Helicopter Is This Year’s White House Ornament
This
year’s official White House Christmas ornament is a helicopter. The holiday
decoration is being sold to generate revenue for the non-profit White House
Historical Association, which was founded in 1961 by the late first lady
Jacqueline Kennedy to fund the executive mansion’s acquisition and display of
Americana.
In
recent years, each ornament has commemorated a symbol of a past presidency. This
year's ornament is reflective of President Dwight Eisenhower, who was the first
American president to regularly use a helicopter—initially an Air Force Bell 47
Ranger and later the military variant of the Sikorsky S-58, either the Army
H-34C or Marine Corps UH-34, the latter depicted on the ornament. Both the Army
and Marines provided rotorcraft for the executive mission up until the Ford
Administration, which then gave the task exclusively to the Marines as part of
an efficiency campaign.
Eisenhower’s
first flight on the UH-34 came on Sept. 7, 1957, when, while vacationing at the
Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, he needed to make a quick day trip
to Washington during the Little Rock public school integration crisis.
Eisenhower took the UH-34 to Quonset Point Naval Air Station, where Air Force
One was waiting on the ramp. Using the helicopter cut a two-hour car trip to
seven minutes. Sikorsky has provided helicopters for the presidential mission
ever since.
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