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The 44th President: Barack Obama

Obamas Begin Move to Washington

Next First Lady and Daughters Prepare for Major Date: the First Day of School

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Mr. Obama came to Washington today, and to a new address in sight of -- but not at -- the White House, a symbolic nod to Obama's oft-repeated adage that there is only one president at a time.

PHOTO OBAMAS MOVING TO WASHINGTON
In this Jan. 3, 2008, file photo Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., waves to supporters at an after caucus rally in Des Moines, Iowa, after winning the Iowa democratic presidential caucus.
(M. Spencer Green/AP Photo)

Michelle Obama arrived with the two first daughters late Saturday, whisking 10-year-old Malia and 7-year-old Sasha into Washington's Hay-Adams hotel, out of sight of waiting photographers. The president-elect flew into town this evening and joined his family at the hotel.

The storied inn, as the barriers and police cars blocking the main thoroughfare of H Street made clear, will serve as the first family's temporary home until they move across Lafayette Park to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue on Jan. 20.

The Obamas had sought to move into Blair House, the official guest house near the White House, but were denied access, apparently due to a scheduling conflict. It is a move the family has hoped for and anticipated for months, as Michelle Obama told ABC's "Good Morning America" in May.

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"What a gift to grow up in the White House, to, to see world leaders, to understand how the country is shaped," she said. "What a symbol that it will show to so many young boys and girls out there, particularly kids of color who have never seen themselves in a major way. What a statement that'll be."

The Obama girls are the youngest White House residents since Amy Carter and John Kennedy Jr. before her.

The main reason for the timing of the move was the Obama girls' first day in their new school on Monday, a sometimes daunting experience for White House children, as Amy Carter discovered when she was mobbed as she arrived at Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School.

As Mary Finch Hoyt, former spokeswoman for first lady Rosalynn Carter, writes in her book, "East Wing," Amy was shocked to be met by a throng of reporters, photographers and onlookers on the bitterly cold morning she arrived at the public school nine blocks from the White House.

"'Uh-h,' Amy rolls her eyes," Finch writes. "Mother and daughter climb out of the limousine into blinding flashbulbs. The child, bundled up in warm clothing, pulls her knit cap down close to her eyes. … The photographers go wild."

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