- President's Park
Infobox_nrhp | name =President's Park South
nrhp_type =
caption =
location= District of Columbia, USA
lat_degrees = 38
lat_minutes = 53
lat_seconds = 39
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 77
long_minutes = 2
long_seconds = 13
long_direction = W
locmapin = District of Columbia
built =1791
architect= L'Enfant,Pierre C.; Downing,A.J.
architecture=
added =May 06 ,1980
area = 18.07 acres (73,130 m²)
established =July 16 ,1790
visitation_num = 1,333,967
visitation_year = 2004
governing_body =National Park Service
refnum=80000347cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2008-04-15|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]President's Park, located in
Washington, D.C. ,United States , includes the White House, a visitor center, Lafayette Park, and The Ellipse. President's Park was the original name of Lafayette Park and Square. The current President's Park is administered by theNational Park Service .White House
The
White House Complex is located at 1600Pennsylvania Avenue , NW. It includes:* The White House
Executive Residence , the official residence of thePresident of the United States . The residence is open to the public for reserved tours. Requests for tour reservations must be submitted through one's member of Congress and are accepted one to six months in advance.
* TheWest Wing , the office of the President and staff. The West Wing is closed to the public.
* TheEast Wing , with office space for the First Lady,White House Social Secretary , and other staff. The East Wing is closed to the public.
* The White House Gardens including the South Lawn, Rose Garden,Jacqueline Kennedy Garden , and North Lawn. The gardens are open to public tours seasonally by advance appointment through one's senator or member of congress.White House Visitor Center
The White House Visitor Center is located in the north end of the
Herbert C. Hoover Building (the Department of Commerceheadquarters between 14th Street and 15th Street on Pennsylvania Avenue NW). Thevisitor center serves as a starting point for those going on a reserved tour of the White House. The various exhibits also provide an alternate visitor experience for those who did not schedule a tour. The themes of the six permanent exhibits are First Families, Symbols & Images, White House Architecture, White House Interiors, Working White House, and Ceremonies and Celebrations. Other exhibits change throughout the year.Lafayette Park
Lafayette Park is a seven-acre (30,000 m²) public park located directly north of the White House on
H Street , bounded byJackson Place on the west, Madison Place on the east, and Pennsylvania Avenue NW. The park and the surrounding structures were designated aNational Historic Landmark District in 1970. Planned as part of the pleasure grounds surrounding the Executive Mansion, this park was originally called "President's Park," which is now the name of the larger National Park Service unit.The park was separated from the White House grounds in 1804, when President
Thomas Jefferson had Pennsylvania Avenue cut through. In 1824, the park was officially renamed in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette, the Frenchman who fought in theAmerican Revolutionary War .Lafayette Park has been used as a
racetrack , agraveyard , azoo , a slave market, an encampment for soldiers during theWar of 1812 , and many political protests and celebrations.Andrew Jackson Downing landscaped Lafayette Park in 1851 in the picturesque style. Today's plan, with its five large statues, dates from the 1930s. In the center stands Clark Mills' equestrian statue of PresidentAndrew Jackson , erected in 1853. In the four corners are statues of foreign Revolutionary War heroes: the Marquis de Lafayette and Comte de Rochambeau of France;Tadeusz Kościuszko ofPoland , and the Baron von Steuben ofPrussia .Concepcion Picciotto has lived inLafayette Square on the 1600 block of Pennsylvania Avenue sinceAugust 1 ,1981 in protest ofnuclear arms .The Ellipse (President's Park South)
President's Park South (commonly called the Ellipse) is a 52 acre (210,000 m²) park located just south of the White House fence. Properly, "the Ellipse" is the name of the five-furlong (1 km) circumference street within the park. The entire park is open to the public.
