December 13 - Plans Unveiled For Incorporating Archeological Findings Into President's House Site - press release and Handout
In the 1790s, at the President's House location at Sixth and Market Streets, Presidents George Washington and John Adams lived and conducted their executive branch business. Washington brought some of his slaves to this site and they lived and toiled with other members of his household during the years that our first president was guiding the experimental development of the young nation toward modern, republican government. The rediscovery of this slave-holding information led to the U.S. House of Representatives Report 107-564 of 2003 which "urges the National Park Service to appropriately commemorate concerns" of those historical events. The historical commemoration came to be entitled "The President’s House: Freedom and Slavery in Making a New Nation." This project, to be located adjacent to the Liberty Bell Center, is a joint cooperation between the National Park Service and the City of Philadelphia (www.phila.gov/presidentshouse). The commemoration will contribute to the growing international network of historic sites that present race and slavery and is expected to be completed about October, 2007. Read more about this topic in the President's House Forum page.
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Did You Know?
Did you know Benjamin Franklin had a pet angora cat? When it died, he asked artist and natural historian Charles Willson Peale to preserve it through a taxidermy process.