Listed below are the private residences of the various presidents of the United States . Except for George Washington, all of them also lived at the White House (Executive Residence ). For a list of official residences, see President of the United States § Residence .
Private homes of the presidents [ edit ]
Mount Vernon , George Washington's Fairfax County, Virginia plantation home
Peacefield , the home of John Adams and John Quincy Adams in Quincy, Massachusetts
Monticello , Thomas Jefferson's Albemarle County, Virginia plantation home; appears on the back of the U.S. nickel
Montpelier , James Madison's Orange County, Virginia plantation home
Lincoln Home , Abraham Lincoln's Springfield, Illinois home
Springwood , Franklin D. Roosevelt's Hyde Park, New York home
The Kennedy Compound , John F. Kennedy's Hyannis Port, Massachusetts home
La Casa Pacifica , Richard Nixon's San Clemente, California home
Walker's Point , George H. W. Bush's Kennebunkport, Maine home
Mar-a-Lago - the Palm Beach, Florida estate owned by Donald Trump
This is a list of notable homes where presidents resided with their families before or after their term of office.
Order
President
Location
1
George Washington
George Washington Birthplace , Westmoreland County, Virginia Ferry Farm , Stafford County, Virginia Mount Vernon , Mount Vernon , Virginia
2
John Adams
John Adams Birthplace , Quincy, Massachusetts Family home , Quincy, MassachusettsPeacefield , Quincy, Massachusetts
3
Thomas Jefferson
Monticello , Charlottesville, Virginia Poplar Forest , Forest, Virginia
4
James Madison
Belle Grove , Port Conway, Virginia Montpelier , Orange County, Virginia
5
James Monroe
Ash Lawn-Highland , Charlottesville, Virginia ,Oak Hill , Leesburg, Virginia
6
John Quincy Adams
Birthplace and childhood home , Quincy, Massachusetts Peacefield , Quincy, Massachusetts
7
Andrew Jackson
The Hermitage , Hermitage, Tennessee
8
Martin Van Buren
Decatur House , Washington, D.C.Lindenwald , Kinderhook, New York
9
William Henry Harrison
Berkeley Plantation , Charles City County, Virginia Grouseland , Vincennes, Indiana
10
John Tyler
Sherwood Forest Plantation , Charles City County, Virginia
11
James K. Polk
James K. Polk Birthplace Home , Pineville, North Carolina James K. Polk Home , Columbia, Tennessee Polk Place , Nashville, Tennessee (demolished)
12
Zachary Taylor
Springfield , Louisville, Kentucky
13
Millard Fillmore
Fillmore House , East Aurora, New York
14
Franklin Pierce
Franklin Pierce Homestead , Hillsborough, New Hampshire Pierce Manse , Concord, New Hampshire
15
James Buchanan
Wheatland , Lancaster, Pennsylvania
16
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln Birthplace , Hodgenville, Kentucky Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial , Lincoln City, Indiana Lincoln Home , Springfield, Illinois
17
Andrew Johnson
Mordecai historic park , Raleigh, North Carolina Andrew Johnson Home , Greeneville, Tennessee
18
Ulysses S. Grant
Grant Birthplace , Point Pleasant, Ohio Ulysses S. Grant Home , Galena, Illinois Grant Boyhood Home , Georgetown, OhioGrant's Farm , Grantwood Village, Missouri 3 East 66th Street, New York City (demolished)[ 1] Grant Cottage , Moreau, New York
19
Rutherford B. Hayes
Spiegel Grove , Fremont, Ohio
20
James A. Garfield
Lawnfield , Mentor, Ohio
21
Chester A. Arthur
Chester Arthur Birthplace , Fairfield, Vermont Chester A. Arthur Home , New York City, New York
22/24
Grover Cleveland
Grover Cleveland Birthplace , Caldwell, New Jersey Westland Mansion , Princeton, New Jersey
23
Benjamin Harrison
Benjamin Harrison Home , Indianapolis, Indiana
25
William McKinley
William McKinley Birthplace , Niles, Ohio
26
