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First Ladies' Gowns Return To View At Smithsonian

First Lady Gowns Michelle Obama

By BRETT ZONGKER   11/18/11 05:13 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Dresses, china and mementos dating back to days when Americans referred to the first lady as "lady presidentress" or "republican queen" will return to view Saturday at the National Museum of American History, along with Michelle Obama's dashing inaugural gown as a centerpiece.

The new exhibition "The First Ladies" features 26 dresses and about 160 other objects ranging from Martha Washington's White House collection to a first look at Laura Bush's china. It's the 10th version of the first ladies exhibit in nearly 100 years. The last one closed in October as the museum moves historic objects out of its west wing for a major renovation beginning early next year.

"We knew that it would be unacceptable during the renovation timeframe for the public to go two years without this popular and almost 100-year-old tradition at the Smithsonian," interim museum director Marc Pachter said.

When it first opened in 1914, the first ladies collection was the first time the Smithsonian Institution gave women a prominent place in history, he said. Every first lady since Helen Taft has followed the tradition of donating her inaugural gown to the collection. Last year, Obama gave the museum her dress designed by Jason Wu.

According to the Smithsonian, the term "first lady" was first used in 1849 by President Zachary Taylor in his eulogy of Dolley Madison. Before that, a variety of other terms were used over the nation's first 100 years.

The new exhibit examines how first ladies have shaped their roles as the influence of women in society has changed and ponders what will happen when a woman is elected president. Eight dresses and at least 10 other items, including Laura Bush's state china service, are on view for the first time or the first time in decades as the museum freshens its display and incorporates new stories.

"There is no job description for first lady of the United States," said Lisa Kathleen Graddy, curator of the collection. "Each one remakes the undefined and challenging position to suit her own interests, the needs of the presidential administration and the public's changing expectations of women in general and first ladies in particular."

Sections of the exhibition are devoted to the first ladies' impact on fashion, her role as the nation's hostess, inaugurations and formal events and the changing role over time. Madison, for example, got engaged in politics early by gathering information and talking about public opinion, and Mary Todd Lincoln was criticized for her attempts at patronage.

For decades, first ladies have influenced fashion, whether through popularizing colors like Nancy Reagan's red or setting trends as with Jacqueline Kennedy or Lou Hoover, who was first to appear in Vogue magazine in a bid to promote American-made clothes.

The public scrutiny of their fashion sense is an unexpected part of the job for many first ladies, Graddy said.

Curators refer to Caroline Harrison's evening gown, on display for the first time, as "early bling." The burgundy velvet and gray satin gown is embroidered with a floral gray pearls and steel beads.

For the first time, curators also mixed in mementos and other "secondary objects" along with gowns and china, Graddy said.

There's a scrap of fabric from Lincoln's redecoration of the White House parlor, a piece of burnt wood from when the British burned the executive mansion and a copy of the book "Treasure Island" that Edith Roosevelt gave to her son's friend Charley Taft, the next child who would occupy the White House. She signed it "Charley, from Quentin's mother," and Charley took the book to read during his father's 1909 inauguration ceremony, presumably to keep from getting bored.

"I really wanted it to be about memory," Graddy said of the revamped exhibit. "My word was always scrapbook. These are the things that people save. These are the things that women especially save, and this is so much a women's show."

As the museum plans its renovation of the 120,000 square feet of its west wing exhibit space, there will be a permanent home for the first ladies' gallery in a larger section devoted to American democracy, Pachter said. There will be floors devoted to the nation's economy and entrepreneurship, the underpinnings of the political system and culture ranging from music and entertainment to sports.

"We're going to give people a way to think about the whole of our society and who we are," Pachter said.

Construction is slated to begin in spring of 2012 and with the wing reopening in late 2014 for the museum's 50th anniversary.

