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All the Presidents' Pets

Page 19

by Mo Rocca


  Baron Spreckle the hen, Eli Yale the macaw, and a one-legged rooster with a crutch made by the kids rounded out the collection with a hyena, a coyote, a zebra, and still others.

  WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT

  Caruso the dog was a gift from opera singing star Enrico Caruso. The dog’s bark was a high-pitched tenor.

  Mooly Wooly, the first cow at the White House since Andrew Johnson’s time, gave unsatisfactory milk.

  Pauline Wayne was the last cow ever at the White House.

  (Three-time presidential loser William Jennings Bryan lost his final race in 1908. He might have had better luck had he not been such a vocal critic of evolutionary theory, which he disparagingly termed “apism.”)

  WOODROW WILSON

  Old Ike the ram, addicted to chewing tobacco, was put out to pasture under the care of AP reporter Robert Probert.

  Puffins the cat ate several of the Wilsons’ songbirds.

  The President who once said, “If a dog will not come to you after he has looked you in the face, you ought to go home and examine your conscience,” owned two of them, Mountain Boy the greyhound and Bruce the bull terrier.

  WARREN HARDING

  Laddie Boy the airedale was a national figure. His fictitious correspondence with the vaudeville dog star Tiger was used to defend Harding’s loyalty to dubious administration officials. After the death of Harding, America’s first newspaperman turned president, 19,134 members of the Newsboys Association chipped in one penny each for the casting of a statue of Laddie Boy. It resides in the Smithsonian’s Museum of American History.

  CALVIN COOLIDGE

  Coolidge’s dogs were celebrities and treated as such. Will Rogers once said, “Well, they was feeding the dogs so much that one time it looked to me like the dogs was getting more than I was . . . I come pretty near getting down on my all fours and barking to see if business wouldn’t pick up with me.” Rob Roy and Prudence Prim the white collies, Paul Pry the airedale (half brother to Laddie Boy), Calamity Jane the Shetland sheepdog, Boston Beans the bulldog, and Palo Alto the birddog were only some of the canine occupants.

  Rebecca the raccoon found temporary companionship with Horace the raccoon before he took off.

  Most of the following pets eventually ended up at the zoo: Ebeneezer the donkey, a wallaby, two lion cubs, Enoch the goose, an antelope, a pygmy hippo, and Smoky the bobcat.

  HERBERT HOOVER

  Hoover found King Tut the husky on a relief trip to Belgium during World War I. A photograph of the two together was subsequently used to warm the candidate to voters during his first run for the presidency in 1928. The White House depressed Tut, though, and he died an emotional wreck.

  Patrick the huge gray-brown Irish wolfhound was the great-great-grandson of Cragwood Darragh, the most famous Irish wolfhound bred in America.

  Weejie the elkhound was also huge, often mistaken for a pony.

  Billy the opossum was found on the White House grounds. He turned out to be the mascot of a Hyattsville, Maryland, baseball team. Hoover reluctantly returned him and the team went on to the state championships.

  FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT

  Fala the Scottie was living under the name Big Boy in Westport, Rhode Island, before he went to the White House. He was formally renamed Murray the Outlaw of Fala Hill, after a Roosevelt ancestor. The President chose cotton over silk sheets so that Fala could sleep on top. He went almost everywhere with the President, though he did miss Yalta.

  Fala wasn’t the only dog in FDR’s White House. Winks the Llewellyn setter once gobbled up eighteen bacon and egg breakfasts. He broke his neck after running headlong into a fence.

  Meggie the Scotch terrier once bit newswoman Bess Furman on the nose.

  Major the German Shepherd once ripped British PM Ramsay MacDonald’s pants.

  HARRY S. TRUMAN

  The man who said, “If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog,” had little use for them. Feller the cocker spaniel and Mike the Irish setter were sent away.

  Mike the Magicat wandered onto the White House lawn. The owner was famed astrologer Jeane Dixon.

  DWIGHT EISENHOWER

  Supreme Allied Commander Ike enjoyed the company of Caacie and Telek the Scotties—the second a gift from his driver, Kay Summersby, whose company he also enjoyed. (The man defeated Hitler. He was entitled to anything he wanted.)

