Christmas Self-Guided Tour of the Eisenhower Home

 

This page contains text for the self-guided tour of the Eisenhower home. Each room in the house is numbered, with the numbers corresponding to the sections below. Please follow this guide and the accompanying directions as you tour the Eisenhower home.

To celebrate the Christmas season, this self-guided tour of the Eisenhower home features special call outs highlighting how Ike and Mamie decorated the house for Christmas and celebrated this special time of year!

 
A black and white image showing the Eisenhower home first floor plan
A map showing the first floor of the Eisenhower home.

NPS Photo

When touring the home, please keep these preservation guidelines in mind:

  • No flash photography is permitted inside the Eisenhower home

  • Please do not touch museum items on display

  • Please use the handrailing when ascending the main staircase

  • No food or drink is permitted in the Eisenhower home

 
A small Father Christmas statue inside the Eisenhower home
The original Father Christmas statue that sits in the Eisenhower living room.

NPS Photo

Room 1: Living Room

The formal living room reflected the public stature of the Eisenhowers. The room showcased the gifts the Eisenhowers received from heads of state as well as friends. They include a mother-of-pearl inlaid, black lacquer coffee table from the Republic of Korea and a silk Tabriz rug from the Shah of Iran. The marble fireplace, removed from the White House in 1873 by President Grant, was an anniversary gift from the Eisenhower White House staff. The painting of Prague, Czechoslovakia above the mantel was presented to General Eisenhower by its citizens at the end of World War II. While the rest of the home reflected who Ike and Mamie were as individuals, this place attested to their decades of public service.

During the holiday season this room also served as a hub of celebration and time spent with family, exchanging gifts, and singing carols together after an afternoon meal. Park staff and volunteers have decorated the home based on oral histories and recollections from family and friends. Though many of the decorations are reproductions, an original Father Christmas sculpture can be found on the stereo on the northern (far side) wall of the living room.

Room 2: Sun Porch

This modest and comfortable porch was the Eisenhowers’ favorite room. Here Ike and Mamie watched tv, played cards with friends, and the General pursued his hobby of oil painting. The easel holds a reproduction of an unfinished painting of Culzean Castle, Scotland, that he was working on in his last year of life. Eisenhower entertained many distinguished guests in a relaxed setting to encourage intimate conversations with visiting world leaders like Nikita Khruschev of the Soviet Union and Charles de Gaulle of France.

Many of Ike & Mamie’s holiday celebrations were spent as doting grandparents, and though they received many gifts throughout their lifetimes, few were as precious as those from their grandchildren. On top of the television set is a small tile box, handmade by their granddaughter Susan.

Room 3: Entrance Hall

Mamie asked all visitors, from world leaders to the Eisenhower grandchildren, to sign her guest book here in the entrance hall. The curio cabinet contains a collection of personal items that Mamie valued. Among them are a presidential plate she purchased from a nearby Stuckey's souvenir stand, and plastic figurines of presidents and first ladies that she collected from cereal boxes. These items represented a place of belonging and memories from decades of a busy, nomadic life.

The entrance hall was often where visitors were initially welcomed, so it’s no surprise that Mamie’s touch of holiday cheer extended into this space. Watch out for mistletoe! On top of the curio cabinet is an original Christmas shadowbox decoration, handcrafted for the Eisenhowers.

 
Mamie's Christmas china plates on a white tablecloth with silverware and drinkware around them
The dining room table is set with Mamie's favorite china for the Christmas season.

NPS Photo

Room 4: Dining Room

The Eisenhowers preferred to dine on TV trays on the sun porch. When family and friends visited, dinner was served in the formal dining room amid lively conversation led in turn by the General and Mrs. Eisenhower. Young Major Eisenhower bought Mamie the tea service across the room piece by piece with his poker winnings. Mamie purchased the dining room suite in 1927. It traveled with the couple during their many and frequent moves.

Set for a holiday feast, the dining room features the Eisenhowers’ Christmas Tree patterned China, used to enjoy several courses often prepared by Delores Moaney, who cooked for the Eisenhowers at home and in the White House- though Ike was known to carve the turkey.