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"The First Ladies" Exhibition At The National Museum Of American History
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Dresses of former U.S. First Ladies are displayed at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, on November 18, 2011 during a media preview of "The First Ladies," a major new exhibition showcasing the premier objects from the century-old First Ladies Collection. The new exhibition features 26 dresses, including those worn by Frances Cleveland, Lou Hoover, Jacqueline Kennedy, Laura Bush and Michelle Obama and more than 160 other objects, including portraits, White House china, personal possessions and related objects.
RELATED VIDEO: Preparing The Gowns
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WASHINGTON -- Dresses, china and mementos dating back to days when Americans referred to the first lady as "lady presidentress" or "republican queen" will return to view Saturday at the National Museu...
WASHINGTON -- Dresses, china and mementos dating back to days when Americans referred to the first lady as "lady presidentress" or "republican queen" will return to view Saturday at the National Museu...
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purplewg
Don't squat with your spurs on.
11:33 AM on 12/13/2011
This is one we could do without.
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Waldo Fartkowski
06:29 PM on 12/08/2011
Is that the toilet paper dress?
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TheNuff
“Be yourself – everyone else is taken.”
09:05 AM on 11/22/2011
I have always wanted to see this. I will be there.
HSC55
We will be known forever by the tracks we leave
09:06 AM on 11/21/2011
I saw this exhibit last fall. Why are they saying it is new? Anyway, it was fascinating seeing how the size of normal americans has changed over the centuries. The original first ladies were so tiny (height and weight) but so were their husbands...(uniform or two also on display for the men.) Some of the gowns were so intricate....hand beading everywhere. One thing that was really interesting were the shoes. Most gowns had hand made shoes to match the gowns with the first ladies names embroidered on the inside. Pat Nixon's dress and matching shoes were stunning. Michelle Obama's shoes weren't handmade for her though. They were Jimmy Choo!
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4more
I don't need no stinkin' micro-bio
08:32 PM on 11/20/2011
Michelle made the dress stunning!!!
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Milash
It says I should edit my micro-bio, so I did.
08:31 PM on 11/20/2011
I see that all the cons have come in here to insult our First Lady. You people are pathetic.
HSC55
We will be known forever by the tracks we leave
09:12 AM on 11/21/2011
Well, people are allowed to have different taste in clothes. It isn't a crime and it doesn't make one a conservative to say you don't like the dress.

I love the dress on Michelle. I just couldn't pull off that style myself. So I don't love it for me.
01:54 PM on 11/21/2011
Really??!! I am as liberal as they come and I did not like the dress. This is in no way an insult, I simply did not like the dress.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pottedferne
02:29 PM on 11/20/2011
saw this exhibit 2 presidents ago and it was surprisingly touching giving one the feeling of the ladies who wore them......beats the heck out of old muskets and cannon balls........
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special38x2
Live, Love, & Laugh
12:19 PM on 11/20/2011
I have a job but this would not be on my list of things to see or do at one of the many showcases. I'm dissappointed with the frivilous need to present bling at a time when so many are out of jobs. Just step back and read the article closely and do the test question - "Does this make sense?". We've got a panel of supposedly our brightest sitting in Washington trying to figure out where to make the cuts and this largely federally funded institution is worrying about the inconvenience to it's patrons of missing out on a dress display during a two year renovation. Sure they are pretty and neat to look at but have we lost our sense of priorities or what? The Smithsonian should think about what they can do to reduce their costs in light of the economy and be more respectful of the cost American's are paying out just so that they can play. This institution has lost site of the original goals that it was established for, I think the benefactor is rolling over in his grave. This kind of spending becomes unnecessary in bad economic times - make the cuts - over 600 million, plus probably more since we have key leaders that chair a board governing it...I don't mean to offend anyone, but really, it's been said that a picture is like a thousand words, then preserve the pictures, auction the items - get people back to reading again.
12:52 PM on 11/20/2011
The Smithsonian is doing what a great museum is supposed to do. You apparently are among the baggers who have no use for cultural institutions such as libraries and museums. Sell the history of America, you say? Are you in favor of selling the Grand Canyon? The Gettysburg battlefield? The American cemeteries in France? Close the libraries and make everyone shop Chapters or go without books? How narrow can one be?
HSC55
We will be known forever by the tracks we leave
09:10 AM on 11/21/2011
I don't know why thay are saying this is a 'new' exhibit in this article. Not true. This was there last year when I visited the Smithsonian. But people donate their own money to things like this. This museum also displays the original Star Spangled Banner...the one Francis Scott Keye was inspried by. Plus many other worthwhile exhibits. You may not appreciate this particular exhibit but some of us do. To each his own.
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theredqueen
Some days I can't spell.
12:13 PM on 11/20/2011
A lovely exhibit - I would love to have been able to see it in person.
11:46 AM on 11/20/2011
I hope the Smithsonian had enough money to put the dresses on a rotating base. They are beautiful to look at, but fashions like the bustle can't be seen. They have preserved several of the cloth shoes with heels worn by the First Ladies of the 18th century. Don't know how they managed those shoes, they have no support.

The china and silverware exhibits are magnificent. I think the silver of the first presidents was much more expensive and beautiful than they are today.

Our thanks to the curators who do a splendid job of preserving and caring for the exhibit pieces.
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10:51 AM on 11/20/2011
Jacqueline Kennedy has no equal when it comes to beauty or fashion...she was and always be the best.
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enh8g2
10:26 AM on 11/20/2011
This is one of my favorite Smithsonian exhibits. It's nice seeing all of the modern First Lady's dresses.
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