The Willard Hotel
During the Civil War, the fighting at times came so close to the capital that the Lincolns could hear the...
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During the Civil War, the fighting at times came so close to the capital that the Lincolns could hear the...
In 1878, Easter Monday celebrants who were not allowed to roll eggs on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol headed...
William Wilson Corcoran—banker, philanthropist, and patron of the arts—resided in picturesque splendor on the northwest corner of Lafayette Park...
Henry Ossawa Tanner was one of the most distinguished Black artists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Despite his immense...
Alice Lee Roosevelt’s life changed forever on September 14, 1901, when President William McKinley succumbed to his wounds eight days after be...
On March 4, 1869, Ulysses S. Grant took the oath of office and became the eighteenth President of the United States. His...
Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in 1818 along the Eastern Shore of Maryland. During his childhood, the wife of one...
In addition to important holdings in historical memorabilia, art, and furnishings, the White House collection also has an archives o...
Shortly before 5 p.m. on April 11, 1968, several congressional and African-American leaders gathered in the East Room of the White House...
A house more thoroughly documented than the White House is difficult to imagine. Historians and students of White House history...
Theodore Roosevelt’s remodeling of the White House in 1902 transformed it from a crazy quilt of alterations over time into a...
John Adams, the first resident of the White House, wanted a vegetable garden plowed and fertilized with the goal of...