Theodore Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace , New York City, New York Sagamore Hill , Cove Neck, New York Pine Knot cabin , Albemarle County, Virginia Maltese Cross Cabin , Medora, North Dakota Elkhorn Ranch , Billings County, North Dakota (demolished)
27
William Howard Taft
Taft House , Cincinnati, Ohio
28
Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson Birthplace , Staunton, Virginia Woodrow Wilson Boyhood Home (Georgia) , Augusta, Georgia Woodrow Wilson Boyhood Home (South Carolina) , Columbia, South Carolina Woodrow Wilson House , Washington, D.C. Prospect House , Princeton, New Jersey
29
Warren G. Harding
Warren G. Harding House , Marion, Ohio
30
Calvin Coolidge
Coolidge Homestead , Plymouth Notch, Vermont Calvin Coolidge House , Northampton, Massachusetts
31
Herbert Hoover
Herbert Hoover National Historic Site , West Branch, Iowa Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House , Stanford, California Waldorf Astoria New York , New York City, New York
32
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Springwood , Hyde Park, New York Roosevelt Cottage , Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada Little White House , Warm Springs, Georgia
33
Harry S. Truman
Harry S Truman Birthplace , Lamar, Missouri Truman Home , Independence, Missouri
34
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Eisenhower Birthplace , Denison, Texas Eisenhower Boyhood Home , Abilene, Kansas Eisenhower Farm , Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
35
John F. Kennedy
John F. Kennedy Birthplace , Brookline, Massachusetts Kennedy Compound , Hyannis Port, Massachusetts Wexford , Marshall, Virginia
36
Lyndon B. Johnson
LBJ Ranch , Stonewall , Texas
37
Richard Nixon
Childhood home , Yorba Linda, California La Casa Pacifica , San Clemente , California
38
Gerald Ford
Gerald Ford Birthplace , Omaha, Nebraska (demolished)Gerald R. Ford Jr. House , Alexandria, Virginia ,President Gerald R. Ford Jr. Boyhood Home , Grand Rapids , Michigan
39
Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter Boyhood Farm , Plains, Georgia Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter House , Plains , Georgia
40
Ronald Reagan
Graham Building , Tampico, Illinois General Electric Showcase House , Pacific Palisades , Los AngelesRancho del Cielo , Santa Barbara, California 668 St. Cloud Road , Bel Air , Los Angeles (demolished)
41
George H. W. Bush
Bush Family Home , Midland , TexasWalker's Point , Kennebunkport , Maine
42
Bill Clinton
Childhood home , Hope , ArkansasClinton House , Fayetteville , Arkansas 15 Old House Lane, Chappaqua , New York[ 2]
43
George W. Bush
Bush Family Home , Midland , TexasPrairie Chapel Ranch , Crawford , Texas
44
Barack Obama
5046 South Greenwood Avenue, Kenwood , Chicago
45
Donald Trump
Childhood homes , Queens , New York CityPenthouse apartment , Trump Tower , New York CityMar-a-Lago , Palm Beach , FloridaSee Residences of Donald Trump
Presidential vacation homes [ edit ]
During their term of office, many presidents have owned or leased vacation homes in various parts of the country, which are often called by journalists the "Western White House", "Summer White House", or "Winter White House", depending on location or season.
The "Summer White House" is typically the name given to the summer vacation residence of the sitting president of the United States aside from Camp David , the mountain-based military camp in Frederick County , Maryland , used as a country retreat and for high-alert protection of presidents and their guests.
President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden 's beach house in the North Shores, Delaware neighborhood which serves as their Summer White House; photo taken in 2022.
