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Inside Camp David (24 images)

Camp David, known formally as the Naval Support Facility Thurmont, is the President’s country residence. Located in Catoctin Mountain Park in Frederick County, Maryland, Camp David has offered Presidents an opportunity for solitude and tranquility, as well as an ideal place to host foreign leaders.

Adapted from the federal employee retreat Hi-Catoctin, President Franklin Roosevelt established the residence as USS Shangri La, modeling the new main lodge after the Roosevelt winter vacation home in Warm Springs, Georgia. President Eisenhower subsequently renamed the institution in honor of his grandson David.

Camp David has been used extensively to host foreign dignitaries. Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Great Britain attended the first such meeting in May of 1943; the summit held at the residence in 1978 for Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin resulted in what are now known as the Camp David Accords. (30 Photos)



This sign marks the entrance to the Presidental Retreat known as Camp David located in the Catctin Mountains in Maryland 11/30/1972.
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This is Aspen Cottage, part of the Camp David Presidential Retreat located in the Catoctin Mountains in Maryland 9/5/1978.
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President Gerald Ford (C), shown in a March 2, 1975 file photo with wife Betty Ford (R) and daughter Susan Ford (L) at Camp David. (UPI Photo/ David Hume Kennerly/Gerald R. Ford Library)
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President Gerald Ford summoned Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to Camp David on November 10, 1974 to begin preparing for his talks with the Soviets, Japanese, and South Koreans. The Chief Executive met the Secretary at the helicopter pad and walked with him to the nearby Aspen Lodge to begin their high level talks. (UPI Photo/Files)
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