Lantern
Glass enclosed lanterns with ornate housings provided the ideal means for lighting drafty passages in eighteenth-century homes. In 1760, George Washington ordered "1 handsome glass Lanthorne for Passage - wt. Lamps & 10 Gals. Oyl" from his London factors. Though the style of the lantern he received in 1761 had become outmoded by the 1780s, the lantern remained in the central passage at Mount Vernon until Washington's death. Each time Washington updated the finish and furnishings of the room, the lantern received a new coat of paint, changing from black to Prussian blue in 1783, and returning to black in the 1790s.
Published ReferencesSusan A. Borchart, Mickey Crowell, Ellen K. Donald, and Barbara A. Farner, "Lighting," Gunston Hall Room Use Study (2002), http://www.gunstonhall.org/mansion/room_use_study/lighting.html#fn11.
Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine 63/2 (February 1929): 75.
Theodore Belote, Descriptive Catalogue of the Washington Relics in the U.S. National Museum (Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1918), 7-8.
Benson J. Lossing, The Home of Washington (Hartford, Connecticut: A. S. Hale & Company, 1870), 316-317.
Benson J. Lossing, Mount Vernon and its Associations: Historical, Biographical, Pictorial (New York: W.A. Townsend & Co., 1859), 301-302.
Benson J. Lossing, "Arlington House: The Seat of G.W.P. Custis, Esq.," Harper's New Monthly Magazine VII (September 1853): 441.