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White House Friends with Fur and Feathers

12/12/2015

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Cheryl Harness 
She's historical!    




You know that presidential humans have lived in the White House since 1800, but so have MANY presidential pets, especially dogs. From those owned by John and Abigail Adams to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Scottie, Fala, to Bo and Sunny, the Portuguese Water Spaniels who live with President Obama’s family, there have been lots of presidential pooches. President Clinton’s daughter Chelsea had Socks, the cat, but really, there haven’t been so very many kitty cats in the White House. So how about other kinds of pets? 

          Well, John F. Kennedy’s daughter Caroline had Macaroni, the pony. Willie and Tad Lincoln loved to hitch up their pet goats Nanny and Nanko to a cart or even kitchen chairs and go banging and bumping through the White House! Thomas Jefferson had pet mockingbirds. James and Dolley Madison kept a parrot. So did Andrew Jackson, but his cussed and swore horribly! President Taft’s pet cow Pauline and Old Ike, one of Woodrow Wilson’s sheep, used to graze on the White House lawn. Among Calvin Coolidge’s many pets were Rebecca, the raccoon, and a donkey named Enoch. 

          When Theodore Roosevelt became president in 1901, things really got lively, inside and outside the White House. He and his wife had six children and boy oh boy, did they have pets! Besides plenty of horses, dogs, and a couple of cats, there was a lizard, a pig, a rabbit, a rat, one small bear, five guinea pigs, a macaw, an owl, a one-legged rooster, and Josiah, the badger. Beautiful bratty Alice, the oldest daughter, loved startling people by taking Emily Spinach out of her handbag. (Emily was a green snake, named after a skinny aunt.) 

          One day, Archie Roosevelt, one of Alice’s little brothers, was sick upstairs. Two of her other brothers, Quentin and Kermit, got their Shetland pony Algonquin into the White House elevator and up they went to visit Archie. As his dad, President Roosevelt would say, Archie was “deee-lighted!” Visiting pets didn’t go over quite so well when little Quentin interrupted an Oval Office meeting and accidentally dropped the four snakes he brought to show his dad!  

          Oh yes, it can be difficult being the president. Long, long ago, President Harry Truman said that, “If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog.” Remember that, if you ever get elected. And when you move to the White House, don’t forget to bring your pet! 


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Billy Possum. May, 1929. Library of Congress
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There is no doubt that the Kennedys were dog lovers. President John F. Kennedy and family with Pushinka's puppies Blackie and White Tips, and family dogs Shannon, Clipper, Wolfie, and Charlie. Hyannis Port, August 14, 1963. WikiMedia
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President Taft's cow Pauline in front of the State, War and Navy Building. This photo was published between 1909 and 1913. Pauline is reportedly the last cow to live at the White House, and provided Taft with milk. Library of Congress
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White House guard holding Algonquin the pony for President Teddy Roosevelt's son Quentin. The photo was taken in 1902.
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President Benjamin Harrison's son Russell shown with Harrison children, and a dog and a goat. Picture published between 1889 and 1893. Library of Congress
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First Lady Grace Coolidge shows off her pet racoon, Rebecca, at the White House Easter Egg Roll, April 18, 1927. The president built a little house for Rebecca. Library of Congress
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President Warren Harding named his pet squirrel Pete. 1922. Library of Congress
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President Jimmy Carter's daughter Amy with her cat Misty Malarky Ying Yang. February 03, 1978. One of WikiMedia
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One of Cheryl Harness's best known picture books is her fantastical, factual Ghosts of the White House.  "Do I really believe that dead presidents spook around the White House, talking about when they lived there? NO! But I'm not above using FANTASY to explain HISTORY! Each president represents a chapter in the story of our country!"

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Astronauts like music as much as the rest of us.  Tomorrow Amy Nathan is going to tell you what's involved in playing an instrument in space.










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Did Theodore Roosevelt Ban Christmas Trees?

12/12/2015

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Kerrie Logan Hollihan

Teaching the Power of Wonder




When I was a kid fifty years ago, President Theodore Roosevelt had a bad rap. We learned that way back in the 1900s, he banned Christmas trees from the White House. What a lousy father, I thought. 

         Down through the years, the story went something like this: Across America in the early 1900s, huge forests were in danger of destruction from a lumbering practice called “clear-cutting.” Lots of newspapers and public leaders asked Americans to stop going to the woods to cut Christmas trees. Now when the Roosevelts and their six kids lived in the White House, they didn’t have a tree. Stockings and presents, but not a tree. So folks assumed that Roosevelt had outlawed Christmas trees, because he was a huge outdoorsman and conservationist. 

         But, according to people who’ve done their history homework, that’s not the whole truth. It’s possible that First Lady Edith Roosevelt had six kids to think of and didn’t want the extra fuss of a Christmas tree. Christmas trees had become very popular ever since the old German tradition was picked up in the United States, but not everyone chose to have one.