  Heidi the Weimaraner was highly neurotic and left a terrible stain on the Diplomatic Room’s carpet.

  Squirrels were the bane of Ike’s putting green. They were successfully relocated to Rock Creek Park.

  A giant pig, a gift from an Indianan named Elden Holsapple (just a great name), was sent to live on the Eisenhower farm in Gettysburg.

  Vicky the vicuna was turned into a coat for Chief of Staff Sherman Adams and all hell broke loose.

  JOHN F. KENNEDY

  The White House ran a letter-writing contest to find homes for Pushinka and Charlie’s pupniks. Charlie, by the way, was the nephew of Asta from the Thin Man movies.

  Shannon the Irish cocker spaniel was a gift from Irish PM Eamon De Valera. Wolf the Irish wolfhound was a gift from a Dublin priest named Kennedy. Clipper the German shepherd was a gift from Joe Kennedy to Jackie.

  Billy and Debbie the hamsters birthed six hamsters. Billy ate them. Then Debbie ate Billy. Then Debbie died.

  Macaroni the pony was a gift from LBJ to Caroline.

  LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON

  As Senate majority leader, LBJ had Little Beagle Johnson. “It’s cheaper if we all have the same monogram,” he said. For a while after the dog’s death, the president stored his ashes over the refrigerator.

  Him and Her the beagles made the cover of Life magazine when the president picked them up by the ears. Her died after swallowing a rock. Him was run over after chasing a squirrel.

  Edgar the beagle was a gift from J. Edgar Hoover.

  Blanco the white collie urinated on an Alexander Calder sculpture on loan from New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

  Yuki the mongrel was discovered by daughter Luci at a Texas gas station on Thanksgiving. Yuki was fond of Upton Sinclair and was present for the signing of the Wholesome Meat Act. He outlived the president.

  RICHARD NIXON

  Checkers the Cocker Spaniel, the most famous of Nixon’s dogs, was a vice-presidential dog. Rumors that he would be exhumed from his Long Island grave and reburied in Yorba Linda after the death of the president in 1994 turned out to be just rumors. (If this changes anytime soon, I’ll be sure to address it in paperback.)

  King Timahoe the Irish setter, Vicky the French poodle, and Pasha the Yorkshire terrier are the forgotten presidential pooches.

  GERALD FORD

  Liberty the Golden retriever was a surprise gift from White House photographer David Kennerly and provided endless enjoyment to the thirty-eighth President. One of her pups, Jerry, became a guide dog for the blind.

  JIMMY CARTER

  Grits the mutt was a gift from daughter Amy’s teacher. He refused to be housebroken and once tore loose from his muzzle when a vet tried to vaccinate him during Heartworm Awareness Week. He was eventually returned to the teacher.

  The “killer rabbit” vs. nutria debate continues to this day.

  RONALD REAGAN

  Lucky the Bouvier des Flandres sheepdog stopped by Chief of Staff Don Regan’s office for doughnuts every morning and grew to over eighty pounds. Regan’s nemesis Nancy Reagan was soon unable to handle him, and the dog was exiled to Santa Barbara. (Was Regan intentionally sabotaging Nancy’s relationship with Lucky? I’m not a conspiracy theorist.)

  Rex the King Charles spaniel lived in a lavish white clapboard doghouse with a shingle roof, red curtains, and pictures of Ron and Nancy. The house was designed by Theo Hayes, the great-great-granddaughter-in-law of President Hayes.

  GEORGE H.W. BUSH

  Millie Kerr the springer spaniel’s memoirs outsold the President’s. She was voted ugliest dog by Washingtonian magazine. She and C. Fred Bush birthed si
x puppies.

  BILL CLINTON

  Buddy the chocolate Lab’s death was ruled an accident and no charges were made against seventeen-year-old Halie Ritterman, driver of the car that hit him.

  Socks the cat still resides with Clinton secretary Betty Currie.

