This circa 1892 black and white photograph by Frances Benjamin Johnston depicts the Entrance Hall of the White House, including the Tiffany Screen. In 1882, Louis Comfort Tiffany created this glass screen to separate the Entrance Hall from the Cross Hall. The glass screen featured topaz, ruby, and amethyst jewels set into the glass alongside four eagles and a shield with the initials "US." The glass screen was removed during the Roosevelt renovation, and portions of it were auctioned off in 1903. No known surviving example of the glass exists today. Note the electric light bulbs along the bottom of the chandelier. The ornate wall decorations were designed by upholsterer Edgar Yergason.
This circa 1892 black and white photograph by Frances Benjamin Johnston depicts the Entrance Hall of the White House, including the Tiffany Screen. In 1882, Louis Comfort Tiffany created this glass screen to separate the Entrance Hall from the Cross Hall. The glass screen featured topaz, ruby, and amethyst jewels set into the glass alongside four eagles and a shield with the initials "US." The glass screen was removed during the Roosevelt renovation, and portions of it were auctioned off in 1903. No known surviving example of the glass exists today. Note the electric light bulbs along the bottom of the chandelier. The ornate wall decorations were designed by upholsterer Edgar Yergason.