Main Content

Related


  • Scholarship

    Lady Bird Johnson's Floral Legacy

    Few first ladies have been so attuned to the natural beauty inside and outside the White House as First Lady Claudia Johnson, or “Lady Bird.” Famed for her environmental work, she brought a sense of the floral to everything she did, from wide-ranging legislation to small touches of hospitality.Mrs. Johnson’s White House entertaining style often included an homage to the

  • Gallery

    The White House Historical Association Christmas Ornament Collection

    Every year since 1981, the White House Historical Association has had the privilege of designing the Official White House Christmas Ornament. This gallery showcases every ornament we've created, including our new 2024 design, which you can purchase for your own collection in our online shop.

  • Scholarship

    Christmas with the Johnson Family

    The White House celebrates many holiday traditions, some of which are historic and others more recent. New arrivals to the Executive Mansion bring unique familial rituals that are often blended with time-tested White House and presidential customs. During the holiday season, the president and first lady participate in public traditions such as receiving a tree for the Blue Room, lighting

  • Scholarship

    "We Shall Overcome"

    After the 1964 electoral landslide, President Lyndon Johnson’s political position changed considerably. With a larger liberal majority in both houses of Congress secured, Johnson believed he now had an electoral mandate to move forward on the issue of civil rights. He wasted no time in setting a marker for his goals. In his 1965 inaugural address, Johnson intimated that he would pu

  • Scholarship

    "The Touch of Velvet and the Stamina of Steel"

    On November 22, 1963, tragedy brought Claudia “Lady Bird” Johnson to the White House and thrust her into the national spotlight. Following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas, her husband Lyndon B. Johnson took the Oath of Office aboard Air Force One at Love Field. In the blink of an eye, Lady Bird Johnson became the first lady—a titl

Digital Library Collections