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FILE - This Dec. 2008 video image provided by the White House shows Barney running through the White House in the "Barney Cam" Christmas holiday doggie video. In 2002 with public access to the White House more restricted in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks, first lady Laura Bush sent the terrier out to prowl the  house with a little camera attached to his collar. Barney Cam's 4.5-minute video tour of the mansion decorations got 24 million views in its first day on the White House Web site and his movies became an annual feature after that.
FILE – This Dec. 2008 video image provided by the White House shows Barney running through the White House in the “Barney Cam” Christmas holiday doggie video. In 2002 with public access to the White House more restricted in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks, first lady Laura Bush sent the terrier out to prowl the house with a little camera attached to his collar. Barney Cam’s 4.5-minute video tour of the mansion decorations got 24 million views in its first day on the White House Web site and his movies became an annual feature after that.
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Scenes from White House Christmases past, as recounted in the book “Christmas at the White House,” by Jennifer B. Pickens:

First tree. The first known Christmas tree at the White House was in the tenure of Benjamin Harrison, who helped trim one in the upstairs library with friends, family and staff.

“We shall have an old-fashioned Christmas tree for the grandchildren upstairs and I shall be their Santa Claus myself,” Harrison exclaimed.

Christmas theme. Jacqueline Kennedy began the tradition of a theme for White House Christmases when she chose to decorate a tree in the Blue Room with items evoking Tchaikovsky’s “Nutcracker Suite.” There were 10 other trees on the main floor of the White House — all but two of them undecorated — and several more upstairs in the family quarters. The White House grounds superintendent thought it a “massive” number of trees compared with the one or two requested by most previous administrations.

Barney cam. With public access to the White House more restricted in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, first lady Laura Bush sent the family’s terrier, Barney, out to prowl the building with a little camera attached to his collar in 2002. Barney Cam’s 4.5-minute video tour of the mansion decorations got 24 million views in its first day on the White House website, and his movies became an annual feature after that.

Mourning season. After John F. Kennedy’s assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, a month of mourning was declared. On the evening of Dec. 22, new President Lyndon Johnson lit the National Christmas Tree behind the White House. The next morning, the black mourning crepe that had been draped over doorways and chandeliers in the White House was replaced with holly, wreaths and mistletoe.

Lady Bird Johnson later wrote, “I walked the well-lit hall for the first time with the sense that life was going to go on, that we as a country were going to begin again.”

What every girl wants. In 1977, a surprise gift arrived for 10-year-old Amy Carter — a red, white and blue chain saw.

A young friend of Amy’s had reported that the first daughter wanted a chain saw for Christmas because “she likes the way they work.”

A White House spokeswoman later clarified, “I think Amy might have said ‘train set,’ not ‘chain saw.’ “

Nonetheless, more chain saws arrived.

Ah-choo! President Ronald Reagan caught Nancy Reagan under the “kissing ball” of mistletoe that hung in the Grand Foyer in 1981. But Reagan’s allergies couldn’t handle some of the other floral arrangements, and the plants had to be exiled to spots in the White House that the president rarely visited.

Source: “Christmas at the White House,” by Jennifer B. Pickens, published in 2009 by Fife & Drum Press

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