The Petersen House.
The Petersen House
The house in which Lincoln died, at 453 (now numbered
516) Tenth Street NW., had been built by William Petersen, a Swedish
tailor, in 1849. It is a three-story building, with the basement only
slightly be low the street level. Since the house had more rooms than
the family required, he rented his extra rooms to lodgers. The bedroom
to which Lincoln was taken was occupied by William T. Clark, a clerk at
the Quartermaster General's Office, formerly a soldier of Co. D, 13th
Mass. Infantry.
The walls of the bedroom at the time were covered
with a brownish paper, figured with a white design. Some engravings and
a photograph hung upon the walls. The engravings were copies of J. H.
Herring's "Village Blacksmith," "The Stable," and "Barnyard." The
photograph was one taken from an engraved copy of Rosa Bonheur's "Horse
Fair." The furniture consisted of a bureau covered with crochet, a
table, several chairs, and a low walnut bedstead. A worn Brussels carper
covered the floor.
The Petersen House remained in the hands of the
Petersen family until November 25, 1878, when the heirs of William and
Anna Petersen sold the property to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schade for the sum
of $4,500. Mr. Schade purchased the Petersen House for a home and for an
office for his newspaper. The Washington Sentinel, of which he
was editor, was published in the front room of the basement for many
years. The room in which Lincoln died was used as a playroom by the
Schade children. Schade added a room adjoining the hack stairway, and
one beneath it in the basement.
Although the building was unmarked on the outside,
the Schade family was constantly besieged by tourists for permission to
view the death room. From 1880, efforts were made in Congress to
memorialize the home. In 1883, a marble tablet was placed on the outside
of the house, telling of its tragic history. This marker was replaced in
1924 with a bronze plaque. The United States Government purchased the
historic building in 1896 from the Schade family.
The House Where Lincoln Died, both on the exterior
and the interior, has remained substantially unchanged in appearance
since the time of Lincoln's death. Entering the building, you walk up
the steps used in carrying the dying President into the house, and
proceed through the hallway to the front and back parlors and to the
room in which Lincoln died. This house was refurnished in 1932, after
the Lincoln collection was moved to the old Ford's Theatre building, by
five women's patriotic organizations following as nearly as possible a
diagram made shortly after the death of Lincoln. Labels in each room
tell the history of the building and the events which took place there
on the night of April 14 and the morning of April 15, 1865. The
appearance of the building was greatly improved in 1959 by the extensive
repairs and rehabilitation made under the Mission 66 program.
Front parlor of the Petersen House.
THE FRONT PARLOR. The horsehair sofa and the
high-back rocking chair in this room were once in the Lincoln home in
Springfield. The sofa is in the same location as the one occupied by
Mrs. Lincoln on the night of April 14 and the morning of April 15, 1865.
The corner whatnots and center table are similar in appearance and in
the same position as those in the room on the night of the
assassination. On the mantel are two candlesticks which were presented
by Lincoln to Caleb Smith, his Secretary of the Interior, The mantels
and fireplaces in both the front and rear parlors are the originals.
Back parlor of the Petersen House.
THE BACK PARLOR. The sofa in this room is also from
the home of Lincoln in Springfield. A bed was placed in this location at
the time of the assassination. The center table is similar to the one
used by Corp. James Tanner in taking shorthand notes from witnesses of
the tragedy as interviewed by Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. Two
ornate vases, gifts of Lincoln to Caleb Smith, are on the
mantelpiece.
The room in which Lincoln died.
THE ROOM IN WHICH LINCOLN DIED. The furnishings in
the room are similar in appearance to those there at the time of the
tragedy. An exact copy of the "Village Blacksmith" replaces the one that
then hung on the wall, and above the bed is a copy of Rosa Bonheur's
"Horse Fair," The wallpaper is a reproduction of the original pattern.
The bed and chairs closely resemble those originally in the room at the
time of Lincoln's death.
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