Wednesday, December 31, 2025

New Years Reception history

 



PRESIDENTIAL HANDSHAKES ON NEW YEAR’S DAY

 

 

 

                   President's John Adams and Jefferson

For more than a century, New Year’s Day was marked by a large reception held at the White House. Foreign ambassadors and members of the US government were invited, but attendance wasn’t restricted to a guest list. Astoundingly, anyone could wait on line, enter the White House, and shake the hand of the president. 

The tradition of the New Year’s reception, or levee, as it was often called, began with George Washington, before the White House was built. The first occupant of the White House, John Adams, took up residence in the unfinished mansion in November 1800, and hosted its first New Year’s reception on January 1, 1801. 

A history of the White House published a century ago noted that John and Abigail Adams hosted a “very formal affair”: 

The President and his wife did the honors alone that New Year's Day, and it does not seem to have occurred to them to call on the Cabinet families to assist them. The President's wife sat in state in her brocades and velvets, while the President stood beside her in knee-breeches, gaily colored waistcoat, high stock collar, and his powdered hair tied in a neat queue. After each guest had paid his respects to them, he passed on and was served with refreshments by a waiter.

Thomas Jefferson Sets the Tone

John Adams would only spend one New Year’s Day in the White House, as Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated in March 1801. Jefferson continued the tradition of the New Year’s Day levee, though his personal style was hardly formal. 

It was Jefferson who began the tradition of shaking hands with each and every visitor. He would stand in the oval reception room at the center of the White House (known today as the Blue Room). The line of visitors would pass by, and Jefferson would take delight in exchanging friendly greetings. 

It was customary for foreign diplomats to attend the New Year’s reception in distinctive dress. In Jefferson’s day it was noted that the French ambassador was “decked in gold lace,” while an ambassador from North Africa wore silk slippers, a turban, and a scarlet jacket “embroidered with precious stones.” Native Americans would also attend, and it was written that they sported feathers in their hair and wore blankets and deerskin moccasins. 

The White House Burns but Tradition Endures


                                           President's  Madison and Monroe

Following the burning of the White House by British troops in 1814, the New Year's Day levees were held in the rented houses used by presidents James Madison and James Monroe. 

The White House receptions resumed on January 1, 1818, hosted by Monroe in the rebuilt mansion. At that time it was decided to hold an earlier reception for the foreign diplomats and government officials, so they wouldn't be subjected to the crush of people in the public reception. 

Customarily, anyone waiting in line outside would be admitted. After greeting the president in the Blue Room, the crowd would be directed into the enormous East Room. A temporary wooden bridge would be positioned in one of the large front windows of the East Room, and the guests would exit through the window onto the White House lawn. 

Shaking Hands and Making History

                                       
                                                     President Lincoln and Mrs. Lincoln

A marathon of handshaking became a footnote to a momentous event on January 1, 1863. President Abraham Lincoln intended to sign the Emancipation Proclamation on that day, but first he had to shake thousands of hands. 

When he finally sat down in his upstairs study to sign the historic document, he told Secretary of State William Seward that his right hand was swollen. 

Lincoln suspected this particular signature might be examined closely in years to come, and he didn’t want it to appear weak. He was later quoted as saying, “The signature looks a little tremulous, as my hand was tired, but my resolution was firm.” 

The following year, the New York Times printed the following dispatch, dated January 2, 1864, from the Associated Press: 

Years ago had any colored man presented himself at the White House, at the President’s levee, seeking an introduction to the Chief Magistrate of the nation, he would, in all probability, have been roughly handled for his impudence. Yesterday four colored men, of genteel exterior and with the manners of gentlemen, joined in the throng that crowded the Executive mansion, and were presented to the President of the United States.

Lincoln’s final New Year’s Day reception was described in the New York Times of January 4, 1865: 

The gala event of our New Year’s celebration was the annual reception of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln. The White House was thrown open at 12 o’clock, and the Cabinet Ministers, the Diplomatic Corps, the Judges of the Supreme Court and the Court of Claims, and the army and navy officers, paid, in the order of precedence, the compliments of the season to the President and his wife. 