  GEORGE W. BUSH

  Spot the springer spaniel, son of Millie, died in February 2004.

  India the cat still lives, though India refused to join the Coalition of the Willing.

  Barney the Scottie currently holds office.

  For further information, check out Niall Kelly’s Presidential Pets.

  Endnotes

  Chapter 7

  1. From “Going for Broke” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, January 20, 2004, Tuesday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 19, Column 6, Editorial Desk.

  2. From “The Awful Truth” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, January 13, 2004, Tuesday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 25, Column 6, Editorial Desk.

  3. From “The Real Thing” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, August 20, 2002, Tuesday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 19, Column 6, Editorial Desk.

  4. From “The China Syndrome” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, September 5, 2003, Friday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 19, Column 1, Editorial Desk.

  5. From “Who Gets It?” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, January 16, 2004, Friday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 21, Column 1, Editorial Desk.

  6. From “Enron and the System” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, January 9, 2004, Friday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 19, Column 1, Editorial Desk.

  7. From “Waggy Dog Stories” by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, May 30, 2003, Friday, Late Edition—Final, Section A, Page 27, Column 1, Editorial Desk.

  Chapter 18

  8. Hoover lived at New York’s Waldorf Towers until his death in 1964.

  Chapter 19

  9. Him was one of LBJ’s two beagles.

  10. Her was the other.

  11. The President is seated in the bathroom. Defense Secretary McNamara is close at hand.

  12. Barry Goldwater was the Republican nominee for the upcoming election.

  13. Jumbo was President Johnson’s name for his Johnson. Oh my.

  14. The President is relieving himself in the sink. Oh dear.

  15. Some bulls do in fact have tits. Oh, that’s pretty hot.

  Appendix

  16 Adams’s bulldog Toddy (Chapter 11) is one of only two fictionalized pets in this book. I needed a male dog for the Crossfire debate, and using Satan would have seemed a little too editorial.

  17 The giraffe in this book is the only other invented animal. Then again, because Arthur burned his papers, we can never know for sure that he didn’t have a giraffe.

  Acknowledgments

  My agent, PJ Mark, is a saint. He made himself available to me at every hour of every day this past year for every question, query, and crisis of confidence imaginable. I took full advantage. (Next time a little less starch on the shirts, please.) Perhaps if this book is a best-seller, he won’t feel so bad about having sacrificed his personal life for it. I can’t thank him enough.

  My editor, Annik LaFarge, was unflagging in her support of this book. She patiently explained to this first-time author that readers appreciate something called narrative. I’m guessing she was scared at times, but she only made me feel good. Thanks also to Annik’s assistant, Mario Rojas. One day he will run Crown.

  Don Epstein, my manager, is a rock star—not literally, thank God, because if he were he wouldn’t be so whip smart before noon. Don has made all my dreams come true. Every time he calls, it’s like Ed McMahon ringing my doorbell. Thanks also to my lawyer, Peter Grant, and Alan Berger and the team at CAA. Don’s assistant, Sonya Giacobbe, has been tireless in accommodating my every need.

  This book would not exist without the help of my friend, the brilliant Catherine Collins. She helped rearrange the random collection of factoids crowding my skull, also known as nonsense, into a story with a beginning, middle, and end. She’s the best.

  Mario Correa, my oldest friend, gave the book several close reads and made invaluable contributions—Quit your job, Mario!—as did my pal Adam Felber, a hilarious man who deserves his own show pronto. Thanks also to Chris Regan, a great writer with keen insight into James Buchanan, and Dolores McMullan, who gave the book an early read.

  Quentin Webb is a fantastic artist. He was able to read my mind and in some cases change it, surpassing what I imagined, all in a flash. Thanks also to Rick Shiers for giving Miss Pussy life, Dan Rembert for his cover design, and Mark McCauslin for giving this book such special attention during production.

  The beautiful Madeline McIntosh and the dashing Chris Pavone (aka as the Rita Hayworth and Ali Khan of publishing) are good friends and have lent vital support throughout the last year, as have Carol Bagnoli, Shannon Brigham-Hill, Lisa Dallos, Oren Izenberg, Jim Margolis, Brian O’Brien, Jeanne Simpson, and Elissa and Frank Sommerfield, Sr.

