:The Philadelphia Museum of Art has been given the Robert L.
McNeil Jr Collection of American Presidential china, considered
the finest outside the White House. The collection includes more
than 450 wares designed for and used by US Presidents from George
Washington to Ronald Reagan and provides a material record of the
history of the United States from its beginnings as a nation.
From the pomp and circumstance of a state dinner served on James
Monroe's gilt-edged French porcelain service to a quiet family
dinner served on the understated Wedgwood creamware brought from
the Georgetown home of John F. Kennedy when he took office, the
McNeil collection offers a rare glimpse at life inside America's
"First Residence," and the evolution of the taste, style and
aspirations of the emerging republic. A selection of 50
highlights from the McNeil Collection is now on view in Gallery
106, marking its first time on public view in 25 years.
"This is like fireworks on the Fourth of July," said Anne
d'Harnoncourt, director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. "The
museum has always had a strong commitment to American arts, and
to the decorative arts in particular. We are deeply grateful to
Bob McNeil for this spectacular act of generosity that will
further enhance the museum's collection while offering a
wonderfully distinctive material means to explore the social and
cultural history of the United States."
The McNeil collection is particularly strong in china from the
early presidential administrations, most notably numerous objects
that belonged to George Washington (first President, 1789-1797).
His courage and military skill aside, Washington "acknowledged
the social importance of a fashionably equipped dining table,"
according to Susan Gray Detweiler, author of George
Washington's Chinaware.
George Washington plate, circa 1780, porcelain, Chinese, for
export to the American market. -Will Brown photo
The influence of the French and their elegant style on
American decorative arts and furnishings was considerable in the
early years of the US Republic, and formal settings purchased by
early Presidential administrations were of neoclassical design
(much like the architecture of Washington, D.C., itself), which was
thought to reflect the Founding Fathers' reverence for Athenian
democratic ideals.
Following the War of 1812 when the President's House was
reconstructed after British troops set it afire, James Monroe
(fifth President, 1817-1825), ordered what is the earliest
surviving official government purchase of china, examples of
which are in the McNeil collection. Monroe actively participated
in refurnishing the White House, and believed its décor should
befit the mansion's architectural dignity.
Of the state services in the McNeil collection, the one
commissioned by Rutherford B. Hayes (19th President, 1877-1881)
is distinctive. Designed by Theodore B. Davis and manufactured by
Haviland & Co. of Limoges, France, it contains elaborate
depictions of American flora and fauna.
It was not until the Twentieth Century that the first
American-made porcelain state service was purchased, by Woodrow
Wilson (28th President, 1913-1921). Designed by Dulin &
Martin Co. of Washington, D.C., it was fabricated by Lenox China
of Trenton, N.J.; the service plates feature a dark blue cobalt
border edged by a wide gilt rim and an inner band bearing gilt
stars and stripes, with the presidential arms in raised 24K gold
in the center.

Ulysses S. Grant dinner plate, 1870, porcelain with printed,
enamel and gilt decoration, Haviland et Cie, Limoges, France
(1842-present). -Will Brown photo
Not every president had commissioned new china while in
office, and patterns of previous administrations are frequently
reused. The Wilson pattern was reordered during the administrations
of Harding, Coolidge, Hoover and Clinton, making it the most
frequently reordered service in the history of the White House.
Jacqueline Kennedy's favorite china service was that of Republican
Benjamin Harrison (23rd President, 1889-1893), and she often used
the Truman/Eisenhower china for large dinners.
The most recent piece in the collection is a red and
gold-bordered plate designed for a special breakfast at the
Reagan White House in 1984 honoring the living First Ladies,
which features each of their signatures on the reverse.
McNeil's collecting of White House china started with the 1960
purchase of a Chinese Export porcelain plate from George
Washington's "Cincinnati" service, which bears the eagle emblem
of the Society of the Cincinnati, the oldest military hereditary
society in the United States.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art is on the Benjamin Franklin
Parkway at 26th Street. For information, 215-763-8100 or
www.philamuseum.org.