The catafalque was hastily constructed in 1865 to support the casket of Abraham Lincoln while the president's body lay in state in the Rotunda. The catafalque has since been used for all those who have lain in state in the Capitol Rotunda, as listed below. When not in use, the catafalque is kept in a specially constructed display area in the Exhibition Hall of the Capitol Visitor Center.
No law, written rule, or regulation specifies who may lie in state; use of the Rotunda is controlled by concurrent action of the House and Senate. Any person who has rendered distinguished service to the nation may lie in state if the family so wishes and Congress approves. In the case of unknown soldiers, the president or the appropriate branch of the armed forces initiates the action.
Senators and representatives have lain in state on the catafalque elsewhere in the U.S. Capitol, and Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase was placed on the catafalque in the Supreme Court Room in the Capitol on May 11, 1873. The catafalque has been used in the Supreme Court Building for the lying in repose of former Chief Justice Earl Warren on July 11–12, 1974; former Justice Thurgood Marshall, January 27, 1993; former Chief Justice Warren Earl Burger, June 28, 1995; former Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., July 28, 1997; Justice Harry A. Blackmun, March 8, 1999; and Chief Justice William Rehnquist, September 6–7, 2005. It was also used in the Department of Commerce building on April 9–10, 1996, for the lying in state of Secretary of Commerce Ronald H. Brown.
The catafalque is a simple base of rough pine boards nailed together and covered with black cloth. Although the base and platform have occasionally been altered to accommodate the larger size of modern coffins and for the ease of the attending military personnel, it is basically the same today as it was in Lincoln's time. Presently the catafalque measures 7 feet 1 inch (216 cm) long, 2 feet 6 inches (76 cm) wide, and 2 feet (61 cm) high. The attached base is 8 feet 10 inches (269 cm) long, 4 feet 3-1/2 inches (131 cm) wide, and 2 inches (5 cm) high. The platform is 11 feet 1 inch (338 cm) long, 6 feet (183 cm) wide, and 9-1/4 inches (23.5 cm) high. Although the cloth covering the catafalque has been replaced several times, the style of the drapery is similar to that used in 1865.
A list of those who have lain in state on the catafalque in the Capitol Rotunda appears below:
Name
|
Lay in State
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
April 19-21, 1865
|
Thaddeus Stevens
|
August 13-14, 1868
|
Charles Sumner
|
March 13, 1874
|
Henry Wilson
|
November 25-26, 1875
|
James Abram Garfield
|
September 21-23, 1881
|
John Alexander Logan
|
December 30-31, 1886
|
William McKinley, Jr.
|
September 17, 1901
|
Pierre Charles L'Enfant
(re-interment)
|
April 28, 1909
|
George Dewey
|
January 20, 1917
|
Unknown Soldier of World War I
|
November 9-11, 1921
|
Warren Gamaliel Harding
|
August 8, 1923
|
William Howard Taft
|
March 11, 1930
|
John Joseph Pershing
|
July 18-19, 1948
|
Robert Alphonso Taft
|
August 2-3, 1953
|
Unknown Soldiers of World War II
and the Korean War
|
May 28-30, 1958
|
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
|
November 24-25, 1963
|
Douglas MacArthur
|
April 8-9, 1964
|
Herbert Clark Hoover
|
October 23-25, 1964
|
Dwight David Eisenhower
|
March 30-31, 1969
|
Everett McKinley Dirksen
|
September 9-10, 1969
|
J. Edgar Hoover
|
May 3-4, 1972
|
Lyndon Baines Johnson
|
January 24-25, 1973
|
Hubert Horatio Humphrey
|
January 14-15, 1978
|
Unknown Soldier of Vietnam Era
|
May 25-28, 1984
|
Claude Denson Pepper
|
June 1-2, 1989
|
Ronald Wilson Reagan
|
June 9-11, 2004
|
Gerald R. Ford, Jr.
|
December 30, 2006–January 2, 2007
|