Stewards of the iconic buildings and grounds of Capitol Hill since 1793.

Featured

A black and white photograph of the United States Capitol in 1846.
The history of the United States Capitol Building begins in 1793. Since then,...

Featured

A crowd of people visiting the Capitol during visitor hours
Please note: Many of these Capitol Hill buildings are working office buildings...

Featured

Painted portrait of Dr. William Thornton
The Architect of the Capitol (AOC) is the builder and steward of America’s...

Featured

Anne Frank Tree and marker planted in the ground in front of the Capitol
Anne Frank Tree on Capitol Grounds

House Bronze Doors

House Bronze Doors at the east portico entrance of the U.S. Capitol's House wing
Thomas Crawford
Artist

14 feet 7 inches high
7 feet 4 inches wide

Overview 

The bronze doors at the east portico entrance of the U.S. Capitol's House wing were designed by the American sculptor Thomas Crawford in Rome in 1855–1857. Upon Crawford's death William H. Rinehart executed the models from the sculptor's sketches in 1863–1867. The models were shipped from Leghorn, Italy, in 1867 but remained stored in the Crypt of the Capitol Building until 1903, when they were cast by Melzar H. Mosman of Chicopee, Massachusetts. The doors were installed in 1905. They are 14 feet 7 inches high and 7 feet 4 inches wide.

The bronze doors of the House wing are comparable to the Senate doors. Each valve consists of three panels and a medallion depicting significant events in American history. The descriptions below start at the top of each valve and proceed downward.

Sculptor Thomas Crawford also modeled the Senate Bronze Doors and the Statue of Freedom atop the Capitol Dome.

Left Valve
Wyoming Massacre, Pennsylvania. During the American Revolution a large proportion of the men of Wyoming Valley, Pennsylvania, joined the Continental Army. A number of Loyalists also remained there, and in 1778 they were joined by British troops and their Indian allies. The settlers who had taken refuge in Forty Fort, near Wilkes-Barre, were outnumbered 1100 to 400. On July 3, 1778, after a desperate battle, the settlers were forced to capitulate. The massacre followed.

Battle of Lexington. General Gage, the British Commander in Boston, heard that the Colonists were collecting arms and ammunition. He determined to prevent rebellion by seizing these supplies. The colonists were warned and during the night of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere and William Dawes rode to alert the Minutemen. As the British troops were marching toward Concord, they met the small militia; here, on April 19, 1775, occurred the famous "shot heard 'round the World" — the beginning of the Revolutionary War.

Presentation of Flag and Medal to General Nathanael Greene. In 1778, Great Britain shifted the attack upon the colonies to the South. Nathanael Greene replaced General Gates as Commander of the colonial army in the South; with the help of loyal American frontiersmen, his forces raided the British camps. This panel depicts General Greene receiving a medal and flag after the Battle of Eutaw Springs on September 8, 1781, in which the British were expelled from South Carolina.

Medallion — Death of General Montgomery. Late in 1775, Congress sent a two-column military expedition to Canada, one column under Richard Montgomery via New York and the other under Benedict Arnold via Maine, hoping to arouse the French Canadians to revolt against the British. The expedition failed. In the attack on Quebec, December 31, 1775, General Montgomery was killed.


Right Valve
Public Reading of the Declaration of Independence at Philadelphia. On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence. The first public reading was on July 8, 1776, when the Declaration of Independence was officially proclaimed in Philadelphia.

The Signing of the Treaty at Paris Between the United States and Great Britain. The American Revolution ended in October 1781, but it was not until September 3, 1783, that the Treaty of Paris was signed. The panel depicts the negotiations between the United States commissioners and the British representatives. Britain's liberal concessions to the United States were due largely to the efforts of Benjamin Franklin.

Washington's Farewell to His Officers in New York. After the Treaty of Peace was signed, Washington prepared to leave New York for Philadelphia. His officers of the war years gathered at Fraunces Tavern on December 4, 1783, to say good-bye. When he entered the room he could scarcely command his voice. He spoke briefly, and they drank a toast. Washington requested that each man come forward and take his hand. General Knox, who stood nearest, was first to do so. The panel depicts this touching farewell.

Medallion — Benjamin Franklin in His Studio. Benjamin Franklin, an inventor, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, a Member of the Continental Congress, and Minister to France from 1776 to 1785, is shown in his studio studying electricity.

Last Updated: October 14, 2014