I am not sure what you are asking. Except for his wife, I do not know of any one person who is a frequent guest at his state dinners. One occasion that calls for a state dinner is a visit from a foreign head of state. Guests might include ambassadors, cabinet members, members of Congress and Supreme Courts justices, as well as family members and celebrities that the guest of honor might like to meet or else have ties with.
The first president to observe a formal Thanksgiving dinner in the White House was Rutherford Hayes. Abraham Lincoln actually celebrated Thanksgiving, but the event was much smaller.
It cannot be said with certainty that Frederick Douglass was the first African American invited to the White House. Certainly Douglass was the first African American **leader** invited for a formal interview, or audience, with the President.
Booker T. Washington
Theodore Roosevelt was criticized for having Booker T. Washington for dinner at the White House. Washington was the first African American to be invited as a guest at the White House.
She visited the White House briefly for the formal unveiling of the White House portraits of herself and her husband in 1971. Onassis and her children had a private dinner with President Richard Nixon and his First Lady, Patrica Nixon.
Although originally called the President's Palace, the Presidential Mansion, or the President's House, the formal name was the Executive Mansion. References to the home as the White House appear as early as 1811. President Theodore Roosevelt made formal the usage in 1901 when he had the "White House" name added to the official stationery.
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Sarah Polk is credited with having the first one at the White house.
i am sorry idk but try too look for it on the internetAbraham LinconGorge Washington
Although George Washington was the first President of the US and served for two terms, he was never "in" the White House. The first president to live in the White House, then called the President's Palace or the Presidential Mansion, was John Adams. Further, it was not called the White House, even informally, until 1811 at the earliest. That term was not used as a formal or official designation until 1901.
the white house honors the president.
Booker T. Washington, the renowned African American leader and founder of Tuskegee Institute, was invited to the White House as a dinner guest in 1901 by President Theodore Roosevelt. This event was significant as it marked the first time an African American had been invited to dine with a President in the White House. However, it was also controversial and faced criticism from many white Americans.