The First White House of the Confederacy was the executive residence of President Jefferson Davis and family while the capital of the Confederate States of America was in Montgomery, Alabama. Completely furnished with original period pieces from the 1850s and 1860s, the 1835 Italianate-style house is open to the public. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1974.[1]
In February 1861, shortly after selecting Davis as president, the Provisional Confederate Congress, meeting in Montgomery, authorized the leasing of an executive mansion. An offer came from Colonel Edmund S. Harrison of nearby Prattville, Alabama, who had recently purchased a newly renovated house in Montgomery that had previously been owned by a series of prominent citizens of the city. He offered to rent the house fully furnished and staffed for $5,000 per year.
The house served as the first White House of the Confederacy from February 1861 until late May 1861, when the Confederate capital moved to Richmond, Virginia. During that time, the White House was the setting for many lavish parties and receptions hosted by Mrs. Davis.
Alabama State Capitol |Dexter Avenue Baptist Church |Montgomery Union Station and Trainshed
Historic districts
Alabama State University Historic District |City of St. Jude Historic District |Cloverdale Historic District |Cottage Hill Historic District |Court Square Historic District |Dowe Historic District |Garden District |Huntingdon College Campus Historic District |Lower Commerce Street Historic District |Maxwell Air Force Base Senior Officers' Quarters Historic District |North Lawrence-Monroe Street Historic District |Ordeman-Shaw Historic District |Perry Street Historic District |South Perry Street Historic District
Other properties
Bell Building |Brame House |Patrick Henry Brittan House |Building 800-Austin Hall |Building 836-Community College of the Air Force Building |Cassimus House |Cleveland Court Apartments 620–638 |Jefferson Davis Hotel |Edgewood |First White House of the Confederacy |Gay House |Gerald-Dowdell House |Governor's Mansion |Grace Episcopal Church |Harrington Archaeological Site |Jefferson Franklin Jackson House |Jere Shine Site |Governor Thomas G. Jones House |McBryde-Screws-Tyson House |Mt. Zion AME Zion Church |Muklassa |The Murphy House |Old Ship African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church |Opp Cottage |Pastorium, Dexter Avenue Baptist Church |Pepperman House |Powder Magazine |St. John's Episcopal Church |Sayre Street School |Scott Street Firehouse |Semple House |Shepherd Building |Smith-Joseph-Stratton House |Stay House |Steiner-Lobman and Teague Hardware Buildings |Stone Plantation |Tankersley Rosenwald School |Dr. C.A. Thigpen House |Tulane Building |Tyson-Maner House |United States Post Office and Courthouse-Montgomery |Winter Building |Winter Place |William Lowndes Yancey Law Office
See also:National Register of Historic Places listings in Alabama and List of National Historic Landmarks in Alabama