Collection Animal Ambassadors
Animals, whether pampered household pets, working livestock, birds, squirrels, or strays, have long been a major part of White House...
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President Thomas Jefferson kept a magpie, one of four birds sent back from the Lewis and Clark expedition, as a pet. Watercolor by Louis S. Glanzman in 1970.
White House Historical AssociationReb and Billy Button take Ulysses S. Grant's children to school, 1869.
White House Collection/White House Historical AssociationDavid B. Sickels to Lucy Hayes, November 1, 1878, regarding the gift of a Siamese cat. "Siam" became the beloved pet of daughter Fanny Hayes.
Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential CenterWilliam H. Taft's Holstein, Pauline Wayne, "Queen of Capital Cows," in front of the Old Executive Office Building near the White House, ca. 1909.
Library of CongressThis drawing depicts the story of Quentin Roosevelt bringing their horse, Algonquin, into the White House to comfort his brother Archie who was sick with the measles.
White House Historical AssociationSheep graze on the White House lawns in 1919 to save the manpower required to mow the expansive grounds. The wool was sold as a fundraiser for the Red Cross.
Library of CongressFirst Lady Grace Coolidge holds her pet raccoon, Rebecca, which she took on walks with a leash.
Library of CongressAbout this Gallery
Pet keeping in America evolved from Native Americans' and European settlers' domesticating animals as hunters, guardians, workers, and companions. Horses, cows, goats, chickens, dogs, cats, songbirds, parrots, and other small animals were a part of daily life during the early years of the White House.
Since 1870, domestic pets at the White House have mirrored the species generally seen in American households. The major difference has always been that a pet belonging to a president generates great public interest and scrutiny.
Animals, whether pampered household pets, working livestock, birds, squirrels, or strays, have long been a major part of White House...
Biographies & Portraits
Biographies & Portraits
In 2022, the White House Historical Association began partnering with UNTOLD, a project of the Driving Force Institute for Public Engagement,...
White House history and American baseball history have been intertwined for more than a century, creating a rich legacy of...
Families taking up residence at the White House since the Theodore Roosevelt administration have encountered the public's insatiable appetite for...
Two of the youngest presidents to reside in the White House brought their families and a menagerie of pets along...
Animals -- whether pampered household pets, working livestock, birds, squirrels, or strays -- have long been a major part of...
When the Fords moved into the White House in August 1974, they did not have a dog. However, the family’s tr...