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| Frank Lazzaro with First Lady Rosalynn Carter in The Cross Hall. Frank was very busy that day decorating the Cross Hall with assorted holiday garland, sleeves up, no suit jacket attire on, when Mrs. Carter came in for a "surprise" inspection of the decorating. This was a great Sunday afternoon for Frank enjoying the company of The First Lady. The surprise visit caught Frank unguarded and he didn't have time to put his suit jacket attire on. The First Lady was very pleased with his work. Carter Administration |
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| Frank is preparing to hang the heavy garland in The Cross Hall at The White House, the main hallway connecting all the beautiful rooms on the first floor. My peers and I created this heavy foliage garland by hand on a table set up in The Cross Hall. White Pine, Evergreen, Holly, Juniper with berries, and touches of Boxwood. All wired together to get the full effect and proper shape. This was an all day job and after it was completed, it looked so elegant hanging in the hall. The First Lady was so impressed with our work. Carter Administration. The Cross Hall is in the large Entrance Hall, prt of James Hoban's original plans of the White House. He was the architect that supervised the restoration of The White House after the British destroyed it on August 24, 1814. New furniture from France was selected, and the White House reopened on New Year's Day, 1818. The Cross Hall, with marble walls and floors added during the Truman renovation, is lighted by two Adam-style cut-glass chandeliers made in London about 1775. There are many portraits hanging at the east end of the Cross Hall: Lyndon Johnson, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. A portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt hangs at the west end of the hall. I enjoyed the thrill of hanging the garland and decorating this beautiful hall with so much history and wealth endured in it. During the Kennedy Administration restoration, interior decorators arranged the furnishings to more closely resemble the cross hall at Malmaison. While a red carpet has traditionally been in the Cross Hall since the early 1960s, the carpet has, over time, become more detailed and the color has evolved. The current carpet, manufactured during the Clinton Administration, was designed to be more graphic, and to appear attractively in television broadcasts. The red was made more saturated, the shade slightly warmer, and a gold border of laurel leaves, medallions, and five-pointed stars, based directly on the carved stone border in the Grand Stairway was woven into the carpet's border. The current appearance of the Cross Hall is the result of a renovation and refurbishing completed in 1997.
A suite of upholstered gilded beech chairs and settées thought to have once belonged to James Monroe are arranged against the walls; two Empire pier tables are placed opposite the Madison suite of furniture and the guilded pier table from Monroe's original purchase for the Blue Room and restored by Jacqueline Kennedy is in the adjacent Entrance Hall. Portraits of recent U.S. presidents hang on the walls of the Entrance Hall and Cross Hall. "If you want to feel like a king in a palace, just walk down the red carpet in The Cross Hall", Frank told Walter Kaner, a columnist from his hometown paper, The Long Island Press, on a telephone interview after returning home from Washington.
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