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The White
House Burns: The War of 1812

The White House after the 1814 fire
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Abraham Lincoln talks to an officer at dusk
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In August 1814, President
James Madison (1809-1817) learned that 4,000 British sailors were
entering the Chesapeake Bay and threatening to attack Washington.
Madison cancelled plans to visit his Virginia plantation home and
gathered his advisors together at the White House. One hundred soldiers
camped out in front of the Presidents House to protect Madison
while he planned the defense of the nations capital. Madison
and his wife Dolley tried to keep life at home as normal as possible.
That was impossible after August 24, when Madison spotted British
troops marching toward the city. He sent a message to his wife to
leave immediately. Although many panicked, Dolley Madison gathered
together important papers and a huge portrait of George Washington
and made sure they were taken and hidden away. The enemy entered
the White House that evening and set it on fire, but not until they
enjoyed a dinner that had been prepared for Madison. The White House
was almost completely destroyed, and Madison did not come back until
several days later. Some members of Congress considered rebuilding
the Presidents House in another city, but Madison moved quickly
and firmly to ensure that the White House was rebuilt on the original
site, using the walls that were still standing. Madison wanted to
show the world that a young America would not be scared off by threats
from other nations.
The Lincoln White House and the Civil War
The Civil
War made Abraham Lincolns White House (1861-1865) the center
of attention for the entire country. From his first days as president,
most of Lincolns decisions related to bringing the southern
states back into the Union. He seldom left the nations capital
during the war, and could not forget that Washington and the White
House were targets of the Confederate forces. Until Union troops
captured Alexandria, Virginia, the enemy was just across the Potomac
River from the capital. Wherever he went, bodyguards protected Lincoln.
His wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, feared that he would be attacked. Lincoln
said that the first two or three threats to his life made him "a
little uncomfortable . . . [but] there is nothing like getting used
to things." The war hit close to home when Lincolns personal
guard, Elmer Elsworth, was killed early in the war while on a mission
that captured Alexandria. Lincoln would keep in touch with his generals
on the battlefields by using the telegraph in the War Department
building, which was next door to the White House. The president
would go down a private stair, walk through the basement and a colonnade,
and stroll across the White House lawn. Lincoln knew that the White
House was a symbol. He wanted to make sure that the country knew
that he was determined to finish the war and keep the southern states
in the Union. Because of this he kept the White House open to those
who wanted to discuss the war, or to tour the house. This showed
Americans that the government was confident that the United States
would survive.
McKinley's
"War Room" during the Spanish-American War
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McKinleys
War Room: The Spanish-American War For
the first time, the White House became a communications
center in wartime during the Spanish-American War of 1898.
President William McKinley (1897-1901) was busy at the White
House where foreign diplomats and members of Congress flocked
to discuss Americas poor relations with Spain. When
the ship U.S.S. Maine exploded in Havana Harbor,
McKinley received the information from a telephone call
at three in the morning. A special telegraph office was
established on the second floor of the White House. Members
of the staff called it the "War Room." The office
allowed McKinley to contact the Army and Navy, and to chart
the progress of the war on maps pinned up on the walls of
the War Room. Usually, the telegraphs were at the War Department,
but McKinley brought them to the office of the commander-in-chief.
The war, which lasted only three months, was a major victory
for the United States. The French ambassador commented that
"much of the rapid success of the United States"
was due to the communication equipment available to the
president.
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Wilson's White
House flock
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The
Wilsons Share in Sacrifice: World War I
On April 2,
1917, thousands of flag-waving Americans stood in the pouring
rain along Pennsylvania Avenue as President Woodrow Wilson
(1913-1921) drove to the Capitol by car. Like the rest of
the country, the drenched citizens were waiting for Wilson
to make an important speech. "The world must be made
safe for democracy," Wilson told Congress that evening.
The president asked for Congress to declare war on Germany.
Wilson realized that his family must make sacrifices just
like all American families. A red, white and blue sticker
was attached to a White House window, indicating that the
Wilsons observed "meatless and wheatless" days
in order to save food for U.S. troops and starving Europeans.
A "victory garden" was planted at the White House
to grow vegetables for the Wilsons meals. The president
even brought sheep to graze on the White House lawn. The
wool from the sheep was sold to benefit the Red Cross. Woodrow
and Edith Wilson led by example. By doing so, the White
House symbolized the efforts that had to be made at home
when the U.S. was trying to win a world war.
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Americans
gather at the White House on December 7, 1941 after the
news of the Pearl Harbor attack
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The
White House: Target? Franklin Roosevelt and World War II
Crowds of angry
Americans surrounded the White House on December 7, 1941,
as news spread of the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor.
How was President Franklin Roosevelt (1933-1945) going to
respond? They had an answer the next day, when Roosevelt
described the 7th as "a day that shall live
in infamy." Congress declared war on Japan and a few
days later the U.S. was at war with Germany. From a room
in the White House basement called the Map Room (because
of maps showing the progress of soldiers and ships), Roosevelt
kept in touch with U.S. military forces and leaders of the
Allies. He also met in the White House with foreign leaders,
such as Britains Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
Worried about the safety of the president and his family,
the Secret Service put bulletproof glass in the windows
of the presidents Oval Office, sentries patrolled
the roof with machine guns, and builders constructed a bomb
shelter under the East Wing. The Secret Service also ordered
many of the windows painted black. Heavy black curtains
covered others. If enemy planes flew in to bomb the White
House at night, the Secret Service wanted to block all light
coming from the structure. For the same reason, Roosevelt
was warned that it was too dangerous for him to light up
a Christmas tree in Lafayette Park across the street from
the White House as he usually did. But the president insisted
on having a tree. He did not want Americans to think their
leader was a coward. A tree was placed on the South Lawn
of the White House, where the Secret Service could keep
a close eye on Roosevelt and his guest, Winston Churchill.