After viewing the dining room and entryway, please proceed upstairs to the second floor. Please note that at this point the house tour route becomes one way. Follow the rooms and stops in numerical order. When ascending the stairs, please use the handrailing and do not lean on the original wallpaper.

 
A black and white map showing the second floor of the Eisenhower home
A map showing the second floor of the Eisenhower home.

NPS Photo

Room 5: Mrs. Doud's Room

Mamie's mother, Elivera Carlson Doud, used this room when she stayed at the farm. After her death in 1960, it served as a guest room. A picture of Doud Dwight Eisenhower, Ike and Mamie's first child, sits on the back dresser. Doud, nicknamed "Icky", tragically passed away at the age of three. This is the only picture of him in the home.

Room 6: Sitting Room

This served as a television room for the grandchildren. Mamie used it as a sitting room after Ike passed away. The books here are part of the General’s personal library found throughout the house. The three volumes with the frayed brown covers on the bottom shelf are his yearbooks from West Point, The Howitzer. Ike finished painting the snow covered landscape, Winter, St. Louis Creek, while recovering from his 1955 heart attack.

Featured in the sitting room opposite the bookcase are a set of custom drapes gifted to the Eisenhowers in 1955 by their interior designer, Elisabeth Draper. The drapes feature the Eisenhower Toile, a custom design that prominently showcases places and symbols significant to the Eisenhowers and their life story.

Room 7: General's Room

This small and sparsely decorated room served as General Eisenhower's dressing room. Following his 1955 heart attack, he used the room for afternoon naps which he took daily under doctor's orders. Many of the General's westerns occupy the bookshelf. The portrait he painted of his two oldest grandchildren hangs over the bed.

Room 8: Mamie's Dressing Room and Bath

The bathroom reflects Mrs. Eisenhower’s eye for detail and her love of the color pink. In the adjoining dressing room, Mamie’s pearls and perfumes cover the dressing table, her brightly colored outfits pack the closet, and assorted hats in hat boxes line the shelves. Ike’s West Point photo sitting on the dressing table is inscribed “To the dearest, sweetest girl in the world…”

Room 9: Main Bedroom

Mamie loved this room. The low windows allowed her to take in the views of the farm from her bed. It was also a hub of activity. Due to a health condition earlier in life, Mamie spent much of her time here, especially in the mornings. She used the room to rest while still meeting with staff, writing correspondence, planning her social agenda, and visiting with friends. After General Eisenhower's death, Mamie kept his side of the bed piled with books, stationary, and candy so it would not seem so empty. Mamie's devotion to family and friends is seen in the numerous photographs surrounding the room, including a portrait of her three oldest grandchildren above the fireplace. A portrait of her youngest granddaughter, Mary Jean, sits above her dresser.

Room 10: Maid's Room

Some of the Eisenhower's earliest furniture was used in this room by Mamie's personal maid, Rose Wood. The maid's room, along with the kitchen and butler's pantry downstairs, is in the portion of the original house salvaged when the Eisenhower's rebuilt their home.

Room 11: Guest Rooms

Visiting friends and family often spent the night here. The four paintings in the hallway, painted by General Eisenhower, add a personal touch. The most famous visitor to stay in the guest rooms was Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India. Nehru visited in December 1956, and was the only world leader to stay at the farm overnight. The Prime Minister and President Eisenhower conducted private talks on the sun porch during his visit.

After viewing the guest rooms, please proceed down the stairway to the first floor, where you will see the final rooms on the tour before exiting through General Eisenhower's office.

 

Room 12: Laundry Room

Sergeant John Moaney and his wife, Delores, were employed as the valet and cook. Sergeant Moaney washed, repaired, and ironed the General’s clothes in the laundry room. He did all his sewing on an old Singer sewing machine that he brought from overseas after the war and kept in his room. Moaney would also sit here and clean the General’s golf clubs after the General returned from a round at the Gettysburg Country Club.

