What The White House Looked Like In 1950 After It Was Totally Gutted

What The White House Looked Like In 1950 After It Was Totally Gutted


In 1948, the White House was almost abandoned. After it had been burned by the British in 1814, and endured the stress of the addition of modern amenities like plumbing and electricity, it was on the verge of being condemned. Staircases were sagging, a fresco in the East Room was held in by scaffolding, and it was actually dangerous to be inside. In fact, the 1948 social season had to be cancelled (gasp!).

US President Harry S. Truman told Congress that while it might be “more economical” to tear it down, that would be destroying a very important national monument. So in 1950 it was completely and totally gutted.

Every column, every wall, every single piece of the inside was taken out and put into storage. Check out these amazing photos of the White House during the reconstruction, taken from the National Archives’ Flickr account.

A view of construction work from the outside.



Iron beams holding up the original walls.



The White House’s East Room.



The main corridor of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.



The skeletal walls of the bedroom and sitting room.



Above, the Oval Study. Below, the Blue Room. Part of the floor was removed to install steel shoring columns.



Remnants of the East Room fireplace.



The shell of the White House.



[National Journal via Digg]

Pictures: National Archives/Flickr


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