The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

The First Pets

- J. Mark Powell is a novelist, former TV journalist and diehard history buff. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Editor’s note: Americans are crazy about animals, and so were most of the folks who called 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. home over the years. How much do you know about their companion animals and other critters? Find out with this short, easy and fun quiz.

1. Which president found it almost impossible to say “No thanks” to any animal that was given to him?

A. George Washington

B. Chester Arthur

C. Calvin Coolidge

D. Dwight Eisenhower

Answer: C. Silent Cal assembled such an extensive menagerie that the Washington press corps jokingly nicknamed it the “White House Zoo.” Its star attraction was a pet raccoon named Rebecca.

2. Lyndon Johnson was fond of showing off his beagles. What were their names? A. He and She

B. Him and Her

C. They and Them

D. Me and Mine

Answer: B. Though LBJ loved the pooches and frequently played with them on the White House lawn, he infuriated many dog lovers in 1964 by lifting Him by the ears.

3. Who was the last president to keep a cow on the White House grounds to supply milk?

A. Thomas Jefferson

B. William Howard Taft

C. Woodrow Wilson

D. Jimmy Carter

Answer: B. Taft’s beloved bovine “Pauline Wayne” became a celebrity in her own right with newspapers even printing “interviews” with her. 4. Abraham Lincoln began the practice of unofficial­ly “pardoning” a turkey in 1863. But it wasn’t for Thanksgivi­ng. The bird was given to the Lincoln family for what occasion? A. To celebrate the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on

B. To mark the end of the Civil War

C. For Lincoln’s birthday

D. For Christmas dinner

Answer: D. On Christmas Eve, Lincoln’s 10-year-old son Tad tearfully begged his father to spare the turkey he had named Jack. Lincoln wrote a presidenti­al pardon to appease the boy.

5. George Washington may have been the Father of Our County, but he also had a soft spot for animals, including the unusual combinatio­n of which dog breeds?

A. A Greyhound and Golden Retriever

B. A Dalmatian and a Poodle

C. A Rottweiler and a Collie

D. A Chihuahua and a Spaniel

Answer: B. Among his many dogs, Washington was especially fond of a Dalmatian named Madame Moose and a Poodle called Pilot. He even took Pilot when he went duck hunting.

6. Which of the following was not the name of a famous presidenti­al pet?

A. Fala

B. Socks

C. Millie

D. Sparky

Answer: D. Fala was FDR’s dog, Socks was Clinton’s cat, and Millie was George H.W. Bush’s dog.

 ?? Marcy Nighswande­r/Associated Press ?? In this March 19, 1994 file photo, President Bill Clinton’s cat, Socks, peers over the podium in the White House briefing room in Washington.
Marcy Nighswande­r/Associated Press In this March 19, 1994 file photo, President Bill Clinton’s cat, Socks, peers over the podium in the White House briefing room in Washington.
 ?? David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images ?? Former U.S. president George H. W. Bush and wife, Barbara Bush, cruise in the back of a golf cart with their dog Millie at their home at Walker’s Point Aug. 25, 2004 in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine.
David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images Former U.S. president George H. W. Bush and wife, Barbara Bush, cruise in the back of a golf cart with their dog Millie at their home at Walker’s Point Aug. 25, 2004 in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine.
 ?? M.L. Suckley /AP ?? President Franklin Roosevelt holds Fala while talking to Ruthie Bie, granddaugh­ter of the caretakers of the Hill Top Cottage at his Hyde Park, N.Y., home in this Feb. 1941 file photo.
M.L. Suckley /AP President Franklin Roosevelt holds Fala while talking to Ruthie Bie, granddaugh­ter of the caretakers of the Hill Top Cottage at his Hyde Park, N.Y., home in this Feb. 1941 file photo.
 ?? LBJ Library photo by Yoichi R. Okamato ?? President Lyndon B. Johnson (holding his dog, Yuki) and his grandson, Patrick Lyndon Nugent.
LBJ Library photo by Yoichi R. Okamato President Lyndon B. Johnson (holding his dog, Yuki) and his grandson, Patrick Lyndon Nugent.

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