Room 13: John and Delores Moaney's Room

Dwight Eisenhower was not the only World War II veteran who called this house a home. John Moaney first served on the General's personal staff in 1942. John and Ike hit it off and developed a close bond, one that they carried through the rest of the war, and the rest of their lives. John remained on Eisenhower's staff for decades. In 1946, John married Delores Butler. She would join him in working for the Eisenhowers, becoming a cook and aide to the family. Even after Ike's death in 1969, the Moaneys stayed on with Mamie. John died in 1976. Delores passed away in 2014.

From decking the halls to preparing multi-course meals, the Moaneys were an integral part of the holiday season during the White House years and beyond. After Ike’s death in 1969 John & Delores continued to care for and occasionally spend birthdays and the holidays with Mamie and the grandchildren.

Room 14: The Kitchen

The kitchen, with its linoleum counters and Crosley refrigerator in the pantry, reflects the 1950s style more than any other room in the house. General Eisenhower enjoyed cooking and pursued this hobby both here and at the barbecue outside. Soups, stews, and Pennsylvania Dutch breakfasts were some of his specialties. Mamie was not quite as adept in the kitchen and liked to joke that she could only make fudge and mayonnaise. Most of the meals were prepared by Delores Moaney. She seldom prepared gourmet dishes, however, since Ike and Mamie preferred basic American fare.

While the Eisenhowers spent most of their Christmas Days in the White House during the presidency, they hosted seasonal gatherings and parties here and occasionally enjoyed a Gettysburg Christmas in retirement. Here, Delores prepared multi-course meals and batches of cookies to share with family and guests alike. One 1960 Christmas dinner prepared by Delores featured roast beef, baked stuffed potatoes, string beans amandine, devil’s food cake and frosted mint delight!

Room 15: The Den

The Eisenhowers’ wish to preserve part of the original farmhouse is evident in the den. The old fireplace and oven were salvaged from the summer kitchen which stood near the house. Salvaged wood from the old house was reused in the construction of the floor and ceiling. Ike spent many relaxing hours reading and playing bridge here with friends. The Civil War pike and musket above the fireplace, the red lamp decorated with fishing flies, and the art books in the bookcase reflect Ike’s interests.

From the grandkids to members of the White House staff, everyone was included in the Eisenhowers’ holiday celebrations and usually received a thoughtful gift from the President and First Lady. Some gift wrapping took place here in the den.

 
A colorful cartoon of Ike and Mamie driving a golf cart with Christmas gifts
The Eisenhowers sent out Christmas cards with colorful holiday artwork, such as this one showing Ike and Mamie driving their beloved Crosley with gifts and a tree in the back.

NPS

Room 16: The Office

Used for conducting farm and presidential business, this room and the den became a “temporary White House” while President Eisenhower recuperated from his 1955 heart attack. The desk is a reproduction of the one used by George Washington. The gift was made with pine boards recovered from the White House during its 1948-1952 renovation. Eisenhower received a phone call here on May 7, 1960, informing him that the Soviet Union not only shot down the U-2 spy plane, but also captured its pilot, Francis Gary Powers. The room’s simplicity reflects the down-to-earth nature that served Eisenhower so well as one of the world’s great soldiers and statesmen.

The Eisenhowers spread their holiday cheer near and far through Christmas cards, which often featured photographs and illustrations of the Gettysburg Farm, or one of Ike’s paintings. According to one 1954 newspaper account, Ike and Mamie’s mailing list was between 3,500 and 4,000 names long!

After visiting the office, you may exit the home and begin a self-guided tour of the grounds. Thank you for spending part of your holiday season with us!

For more on the Eisenhowers and Christmas, check out the virtual program and links below!

 
 
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Duration:
3 minutes, 45 seconds

Join Park Ranger Alyce Evans for a special Christmas tour of the Eisenhower home. Christmas was a very important time for Mamie Eisenhower and the park is fortunate to have three original decorations and Mamie's favorite Christmas china for the dining room table.

 

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Last updated: December 2, 2025

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