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Stories

21 Surprising Facts About Moving Into The White House

by Zack Walkter

Published October 31, 2017

21 Surprising Facts About Moving Into The White House

16. The first movie screened at the White House was Birth of a Nation, by Woodrow Wilson in 1915.

Birth of a Nation, adapted from The Clansmen, centered on themes like Reconstruction and the KKK with alarmingly racist overtones but was a landmark film at the time.

National Archives/Newsmakers, David W. Griffith Corp. / Via IMDB (Buzzfeed)

17. The Oval Office wasn’t put in until 1913, per William Howard Taft’s instructions.

Keystone View Company/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images, Getty Images (Buzzfeed)

18. A lot of animals other than Bo and Sunny have lived there. At different times, the White House has housed snakes, alligators, bear cubs, lion cubs, bobcats, and more.

Here is First Lady Grace Coolidge holding her pet raccoon, Rebecca, on the White House lawn in 1927.

Related:

  1. Surprising Facts You Never Knew About Goldie Hawn
  2. 8 Of The Most Surprising And Incredible Facts About Our Solar System

19. White House staff only has 12 hours to move in a new president’s belongings on inauguration day.

Alex Wong / Getty Images (BuzzFeed)

Move-in doesn’t start until noon, and in those 12 hours, the staff must unpack and arrange all furniture and personal items, clean, and tidy up. However, the president coordinates the move using private movers.

20. There’s a coffee maker that was a gift from Tom Hanks.

He bought an espresso maker for the press room in 2004 and upgraded it to a newer one in 2010. Here he is looking admiringly at his gift.

21. George Washington never actually lived there.

But his portrait hangs on its walls. The cornerstone was laid while he was president in 1792, and he died in 1799, less than a year before the first tenants moved in.

(Credits: dailydisclosure and Buzzfeed)

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