• Mrs. Nixon Speaks with Barbara Walters Outside Peking Hotel
    Byron E. Schumaker
    press
    First Lady Visit
    travel
    China
    This photograph of First Lady Pat Nixon was taken on February 22, 1972, during President Richard M. Nixon's historic visit to the People's Republic of China. Mrs. Nixon is captured speaking to American reporter Barbara Walters outside the Peking Hotel. President Nixon's trip was the first time an American president had taken part in a State Visit to China.
  • Press Secretary Connie Stuart Addresses Members of the Press
    Byron E. Schumaker
    South Grounds
    South Lawn
    press
    staff
    wedding
    staff of FLOTUS and POTUS
    This photograph of press secretary and staff director to First Lady Pat Nixon, Constance “Connie” Cornell Stuart, addressing members of the press was taken on June 12, 1971. That day, Tricia Nixon -- eldest daughter of President Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon -- married Edward Cox at the White House in a Rose Garden ceremony followed by a reception in the East Room. Press members outnumbered the 400 wedding guests by approximately two to one, with the White House issuing around 700 press credentials. There was also a yellow and white striped tent at the tennis pavilion, which served as an outdoor press room.
  • Press Secretary Connie Stuart Addresses Members of the Press
    Byron E. Schumaker
    wedding
    staff
    press
    South Lawn
    South Grounds
    staff of FLOTUS and POTUS
    This photograph of press secretary and staff director to First Lady Pat Nixon, Constance “Connie” Cornell Stuart, addressing members of the press was taken on June 12, 1971. That day, Tricia Nixon -- eldest daughter of President Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon -- married Edward Cox at the White House in a Rose Garden ceremony followed by a reception in the East Room. Press members outnumbered the 400 wedding guests by approximately two to one, with the White House issuing around 700 press credentials. There was also a yellow and white striped tent at the tennis pavilion, which served as an outdoor press room.
  • Tricia Nixon's Wedding Place Setting
    Byron E. Schumaker
    President's Dining Room
    Second Floor
    tableware
    place settings
    This photograph of a dinner service place setting featuring Tricia Nixon's china pattern was taken by Byron E. Schumaker on May 8, 1971. The place setting is on a table in the President's Dining Room. The room is located on the Second Floor of the Executive Mansion in the northwest corner. The President's Dining Room was originally a bedroom referred to as the Prince of Wales Room after the 1860 visit of Edward Albert, Queen Victoria's son who would later become King Edward VII. It was not until the John F. Kennedy administration that the room became the President's Dining Room and the main eating room for the First Family. The dining room also features sideboards decorated with pieces of silver and a Zuber & Cie wallpaper depicting scenes from the American Revolution and natural landmarks.
  • Wedding Frenzy in the Rose Garden
    Byron E. Schumaker
    military
    staff
    wedding
    Rose Garden
    South Grounds
    This photograph was taken on June 12, 1971 by Byron E. Schumaker and shows the all-hands-on-deck preparations for Tricia Nixon and Edward Cox's wedding as staff and military aides set up chairs in the Rose Garden. Their wedding was the 16th documented wedding to take place at the White House and the first to be held in the Rose Garden or outdoors. Nixon was the daughter of President Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon. Approximately 400 guests watched the nuptials of the couple.
  • Mrs. Nixon Watches a Panda at the Beijing Zoo
    Byron E. Schumaker
    travel
    First Lady Visit
    China
    In this photograph taken by Bryon E. Schumaker, First Lady Pat Nixon, Chinese interpreters, officials, and the press watch a panda inside an enclosure at the Beijing Zoo (also known as the Peking Zoo) on February 22, 1972. The trip to the zoo was part of the Nixons' State Visit to the People's Republic of China.
  • Mrs. Nixon Watches a Panda at the Beijing Zoo
    Byron E. Schumaker
    First Lady Visit
    China
    travel
    In this photograph taken by Bryon E. Schumaker, First Lady Pat Nixon, Chinese interpreters, officials, and the press watch a panda inside an enclosure at the Beijing Zoo (also known as the Peking Zoo) on February 22, 1972. The trip to the zoo was part of the Nixons' State Visit to the People's Republic of China.
  • Mrs. Nixon Watches a Panda at the Beijing Zoo
    Byron E. Schumaker
    First Lady Visit
    China
    travel
    In this photograph taken by Bryon E. Schumaker, First Lady Pat Nixon, Chinese interpreters, officials, and the press watch a panda inside an enclosure at the Beijing Zoo (also known as the Peking Zoo) on February 22, 1972. The trip to the zoo was part of the Nixons' State Visit to the People's Republic of China.
