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Engraving
of the White House by William Strickland, after
a watercolor by George Munger, 1814. Library of
Congress
Hostilities with Great Britain, begun in 1812, culminated
in the invasion of Washington on August 24, 1814.
British troops entered the defenseless city, where
they ate a dinner prepared for the President at
the White House, and then torched the building,
destroying all but the outer walls. At the urging
of President Madison, Congress decided to rebuild
the public buildings in Washington rather than move
the capital to another city. James Hoban returned
to reconstruct the Presidents House as it
had been before the fire. The weakened walls were
dismantled to the basement level on the east and
west sides and on the north except for the central
section. Most of the carved ornamentation, bearing
the scorch marks of the fire, was re-used. President
James Monroe moved into a new house in the autumn
of 1817.
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