Once
the White House was opened to public egg rolling festivities
in 1878, first families had to decide whether they were
going to join the throng of celebrants or just organize
and play host to it. Previously, the South Lawn was reserved
for their own private Eastertide activities. Now the very
grounds represented a famous rite of spring for the nation’s
capital. President Benjamin Harrison gave his grandson
limited exposure to the crowds. The Clevelands kept their
daughters Ruth and Esther in the house away from the crowd.
The Theodore Roosevelt clan studied the action from the
South Portico. First Lady Edith Wilson invited family
friends and cabinet members to join in the fun. Two Hoover
grandchildren spoke from the bandstand for the “talkies”
in 1931.
The
Harding, Coolidge, F. D. Roosevelt and George W. Bush
administrations:
Library of Congress, White House
Source
Credits: C.L. Arbelbide, "With Easter Monday You Get Egg
Roll at the White House," Prologue, Volume 32, Spring
2000; White House Curator's Files, and the White House Historical
Association Files