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New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
Washington's Room and the Bed on Which He Died
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.

Washington's Room and the Bed on Which He Died

Artist Luke C. Dillon (American, active 1870s - 1890s)
Publisher Luke C. Dillon (American, active 1870s - 1890s)
CultureAmerican
Dateca. 1884-1894
MediumAlbumen cabinet card
DimensionsOverall, Image: 3 3/4 × 5 13/16 in. (9.5 × 14.8 cm)
Overall: 4 1/4 × 6 1/2 in. (10.8 × 16.5 cm)
InscribedOn reverse: "WASHINGTON'S ROOM AND THE BED ON WHICH HE DIED." / Copyrighted by LUKE C. DILLON, Photographer to Mount Vernon," / "Office at Pullman's Gallery, 935 Penn. Avenue, Washington, D. C."
Credit LineAnonymous gift
Object number0.3236.3
Not on view
DescriptionThis is an albumen print cabinet card depicting the bedroom at Mount Vernon in which George Washington died.

Label TextLuke C. Dillon American, active 1870s–1890s top Mrs. Washington’s Room Where She Died, ca. 1884–1894 Albumen print (photograph) cabinet card bottom Washington’s Room and the Bed on Which He Died, ca. 1884–1894 Albumen print (photograph) cabinet card The Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association set out to preserve George Washington’s neglected estate in 1853. In their founding documents, the Ladies promised to “Let no irreverent hand change it; no vandal hands desecrate it with the fingers of progress.” Strict preservationists, they claimed Mount Vernon would be the “one spot in this grand country of ours…saved from change.” The Ladies hired Luke Dillon as their official photographer from 1884 to 1894, and his dreamy photographs evoked the sense of agelessness they admired. A clever salesman, Dillon also began taking pictures of modern tourists visiting the house and convinced them to visit his Washington, DC, shop to purchase prints. The Ladies put a stop to Dillon’s moneymaking scheme, claiming he was disrupting the site’s sacred past, but they continued to sell souvenir photographs like these to fund upkeep projects. Anonymous gift 0.3236.2, 0.3236.3 Exhibition History"First in the Hearts of His Countrymen: America Remembers George Washington 1732-1799," Chrysler Museum of Art, Nov. 23, 1999 - Summer 2001. "Photographs Take Time: Pictures from the Chrysler Collection," Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA, April 6 - August 26, 2018.
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
Luke C. Dillon
ca. 1884-1894
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
Luke C. Dillon
ca. 1884-1894
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
Lloyd V. Winter
1895
Photographed by Scott Wolff.  Scanned from a slide.  Color corrected by Pat Cagney.
Luke C. Dillon
ca. 1855
New photography by Pat Cagney captured with a digital camera.
Unknown
1825 - 1875
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2008.
Price & McLanahan
No Date
Photograph by Ed Pollard, Canon  EOS 5D Mark II digital slr-2012.
Nam June Paik
1996
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2008.
Elmer Chickering
No Date
New photography by Shannon Ruff captured with a digital camera-2007.
Campbell Metcalf Silver Co.
ca. 1899