Home >
History & Tours >
Eisenhower Executive Office Building
|
Shown here in May 1910 sitting in room 341, are Mabel Boardman (left), President of the American Red Cross, and clerks Francis Mulhall (center), and Charles Magee (right). Red Cross history reveals that President Theodore Roosevelt signed their Congressional Charter on January 5, 1905, that required the Red Cross to provide services that address "the sufferings caused by pestilence, famine, fire, floods, and other great national calamities, and to devise and carry on measures for preventing the same." In response, Secretary of War William Howard Taft provided room 341 to the Red Cross for their use, and allowed them to stay during his tenure as President. It is believed that this was the first high ranking female, within any organization, to have an office in the building. The Red Cross responded to the following three disasters from their offices in room 341:
|