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Why is the White House white?
It has nothing to do
with the burning of the house by the British in 1814, although
every schoolchild is likely to have heard the story that way.
The building was first made white with lime-based whitewash in
1798, when its walls were finished, simply as a means of protecting
the porous stone from freezing. Why the house was subsequently
painted is not known. Perhaps presidents objected to the dirty
look as the whitewash wore away. The house acquired its nickname
early on. Congressman Abijah Bigelow wrote to a colleague on March
18, 1812 (three months before the United States entered war with
England): "There is much trouble at the White House, as we call
it, I mean the President's" (quoted in W. B. Bryan, "The Name
White House," Records of the Columbia Historical Society 34-35
[1932]: 308). The name, though in common use, remained a nickname
until September 1901, when Theodore Roosevelt made it official. |
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