Front:
DAGA
SHINGTON
APR
23
1002
The White House
1792
1992
The Whe House
1792
1992
2000
29 USA
29 USA
JJde GrafeArred 92
Back:
BICENTENNIAL OF THE WHITE HOUSE
First Day of Issue: April 23, 1992
First Issue Location: Washington, D.C.
In a neighborhood of stern-looking red brick monoliths,
architect James Hoban's vision was as visible as a single
cloud in an all-blue sky. Built of grayish-white limestone
in 1792, the house on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in
Washington, D.C., has an obvious name: the White
House. It is a simple name for a mansion which has housed
some of the nation's greatest men. Hoban envisioned a
mansion in the Neoclassical style with three stories and
100 rooms. Built on a site selected by George Washington,
the White House was originally called the President's
House. It was not until the term of Theodore Roosevelt that
the nickname White House became official. John Adams
became the first president to live in the Executive Mansion
after its completion in 1800. In 1814, the mansion was
sacked and burned by the invading British, but rebuilt.
Many presidents have basked in the history of the place,
yet they have remained humble. “I never forget that I live
in a house owned by all the American people...” remarked
Franklin D. Roosevelt once.
No. 92-10
First Day of Issue Postcard Collection™
©1992 Fleetwood® Cheyenne, WY 82008-0001
Original painting for the First Day of Issue Postcard by J. & J. de Graffenried
Heetwood