Both Maryland and Virginia gave land for the new capital. The land was on the border of the North and the South. At that time, there were no western states! George Washington named the land the District of Columbia, in honor of Christopher Columbus.
John Adams, the second president of the United States, moved into a cold, damp White House in November 1800.
Washington, D.C., is one of the only cities in the world that was designed before it was built.
Next it was time to decide what kind of house to build for the president. Thomas Jefferson suggested having a contest. He advertised the contest in newspapers across the country. A committee picked a simple but elegant design by James Hoban, a young Irish American architect.
The first stone was laid on October 13, 1792. It took eight years
to finish enough of the house to make it livable.
Washington decided to put the Capitol Building on a hill at one end of the city, and the president's house on a hill at the other end.
The White House was the largest residential house in America!
Madison's wife, Dolley
War of 1812
would not leave the house until two men agreed to take down the famous portrait of George Washington.
the picture that Dolley saved is the only thing that has been in the White House since it first opened.
repainted white to cover the smoke marks. People began to call it the White House.
She writes fluidly across genres and age groups, from picture books to chapter books, experimenting with themes of loss, parental absence and spiritual redemption.
By her own account, she came to writing books in a meandering way. Born in Philadelphia but raised in Florida, she spent her 20s working jobs at Disney World, Circus World and a campground, harboring secret ambitions to be an author.
“It wasn’t until my fifth or sixth book where I realized I’m trying to do the same thing in every story I tell, which is bring everybody together in the same room,” Ms. DiCamillo said. “That’s the same thing that I want here: to get as many different people into the room as I can. I don’t know that I will resonate with a particular group of kids, but I want to get as many kids and as many adults together reading as I can.”