Search Posts
Recent Posts
- Rhode Island Weather for January 30, 2025 – Jack Donnelly January 30, 2025
- Ray Rickman in The Civil Rights Kid at Courthouse Center for the Arts January 30, 2025
- RI Veterans: Did you know? 30.01.25 (Mulcahy honors, reinstatements, more) – John A. Cianci January 30, 2025
- We Cook! Mill’s Tavern Point Judith Calamari with Sun-Dried Tomato Puttanesca Sauce January 30, 2025
- “Lifting the Curtain” series: Curators’ insights into Preservation Society of Newport collections January 30, 2025
Categories
Subscribe!
Thanks for subscribing! Please check your email for further instructions.
Made in Rhode Island: The Official 2019 White House Christmas Ornament
ChemArt, a Lincoln, Rhode Island company, has commemorated Christmas 365 days a year. From December 26th on, it’s all Christmas ornaments for the next year.
What some may not know is that since the 1980s, ChemArt has also produced all the commemorative ornaments for the White House.
Each one has something unique to do with a president. This year the ornament honors President Eisenhower and his commitment to innovation.
The ornament can be seen – as well as a few others – in the annual video showing the beautiful decorations at The White House, hosted by First Lady Melania Trump.
If you visit the White House gift shop during a trip to Washington DC, you’ll have the opportunity to purchase one, but you can also purchase them through ChemArt’s catalog.
Here is the link to view all the ornaments over the years, and how to order: https://shop.whitehousehistory.org/holidays/ornaments
About the 2019 Ornament
The White House Historical Association’s Official 2019 White House Christmas Ornament honors Dwight D. Eisenhower, the thirty-fourth president of the United States. This ornament symbolizes President Eisenhower’s commitment to innovation. Eisenhower was the first president to fly in a helicopter while in office in July 1957, and thereafter the helicopter became a feature of White House life. It was often used by the president to commute short distances, demonstrating to the public and indeed the world that it was safe.
As the first president to regularly use a helicopter, he had two Executive Flight Detachments for his transport. These were provided by flight crews of the United States Army and the United States Marine Corps. To demonstrate his impartiality, the president alternated between these helicopters and their respective military personnel. Likewise, the Official 2019 White House Christmas Ornament does not represent a single helicopter. One side features the Presidential Seal, representing Eisenhower’s two terms as commander in chief of the Armed Forces. On the other side is his five-star rank, honoring his military service as a general in the United States Army.
Since 1957, Sikorsky, a Lockheed Martin Company, has proudly built the Presidential helicopter. The men and women of Lockheed Martin are honored to have flown every commander in chief since President Eisenhower. The Official 2019 White House Christmas Ornament honors that legacy and is proudly supported by Lockheed Martin.