Looking glass
In 1961, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy expressed her “deepest appreciation” to the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association for the loan of this looking glass to the White House as a part of the campaign to refurnish it with historically significant antiques. This may not have been the first occasion upon which it graced the halls of state. According to family tradition, it once hung in the executive mansion in Philadelphia during George Washington’s presidency. It is one of two mirrors with a Washington association that descended in the Peale family. See also W-291.
The veneered faces of the lower frame are mitered together at the corners. The crest appears to be a single board glued to the sides’ upper extensions. This joint is reinforced by a set of three horizontal glue blocks. The base appears to extend from the frame. The lower trusses or scrolls glued to the frame’s sides are each a single piece and are reinforced with vertical braces. The backboard is a single piece of particle board nailed to the back of the frame.
Published ReferencesWendy A. Cooper, An American Vision: Henry Francis Dupont's Winterthur Museum (Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 2002), 22.
The White House: An Historic Guide (Washington, D.C.: The White House Historical Association), 11.
Kenneth W. Leish, The White House (New York: Newsweek, 1972), 17.
“Antiques Make New White House History,” The Washington Post, January 1, 1962: B5.