Years
President
Property name
Location
1789–1797
George Washington
Mount Vernon
Fairfax County, Virginia
1793–1794
George Washington
Deshler-Morris House
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1805–1808
Thomas Jefferson
Poplar Forest
Forest, Virginia
1853–1857
Franklin Pierce
48 Central Street[ 3]
Andover, Massachusetts [ 4]
1857–1860
James Buchanan
Bedford Springs Hotel
Bedford, Pennsylvania
1862–1864
Abraham Lincoln
Cottage at the Soldiers' Home
Washington, D.C.
1869–1876
Ulysses S. Grant
Ulysses S. Grant Cottage [ 5]
Long Branch, New Jersey
1877–1881
Rutherford B. Hayes
Spiegel Grove
Fremont, Ohio
1886–1888
Grover Cleveland
Oak View Upon Red Top [ 6]
Washington, D.C.
1887–1888
Grover Cleveland
Wateridge
Marion, Massachusetts
1889–1892
Benjamin Harrison
Congress Hall
Cape May, New Jersey
1893–1896
Grover Cleveland
Gray Gables
Bourne, Massachusetts
1893–1896
Grover Cleveland
Woodley [ 6]
Washington, D.C.
1897, 1899
William McKinley
Hotel Champlain
Plattsburgh, New York
1901–1908
Theodore Roosevelt
Sagamore Hill
Cove Neck, New York
1909–1910
William Howard Taft
Stetson Cottage
Beverly, Massachusetts
1911–1912
William Howard Taft
Parramatta
Beverly, Massachusetts
1913–1915
Woodrow Wilson
Harlakenden
Cornish, New Hampshire
1916
Woodrow Wilson
Shadow Lawn
West Long Branch, New Jersey
1924
Calvin Coolidge
Coolidge Homestead
Plymouth Notch, Vermont
1925
Calvin Coolidge
White Court
Swampscott, Massachusetts
1926
Calvin Coolidge
White Pine Camp
Paul Smiths, New York
1927
Calvin Coolidge
Custer State Park
Custer County, South Dakota (Black Hills )
1928
Calvin Coolidge
Cedar Island Lodge
Brule, Wisconsin
1929–1932
Herbert Hoover
Rapidan Camp
Madison County, Virginia
1933–1939
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Roosevelt Campobello International Park
Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada
1933–1944
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Little White House
Warm Springs, Georgia
1933–1944
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Springwood
Hyde Park, New York
1953–1955
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Lowry Air Force Base
Denver, Colorado
1956–1960
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Commandant's Residence , Fort Adams
Newport, Rhode Island
1961–1963
John F. Kennedy
Hammersmith Farm
Newport, Rhode Island
1961–1963
John F. Kennedy
Kennedy Compound
Hyannis Port, Massachusetts
1964–1968
Lyndon B. Johnson
LBJ Ranch
Gillespie County, Texas
1969–1974
Richard Nixon
Florida White House
Key Biscayne, Florida
1969–1974
Richard Nixon
La Casa Pacifica
San Clemente, California
1974–1977
Gerald Ford
Firestone Residence
Palm Springs, California
1977–1980
Jimmy Carter
209 Woodland Drive
Plains, Georgia
1981–1988
Ronald Reagan
Rancho del Cielo
Santa Barbara, California
1989–1992
George H. W. Bush
Walker's Point Estate
Kennebunkport, Maine
1998–1999
Bill Clinton
Georgica Pond
East Hampton, New York
2001–2008
George W. Bush
Prairie Chapel Ranch
Crawford, Texas
2009–2012
Barack Obama
Blue Heron Farm
Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts
2013
Barack Obama
Chilmark House[ 7]
Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts
2017–2020
Donald Trump
Trump National Golf Club Bedminster [ 8]
Bedminster, New Jersey
2021–present
Joe Biden
None
North Shores, Delaware [ 9] [ 10]
A "Winter White House" is typically the name given to the winter vacation residence of the standing president of the United States aside from Camp David , the mountain-based military camp in Frederick County , Maryland , used as a country retreat and for high-alert protection of the president and his guests.