  Robert Schiff, Haverford’s BMOC, is a terrific guy, a fantastic researcher, and an expert anagrammatist. (That’s actually a word.) He’s now the go-to man on turkey buzzards.

  UVA’s Larry Sabato is a great professor—and funny, too. If you ever want a good five minutes on the Alien and Sedition Acts, he’s the guy to call. You’ll be rolling. His staff at the Center for Politics—Joshua Scott, Molly Clancy, Damon Irby, and Matt Smyth—generously gave their time to research and critique the manuscript. (I still want that tour of Zachary Taylor’s birthsite.) Thanks also to interns Sarah Davis and Jenny Goodlatte.

  Brooks Jackson, formerly of the AP and CNN, recounted for me the story of President Carter and the killer rabbit, which some believe to actually be a nutria.

  All the agents at Greater Talent Network are friendly, fun, and very attractive. Until I met them I had no idea that mentoring college students could be so profitable.

  A number of people have, at their own risk, given me platforms for appearing on camera. First and foremost, I must thank the amazing Jon Stewart and The Daily Show’s cocreator Madeleine Smithberg. Thanks also to NBC’s Katie Couric, Matt Lauer, and Tom Touchet, MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann, Fox News’ Tony Snow, CNN’s Jeff Greenfield, and The King, Larry King.

  My friend Stephanie Simpson gave me my first job in television, on the PBS show Wishbone. (She opened my eyes to the creative potential in dogs.) She is a genius writer and show creator.

  Dr. Stephen Ochs was my high school history teacher and continues to teach. He made a great impression on me. I’m hoping he doesn’t feel like Dr. Frankenstein after reading this book.

  I must thank those chroniclers that have come before me in the field of presidential pets, some of whom are mentioned in the text of this book. If I ever get to chair a Department of Presidential Pet Studies, I’m hiring all of you for my faculty.

  I could not have written this book if Helen Thomas had never been born. She is a great asset to the profession of journalism, an indefatigable pursuer of truth, and an amazing character in this book. I thank her for her example. And I thank her for her love.

  This book would have been impossible without the support of Frank Sommerfield. Every time I was about to jump, he pulled me back from the brink with his mumbo-jumbo therapy. He now knows more about cable news than he ever cared to know.

  My brothers, Francis and Lawrence, have taught me, protected me, and backed me in every thing I’ve done. (Well, maybe not everything. They’re not crazy.) I thank them in advance for supporting all my future endeavors.

  You can’t choose your parents—science hasn’t come that far—so life is still something of a lottery. That’s why I know I won the jackpot with my father and mother. My parents have taken as much joy in my life and career as I have. Sharing my experiences with them has made those experiences all the sweeter. (Who would have thought an appearance on CNBC’s Bullseye could be described as “sweet”?) They have sacrificed so much for me, and I am in a
we of them.

  About the Author

  MO ROCCA is best known for his work on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. He appears frequently on NBC’s Today Show, CNN’s Larry King Live, MSNBC, Fox News, NPR’s Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, and VH1. He lives in New York City.

  Photography Credits

  AP/Wide World Photo

  Picture History

  Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, reproduction number, LC-USZ62-118058

  Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, reproduction number, LC-USZ62-11417

  Robert Knudsen, White House/John F Kennedy Library, Boston

  Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, reproduction number, LC-USZ62-17184

  Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, reproduction number, LC-USZ62-131302

  Courtesy of Lyndon Baines Johnson Library Museum

  Courtesy of Lyndon Baines Johnson Library Museum

  CORBIS

  Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, reproduction number, LC-USZ62-131900

  AP/Wide World Photo

  Courtesy of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library

  “Getting to Know You” by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. Copyright © 1951 by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. Copyright Renewed. WILLIAMSON MUSIC owner of publication and allied rights throughout the world. International Copyright Secured. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.

  Photograph credits appear.

  Copyright © 2004 by Mo Rocca

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

 

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