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Stine - Where Is the White House?

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Stine Where Is the White House?
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For Bill and CodyMS For Alana Elise and GrantDG GROSSET DUNLAP Published by - photo 1
Where Is the White House - image 2

For Bill and CodyMS
For Alana, Elise, and GrantDG

GROSSET & DUNLAP

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA

Where Is the White House - image 3

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Text copyright 2015 by Megan Stine. Illustrations copyright 2015 by Penguin Group (USA) LLC. All rights reserved. Published by Grosset & Dunlap, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014. GROSSET & DUNLAP is a trademark of Penguin Group (USA) LLC.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

ISBN 978-0-698-19890-6

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Contents
Where Is the White House On a fall day in 1792 President George Washington - photo 4

Where Is the White House?

On a fall day in 1792, President George Washington stood in a muddy pit on a barren rise of land. Rolling hills nearby were surrounded by woods. Cows and pigs grazed in the distance. No one lived anywhere near this beautiful wilderness overlooking the Potomac River.

Washington picked up a hammer and drove a stake into the ground Then he drove - photo 5

Washington picked up a hammer and drove a stake into the ground. Then he drove another. And another. Those stakes told the workmen exactly where to put the corners and walls of a new house. George Washington was the first president of the United States. But he was also a surveyora person who measures land.

A whole new city was going to be built! It would be the capital city for the new country of the United States of America. The house at the center of it would be the new Presidents House.

It would take eight years, many laborers, and tons of stone before the house was complete. George Washington never even got to live there. But eventually, the White House stood exactly where the first president said it should go, and the new capital city was named for himthe city of Washington.

Chapter 1
Building a Capital City

It was 1783 The Revolutionary War was over The colonists had fought against - photo 6

It was 1783. The Revolutionary War was over. The colonists had fought against the British for eight long years to gain their freedom. Finally, the colonists had won! A new country was bornthe United States of America.

Now it was time to go about the business of creating a government. Like any other country, America would need a capital city. The city would need to have buildings for the government to work in. And it would need an important house for the president to live in.

Where should that capital city be?

At that time, some people thought the capital should be in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After all, thats where the first Congress met. Its also where the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence.

But one day something scary happened. A mob of angry men stormed up to the building where Congress was meeting. Congress asked Pennsylvania to protect them from the mob. The governor of Pennsylvania refused to help. He thought the angry men were in the right!

That made the men in Congress think twice about where the capital should be - photo 7
That made the men in Congress think twice about where the capital should be - photo 8

That made the men in Congress think twice about where the capital should be. They decided it should not be in any of the thirteen states. It should be separate, on a special piece of land. Then the US government could have soldiers to protect and defend the capital city, without ever asking any state for help.

In 1790, Congress decided that the new capital city would be built along the Potomac River.

The spot they chose was part of Maryland and Virginia. Congress picked the spot to please the southern states. In exchange for having the capital in the south, the southern states agreed that the whole country should pay some debts from the war for the northern states. Now everyone was happy. Both Maryland and Virginia agreed to give up the land for the new city.

President George Washington hired a French architect named Pierre LEnfant to - photo 9
President George Washington hired a French architect named Pierre LEnfant to - photo 10

President George Washington hired a French architect named Pierre LEnfant to design the city. LEnfant had big ideas. He designed the entire city of Washington, DC, on a grand scale. The main avenues in the new capital would be wide. They would lead into huge traffic circles. There would also be long diagonal streets. Important statues and monuments would be lined up with one another. That way people could stand at one important building and look straight down the avenue to another one.

LEnfant planned that the Presidents House would sit at one end of a big diagonal street. The Capitol building, where Congress would meet, would sit at the other end. Straight across from the Presidents House, he thought there should be a statue of George Washington riding on a horse.

LEnfant drew up the plans and gave them to George Washington Washington liked - photo 11

LEnfant drew up the plans and gave them to George Washington. Washington liked the plans, but not everyone agreed about the house. LEnfant had set aside more than eighty acres of land for a Presidential Palace. Thomas Jefferson, one of the Founding Fathers, thought a big house was a bad idea. He said it would be too grand and showy. It would seem like Washington was trying to be a kingnot a president elected to serve the people.

Jefferson said they should hold a contest to see who could come up with a design for the house. Washington agreed. So the contest was announced, and several people sent in designs. Some of the drawings looked like palaces or churches. One of them even had a throne inside. And one design was sent in anonymouslywithout a name on it. It was probably sent in by Thomas Jefferson! He very much wanted to help design the Presidents House.

George Washington had his own ideas, though. He had already met a builder he liked. His name was James Hoban. Washington invited Hoban to enter the contest. He met with Hoban privately. They probably talked about what kind of house Washington wanted. And guess what? Hoban won the contest!

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