  • Filming of "A Day in the Life of the President," 1971
    Byron E. Schumaker
    sports
    White House Guests
    West Wing
    Oval Office
    press
    In this photograph, taken by Byron E. Schumaker on December 6, 1971, a camera crew records as President Richard M. Nixon meets with guests in the Oval Office for the presentation of the Most Courageous Junior Olympian Award to Gary Washington, a 17-year-old athlete from the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind High School. Among those in attendance were Senator Gordon Allott of Colorado; Joseph Sisneros, American Sign Language interpreter and athletic coach at the Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind High School; John Kelly, Jr., president of the Amateur Athletic Union of the U.S., Inc. (AAU); Richard W. McArthur, publicity director of the AAU; C.M Sgt. Sidney Brooks, chairman of the 1971 Junior Olympic Championships; and Richard G. Kline, Washington, D.C. attorney and former chairman of the Junior Olympic Championships. This event was filmed for an NBC News television special entitled "A Day in the Life of the President," that aired in January 1972. NBC television crews returned to the White House to document "A Day in the Life of the President" specials for subsequent administrations including presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.
  • President Nixon Presents 1971 Most Courageous Junior Olympian Award
    Byron E. Schumaker
    sports
    White House Guests
    West Wing
    Oval Office
    Congress
    In this photograph, taken by Byron E. Schumaker on December 6, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon presents the Most Courageous Junior Olympian Award to Gary Washington, a 17-year-old athlete from the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind High School. Present at the ceremony were Senator Gordon Allott of Colorado; Gary Washington; Joseph Sisneros, American Sign Language interpreter and athletic coach at the Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind High School; President Nixon; and John Kelly, Jr., president of the Amateur Athletic Union of the U.S., Inc. (AAU). Also in attendance were Richard W. McArthur, publicity director of the AAU; C.M Sgt. Sidney Brooks, chairman of the 1971 Junior Olympic Championships; and Richard G. Kline, Washington, D.C. attorney and former chairman of the Junior Olympic Championships. This event was filmed for an NBC News television special entitled "A Day in the Life of the President," that aired in January 1972. NBC television crews returned to the White House to document "A Day in the Life of the President" specials for subsequent administrations including presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.
  • President and Mrs. Nixon Visit the Great Wall of China
    Byron E. Schumaker
    Presidential Visit
    First Lady Visit
    China
    This photograph, taken on February 24, 1972, shows President Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon visiting the Great Wall of China. President Nixon visited the People's Republic of China to normalize relations with the communist country. This was the first time a sitting American president visited China. This photograph is part of a collection belonging to former White House Executive Chef Henry Haller. Haller served as executive chef at the White House from 1966-1987.
  • Athletes at the Beijing Capitol Gymnasium During Nixon's State Visit
    Byron E. Schumaker
    Presidential Visit
    Head of State
    First Lady Visit
    China
    This photograph was taken on February 23, 1972 during President Richard M. Nixon's State Visit to the People's Republic of China. It was the first time a current American president had visited China. In the photograph, Chinese gymnasts, table tennis athletes, and audience members rise to applaud President Nixon, First Lady Pat Nixon, and Chinese Premier Enlai Zhou. This photograph is part of a collection belonging to former White House Executive Chef Henry Haller. Haller served as executive chef at the White House from 1966-1987.
  • Man Walks in Snow, Beijing, China
    Byron E. Schumaker
    Presidential Visit
    China
    In this photograph, taken on February 24, 1972, an elderly man carrying a parasol walks through the snow in Beijing, China. This photograph was taken during President Richard M. Nixon's State Visit to the People's Republic of China, which occurred on February 17-28, 1972. It was the first formal visit of a sitting American president to China. This photograph is part of a collection belonging to former White House Executive Chef Henry Haller. Haller served as executive chef at the White House from 1966-1987.
  • Street Scenes in China During President Nixon's Trip
    Byron E. Schumaker
    Presidential Visit
    China
    This photograph was taken during President Richard M. Nixon's visit to the People's Republic of China, that occurred on February 17-28, 1972. It was likely taken on February 25, in Beijing. In the photograph, young workers march by, carrying shovels to remove snow from the city's streets. This photograph is part of a collection belonging to former White House Executive Chef Henry Haller. Haller served as executive chef of the White House from 1966-1987.
  • Chefs Assemble Tricia Nixon's Wedding Cake Topper
    Byron E. Schumaker
    staff
    Ground Floor
    Kitchen
    wedding
    food
    In this photograph, taken June 11, 1971, New York pastry chef Maurice Bonté works on a structure made from pulled sugar, which would be placed at the top of Tricia Nixon's wedding cake. Bonté designed the six-layer cake and its decorations. Standing at nearly a foot tall, the cake topper was modeled after the altar in the White House Rose Garden, where Nixon and her husband Edward Cox exchanged wedding vows on June 12, 1971. To the right of Bonté, are White House Executive Chef Henry Haller (center) and White House Pastry Chef Heinz Bender. This photograph is part of a collection belonging to former White House Executive Chef Henry Haller. Henry Haller served as executive chef at the White House from 1966-1987.