Features
* Visitor pavilion (location of visitor facilities staffed by
National Park Ranger s andNational Park Service volunteers)
*Boy Scout Memorial byDonald De Lue
* Bulfinch Gatehouses byCharles Bulfinch
* Butt–Millet Memorial Fountain byDaniel Chester French
* Enid Haupt Fountains
*First Division Monument byDaniel Chester French
* Second Division Memorial, byJames Earle Fraser
* Original Settlers of the District of Columbia Memorial, byCarl Mose
*National Christmas Tree
*Zero Milestone Annual events on the Ellipse include the Christmas Pageant of Peace, the "Twilight Tattoo" military pageant, and the graduation ceremony for
The George Washington University . It is also the queueing location for the annual White House Easter Egg Roll and the White House garden tours. Under the auspices of theNational Park Service , theCapital Alumni Network and a number of neighborhood and military sports leagues play softball and flag football games on the grounds of the Ellipse. A number of ultimate competitions are also held by various groups throughout the warmer months.The Ellipse is the world's largest ellipse:Fact|date=May 2008
* Major axis: convert|1058.26|ft|m
* Minor axis: convert|902.85|ft|m
* Area: 751,071.67 square feet (more than 16 acres)
* Perimeter: convert|3086.86|ft|mThe
Ellipse Meridian Stone , located slightly under the surface near the center of the Ellipse, commemorates President Thomas Jefferson's idea of an American prime meridian. The measurements for the small brass hole at the top the granite Meridian Stone are:* Latitude: 38° 53' 38.17002" North of the Equator
* Longitude: 77° 02' 11.55845" West of Greenwich Meridian
* Elevation: 5.205 meters above sea levelHistory
In 1791, the first plan for the park was drawn up by
Pierre Charles L'Enfant . The Ellipse was known as "the White Lot" due to the whitewashed wooden fence that enclosed the park.During the
American Civil War , the grounds of the Ellipse and incompleteWashington Monument were used as corrals for horses, mules, and cattle, and as camp sites for Union troops.The Army Corps of Engineers began work on the Ellipse in 1867. The park was landscaped in 1879, and
American Elm s were planted around the existing portion of roadway. In 1880, grading was begun and the Ellipse was created from what had been a common dump. In 1894, the Ellipse roadway was lit with electric lamps.In the 1890s, Congress authorized the use of the Ellipse grounds to special groups, including religious meetings and military encampments. As late as 1990,
baseball field s andtennis court s existed in the park. Sporting events and demonstrations are still held on the Ellipse. President's Park South came under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service in 1933.On Christmas Eve 1923, President Calvin Coolidge started an unbroken tradition by lighting the first "National Christmas Tree". The first tree, a cutbalsam fir , was placed on the Ellipse by District of Columbia Public Schools. From 1924 to 1953, live trees in various locations around and on the White House grounds were lit on Christmas Eve. In 1954, the ceremony returned to the Ellipse and with an expanded focus: the "Christmas Pageant of Peace". From 1954 through 1972, cut trees were used, but in 1973 a Colorado blue spruce fromYork, Pennsylvania was planted on the Ellipse. A replacement was planted in 1978.In 1942, during
World War II , the National Park Service granted permission for the construction of barracks as a special emergency war-time measure. The temporary barracks were erected on the south side of theOld Executive Office Building and the entire First Division Monument grounds. The "White House Barracks" were demolished in 1954.The Ellipse Visitor Pavilion was opened for visitors in May 1994. The facility is used to distribute free tickets for special events at the White House such as the Easter Egg Roll and the fall and spring Garden Tours. There also is an information window, concession area, restrooms, telephones, water fountains, and a first aid area, all accessible.
Administrative history
On
August 10 ,1933 , the Ellipse was transferred to the National Park Service, the legal successor of three Federal Commissioners appointed by the President under an act ofJuly 16 ,1790 , which directed initial construction. Their authority developed through acts ofMay 1 ,1802 ;April 19 ,1816 ;March 3 ,1849 ;March 2 ,1867 ;July 1 ,1898 ;February 26 ,1925 ;March 3 ,1933 ; and Executive Order ofJune 10 ,1933 . Under act ofSeptember 22 ,1961 , "the White House. . .shall be administered pursuant to the act ofAugust 25 ,1916 " and supplementary and amendatory acts. This NPS area was originally referred to simply as "The White House".References
* "The National Parks: Index 2001-2003". Washington: U.S. Department of the Interior.
External links
* [http://www.whitehouse.gov/ The White House]
* [http://www.whha.org/ White House Historical Association]
* [http://faculty.evansville.edu/ck6/ellipse.pdf The Shape and History of The Ellipse in Washington, D.C.] by Clark Kimberling
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.