You are here: Home > The Buildings > North America > United States > Washington > White House, The
White House, The photograph.
Photograph © Wayne Lorentz/Artefaqs Corporation
This image is available for business licensing.
This image is available for purchase as prints or posters
.

White House, The photograph.
Photograph © Wayne Lorentz/Artefaqs Corporation
This image is available for business licensing.
This image is available for purchase as prints or posters
.

Got more pictures?
Got better pictures?
Share your skyscraper and architecture and pictures and make money!


Most E-mailed Buildings
Freedom Tower
New York, United States
Sears Tower
Chicago, United States
Burj Dubai
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Chicago Spire
Chicago, United States
Flatiron Building
New York, United States
Trump International Hotel and Tower (Chicago)
Chicago, United States
Time Warner Center
New York, United States
World Trade Center (New York)
New York, United States
BellSouth Building
Nashville, United States
Hydropolis
Dubai, United Arab Emirates

White House, The

Formerly: The Executive Mansion
Formerly: The President's House
Formerly: The President's Palace
Built: 1790-1800
Designed by: James Hoban
Renovated: 1814 after being burned by British Troops
Type: Government Building
Location: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, United States

E-mail this article.
Copyright information.
Quote this article.
Printer-friendly version.
Text-only version.

Building Rating
50%
60% of readers like the White House, The.
What do you think?
Advertisement
T he location of the White House was chosen by the first president of the United States of America, George Washington; along with the capital's first city planner, Pierre L'Enfant in 1790. Washington had a heavy hand in what the home of the country's future leaders would look like from the outside. In fact, in spite of a number of major renovations, the exterior walls are the same ones put in place more than 200 years ago. Each president, however, is allowed to decorate the inside as he sees fit. During the Truman administration the first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth floors were gutted. Construction was so extensive that the First Family had to live elsewhere for a time. The building‘s main rooms are as follows:
* Blue Room
* China Room
* Diplomatic Reception Room
* East Room
* Green Room
* Library
* Map Room
* Red Room
* State Dining Room
* Vermeil Room
* Yellow Oval Room
The White House has faced a number of threats in long history; most commonly from fire. The British burned it during the War of 1812. And the West Wing burned in 1929 during Herbert Hoover's administration. In the late 1990's, Pennsylvania Avenue was closed to traffic and concrete security barriers erected because of the fear of terrorism. In 2000, a plan was conceived to reopen the street to the public, but with a pair of low pedestrian walkways. These would only allow cars to pass, keeping large trucks and the bombs they might carry away from the building. It would also achieve the Park Service's major goal -- restoration of the White House as a symbol of openness. "The People's Palace," as it is sometimes called, has been open to visitors since 1805, with a few brief closures during war.

