• March 28, 2024

[VIDEO] Poor Michelle: She Lives In FREE GOVERNMENT HOUSING Built By Slaves!

Will someone please tell Michelle we would be happy for her to find living accommodations else where, AND SOON!

So what Michelle, now you’re the First Lady of the United States of America. Like they used to say in the 70’s “you’ve come a long way baby.” Why don’t you just celebrate that instead of whining & complaining about something so long ago in the past.

YC: Michelle is incredibly ungrateful for everything she’s earned, and it would seem waking up everyday in the White House is almost a chore. You can feel the disdain she has for America after saying this… More

History: The official home for the U.S. president was designed by Irish-born architect James Hoban in the 1790s. Rebuilt after a British attack in 1814, the “President’s House” evolved with the personal touches of its residents, and accommodated such technological changes as the installation of electricity. The building underwent major structural changes in the early 1900s under Teddy Roosevelt, who also officially established the “White House” moniker, and again under Harry Truman after WWII. Counting the Oval Office and the Rose Garden among its famous features, it remains the only private residence of a head of state open free of charge to the public.

Not long after the inauguration of President George Washington in 1789, plans to build an official President’s House in a federal district along the Potomac River took shape. A contest to find a builder produced a winning design from Irish-born architect James Hoban, who modeled his building after an Anglo-Irish villa in Dublin called the Leinster House.

The cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1792, and over the next eight years a construction team comprised of both enslaved and freed African Americans and European immigrants built the Aquia Creek sandstone structure. It was coated with lime-based whitewash in 1798, producing a color that gave rise to its famous nickname. Built at a cost of $232,372, the two-story house was not quite completed when John Adams and Abigail Adams became the first residents on November 1, 1800.

BB4SP.com

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