It is difficult to document the origin of the Senate’s gilded wood Eagle and Shield,
 which currently adorns the dais in the Old Senate Chamber. An 1809 plan
 for the room shows that architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe intended to 
hang an eagle crest and elaborate canopy over the vice president’s desk.
 His drawing also includes an oval cartouche or escutcheon of 
unspecified design on the eagle’s breast. However, Latrobe’s bird, with 
drooping wings, lacks the majesty and drama of the soaring eagle that 
exists today in the Old Senate Chamber. It is unclear whether his design
 ever became reality–-any evidence would have been destroyed when 
British troops burned the Capitol in 1814.
                                                            Further, 
records of the art in the Old Senate Chamber are notably scarce. The 
first reliable evidence of an eagle and shield located in this room 
appears in an 1838 article in the Daily National Intelligencer. 
It describes a “rich burnished shield, with an outer margin in the old 
French style, surmounted by an eagle of the size of life” hanging above 
the vice president’s dais in the room. [1] From 
this report it appears that the shield we know today existed from at 
least 1838, although the official records remain unclear on the matter. 
In 1846, Senate records indicate payment for “taking down curtains and 
drapery & irons for Eagle &
shield.” The eagle and shield also 
appear in two mid-19th-century engravings: Thomas Doney’s United States Senate Chamber, published in 1846, and Robert Whitechurch’s The United States Senate, A.D. 1850,
 dated 1855. In addition, Senate records note that in 1847 a John Wagner
 was paid $10 for “carving & gilding 1 scroll for eagle,” although 
the Whitechurch engraving shows no such ribbon in the eagle’s beak.
                                                            After the
 Senate left the room and moved into its new Chamber in 1859, the 
Supreme Court of the United States used the space. Photographs from this
 period show that the shield was placed in the outer vestibule, over the
 door to the Chamber, while the eagle remained in the room. The ornate 
canopy that hung over the vice president’s desk was removed, and the 
eagle, now perched on a ribbon-draped horizontal bar, was Eagle and Shield 
remained in the same locations they occupied during the Court years–-the
 eagle inside the room on the gallery balustrade, and the shield outside
 over the Chamber’s door. In 1976 the two pieces were reunited inside 
the room for the restoration of the Old Senate Chamber.
affixed to the
 gallery balustrade above the chief justice’s desk. The Court occupied 
the room until 1935, when it moved to its new building across the street
 from the Capitol. For several more decades the 
                                                            Numerous artistic renderings of eagles are found in the United States Capitol, but the Eagle and Shield
 in the Old Senate Chamber has become the enduring symbol of the Senate.
 In 1838 Daniel Webster immortalized the Senate’s eagle as an icon of 
American patriotism when delivering one of the impassioned speeches for 
which he was famous. From the floor of the Senate, with the gilded eagle
 gazing down on him from above the vice president’s dais, he proclaimed,
 “We have made these struggles here, in the national councils, with the 
old flag, the true American flag, the Eagle, and the Stars and Stripes, 
waving over the chamber in which we sit.” [2]

 
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