World War II significantly impacted Mount Vernon, as it did the rest of the nation.
Attendance in Decline
Although the bombing of Mount Vernon during World War II was deemed "a very remote possibility," the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association (MVLA) hired additional guards, constructed a subterranean storage structure for the most important artifacts in the collection, and sent copies of measured drawings to "a depository in the middle west." Before the attack on Pearl Harbor, annual visitation to the estate had passed the 750,000 mark, a new record. A year after Pearl Harbor, attendance had declined some 75 percent, due to gas rationing, drastic cutbacks in bus service, and the cancellation of virtually all school tours.
By June of 1943, attendance had been reduced to a trickle. At the same time, staffing levels had been reduced by half, as many men on the Mount Vernon crew were drafted or tempted away by higher-paying jobs in factories that were open 24 hours a day to meet the demands of war. Even when the MVLA increased salaries by 10 percent, qualified applicants were few and far between.
Women Take Charge
In late 1943, the Association decided for the first time to hire "woman attendants" to serve as guards in the Mansion, in order to transfer male guards to much-needed maintenance and restoration duties. About 20 women replied to the first advertisement placed in an Alexandria newspaper, and five were eventually hired.
To assist the war effort, the barebones staff collected 1,200 pounds of much-needed rubber and several truckloads of scrap metal. The heating plant was converted from oil to coal, and the numbers of areas devoted to producing foodstuffs increased drastically.
But the resident director, Charles Cecil Wall, bristled when army officials asked if they could put "a searchlight emplacement on the hilltop immediately north of the Mansion." Later on, Wall also said no when it was suggested that the cupola of the Mansion would be an ideal "aircraft observation point," particularly if Mount Vernon staff members would agree to staff the site 24 hours a day.
First Free Attendance Day
To lift spirits during the war, the Association initiated the tradition of providing free admission to the estate on George Washington's Birthday. On February 22, 1942, about 4,000 people toured the estate, and many more listened to a radio broadcast entitled "George Washington in Education and Spiritual Faith."
Once the pendulum began to swing in favor of the Allies, restrictions started to ease, and a boat service was established to transport visitors from Washington. Visitation jumped to some 345,000 people, which was a double-edged sword; although profits skyrocketed, the skeletal staff could not control the crowds. Wall was forced to ask the military police to "come in on Sundays and holidays to help maintain order."
Winston Churchill at Mount Vernon
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill visited Mount Vernon on January 1, 1942, accompanied by President Franklin Roosevelt, the British Ambassador to the United States Lord Halifax, and other officials.
Guest book entry from September 8, 1943
Mount Vernon’s guest books, signed by VIP visitors since the 1890s, are filled with autographs of notable and influential people. These visits are often for diplomatic or military purposes, but occasionally a name catches your eye for a different reason.
The large, loopy signature of Lucille Ball is easily recognizable, and then you realize she is not the only movie star from Hollywood’s golden age represented on this page.
Others include Harpo Marx, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Mickey Rooney, and James Cagney, who all stopped by Mount Vernon with the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Morgenthau, as part of a larger tour of Washington, D.C.
They were here to assist with U.S. war bond rallies, which was common for celebrities during WWII.
A Return to Normalcy
With the end of the war in sight, operations at Mount Vernon slowly returned to normal. A sense of patriotism seemed to pervade the nation, a fact reflected in Mount Vernon's increasing attendance. After the construction of countless new highways in the two decades following the war, Mount Vernon's popularity would reach its all-time high in 1964, when a remarkable 1.35 million people toured the estate. That record has yet to be broken.
Mount Vernon After World War II
See what the Mansion's interior looked like in the years following World War II.
Mount Vernon Through Time
World War II was just one of many chapters in the MVLA's long, resilient history.
Learn More