Although Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy had spent significant time in Florida (Harry Truman having spent time there in the summer), Richard Nixon's Florida White House was the first that reporters called the "Winter White House".[ 11]
Years
President
Property name
Location
1912–1913
Woodrow Wilson
Beaulieu (John M. Ayer Estate, Dixie White House)[ 12]
Pass Christian, Mississippi
1921–1923[ a]
Warren G. Harding
John Ringling Estate
Bird Key , Florida
1923–1929
Calvin Coolidge
Howard E. Coffin Estate
Sapelo Island , Georgia
1933–1945
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Little White House
Warm Springs, Georgia
1945–1953
Harry S. Truman
Harry S. Truman Little White House [ 11]
Key West, Florida
1953–1961
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Eisenhower Cabin, Augusta National Golf Club
Augusta, Georgia
1961–1963
John F. Kennedy
La Querida [ 13]
Palm Beach, Florida
1969–1974
Richard Nixon
Nixon's Florida White House
Key Biscayne, Florida
2009–2017
Barack Obama
Plantation Estate [ 14]
Kailua, Honolulu County, Hawaii
2017–2021; 2025–
Donald Trump
Mar-a-Lago [ 11]
Palm Beach, Florida
Western/Southern White House[ edit ]
President George W. Bush speaks to the press from his Crawford, Texas ranch on Sunday August 28, 2005. The logo in the background was created by the Bush administration in August 2001, and it was displayed at press briefings during Bush's stays at his ranch in Crawford. The sign reads:THE WESTERN WHITE HOUSE CRAWFORD, TEXAS
The Western White House and Southern White House are terms sometimes applied to additional residences of the president, especially when those residences are very distant from the District of Columbia. Famous examples include Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, as well as George W. Bush's Prairie Chapel Ranch in Crawford, Texas; Lyndon B. Johnson , Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan have also used the term for their private residences (Nixon and Reagan in California, Johnson in Texas).[ 15] [ 16] [ 17]
Other secondary "White Houses"[ edit ]
The first governmental spending on property improvements of private presidential residences was at Dwight Eisenhower 's Gettysburg farm , where the Secret Service added three guard posts to a fence.[ 18] Federal law now allows the president to designate a residence outside of the White House as his temporary offices,[ 19] [ 20] so that federal money can be used to provide required facilities.[ 21]
Other official residences occupied by presidents [ edit ]
Official residences occupied while in other offices [ edit ]
This is a list of official residences occupied by individuals who later served as presidents with their families while they served in the office related to the residence.
Order
President
Residence
Related office
10
John Tyler
Executive Mansion (Richmond , Virginia )
Governor of Virginia [ 22] (served 1825–1827)
22/24
Grover Cleveland
New York State Executive Mansion (Albany , New York )
Governor of New York [ 23] (served 1883–1885)
26
Theodore Roosevelt
New York State Executive Mansion (Albany , New York )
Governor of New York [ 23] (served 1899–1900)
27
William Howard Taft
Malacañang Palace (Manila , Philippines )
Governor-General of the Philippines [ 24] (served 1901–1903)
28
Woodrow Wilson
Prospect House , Princeton, New Jersey
President of Princeton University [ 25] (served 1902–1910)
32
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
New York State Executive Mansion (Albany , New York )
Governor of New York [ 23] (served 1929–1932)
39
Jimmy Carter
Georgia Governor's Mansion (Atlanta, Georgia )
Governor of Georgia [ 26] (served 1971–1975)
41
George H. W. Bush
Residence of the United States Ambassador to the United Nations (New York City )
United States Ambassador to the United Nations (served 1971–1973)
Number One Observatory Circle (Washington, D.C. )
Vice President of the United States (served 1981–1989)
42
Bill Clinton
Arkansas Governor's Mansion (Little Rock , Arkansas )
Governor of Arkansas (served 1979–1981 and 1983–1992)
43
George W. Bush
Texas Governor's Mansion (Austin , Texas )
Governor of Texas (served 1995–2000)
46
Joe Biden
Number One Observatory Circle (Washington, D.C. )
Vice President of the United States (served 2009–2017)
Official residences occupied by presidents while another member of their family served in other offices [ edit ]
This is a list of official residences occupied by presidents with their families (before or after their term of office) while another member of their family served in the office related to the residence.
