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Our American Stories

How the Senate Candy Desk Became a Capitol Hill Tradition

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2026

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, in 1965, California Senator George Murphy started a sweet tradition, literally. He began stocking his desk on the Senate floor with candy to share with his colleagues. That desk, now known as the “Senate Candy Desk,” remains a Capitol Hill tradition to this day. Jesse Edwards shares the history, mystery, and origins behind one of the Senate’s most interesting traditions.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:04.3

In the Big Rock Candy Mountains, the jails are made of tin,

0:09.2

and you can walk right out again as soon as you are in.

0:14.1

There ain't no short-handle shovels, no axes, saws or picks.

0:18.9

I'm going to stay where you sleep all day, where they hung the turk that invented work in the big rock candy mountains.

0:26.8

This is our American stories, and now Jesse Edwards brings us the story of a desk, unlike any story of a desk that you've ever heard before.

0:39.9

August 24th, 1814 marks one of the darkest episodes in the War of 1812.

0:47.0

On that day, British troops marched on Washington, burning public buildings, including the U.S. Capitol.

0:55.0

Among the losses in the Capitol were the Senate chamber in all its contents.

0:59.0

Reconstruction took until 1819, and when Senators again took their seats in the rebuilt chamber,

1:05.0

they occupied 48 new desks and chairs custom made by Thomas Constantine, a New York cabinet maker.

1:12.7

Constantine was paid $34 for each Senate desk and 46 for each chair.

1:18.7

Today, all of Constantine's desks remain in use in the current Senate chamber,

1:23.5

although his chairs have been replaced.

1:26.2

As new states entered the Union, desks of similar design were ordered from other captain makers,

1:31.3

although the four newest desks, those constructed for Alaska and Hawaii, were built in the Senate Cabinet Shop.

1:38.3

There are noticeable differences in shape and dimension among the 100 desks.

1:43.3

These result from the original

1:44.5

semicircular arrangement in the old Senate chamber. A desk's shape reflected its position in

1:50.1

the room. Isle desks were narrow and angled, while the center was wider and square. If the

1:56.1

oldest were arranged in the original layout, it is believed they would have formed a perfect

...

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