Senate.Gov. The United States Senate
Find Your Senators
 
Search
SenatorsCommitteesLegislation and RecordsArts and HistoryVisitorsReference
The United States CapitolTelegraphSenate Floor
Virtual Reference Desk
Public Disclosure
Nominations
Statistics and Lists
Capitol Camera
Live video stream of the U.S. Capitol dome available here.
This Week in Senate History
Henry Clay by Allyn Cox
June 29, 1852

Legendary Kentucky Senator Henry Clay died of tuberculosis in Washington at the age of seventy-five. Known by many as "the Great Compromiser," Clay played a major role in directing and influencing domestic and foreign policy during his forty-six years of public service. He began his Senate career in 1806 at age 29, just short of the constitutionally required minimum age of thirty.

More»
2009 Session Schedule
Scheduled Hearings
Active Legislation
Votes
Floor Schedule

Monday, Jul 06, 2009

2:00 p.m.: Convene and begin a period of morning business.

Thereafter, resume consideration of H.R.2918, the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act.


Previous Meeting

Thursday, Jun 25, 2009

The Senate convened at 9:30 a.m. and adjourned at 7:30 p.m. 2 record votes were taken.


Daily Digest(latest issue)


Senate Calendar(latest issue)


Executive Calendar(latest issue, PDF format)

An Historic Painting, Rediscovered: Henry Clay in the U.S. Senate

On May 23, 2009 Henry Clay in the U.S. Senate by Phineas Staunton arrived at the Capitol on a beautiful, sunlit morning while a small crowd gathered to watch.


Installation in U.S. Capitol of Henry Clay in the U.S. Senate Installation in U.S. Capitol of Henry Clay in the U.S. Senate
The painting arrivesInstalling the painting

Nearly 140 years earlier, the painting lost the competition for which it was created. In 1865 as the Civil War drew to a close, the Kentucky state legislature launched a competition for a life-size portrait of Henry Clay for its state capitol. New York artist Phineas Staunton unsuccessfully entered the competition. The painting returned to the artist's hometown of Le Roy, New York and, over time, fell into obscurity.

In 1901 the painting was sold for just $60 to the Le Roy Union Free School where schoolboys tossed balls at it during study hall, as evidenced by the many concentric rings of damage etched onto the painting's surface.

In fact, the painting suffered other ravages of time: fragile and flaking paint, stains, multiple tears, and brittle canvas. When the Le Roy Historical Society offered the painting to the Senate, the work needed extensive conservation. Both the painting and its original frame, made of much-coveted Honduras mahogany, were painstakingly restored and the historically important painting was welcomed to the U.S. Capitol for installation in the East Brumidi Stairway.

Henry Clay in the U.S. Senate depicts Clay in the year 1851, posed in the Old Senate Chamber with 12 contemporaries and Senate colleagues—a roll call of legendary figures. It is one of only three known paintings of the Senate set in its venerable early Chamber.

Learn more about this acquisition and its fascinating past at http://www.senate.gov/Clay1851.

Past Feature Articles

Capitol Tours
Photo Capitol Hill

FOR INFORMATION ON CAPITOL TOURS, PLEASE CALL 202-226-8000

The visitors page is your source for information on Capitol tours, maps of the area and visiting Washington, D.C.