The world leaders gave the word, and the colored lights
blazed. To this day, the president lights a tree on the
South Lawn.
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President
Truman announces the end of the Second World War, 1945
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Truman
and the Atomic Bomb
People all over
the world still have strong feelings about President Harry
S. Trumans decision to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. Truman (1945-1953) gave the order because
he thought it would end the war quickly, and he would save
thousands of lives that would be lost if U.S. troops had
to invade Japan and fight to a finish. On June 18, 1945,
Truman held a meeting in the White House. He listened to
different advisors discuss the best way to force the enemy
to surrender. When Truman wanted to know the number of estimated
casualties those who might be killed or wounded
no one could agree on a number. Already, the island invasions
of Iwo Jima and Okinawa had proven to be very bloody. When
compared to invading the country of Japan, it was thought
that the casualties would be enormous. By the end of the
meeting, it was agreed that the U.S. should begin by invading
Kyushu, an island located just to the south of the Japanese
homeland. Depending on how successful the troops were in
Kyushu, they would then plan further attacks. Soon after
the White House meeting, though, an alternative became available.
On July 16, the first atomic bomb was detonated in Alamogordo,
New Mexico as a test. With this new weapon, Truman decided
against an invasion and ordered an atomic bomb to be dropped
on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in early
August 1945. On the evening of August 14, reporters crammed
into the Oval Office to hear a special announcement from
the president. An excited Truman told reporters that Japan
had just surrendered. The Second World War was over.
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An American
soldier comforts a comrade in the Korean War
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The
Cold War Turns Hot: Korea
On the evening
of June 24, 1950, President Harry S. Truman (1945-1953)
was interrupted by a phone call from Secretary of State
Dean Acheson. Truman was visiting relatives in Missouri
at the time. "Mr. President," Acheson said, "I
have very serious news. The North Koreans have invaded South
Korea." North Koreas government was communist,
and supported by China and the Soviet Union. Truman returned
to Washington the next day. He was concerned that the attack
was the beginning of an effort to spread communism through
a third world war. As soon as he arrived, he gathered his
best military and political experts in his residence at
Blair House. (At the time, the White House was being renovated
and the Trumans lived in a townhouse across the street.)
They decided that the attack was a test. The Soviet Union
wanted to see how the United States would react. Truman
decided that America would draw the line: the U.S. would
fight to keep communism from spreading into South Korea.
By the end of the month, naval, air and ground troops were
sent to the area. The war lasted three years, but there
was no clear victory over communism.
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President
Johnson listens to a taped report from his son-in-law, Charles
Robb, which describes the fighting in Vietnam
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LBJ
and Vietnam
One of the most
important steps taken by President Lyndon Baines Johnson
(1963-1969) to stop the Vietnam War occurred on March 31,
1968. From the Oval Office, he shocked the nation by announcing
on television that he would not run for president again.
He declared: "I shall not seek, and I will not accept,
the nomination of my party for another term as your president."
By doing so, he hoped to begin Americas healing. Not
since the Civil War had Americans been so divided by a presidents
use of military force. Many blamed Johnson for the deadly
costs of the war. By telling Americans he would not run
for president, he was removing himself from the conflict
so that someone else might solve it. The Vietnam War did
not begin with Johnson and did not end with him, but he
is known as the leader who increased the number of troops
sent to Southeast Asia. Over a half million troops were
in Vietnam. Most Americans thought the U.S. was winning
the war to stop communisms spread there until January
1968, when the North Vietnamese won a number of important
battles. Americans would still be fighting in Vietnam for
four years after Johnson left the White House. But his speech
in March 1968 told Americans that the process of ending
the centurys most unpopular war had begun.
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President
and Mrs. Bush visit American troops in Saudi Arabia during
Thanksgiving, 1990
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The
Gulf War
The world was
stunned when Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein ordered his troops
to invade Middle East neighbor, Kuwait, on August 2, 1990.
The region supplies oil to many of the worlds most
powerful nations, including the United States. Not only
did Iraq threaten the free trade of oil, the invasion of
Kuwait was without cause. A few days later, President George
Bush (1989-1993) stepped off his helicopter and onto the
South Lawn of the White House. Reporters asked him how he
was going to react to Husseins aggression. "This
will not stand," he declared. First, Bush arranged
for American troops to take part in Operation Desert Shield.
Desert Shield was meant to discourage Hussein from moving
past Kuwait into Saudi Arabia, another oil-rich nation.
At the end of October 1992, the president doubled the number
of troops in the region to about 500,000. It became clear
that the United States and its United Nations allies were
preparing to push Iraq out of Kuwait, if necessary. The
United Nations gave the authority to use military force
if Hussein refused to pull out his army by January 15, 1991.
That day came and went, and Husseins forces had not
moved. The United Nations then launched Operation Desert
Storm, which included heavy air attacks. On February 24,
1991 troops followed on the ground. In four days, Iraq had
been expelled from Kuwait and President Bush gave the word
that the fighting should end. The victory was quick and
completed the mission to send Iraqi troops back to Iraq.
Some thought that the United Nations troops should have
pushed on into Iraq and attempted to destroy that countrys
ability to invade her neighbors in the future. Over time,
historians will look back and discuss the Gulf War and what
President Bush and the United Nations troops accomplished.
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