Executive Images
To assemble "The American Presidency" exhibition, experts scour a treasure trove of historic pictures
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2001, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
An alcove of the exhibition devoted to life in the White House is sure to please youngsters with its display of such personal items as an 1829 bisque doll belonging to John Quincy Adams’ granddaughter, the elaborate dollhouses of Jimmy Carter’s daughter, Amy, and Grover Cleveland’s children, a découpaged paint box, pointe shoes and a chess set. The photographs accompanying this section enhance the domestic setting: there are pictures of Commanders in Chief cuddling their grandchildren, of Lincoln reading to his son Tad, and of children having a snowball fight on the White House lawn. And, of course, there’s that charming picture of John Kennedy, Jr., playing under his father’s desk.
"Many of these pictures are from Presidential libraries," Kreiss said. "The hardest to get were of Chelsea. The Clintons really protected her."
But apparently some Presidents are less concerned about their privacy: here also is a picture of Lyndon Johnson conducting a staff meeting from his bed, a habit of his, Kreiss said.
Occasionally, certain photographs prove to be elusive, even though everyone thinks they’ve seen them everywhere. "We needed a shot of Franklin Roosevelt with his dog Fala," Kreiss said. "Easy, we thought. But the National Archives didn’t have one. We called the wire services. Nope. The Roosevelt Presidential Library had a picture but couldn’t give us permission to use it. We finally found a copy at one of the big stock houses that lend commercially."
The long-sought-after photograph shows the Scottish terrier in the front seat of a convertible with FDR at the wheel (the President, disabled, used hand controls to drive).
One of the most compelling pictures is an enlargement of Ulysses S. Grant in his post-Presidency days. Suffering from throat cancer, he is shown swaddled in blankets, working feverishly on his memoirs, which he wanted to finish before his death, in order to support his wife.
Laura Kreiss has been finding photographs most of her life. "I have a master’s degree in anthropology," she told me, "but I’ve been interested in photographs since I was a little girl. I got my first job working for the National Institutes of Health with a medical researcher who set up a film and a photographic archive at NIH."
A few years later, when Kreiss was working at the National Library of Medicine at NIH, Woody Allen’s people called and wanted footage of mental institutions in the 1930s. "They were researching the film Zelig. I helped them find some film footage and got a credit in the movie. Boy, I thought, finding this stuff is so much more interesting than just storing films and putting numbers on things."
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