecz disagrees in his book All the Presidents Women An Examination of Sexual Styles of Presidents Truman through Clinton stating One White House secretary is reported to have had sex with him on the desk in the Oval Office 21 The Johnson desk in the replica Oval Office at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum Johnson called Gordon Bunshaft the architect for the forthcoming Johnson Library and Museum on October 10 1968 to discuss the presidential library he was designing and his desire to have the Johnson desk moved to it He stated I hate to build me a little one out there at the side and say this is the way the President s office looked And here s his desk and here s his chair Here s his FDR picture maybe we don t have to have the same height ceiling and maybe we can t have the same oval room But it seems to me that if we could we ought to take this rug out of here and this just as the Kennedys are doing and have done just as the Trumans did and ought to take the desk and ought to take the chairs 22 The Johnson desk was moved to the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum in Austin Texas and sits in the 7 8 scale replica Oval Office there Johnson was known to sit at the desk on occasion to surprise visitors 23 16 References Edit a b c d e f g Desk Flat Top Partner United States Senate Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 30 2020 a b c d e f Russell Senate Office Building furniture U S Senate Commission on Art by the Office of Senate Curator Senate Publication 110 26 Retrieved November 30 2020 The Oval Office Permanent Exhibitions Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum Retrieved 2023 01 07 Saffo Paul June 11 2008 Obama s Cybergenic Edge opinion ABC News Archived from the original on November 6 2018 Retrieved December 1 2020 Enlargement Nov 26 1963 1963 11 26 CA10 1 Archived May 16 2016 at the Wayback Machine White House Photo Office Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Retrieved December 2 2020 Enlargement Nov 27 1963 1963 11 27 CA18 1 Archived April 2 2016 at the Wayback Machine White House Photo Office Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Lyndon B Johnson A Featured Biography United States Senate Archived from the original on November 26 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 Official congressional directory 81st congress 1st session 1949 United States Government printing Office 1949 p 299 Retrieved December 1 2020 Official Congressional Directory United States Congress 1951 p 325 retrieved December 1 2020 Official Congressional Directory United States Congress 1953 p 340 Retrieved December 1 2020 Official congressional directory 84th congress lst session United States Government printing Office 1955 p 344 Retrieved December 1 2020 a b c d The Senate s Taj Mahal United States Senate Archived from the original on October 10 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 a b c The Lyndon Baines Johnson Room Office of Senate Curator Senate Publication 105 60 Retrieved December 1 2020 Ball Moya Ann Winter 1994 The Phantom of the Oval Office The John F Kennedy Assassination s Symbolic Impact on Lyndon B Johnson His Key Advisers and the Vietnam Decision Making Process Presidential Studies Quarterly 24 1 105 119 JSTOR 27551197 a b Johnson Moves Into White House s Oval Office Also Installs Own Rocker Pictures and Desk as Red Carpet Is Rolled Out The New York Times November 27 1963 p 16 Retrieved December 12 2020 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link ProQuest URL a b Artifacts in the Oval Office Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum Retrieved December 1 2020 Historic Desk Loaned to President Carter Smithsonian Institution 1977 Retrieved December 1 2020 a b Dallek Robert lone Star Rising Lyndon Johnson and his times Oxford University Press 1991 p 189 Retrieved January 12 2022 Kessler Ronald Inside the Whitehouse Pocket Books 1995 pp 1 37 Retrieved January 12 2022 Hagood Wesley O Presidential SexCarol Pub 1998 p 181 Retrieved Januar 12 2022 Berecz John M All the Presidents Women An Examination of Sexual Styles of Presidents Truman through Clinton Green Dragon Publishing Group April 1999 Retrieved January 12 2022 A Conversation between LBJ and Gordon Bunshaft Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum November 10 1968 8 57 p m Retrieved November 30 2020 Hess Stephen January 8 2009 What Now The Oval Office Brookings Institution Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved November 30 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Johnson desk Senate website for the Russell Senate Office Building desks Senate pamphlet for Russell Senate Office Building Furniture Clip from The President January 1969 MP904 showing the Johnson desk being moved out of the Oval Office and the Theodore Roosevelt desk being moved in Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Johnson desk amp oldid 1132243167, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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