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Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House

Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Little White House DC.JPG
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House in 2008
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is located in Central Washington, D.C.
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is located in the District of Columbia
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is located in the US
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Location in Washington, D.C.
General information
Architectural style Federal
Town or city Washington, D.C.
Country United States
Coordinates 38°53′58″N 77°2′4″W / 38.89944°N 77.03444°W / 38.89944; -77.03444
Completed 1828
Client

Benjamin Ogle Tayloe

Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is located in the District of Columbia
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is located in the US
Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House
Part of Lafayette Square Historic District (Washington, D.C.) (#70000833)
Designated NHLDCP August 29, 1970

Benjamin Ogle Tayloe

The Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House is a Federal-style house located at 21 Madison Place NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States. The house is on the northeast corner of Madison Place NW and Pennsylvania Avenue NW, directly across the street from the White House and the Treasury Building. Built in 1828 by Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, son of Colonel John Tayloe III (who built the famous Octagon House), the house became a salon for politically powerful people in the federal government.

Phoebe Tayloe inherited the house upon Tayloe's death in 1868. After she died in 1881, more than 200 marble statues, bronze sculptures, fine furniture, and paintings in the house were donated to the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Phoebe Warren Tayloe's niece, Elizabeth H. Price, inherited the house in 1882 and later sold it to Senator Don Cameron of Pennsylvania for $60,000 in 1887. In around 1896, the U.S. Senate passed legislation which would have made the building the official residence of the Vice President of the United States, but the House of Representatives failed to act on the bill. Cameron leased the house to Vice President Garret Hobart from March 1897 until the fall of 1899 and the press and public nicknamed the house the "Historic Corner" and the "Cream White House" for the large number of politically important visitors and meetings held on the premises, with esteemed guests such as the International Boundary Commission and Prince Albert of Belgium. Hobart's failing health led the family to leave the Tayloe House in the fall of 1899 and Cameron then leased the home to Republican Senator Mark Hanna from January 1900 to 1902. Hanna's important political discussions of the moment with William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt over substantial breakfasts of corned beef hash and pancakes became famous.


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