Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

LEADING WOMAN

Dolley Madison: The White House’s first power hostess

- By Katherine Roth

Sometimes, thoughtful decor, elegant tableware and gracious entertaini­ng can come together into something truly powerful.

An exhibit in New York argues that Dolley Madison’s prodigious domestic, social and political talents helped define and unite a fledgling nation.

Madison was the first First Lady to reside in the White House for a full term. She decorated three of its rooms, and boldly invited the public to dinner not once, but every Wednesday.

“A lot of Americans at that point did not even know how to use a fork, and some coachmen who entered the White House had never before sipped from porcelain cups,” says Valerie Paley, who curated “Saving Washington,” on view at the New-York Historical Society through July 30. Paley is director of the museum’s new Center for Women’s History, which aims to reveal the often overlooked stories of women who shaped American history.

Dolley Madison “understood the power of symbols, and showed what American refinement could look like,” Paley says. Through decoration and tableware, the First Lady showed that Americans could perform socially as well as politicall­y on the national and internatio­nal stage. She hosted a broad range of people at her dinners, from European foreign ministers to American congressme­n and merchants.

The exhibit features a tiny, urn-shaped nutmeg grater, a marrow scoop, mustard and egg spoons, and an array of similarly specialize­d utensils of the era, all of which would have been novel items to many of her guests.

It also features the First Lady’s own silver snuff box, from which she generously offered snuff to guests, Paley says. Also on view are tea and coffee sets that belonged to the Madisons.

Instead of donning a tiara, as was customary, the socially savvy Madison wore a turban decorated with a towering feather plume, so that she could be easily located in a crowded room.

“She was an important example of what a woman could be in the United States at the time but, more importantl­y, she embodied the idea of American strength, virtue and honor,” says Paley, who calls Madison “one of the most influentia­l women in America during the nation’s formative years, and a powerful force during a time when women were excluded from affairs of state.”

Her public White House dinners became known as the “Wednesday evening squeeze,” since so many people attended.

“It was an important part of her whole project of civility, and humanizing the office of the president. After a while, she didn’t even need the ads because everyone knew that that’s what was going on in Washington on Wednesdays,” Paley said.

At the “squeezes,” people of various background­s could circulate with diplomats, politician­s and even the president himself.

“It’s important to remember that Washington was pretty desolate at the time,” Paley says. “It was literally a swamp and figurative­ly a desert, and Mrs. Madison helped create important informal networks and a sense of connection.”

The trappings of gentility required an enormous amount of physical work, museum experts noted: Crisp table linens had to be washed, bleached, ironed and mended; silver had to be cleaned and polished; delicate porcelain had to be dusted. The Madisons had a sizable staff — some of them experience­d Washington servants who were paid wages, but most of them slaves.

A highlight of the exhibit is an interactiv­e dining table meant to represent Dolley Madison’s table at a Wednesday gathering. Visitors are invited to take a seat and, using screens, take on the role of a character. Using prompts, the “diners” are invited to try to reach consensus on an issue of the day, deciding whether to use flattery, criticism or some other method to make their points.

“I would argue that in a larger sense, Washington was an aspiration­al place, while the two earlier capitals were not. This needed to be a congenial place for politickin­g as well as socializin­g, and it was through creating these wonderful spaces and important social events that she helped solidify not only Madison as president but the whole notion of unity in the fledgling United States,” Paley said.

While John Adams and his wife, Abigail, were the first presidenti­al couple to live in the White House, Abigail Adams “was only there about a month and apparently hated it,” Paley says. Thomas Jefferson was a widower by the time he moved in and, wary of any semblance of aristocrac­y, he left the White House quite spartan.

The Madisons lived in the White House from 1809 to 1817.

 ?? GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP ?? This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
 ?? GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP ?? This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
 ?? GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP ?? This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
 ?? GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP ?? This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.
GLENN CASTELLANO — NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY VIA AP This 2017 photo provided by The New York Historical Society shows a installati­on view of the exhibit “Saving Washington,” at the New York Historical Society in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States