The Washington DC Embassy that’s Larger than the Size of the White House Compound
"Cleveland Park Historic District" by dbking from Washington, DC - Twin Oaks Estate (Rear)Uploaded by Gary Dee. Licensed under CC BY 2.0 via Commons.
Even in a city renowned for its commanding estates, Twin
Oaks stands out for its understated beauty and historic pedigree. Yet, while
the gala events held at other such grand homes are routine fodder for the
social pages of Washington’s newspapers, the owners of this particular
residence tend to keep their own council. Reason: It is, in fact, a symbolic
embassy. A virtually invisible embassy but an embassy nonetheless.
In 1971 Taiwan lost its representation in the United Nations and in 1979 the United States recognized China. But within 90
days the Congress signed the Taiwan Relations Act in April of that year, which
authorized the "continuation of commercial, cultural and other relations
between the people of the United States and the people on Taiwan." Ever
since then the US and the island-province have maintained a close, though
discreet relationship. Taipei and Washington have long consulted on security affairs,
as well as on cultural and educational exchanges. Technically, though, Taiwan
hasn’t had an actual embassy in Washington for 36 years, its facsimile - the
awkwardly titled “Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office” in fact
fills that precise role, and its staff works hard to keep Taiwan’s views in
focus in the US capitol.
But every autumn senior Washington-based Taiwanese officials
celebrate their Double Tenth (October 10th) National Day by hosting a lavish
reception at Twin Oaks.
Though the Taiwanese
have had to forfeit their official diplomatic standing, don’t feel too bad for
them.
After all, they managed to hold tight to Twin Oaks, a
strikingly elegant 26-room Georgian style mansion, which serves as the
non-official residence of the non- official ambassador. Located on a leafy,
tree-shaded property in a posh neighborhood in northern Washington, its 18.24 acres
are considered the largest privately owned estate in Washington, and slightly
larger than the White House compound.
Aside from its beautiful bucolic setting, all of Twin Oaks
owners have had impeccable pedigrees. Set gently atop a hill once owned by a
one-legged general who fought in the Revolution, the manor itself was built in
1888, by a leading architect of the time for the founder of the National
Geographic Society. The cost: $30,000. Years later the house came into the
family of Alexander Graham Bell, the Scots-born inventor of the telephone. By
the 1930s, Bell’s daughter, Grace, was renting the house to senior government
officials as a place to escape the humid Washington summers.
Then, in 1937, Grace Bell rented Twin Oaks to Thomas C. T.
Wang, the official representative of China’s Chiang Kai-shek government. For
nearly a decade the house was leased by the Chiang government, until 1947, when
Ambassador Wellington Koo decided to buy the estate for $350,000 - to use it as
a permanent residence for China’s ambassadors to Washington.
From that year until 1978, a total of nine Taiwan
ambassadors lived happily at Twin Oaks where they entertained countless
thousands of US dignitaries, including presidents Eisenhower and Ford, CIA
founder John Foster Dulles, and numerous senators and governors. However, in
1978, when Jimmy Carter announced that the US would formally recognize the
People’s Republic, there were fears that Beijing would lay claim to all Chinese
assets in the US, so Taipei’s representatives quickly sold the estate to the
Friends of Free China Association for $10 (yes ten dollars) to a foundation set up for
the purpose under the co-chairmanship of the late Senator Barry Goldwater. But
the passing of the Taiwan Relations Act guaranteed that all property held by
the Taiwan government as of December 31, 1978, would remain the property of
Taiwan.
Several restrictions, however, were placed on the use of the
estate out of deference to Beijing, many of which remain today. Taiwan
representatives are permitted to entertain at the estate, but may not live
there, or even sleep there. And diplomatic feathers can be easily ruffled. In
January there were complaints from mainland Chinese officials when the flag of
the Republic of China (Taiwan’s official name) was raised on January 1, 2015,
to mark New Year’s Day. A senior in the Obama administration denied knowing
anything about the incident. Likewise, the State Department claimed to be
unaware of the naughty flag-rising.
Despite such political-based boundaries, over the decades
Twin Oaks continues to be the show-residence of the Taiwanese government, and
has since quietly hosted many thousand Washington VIPs for lavish lunches and
dinners, including senior officials of the first president Bush, as well as
those of President Clinton and former Secretary of State Colin Powell.
In the mid-1980s, the then 100-year-old house underwent
extensive structural repairs. But these were carried out with painstaking care
to preserve the house’s charming century old wooden interiors, and hand-carved
stairways and balusters. In recognition of the fact that the house is the last
remaining Georgian-style estate of its type in Washington, in 1986 Twin Oaks
was listed on the National Register for Historic Sites.
Today, the interior furnishings include classic Chinese blue
& white carpets in the sitting room. And in the formal dining room there is
an intricately-carved antique rosewood dinning set believed to have been sent
to the St. Louis World’s Fair of 1904 by the Empress Dowager. Its striking
dragon motif suggests that this beautifully preserved set was made specifically
for the Imperial household.
Elsewhere in the house is an original Tiffany chandelier,
and scores of precious Chinese porcelains. But Twin Oak’s prize possession is
an 1897 painting which, according to a noted Taiwanese historian, was made by
the celebrated Empress Dowager Tzu-Hsi as a gift.
On the second and
third floors are large bedrooms. But these are all closed to visitors.