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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 piled upon Pelion and Olym­pus over all. It is a difficult feat to summon up in these surroundings the ghosts of vanished absolutism or to imagine real people actually living and working in them. The President's House, in Wash­ingt

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The White House Album: The Theodore Roosevelt Years

It is hard to believe that nearly a hundred years have passed since Theodore Roosevelt became president of the United States. Recollections of him at the White House are vivid. And the White House was never quite the same after his seven years and 171 days there. He entered the presi­dency in 1901, but from the perspective of form and procedure, n

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The White House Collection: Reminders of 1814

When the President’s House was consumed by fire in 1814, furnish­ings purchased over twenty-five years by the United States government for Presidents George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison were lost. Among them were the eighteenth-centu­ry objects from the two resi­dences occupied by President Washington in New York in 1789 and 1790 and from the Philadelphia home in wh

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The Dolley Madison House on Lafayette Square

The Dolley Madison House, a yellow structure on the corner of H Street and Madison Place in “The President’s Neighborhood” surrounding Lafayette Square near the White House, was built in 1818-1819 by Richard Cutts, a congressman from Massachusetts who was married to Dolley Madison’s sister Anna. The mortgage passed to President James Madison, and, after his death, to his wife