At 1 o’clock the citizens at large were presented. The Marine Band during the hours of reception discoursed excellent music, and the whole affair passed off with brilliancy, no less than five thousand people having gained admittance to the reception. 

The President was in the best of spirits, and received the greetings of his friends in the most genial manner.

The New Year’s Day receptions continued for decades after Lincoln’s time. In the years before White House Christmas trees became the focus of holiday entertaining, the visit to the president's house on the first day of the year was the beginning of the social season in Washington. 


The Great Receptions Fade Into History


Line for Theodore Roosevelt.



                                             President Lincoln and Mrs. Lincoln

The receptions remained enormously popular, and Time magazine published an article in 1930 about a man arriving early enough to be first on line for that year’s reception. The last New Year’s Day reception was held January 1, 1932, during the administration of Herbert Hoover. The following year, the Hoover family left Washington for the holidays, and the long tradition was broken. 

When Franklin Roosevelt took office in 1933 he chose not to revive the custom, partly because his paralysis made it difficult to stand to greet visitors. 

With all the security precautions in today's world, it’s impossible to imagine that the public will ever again be able to celebrate New Year's Day by walking into the White House and shaking the president's hand. 


Happy New Year!


Barb.  


   Copied from Wikipedia.  


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Friday, December 26, 2025

Favorite Christmas Sights and Sounds and Memories.






What to write about?  Does your character like the seasonal holiday time or does he/she dread it? Why? Do you want your character to feel the same emotions that you do once the time is upon us?  How about that cousin, aunt or uncle that makes you crazy?

Here is a description straight out of A CHILDS CHRISTMAS IN WALES by Dylan Thomas.  Copyright 1954



    
      For dinner we had turkey and blazing pudding, and after dinner the Uncles sat in front of the fire, loosened all buttons, put their large moist hands over their watch chains, groaned a little and slept. Mothers, aunts and sister scuttled to and fro, bearing tureens. Auntie Bessie, who had already been frightened, twice, by a clock-worked mouse, whimpered at the sideboard and had some elderberry. The dog was sick. Auntie Dosie had to have three aspirins, but Auntie Hannah, who liked port, stood in the middle of the snowbound back yard, singing like a big-bosomed thrush.

That paragraph evokes all sorts of sights, sounds, and emotions.  Take the time and count all the emotions and write down what they are.  Afterwards, the descriptive words.  Dylan Thomas sets the scene and puts you right there in the middle of it.

Go ahead and write your holiday scene with your character.  Are you dropping the reader right in the middle of it? I would hope to be like one of the latter aunts, Dosie or Hannah.  They seem to know how to have fun.

Have fun and happy holidays!  Please leave a comment and share!

Barb

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Sunday, December 21, 2025

History of White House Christmas Cards








      White House Christmas Cards History.










Wouldn’t it be great to receive a greeting card from the White House? I think I’d flip. My husband would have to revive me if that were to happen.

The act of sending greeting cards over the holiday season began with President Coolidge. At that time, people all over the United States had begun the tradition, and it’s still in practice.


President Hoover, in 1930-31, sent greeting cards to friends and family with pictures included! So he was in the Christmas spirit even in office.


 FDR introduced more of a stylized Christmas card in 1937 which was provided by the distinguished Brewood Engravers. The single-sided FDR offering was a small, three by four inch, lithograph of a snow covered farm with two red barns and two green fir trees. The inscription said simply, "Christmas 1937."


In 1942 the Roosevelt’s were seated for a black and white photograph. The greeting read: "With Christmas Greetings and our Best Wishes for a Happier New Year."




The Truman’s had larger and smaller cards.

Throughout the remainder of the Eisenhower years the Presidential Seal was the single stark feature on the front of the cards. "The President and Mrs. Eisenhower extend their best wishes for Christmas and the New Year."

In 1961 President John Kennedy also incorporated the dramatic Presidential Seal for the White House Christmas cards. The card used a smooth white stock with a bold green silk border, and used the words, "Season's Greetings 1961," on the front. Inside the card the president and Mrs. Kennedy extended wishes for a "Blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year."







Every president since has added a special twist their greeting, and the tradition continues. A card now from the Kennedy’s would sell on the market for about $11,000.00










My information came from the White House historical site.


Interesting, isn't it?

Barb

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