^ Harding died before he could vacation in Bird Key.
^ Picone, Louis L. (2021). Grant's Tomb . New York: Arcade. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-950691-70-8 .
^ Montgomery, David (September 4, 1999). "The Clintons Are Coming and Chappaqua Braces" . The Washington Post . Retrieved April 3, 2024 .
^ "Welcome to the Andover Historic Preservation Web Site" . Andover Preservation Commission.
^ " 'Summer White House' of President Franklin Pierce - place with historical importance" . Wikimapia .
^ Null, Druscilla J. (1984). "Ulysses S. Grant Cottage, 995 Ocean Avenue, Long Branch, Monmouth County, NJ" (PDF) . Historic American Buildings Survey . HABS NJ-884.
^ a b "Frances Cleveland Biography" . National First Ladies' Library. Archived from the original on October 9, 2018. Retrieved February 14, 2012 .
^ "Martha's Vineyard estate once enjoyed by the Obamas is for sale" . July 2015.
^ Holson, Laura M. (June 3, 2017). "At the 'Summer White House,' You Are Never Far From a Trump Photo" . The New York Times . Retrieved January 20, 2021 .
^ Heim, Joe; Leonnig, Carol D. (November 27, 2020). "After Biden win, Rehoboth Beach celebrates local boy who made good: 'He's our Joe' " . The Washington Post . Retrieved November 27, 2020 .
^ Heller, Karen (January 12, 2021). "Lovely, little Delaware – long famous for corporations, chickens and credit cards – is ready for its big moment" . The Washington Post . Retrieved January 20, 2021 .
^ a b c Caputo, Marc. "Trump dubs Mar-a-Lago the new 'Winter White House' " . Politico .
^ "Dixie White House" .
^ Hofheinz, Darrell (June 19, 2020). "Former Kennedy estate sells for $70 million in Palm Beach, deed shows" . The Florida Times-Union (USA Today Network) . Retrieved January 16, 2021 .
^ Rachel Ross (January 18, 2017). "Want to Live Like the President? Barack Obama's Winter White House is Up for Rent" . Honolulu Magazine . Retrieved April 25, 2017 .
^ "Nixon's Western White House For Sale" . Orange County Register .
^ "About the Ranch" . Young America's Foundation.
^ "Texas Research Trip" . The Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies. Retrieved August 9, 2006 .
^ Damon, Allan L. (June 1974). "Presidential Expenses" . American Heritage Magazine . Vol. 25, no. 4. Archived from the original on January 7, 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2012 .
^ 31 C.F.R. 408.2(c)
^ "408.1 Authority" . Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) .
^ "Reagan Designates Ranch a 'Western White House' " . Around the Nation. The New York Times . Associated Press. February 5, 1981. p. A10.
^ a b "The Executive Mansion of Virginia Historical Marker" . www.hmdb.org . Retrieved February 17, 2022 .
^ a b c Fleming, Joe (November 26, 1985). "Executive mansion toasted, reviledUPI LifeStyle" . UPI . Retrieved February 17, 2022 .
^ "Malacanang Palace restored to the people by the people" . www.philippines-travel-guide.com . Retrieved February 17, 2022 .
^ "Prospect House | Facilities" . facilities.princeton.edu . Princeton University. Archived from the original on February 17, 2022. Retrieved February 17, 2022 .
^ Vejnoska (September 23, 2015). "New book takes peek at life inside Georgia Governor's Mansion" . The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved February 17, 2022 . [permanent dead link ]
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