First Oval Office Project
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The cornerstone of the Museum’s collection is General George Washington’s Revolutionary War tent, the marquee or office and sleeping quarters that he used as the command center of the Continental Army.
In 2013, the Museum of the American Revolution partnered with the Historic Trades Department at The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in Williamsburg, Virginia, to reproduce Washington’s War Tent. The First Oval Office Project allowed Museum staff to make important decisions about how the original tent would be displayed at the Museum in the Alan B. Miller Theater. The replica tent was used in the filmmaking process to design and test the mount that displays the original tent in the Washington’s War Tent film, produced by Donna Lawrence Productions.
The process and collaborative research of the First Oval Office Project continues as we learn more about Washington’s wartime headquarters, including displaying the Museum's 2018 special exhibition, Among His Troops: Washington’s War Tent in a Newly Discovered Watercolor, as well as the 2024-25 special exhibition, Witness to Revolution: The Unlikely Travels of Washington's Tent.
Each year, the hand-stitched replica tent is pitched outdoors at historic sites as an interactive education and outreach program with associated replica tents, camp equipage, and furnishings, which fosters special immersive opportunities to experience how this tent was used during the Revolutionary War.
Funding for the First Oval Office Project was generously provided by Acorn Foundation Fund for History in Memory of Alexander Orr Vietor.
Learn More
Historical Timeline
Real and Replica: Constructing the First Oval Office Project