US Presidential Libraries
There are 13 Presidential Libraries and one Museum in the U.S. Official Library System, managed by the Office of Presidential Libraries, addressing the 13 latest presidents in U.S. history: Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald R. Passage, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Shrub, William J. Clinton and George W. Shrub. Gerald Ford’s Library and Museum are in two separate urban areas in Michigan, Ann Arbor and Grand Rapids. They are completely worked and regulated by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The George W. Bramble Presidential Library, which is briefly situated in Lewisville, Texas, is number 13. The perpetual Presidential Center, still under development, will be situated on the grounds of Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, Texas, the institute of matriculation of First Lady Laura Bush. Both the Kennedy and the Carter libraries are scheduled for updates and facelifts.
Also, albeit not authoritatively authorized and kept up by NARA, libraries have been coordinated for a few Presidents who went before the authority beginning of the Presidential Library Office. They are worked by private establishments, chronicled social orders, or state governments, including the William McKinley, Rutherford Hayes, Calvin Coolidge, Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson libraries. For instance, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum is claimed and worked by the State of Illinois.
The homes of George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams have been protected as exhibition halls or recorded locales too. Thomas Jefferson’s home Monticello, which Jefferson planned, alongside close by University of Virginia was assigned an UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987, just as being a U.S. Public Historical Landmark. The Adams National Historical Park in Quincy, Massachusetts, protects the home of Presidents of the United States John Adams and John Quincy Adams, of U.S. Minister to Great Britain Charles Francis Adams, Sr., and of the essayists and students of history Henry Adams and Brooks Adams.
The (Adams) public verifiable park’s eleven memorable constructions recount the narrative of five ages of the Adams family (from 1720 to 1927) including Presidents, First Ladies, U.S. Priests, students of history, authors, and relatives who upheld and added to their prosperity. Notwithstanding “Peacefield,” home to four ages of the Adams family and furthermore called the “Old House”, the recreation center’s primary notable highlights include: John Adams origination (October 30, 1735), the close by John Quincy Adams origination (July 11, 1767); the Stone Library (worked in 1870 to house the books of John Quincy Adams and accepted to be the main official library) containing in excess of 14,000 memorable volumes.