>The White House has long been known for its distinguished cadre of ghosts. Among them, the most famous is spirit of President Abraham Lincoln who has been reported a number of times in and in the vicinity of the Lincoln Bedroom.
>It is said the ghost of President Harrison can be heard in the attic.
>The ghost of President Andrew Jackson has been repeatedly seen in one of the bedrooms.
>The ghost of First Lady Abigail Adams has been seen walking through the halls with her arms outstretched, as if carrying something. She has also been seen making motions as if doing laundry.
>The sighting of the spirit of a black cat in the basement has been known to precede national tragedies like assasinations and stock market crashes. The same things is said of a spirit cat in the basement of the Capitol Building. It is unknown if this is the same phantom, or a confusion of the tales.
>The ghost of First Lady Dolly Madison has been seen in the Rose Garden.
>The White House has 132 rooms, 32 bathrooms, 412 doors, 147 windows, 28 fireplaces, seven staircases, five full-time chefs, three elevators, a movie theater, a bowling alley, a tennis court, a jogging track, and a billiards room.
>The State Dining Room can seat 140 guests.
>It takes 570 gallons of paint to paint the exterior.
>The White House is the only private residence of a head of state that is open to the public for free.
>George Washington is the only U.S. President who has not lived in the White House.
>After the Civil War, the White House was almost abandoned in favor of another mansion in the countryside. It was President Grant who saved the White House by deciding he wanted to sleep where President Lincoln slept.
>During World War I, Woodrow Wilson used sheep to cut the lawn to save money.
>The curved driveway used to be open to the public, and became a "lover's lane." First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt put a stop to it.
>Just about everything inside the White House has a story. The president's desk is no exception. It started out as an Arctic exploration ship. In 1852 the HMS Resolute set sail from England on a rescue mission. It was in search of a ship that disappeared near Greenland while searching for the fabled Northwest Passage. The Resolute and three other ships became trapped in the ice and in 1854 they were abandoned. Eventually the ice melted, and the Resolute drifted a thousand miles before it was found by the American whaling ship George Henry. Its captain brought the Resolute to Connecticut. A New York merchant paid to have it refurbished and sent to England. Back in its home country the Resolute served for two decades in the Royal Navy. It was then decommissioned, and ordered destroyed. Queen Victoria decided part of the ship should be made into a desk for the American president. The 1,300 pound piece of furniture arrived at the White House on 23 November, 1880.
>September, 1994 - Frank Corder crashed a stolen airplane on the south lawn of the White House. He was killed on impact.
>October, 1994 - Francisco Duran opened fire on the White House with an automatic weapon. No one was hurt.
>May, 1995 - Leland Modjeski climbed over the fence with an unloaded gun. He was shot on the lawn.
>In 2000, Three replica White House dog houses were made by the Coldwell Banker real estate firm. One went to then-President Clinton and his dog. The second went to President George W. Bush, and the third was given away in a contest.
>7 February, 2001 - A man with a history of mental illness was shot by a Secret Service agent outside the White House in Washington, DC. Robert Pickett was shot in the knee when he refused to put down his gun after firing several shots and aiming the weapon at the White House. He is a West Point Military Academy dropout who was fired from his IRS job in Cincinnati and claims the government has ruined his life through a campaign of systematic persecution.
>14 March, 2001 - Another man jumps the White House fence. He is not armed and is arrested without incident.
>August, 2001 - The White House gets a facelift. 40 renovation projects are undertaken while the president is away at his ranch in Texas. Cracking driveways and crumbling columns are repaired. And the building is repainted in its official shade "Whisper White."
>11 September, 2001 - The White House is closed to the public after terrorists attack the Pentagon.
>September, 2002 - The National Parks Service starts installing solar panels on some of the buildings on the grounds of the White House. They are used to light the grounds at night, warm the President's water, and heat the President's pool.
>28 April, 2003 - Following the war on Iraq, public tours of the White House resume, but are limited to children's groups and veterans groups.
>September, 2003 - More public tours of the White House are permitted, but must be arranged through a member of Congress and the visitor must pass a security screening.

 
Related Links
Talk about the world's great architecture at the Agoraphoria forum.
Quotations
"I pray Heaven to Bestow the Best of Blessings on THIS HOUSE and on All that shall hereafter Inhabit it. May none but honest and Wise Men ever rule this roof."
-John Adams, second president of the United States.

"Our nation was new, carving out the symbols that would define it...These walls carry the story of America... History tells us that even as the city's planners debated the final design of this house, masons laid its stone foundations more than 4 feet thick. Like our nation's founders, these men were building a monument to freedom, and they wanted it to last. "
-William Jefferson Clinton, 40th president of the United States. 1 November, 2000.

"So grandly did it rise over the nascent city, so supremely complete did it seem compared with the Capitol, which was long yet to be finished, that it was the prize statement that Washington the city would prevail."
-William Seale "The White House, The History of an American Idea"

Bryant Scott
February 28th, 2003
there is also accounts of the ghost of abraham licoln being seen bye the queen of england while staying in the building.


Add your corrections, comments, reviews, or thoughts about this building. Simply fill out the form below.
Your name:
E-mail address:
Your nation:
Rate this structure:
1 5
Your comments:
  Messages without valid e-mail addresses, or containing profanity will be automatically discarded. You're wasting your time, not ours.

Return to the top of the page.
© 2008 Artefaqs Corporation. :: Privacy Policy :: Contact
Photographs and information may not be used without permission. Contact us for details.

All your skyscrapers are belong to us.