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America’s most famous mansion — the White House at Sixteen Hundred Pennsylvania Avenue. Two hundred years ago it was just swamp between fields and a river. Today it is the backdrop for wars declared and ended, portraits and scandals, state dinners and midnight crisis calls. This film follows the whole arc: the backroom deal that put the capital in a mosquito-ridden marsh, the Irish architect and the enslaved craftsmen who raised its stone walls, John and Abigail Adams moving into a half-finished shell, Jefferson’s elegant terraces hiding brutal contradictions, British officers eating the president’s dinner before burning the house in eighteen fourteen, Hoban’s white-painted reconstruction, gaslight and early electricity, Truman’s gut renovation that rebuilt the entire interior in steel, and the late-twentieth-century work that finally began naming the enslaved workers who built “the people’s house” but could never enter it as citizens. Before we begin—drop a comment: when in the White House’s life would you most want to step inside? Moving day with the Adams family, Dolley Madison saving Washington’s portrait, British troops dining before they torch the rooms, or engineers in the Truman era discovering the house is close to collapse? Is the White House a true house of democracy, or a monument built on contradictions we’re only now learning to face? If you love deep-dive history, architecture, and the hidden stories behind famous buildings, hit like and subscribe. Your support keeps these long, detailed histories alive. Copyright & Fair Use Disclaimer • This video is a non-commercial, educational history documentary created for commentary, criticism and research. • Some archival photos and footage are used under the principles of Fair Use (Section 107, U.S. Copyright Act) for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. #WhiteHouse #AmericanHistory #WashingtonDC #Architecture