Collection Presidential Pastimes
Although the presidency is an often all-consuming job, many presidents have found solace in their various hobbies and pastimes. When...
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The White House in the Mountains of Maryland
How Long? 7 minutes
Sixty miles outside of Washington, D.C. is a rustic wilderness retreat that serves presidents and first families as a secluded getaway from the White House. Camp David was originally built as a camp for federal employees and their families, a project completed in 1938 through the Works Progress Administration (WPA) during the New Deal. The camp is located east of Hagerstown and north of Frederick in the Catoctin Mountains of western Maryland, near the towns of Thurmont and Emmitsburg.
It might have remained a federal employee recreation spot if World War II had not intervened. President Franklin Roosevelt previously used the presidential yacht, the USS Potomac, for relaxation. However, after the United States entered the war, military and Secret Service officials became concerned about the president’s safety on the open waters of the Atlantic due to threats of German U-boats.1
Roosevelt requested that the National Park Service identify sites within one hundred miles of the White House that might serve as an alternative respite for the president. On April 22, 1942, FDR visited Camp Hi-Catoctin and selected it as the location for the future presidential retreat.2
This black and white photo is of President Franklin D. Roosevelt fishing in a stream, accompanied by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The presidential retreat during Roosevelt's administration was known as "Shangri-La" but was renamed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower after his grandson and is still known as "Camp David."
Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum/NARAFDR began using the camp for two purposes: relaxation and international diplomacy. Roosevelt’s favorite spot at Shangri-La was the closed-in porch of his presidential cabin. He sat there to think, but also to enjoy an evening cocktail. With his own doghouse next to the presidential cabin, FDR’s dog Fala often joined him at the site.6
Subsequent presidents made important additions to the presidential retreat. Harry Truman spent less time than FDR at Shangri-La during his presidency, but he did make it a permanent federal facility. Truman also added heat to the cabins, enabling winter use of Shangri-La.9
Dwight Eisenhower and Mamie Eisenhower play board games at Camp David in 1954.
Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential LibraryIn addition to the presidential cabin, there are approximately a dozen guest cabins at Camp David. A main cabin, called Laurel Lodge, provides three conference rooms, a dining room, and a small presidential office. Most diplomatic meetings take place here. Several presidents used the Laurel Lodge presidential office and its nearby outdoor patio as a location to issue a weekly presidential radio address. Hickory Lodge houses indoor recreational activities as well as a grill, bar, and gift shop. Holly Cabin provides smaller meeting rooms and recreational space.13
Over the years, presidents followed in FDR’s footsteps and used Camp David as a place to host foreign leaders and heads of state. In 1959, President Eisenhower welcomed Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at Camp David for two days, the first visit of a Soviet leader on United States soil. After the visit, in which the two leaders watched American westerns, visited the camp’s recreation center, and dined on steak, Khrushchev coined the term “the spirit of Camp David.”14
Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin greet each other before initial talks at Camp David, along with Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter on September 7, 1978.
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum/NARAPresident Jimmy Carter hosted perhaps the most famous diplomatic negotiations at Camp David in September 1978 when Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin spent thirteen days at the retreat. After a series of trilateral and bilateral talks, the result was a “framework for peace” agreed upon by all parties involved.16
President Reagan didn’t host many foreign visitors at Camp David, but he did welcome British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1984. In a private meeting with Reagan, Thatcher recounted the recent visit of up-and-coming Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to London. Her observations would prove quite prescient; she called Gorbachev an “unusual Russian.”18
Barack Obama and world leaders watch a soccer match during the G-8 summit at Camp David in 2012.
Official White House Photo by Pete SouzaPresidents have also used Camp David as a secluded setting for important, high-level discussions and decisions. After the failed Bay of Pigs operation in Cuba, President John Kennedy invited former President Dwight Eisenhower to Camp David in April 1961 for a private consultation. This was Eisenhower’s fiftieth and final trip to Camp David.20
In addition to engaging in diplomacy and hosting key staff, presidents and first families spend time at Camp David to relax and enjoy numerous recreational activities. Hiking, horseback riding, jogging, tennis, basketball, horseshoes, skeet shooting, and mountain biking are popular options for fun. A movie theater, game room, pool table, bowling alley, fitness center, and library are available for indoor leisure time. The first family and visitors use a fleet of Camp David golf carts as the preferred method of transportation within the complex.24
George W. Bush enjoys Christmas at Camp David in 2003.
Official White House Photo by Eric DraperSince World War II, every president and first family has visited Camp David to escape the daily pressures of the White House. Ronald Reagan described the relief provided by the bucolic site:
As president, the days I hated most were those of nonstop meetings, one after another, with no time in between to collect my thoughts…the days I liked best were those Fridays when I could break away a little early, about three or three-thirty, and take off for Camp David.25
Each president has discovered reasons for appreciating Camp David as a private retreat. Perhaps former White House staffer Ken Khachigian captured it most succinctly when he stated, “It’s where a president can be a human being again.”26
President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Reagan issue a joint radio address on federal drug policy at Camp David in 1982.
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