While touring the White House Visitor's Center, I saw lots of interesting items and photos, and I learned many new things about the home of our Presidents. Because we vote on who gets to sit in the "big chair" every four years, the White House has seen quite a lot of moving crews. Each First Family brings their own collection of belongings, and new items are routinely added to the collection of state belongings.
No, I didn't find a gondola in the White House, but I thought this "vessel" might be interesting and worth a post.

Grant was an icon of the Civil War, personal friend to Abraham Lincoln, and a strong proponent of civil rights.
Most folks know him best though as the guy on the front of the fifty-dollar bill.
The sculptural centerpiece is known as "Hiawatha's Boat" and it was crafted in 1871 by silversmiths at the Gorham Manufacturing Company in Providence, Rhode Island. First Lady Julia Grant selected it at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876.

"depicts Henry Wadsworth Longellow's character, legendary founder of the Iroquois league, steering his masted canoe on the water of a mirror-glass plateau."
Along the base of the piece, raised letters spell out:
"All alone went Hiawatha through the clear transparent water"

I'm not sure whether a real boat like this ever existed, but the people in Providence sure dreamed up an interesting image.