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What
Does the President Do?
Every
four years, Americans decide who will live and work in the White
House. They vote for the president of the United States. For one
person, the president has a lot of power. He also has much responsibility.
What does the president do?
> He makes sure that citizens obey laws.
> He is in charge of all armed forces.
> He makes agreements, called treaties, with other countries.
> He decides how America will act toward other countries and
he represents our country here and around the world.
> When Congress sends him a new law, he may or may not agree
to sign it.
> He lets Congress know about new laws he thinks should be passed.
Since so much power is given to one person, we hope that the president
is a good leader. We hope that he uses his power to make the lives
of Americans better.
President Obama at work
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Where
Does the President Work?
Do
you know anyone who works at home? Many people do. The
president works in his home, the White House. In the White
House, the president has an office. It is called the Oval
Office. In over two hundred years, 43 presidents have
worked in the White House. They have made important decisions
from the house at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington,
D.C.
Lets
meet some of the presidents and learn about the important
work they have done in the White House.
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Thomas Jefferson and his mockingbird
drawing by Louis S. Glanzman, 1970

Meriwether Lewis
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Thomas
Jefferson, 3rd President, 1801-1809
Lewis
and Clark Explore the West
Thomas
Jeffersons office was part of the room that is now
called the State Dining Room. He had a long worktable
with drawers on both sides. On the walls he put maps.
He also had globes and lots of paper for writing. Jeffersons
pet mockingbird lived in a cage in his office, but sometimes
the bird flew around the room. Jefferson could see the
Potomac River when he looked out his windows.
Jeffersons
office was very private. It was a place for working and
learning. The office was also called a "library."
Who learned in his office? Jefferson, of course. But Jefferson
also taught a 27-year-old student named Meriwether Lewis.
Lewis was Jeffersons secretary, but he did not write
many letters. Jefferson hired Lewis because he knew how
to live outdoors. Jefferson wanted Lewis to explore the
western lands that the president had purchased for America.
The Louisiana Purchase gave the United States millions
of acres west of the Mississippi River. No one really
knew how much land was out there or who lived there.
Jefferson
taught Lewis about plants and animals. He taught him math
and surveying, too, so Lewis could make maps of the new
land. Meriwether Lewis and his friend William Clark explored
the west. They sent Jefferson some of the things they
found: stuffed animals, antlers, Indian costumes, plants,
and snakeskins. Jefferson put these things in the White
House and invited people to come see them and learn about
the new land. He wanted Americans to be excited about
their growing country.
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Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln's
signature on the Emancipation Proclamation
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Abraham
Lincoln, 16th President, 1861-1865
The
Emancipation Proclamation
One
of the most important jobs of a president is to write
and sign his name on papers, called documents. One of
the most important documents ever written by a president
is called the Emancipation Proclamation. It was signed
by President Abraham Lincoln in his White House office
on January 1, 1863. Emancipation means being free.
Proclamation is a way of telling people something.
Abraham Lincoln was telling people that the slaves were
free. He wrote the paper and signed it during the Civil
War.
January
1, 1863 was New Years Day. On New Years Day,
the White House was open to anyone who wanted to meet
the president and his wife. Abraham Lincoln shook hands
with visitors all morning. Then he walked upstairs to
the second floor of the White House. He took his pen and
signed his name at the bottom of the Emancipation Proclamation.
His hand was wobbly when he signed it. This was a very
powerful thing to do. It meant that the Civil War was
a fight for freedom. The freedom of black slaves. It meant
that our country stood for freedom for Americans whether
they were black or white. Sometimes, a president can make
very big decisions that will make life better for Americans.
This is what Abraham Lincoln did when he wrote the Emancipation
Proclamation.
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Woodrow Wilson

Sheep
on the White House lawn
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Woodrow
Wilson, 28th President, 1913-1921
Helping
American Soldiers
In
1917, President Woodrow Wilson sent American troops to
fight in World War I. He said that the world must "be
made safe for democracy." In a democracy, all the
people decide who will have power. Wilson wanted to make
sure that if a country wanted to be a democracy, another
nation would not stop them.
When
the United States goes to war, Americans support the men
and women who fight for us. One way to help our soldiers
is to sacrifice, or give up, some things we eat or buy.
The food we save or the clothes we dont buy can
be sent to the soldiers who are fighting far away from
home.
Good
leaders set good examples. President Wilson thought he
should set an example, so he planted a vegetable garden
at the White House. Instead of buying vegetables, the
Wilson family ate what they grew in the White House garden.
President Wilson also had sheep in his yard! The sheeps
wool was sold and the money was used to help pay for army
hospitals. President Wilson showed Americans that they
should sacrifice, too.
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President Kennedy and astronaut John Glenn, 1962
Richard Nixon
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John
F. Kennedy, 35th President, 1961-1963 and
Richard Nixon, 37th President, 1969-1973
Putting
a Man on the Moon
The
United States was a very proud country when American astronauts
first stepped on the moon on July 20, 1969. How did this
happen? President John Kennedy wanted America to be the
first country to have a man reach the moon. He wanted
to show that American scientists were the best in the
world. With presidents leading the way, it finally happened,
but it took eight years.
President
Richard Nixon spoke to the first astronauts on the moon.
"Hello, Neil and Buzz," he said. "Im
talking to you by telephone from the Oval Room at the
White House." President Nixon was speaking to Apollo
11 Commander Neil Armstrong and Pilot "Buzz"
Aldrin. Half a billion people around the world watched
on television as Armstrong stepped on the surface of the
moon. More Apollo spacecraft would fly to the moon over
the next three years. Now, American probes have gone to
the planet Mars. A probe is a spacecraft that flies with
no humans on board. A probe takes samples of soil and
rock and other information from planets and outer space.
It
takes many men and women working together to send a spacecraft,
probe, or shuttle to space. They can do great things if
they think their leader is supporting them. Americas
trips to space were successful because presidents thought
they were important and would teach us about the Earths
neighbors in space.
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