president's park
Marie-Joseph Paul YVes Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette was a general in the American Army during the American Revolution, and in the French Army during the French Revolution. The park across the street from the White House in Washington, DC is named Lafayette Park in his honor.
It was the Pennsylvania State House, also known as the Old State House, built in 1753 to house the Pennsylvania legislature. [Edit] Also commonly referred to as the "Shrine of Independence"
Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was where both the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution were devised and signed.New York and Philadelphia were both used as temporary capitals during the Revolutionary war as either was captured by the British or liberated, but by the end of the war, Philadelphia was the capital of the United States, and would remain that way as the United States government slowly shifted to the newly built Washington City as various Federal buildings like the White House were completed. John Adams was the first President to live in the White House.
Yellowstone national park
It was written in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in what is now called "Declaration House." Thomas Jefferson rented a second floor space in the house of a bricklayer named Graff at 7th and Market Streets near the outskirts of Philadelphia, because he couldn't work in all the noise in the main part of town. The actual house was demolished in 1883 but was restored based on old photographs by the National Park Service. After the declaration draft was completed, and changed slightly by Ben Franklin and John Adams, it was presented to Congress in Independence Hall (then called the Pennsylvania State House).
Lafayette Square is a 7 acre public park across the street from the White House.
Lafayette Park.
Lafayette Square is the seven acre park directly across from the White House. Andrew Jackson Downing landscaped the park in 1815.
LaFayette Park
St. John's Episcopal is the old church just north of the White House and attended by many of the US Presidents.
No
The house is in a white neighborhood called Clybourne Park.
National park service
The Ellipse (officially called President's Park South) is a 52-acre park located just south of the White House fence. Properly, the Ellipse is the name of the five-furlong (1 km) circumference street within the park. It is flanked by the White House and the Washington Monument.
Houdini in the White House or the Squire of Hyde Park
There must be thousands of "Washington Park"s across the USA . . . which one are you in?
It was in my house...at the dining room