History in the Camera's Eye
Versailles, Potsdam, and other grand relics of power are all imposing architecture and vistas, one always leading to another— Ossa pi...
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Entrance Hall, c. 1902.
Versailles, Potsdam, and other grand relics of power are all imposing architecture and vistas, one always leading to another— Ossa pi...
The Dolley Madison House, a yellow structure on the corner of H Street and Madison Place in “The President’s Neig...
One of the most interesting collections of silver of which this country can boast is at the White House. I...
When Whig opponents chanted “Who is James K. Polk?” throughout the presidential election of 1844, it was more an attempt to infl...
For the politicians, civil servants, and accompanying citizenry of the new federal government—freshly arrived in 1800 from comfortable, sophisticated Philadelphia—the...
In May 1865, at the close of hostilities, a Grand Review throughout Washington, D.C., exhibited parading Union troops from the...
In 1853, Clark Mills’ statue of President Andrew Jackson on horseback is in the center of Lafayette Park. The park’s four...
When people think of President Herbert Hoover and baseball, many recall the famous story from 1930, when Babe Ruth signed a...
White House history and American baseball history have been intertwined for more than a century, creating a rich legacy of...
John and Abigail Adams had a wealth of experience in establishing and living in official houses prior to their move...
When Commodore Stephen Decatur and his wife, Susan, moved into their new three story brick home across from the White...
The restoration of the exterior of the White House, which I performed from 1989 to 1996, was an exciting and challenging task....