
The White House and The Sea (#71)
With this issue of the Quarterly we follow Americaâs presidents to sea, where so many chapters of White House history have been written. Sailing on the Mayflower, the Sequoia, the Potomac, and other vessels both official and private, our presidents have carried the burdens of the White House out over the horizon. They have sought peace at sea, relaxed, dined, and celebrated at sea, and mourned tragedies at sea. As this issue goes to press, November 22, 2023, the sixtieth anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, approaches. Reflections on his lifelong connections to the sea are threaded through the issue, and it is fitting that his wordsââwe are tied to the oceanââare quoted on our cover. They set the stage for the articles to follow.
From George Washingtonâs crossing of the Delaware to Joe Bidenâs sojourns to Rehoboth, Kenneth T. Walshâs opening survey reveals the significance of âtime on the waterâ for the presidents.
Historian Matthew Goetz reminds us that it was at the urging of future president George Washington that the Continental Congress established the navy. By the twentieth century, the small force of âcivilian fishing vesselsâ that Washington commissioned had grown into the
worldâs greatest navy. Among the U.S. Navyâs mid-century sailors committed to defending democracy and safeguarding freedom were six future presidents whose service is recounted by Stewart D. McLaurin in his Quarterly Reflections.
âYou have to go a long way off to see things in their true perspective,â observed President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who spent more time at sea than any other president. Author James Fortuna explains that, whether for diplomacy, statecraft, or recreation, FDR, who filled his Private Quarters in the White House with nautical paintings and model ships, considered sailing an âabsolute necessity.â On many of these excursions FDR was joined by his military aide William Rigdon, who described the role as âthe best duty I ever had.â Author Mary Jo Binker traces Rigdonâs adventures with the president.
Although the sea can bring true comfort to the presidents, it has at times also bought great sorrow. Matthew Costello takes us back to the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, which took the life of President William Howard Taftâs trusted adviser Major Archibald Butt. A hero in death, Butt, poignantly eulogized by Taft himself, is remembered today by a monument just south of the White House in the Presidentâs Park.
Back on dry land at the White House, reminders of the sea are close at hand. Former White House curator Lydia Tederick presents a selection of the coastal paintings in the White House Collection that can quickly transport the president back to the water through the eyes of the nationâs most accomplished artists. Many presidents have included nautical references in the decor of their workspace, and in recent decades the Oval Office has been furnished with the famous Resolute Desk. Ornately carved from the timbers of the British exploring vessel HMS Resolute, it was given by Queen Victoria to President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1880. Once trapped in Arctic ice, the salvaged oak from which the president conducts the business of the nation provides a tangible connection to the sea.
Culinary historian Alex Prudâhomme shares two stories of presidential dining at sea. For Calvin Coolidge, dinner at sea was often on the Mayflower in the form of an early version of âAsian fusion,â prepared by navy steward and chef Lee Ping Quan. For Kennedy, it was on May 29, 1963, what turned out to be his last birthday, when his closest friends and family enjoyed roast fillet of beef with Dom PĂ©rignon on the Sequoia.
With a focus on five chief executivesâGeorge Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Ronald Reaganâauthor Joel Kemelhor provides the first of what will be an ongoing review of ships named for the presidents. Beginning with a merchant vessel renamed Washington in 1775 and ending with the USS George Washington heading for Japan in 2024, Kemelhor documents their places in both nautical history and popular culture.
Awards:
Communicator Award
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Description
With this issue of the Quarterly we follow Americaâs presidents to sea, where so many chapters of White House history have been written. Sailing on the Mayflower, the Sequoia, the Potomac, and other vessels both official and private, our presidents have carried the burdens of the White House out over the horizon. They have sought peace at sea, relaxed, dined, and celebrated at sea, and mourned tragedies at sea. As this issue goes to press, November 22, 2023, the sixtieth anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, approaches. Reflections on his lifelong connections to the sea are threaded through the issue, and it is fitting that his wordsââwe are tied to the oceanââare quoted on our cover. They set the stage for the articles to follow.
From George Washingtonâs crossing of the Delaware to Joe Bidenâs sojourns to Rehoboth, Kenneth T. Walshâs opening survey reveals the significance of âtime on the waterâ for the presidents.
Historian Matthew Goetz reminds us that it was at the urging of future president George Washington that the Continental Congress established the navy. By the twentieth century, the small force of âcivilian fishing vesselsâ that Washington commissioned had grown into the
worldâs greatest navy. Among the U.S. Navyâs mid-century sailors committed to defending democracy and safeguarding freedom were six future presidents whose service is recounted by Stewart D. McLaurin in his Quarterly Reflections.
âYou have to go a long way off to see things in their true perspective,â observed President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who spent more time at sea than any other president. Author James Fortuna explains that, whether for diplomacy, statecraft, or recreation, FDR, who filled his Private Quarters in the White House with nautical paintings and model ships, considered sailing an âabsolute necessity.â On many of these excursions FDR was joined by his military aide William Rigdon, who described the role as âthe best duty I ever had.â Author Mary Jo Binker traces Rigdonâs adventures with the president.
Although the sea can bring true comfort to the presidents, it has at times also bought great sorrow. Matthew Costello takes us back to the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, which took the life of President William Howard Taftâs trusted adviser Major Archibald Butt. A hero in death, Butt, poignantly eulogized by Taft himself, is remembered today by a monument just south of the White House in the Presidentâs Park.
Back on dry land at the White House, reminders of the sea are close at hand. Former White House curator Lydia Tederick presents a selection of the coastal paintings in the White House Collection that can quickly transport the president back to the water through the eyes of the nationâs most accomplished artists. Many presidents have included nautical references in the decor of their workspace, and in recent decades the Oval Office has been furnished with the famous Resolute Desk. Ornately carved from the timbers of the British exploring vessel HMS Resolute, it was given by Queen Victoria to President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1880. Once trapped in Arctic ice, the salvaged oak from which the president conducts the business of the nation provides a tangible connection to the sea.
Culinary historian Alex Prudâhomme shares two stories of presidential dining at sea. For Calvin Coolidge, dinner at sea was often on the Mayflower in the form of an early version of âAsian fusion,â prepared by navy steward and chef Lee Ping Quan. For Kennedy, it was on May 29, 1963, what turned out to be his last birthday, when his closest friends and family enjoyed roast fillet of beef with Dom PĂ©rignon on the Sequoia.
With a focus on five chief executivesâGeorge Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Ronald Reaganâauthor Joel Kemelhor provides the first of what will be an ongoing review of ships named for the presidents. Beginning with a merchant vessel renamed Washington in 1775 and ending with the USS George Washington heading for Japan in 2024, Kemelhor documents their places in both nautical history and popular culture.
Awards:
Communicator Award



