         As it turned out, the Roosevelts did have at least one tree, courtesy of their eight-year-old son Archie. On Christmas morning 1902, Archie surprised his family. The president wrote about it in a letter that told of Christmas morning: 

           So their mother and I got up, shut the window, lit the fire (taking          
           down the stockings of course), put on our wrappers and prepared to       
           admit the children. But first there was a surprise for me, also for 
           their good  mother, for Archie had a little birthday tree of his own which he     
           had rigged up with the help of one of the carpenters in a big closet; 
          and we all had to look at the tree and each of us got a present off of it.


          A magazine ran the story of Archie’s tree the next year. From then on, it picked up all sorts of embellishments, sort of like playing telephone at a birthday party.  

     Today, the best explanation of the old story appears on a blog run by the Forest History Society. Visit their 
website.

     And for more cool facts about Christmas trees, check out the website of the folks who know, the 
College of Agriculture at the University of Illinois. 

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Roosevelt Family in 1903 with Quentin on the left, TR, Ted, Archie, Alice, Kermit, Edith, and Ethel. Credit: Library of Congress
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Young Archie Roosevelt on his horse Algonquin. Credit: Library of Congress
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The discovery of the tree in the seamstress's closet was a popular Christmas illustration for a story that ran in Ladies Home Journal. The story underscored the simplicity of the Roosevelt family’s Christmas decorations and the president’s conservation ethic..
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   Theodore Roosevelt for Kids brings to life this fascinating man, an American giant whose flaws were there for all the world to see. Twenty-one hands-on activities offer a useful glimpse at Roosevelt’s work and times. Readers will create a Native American toy, explore the effects of erosion, go on a modern big game hunt with a camera, and make felted teddy bears. The text includes a time line, online resources, and reading list for further study. And through it all, readers will appreciate how one man lived a “Bully!” life and made the word his very own.

Kerrie Hollihan is a member of iNK's Authors on Call and is available for classroom programs through FieldTripZoom,  a terrific technology that requires only a computer, wifi, and a webcam.  Click here to find out more.
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Christmas is coming.  Andrea Warren's Minute will put you in the true spirit of the holiday as she describes how one rather short book not only entertains us to this day, but also inspired so many to give so much to others.















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Young Frederick Grant Goes to War

11/28/2015

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Andrea Warren
Giving Voice to Children in History

Would parents willingly send their twelve-year-old son to war? During the U.S. Civil War, that’s exactly what General Ulysses Grant and his wife, Julia, did. Of course they expected Frederick to stay safely behind Union lines—only Frederick wasn’t the type to miss any excitement, and he ended up paying a big price for that.

         It wasn’t unusual for officers to have a family member with them, for they often faced separations that could last months or even years. Grant knew the campaign to silence Confederate cannons along the Vicksburg, Mississippi waterfront that were preventing Union ships from taking control of the Mississippi River was going to be a long one. He was a devoted family man and became depressed if away from his wife and four children for very long. Julia suggested their eldest son keep Grant company. Frederick, who wanted to make the military his career, was thrilled.  

         I learned about Frederick while researching my book Under Siege! Three Children at the Civil War Battle for Vicksburg. He joined a boy and girl who were inside Vicksburg as my eye-witnesses to Grant’s brutal forty-seven-day siege in 1863 of that little river town.

       And what an eye-witness he was! As the general’s son, he had his own uniform and pony. He accompanied Grant during daily troop inspections and shared his tent at night. He knew he was supposed to stay in camp, but he was so eager to be part of the action, and several times he put himself in harm’s way. That ended when he foolishly rode into battle, only to be shot in the leg by a Confederate sniper. Frederick realized that if his leg were to be amputated—common treatment for a bullet wound--he’d never be a soldier. Even though his leg became painfully infected, doctors were able to save it. But in his weakened condition he became ill with typhoid fever, a common camp disease. 

       He was still recuperating in his father’s tent when Grant received word of Vicksburg’s surrender. Frederick limped outside to excitedly announce the Union’s victory to the troops.   

       Luckily, Frederick fully recovered. He returned to school and later served as his father’s private secretary while Grant was President of the United States. He also joined the army, rising to the rank of general: the siege of Vicksburg had taught him a hard lesson about what it took to be a military man.

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Ulysses S. Grant, wife Julia and their children Frederick (standing), Buck, Nellie, and Jesse. Credit: Library of Congress
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Frederick (seated, fourth from left in the oval), with his father (standing in the middle) and his officers. Credit: Library of Congress
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Period photographs, engravings, and maps extend this dramatic story as award-winning author Andrea Warren re-creates one of the most important Civil War battles through the eyes of ordinary townspeople, officers and enlisted men from both sides, and, above all, three brave children who were there.  One of those children was Frederick Grant. Click here for more information about the book and all of the awards it has won.

Andrea Warren is also a member of Authors on Call.  Bring her into your classroom via interactive video conferencing.   Here’s where you can learn more about her and her programs.
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Talk about a reluctant hero.  One of the nation's most famous labor leaders wanted nothing at all to do with his strike.  Larry Brimner will tell you the story tomorrow.









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The Wednesday Night Crush

10/17/2015

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Picture


Cheryl Harness


She's historical!


