Main Content

Mourning William McKinley

This exhibit explores the power of black cloth as part of public and private displays of bereavement at the White House. Between 1841 and 1963, eight American presidents died while in office. By examining the fabrics used to decorate the White House for their funerals, as well as the mourning fashions of their spouses, one can track displays of grief through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and observe the mourning traditions that were either preserved or discarded to meet the needs of a growing, modernizing nation.

William McKinley
Died on September 14, 1901

For the first time after the death of a sitting president, the White House façade was not decorated with black cloth for William McKinley due to a provision in an 1893 appropriations act that prohibited draping on federal buildings. The bare North Portico columns contrasted starkly with the memory of Lincoln and Garfield’s heavily festooned White House; one reporter complained, “...the existence of a federal statute prohibiting the draping of government buildings brought here and there into the outward show of the people's grief a hiatus which detracted not a little from the otherwise impressive grandeur of the pageant.”

Although the rules restricting a widow’s attire loosened considerably by the turn of the century, it seems First Lady Ida McKinley observed older, stricter mourning etiquette. She remained in mourning clothing until at least 1904, often with her face covered. At a memorial dinner for President McKinley held that year in Canton, Ohio, a journalist reported that “Mrs. McKinley entered the right-hand box and everybody arose…There was a moment of impressive silence, of reverence and respect,” and then, momentarily, “Mrs. McKinley threw back her veil,” and the entire hall erupted in applause as she smiled to the crowd. The reporter concluded, “to me, as to many, that was the great event of the whole evening.”