Indian Treaty Room
Located in the former Navy Department Wing is the Indian Treaty Room,
which was originally known as the Navy Department Library and Reception Room.
It was designed by Richard von
Ezdorf, Draftsman for the Supervising Architect of the Treasury. Completed
in 1879, it cost more to construct than any other room in the building at about
$33.50 per square foot (total $55,675.00). The room was used as a library and a
reception room.
The design of the room includes many nautical motifs - such as shells over the
Italian and French marble panels; seahorses and dolphins in the cast iron
railing at the second floor balcony; stars for navigation in the ceiling and
the compass in the center of the floor. The floor is the original English
Minton tile floor. The room contains the only surviving original lighting
fixtures in the building.
The Navy Department vacated the building between 1918
and 1921, and by 1930 the building was renamed the Department of State Building
(although the War Department did not completely move out until 1938); by 1949
the building was renamed the Executive Office Building. The Treaty Room was
used for presidential press conferences from 1955 until 1961.
Eisenhower held the first
televised presidential press conference here in January 1955.
The name "Indian Treaty Room" came about sometime during the 1930s, and
it is still not clear as to where it originated, despite extensive research.
Some say it is due to the fact that during the 1930s the War Department stored
papers there, including treaties with the
American Indian
nations.
Although most treaties were signed in the State
Department Diplomatic Reception Room (212-214) and the Secretary of State's
office (208), a few were signed in the Indian Treaty Room. These include
Bretton Woods - establishing the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Peace
Treaties with Rumania, Italy and Hungary after WWII, and the
UN Charter.
Restoration of the main room was done between 1984 and 1985 (the upper
north alcove was opened in 1991). Today the room is used for meetings and
receptions. |