Until 1800, the U.S. capital had been Philadelphia, a big city. Then the capital moved to Washington, DC, a small town with dirt roads, lots of trees, and the not-quite-finished Capitol and presidential mansion, known to some as the “White House.” In the winter of 1809, when Abe Lincoln (future President No. 16 – the tallest) was still a baby, James Madison, the new president (No. 4 – the shortest), gave a party. It happened that James’s wife, Dolley, was excellent at bringing all sorts of people together and making sure they had a jolly time. This was her way of making Mr. Madison popular.

    So, one Wednesday evening, the Madisons’ servants (enslaved African Americans, some of them) welcomed party goers to the White House. The large East Room, where Abigail Adams (wife of President No. 2) hung up her laundry, was closed off. Now the politicians, government workers, foreign diplomats, and their wives exchanged smiles with rosy Dolley Madison. (She used blusher – very daring then!) Imagine people in the oval-shaped Blue Room (cream-colored then, with red velvet curtains), laughing with the First Lady, all fancy in her Paris gown. 

    Next door was the sunny gold parlor (the Red Room now), where you might visit with shy, brainy President Madison. (Did you know he helped to write the U.S. Constitution? Well he did!) Best of all was the big State Dining Room. It had been an office for Thomas Jefferson (President No. 3). Now it was full of FOOD: Savory snacks, tea and other drinks, little cakes and a rare delicacy: ice cream. Imagine guests with their mouths full and eyes wide, staring up at Gilbert Stuart’s great portrait of President No. 1. Some of the guests had met George Washington, but they all knew how much he’d done to make the United States possible. 

    Everyone had such a good time, that there was another party the next Wednesday and the next. LOTS of people came – even the most disagreeable politicians! The popular weekly party, with its crowds of mashed together party goers, was a White House tradition for a while. It even got a name: Mrs. Madison’s Crush. 


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Gilbert Stuart portrait of President George Washington
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Dolley Madison
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Cheryl Harness's latest book is Flags Over America, a picture book history of flags, especially America's. It was just published last month by  Albert Whitman & Co. just in time for the 200 YEARS anniversary since Francis Scott Key wrote his poem about the Star Spangled Banner.  For more information, click here.


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The Princess and the Pea is a nice story, but tomorrow Jim Whiting is going to tell you the tale of the real-life princess and the tree! 



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George Washington’s Hair

10/8/2015

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Carla Killough McClafferty 


illuminating lives from the past, impacting lives in the present


When you hear the name George Washington, what comes to mind?  If you are like most people, you think about his image on the one dollar bill.  And it’s no wonder since 9 billion dollar bills are in circulation at all times.  This image is so familiar we sometimes forget that Washington wasn’t always a 64-year-old man.  He certainly wasn’t born with white hair and dentures!  

    What did George Washington look like when he was a young man?   The leadership of Mount Vernon, Washington’s home, decided to find out.  They gathered a group of experts to do a forensic study of George Washington.  Their goal was to create three wax figures that show him at the ages of 19, 45 and 57 years old.        

    To make sure the wax figures would look like the real George Washington, the hair they used must be the right color.  The experts didn’t have to guess what color his hair was.  They looked at George Washington’s real hair.  Many locks of his hair still exist today.  Why?  Because in the 18th century it was common to keep small locks of hair that belonged to someone you loved or admired.  (Sometimes even strangers would ask Washington for a lock of his hair to keep as a token of their respect for him.)  

    Can you guess what color Washington’s hair was when he was 19 years old?  His natural hair was reddish brown (it wasn’t really red, and it wasn’t really brown—it was in between).  Sometimes this color is described as “chestnut.”    

    Once the experts knew Washington’s hair color, they ordered human hair from a “hair merchant” in London, England.  (Real people sell their hair to them.)   The cost was about $300.00 for the hair used on the figure of Washington at 19.    Sue Day, an artist, used a needle-like tool to place one human hair at a time directly into the wax head.  She consulted portraits of Washington to make sure the shape of his hairline was right.      

    When the wax figure of young George Washington was finished, his long chestnut hair was pulled back into a queue (we would call it a ponytail).  A large black silk bow was placed in his hair.   

    Today visitors to Mount Vernon can see what George Washington really looked like at the age of 19.   And he looks great.     


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Washington’s long chestnut hair is seen here. Sue Day puts the finishing touches of paint on his wax face.
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Artist Sue Day pushes one hair at a time into the wax to form the hairline of George Washington as he would have looked at 19 years of age.
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Famous 1797 Gilbert Stuart portrait of George Washington.
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Carla McClafferty wrote a book on the subject of this Nonfiction Minute.  For more information on THE MANY FACES OF GEORGE WASHINGTON: REMAKING A PRESIDENTIAL ICON (Carolrhoda, 2011)   and for access to lesson plans and enrichment materials based on the award-winning book, click here.


Carla Killough McClafferty is a member of iNK's Authors on Call and is available for classroom programs through Field Trip Zoom,  a terrific technology that requires only a computer, wifi, and a webcam.  Click here to find out more.
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Looking at an old tree doesn't sound very exciting, but try it with Alex Siy, tomorrow.  You'll be amazed.



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