This photograph of the Children's Garden was taken during the 141st White House Easter Egg Roll by Matthew D'Agostino on April 22, 2019. Established in 1968 during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, the Children's Garden is small, secluded, and private. The Children's Garden is famous for the handprints of the presidential grandchildren embedded in the stone paths.
This photograph of the Children's Garden was taken by Maggie Knaus in July of 2002. It shows the entrance of the Children's Garden on the South Lawn of the White House. Established in 1968 during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, the Children's Garden is small, secluded, and private. The Children's Garden is famous for the handprints of the presidential grandchildren embedded in the stone paths.
This photograph of the Children's Garden on the South Grounds was shot by Maggie Knaus in July of 2002. Established in 1968 during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, the Children's Garden is small, secluded, and private. The photo features several of the handprints the Children's Garden is famous for. They are impressions created by the children and grandchildren of different presidents.
This black and white carte de visite image shows a group of children sitting around the sea serpent fountain on the South Lawn of the White House during the administration of Abraham Lincoln.
This black and white photograph by Mathew Brady is a south view of the White House during the Lincoln Administration. There is a man sitting on a brick wall and children sit and play on the grass. Brady was one of the first professional photographers in the United States. He studied under inventor Samuel F.B. Morse, who brought the daguerreotype from France to America. Brady achieved his fame documenting the Civil War.