Camp David Catoctin Mountain, Md. | |||
| |||
Elevation | 1,900 ft. (579.1 m) | ||
Location | |||
Location | Frederick County, Maryland, USA | ||
Range | Appalachian Mountains | ||
Coordinates | +39.648333N -77.466667 W | ||
The Naval Support Facility in Thurmont, Maryland—better known as Camp David—no longer appears to receive the level of presidential use it once did. This historic, secluded, and highly secure retreat, located just 65 miles from Washington, D.C., has seen only limited presidential visitation in recent years.
Nestled deep
within Maryland’s Catoctin Mountains, the 150-acre compound has served as a
sanctuary for 15 presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt first visited in July
1942. A devoted naval enthusiast, Roosevelt rechristened what had been High
Catoctin Camp No. 3—a recreation site for government employees—U.S.S.
Shangri-La. The retreat’s storied past alone argues against any notion of
divestment: Winston Churchill visited several times in 1942 and 1943, meeting
with Roosevelt to plan the Allied invasion of France. Roosevelt himself visited
Shangri-La 19 times, spending 65 days there.
| Entrance to retreat |
Modern Camp
David bears little resemblance to the modest facility Roosevelt occupied during
World War II. He originally authorized no more than $10,000 to make the camp
suitable for presidential use, though costs ultimately reached $18,000.
| Aspen Lodge (2025) |
Over the decades, tens of millions of dollars have been invested in infrastructure, guest lodging, recreation facilities, staffing, and security. Today, the site supports more than 200 Marines, Navy personnel, and White House Communications Agency (WHCA) staff, many of whom live on or near the grounds.
Most modern
presidents have maintained private residences and divided their time between
those locations and Camp David, often favoring their personal retreats.
Presidential Use of the Presidential Retreat by Era
Harry Truman
(1945–1953) President Truman used the retreat least among postwar
presidents, visiting only 10 times for 35 days. At one point, he considered
closing Shangri-La due to operating costs. Truman preferred Key West, Florida,
visiting the Little White House there 11 times for 175 days. When President
Trueman left office, he returned to his private residence in Independence Mo.
| President Truman’s residence in Independence MO |
He hosted
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev there in 1959, producing the famous “Spirit of
Camp David.”
Eisenhower also purchased a Gettysburg farm (Scorecard), visiting both retreats a combined 45 times for 517 days.
| David Eisenhower at the entrance |
| The Gettysburg Farm |
| The Kennedy Compound In Hyannis Port |
| The LBJ Ranch in Stonewall TX |
President Nixon had two private
residences La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente CA codename (Storm King )
where he would visit anywhere from one week to one month each time he visited
his Western White House he also hosted Japanese Prime Minister Sato and Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev in 1973.
| The Western White House in San Clemente CA |
WHCA also had a detachment of permanent personnel to provide and maintained all permanently installed communications equipment in both San Clemente CA, and Key Biscayne FL. WHCA positioned Communications Contingency Teams (CCT) in El Toro MCAS and Homestead AFB to cover any side trips that the President might take while visiting.
| The Presidential Compound in Key Biscayne FL |
Gerald Ford (1973–1977) Ford visited Camp David 29 times for 170 days and hosted Indonesian President Suharto during his term in office. He had no permanent second home but vacationed widely as he spent 189 days in various places such as Palm Springs CA,, Vail CO and occasionally Mackinac Island.
President Jimmy Carter 1977-1981 initially favored
closing Camp David to save money, but once he visited the retreat, and after he
was given a tour of the complete facility including the permanent
communications and he reviewed the facilities COG mission, he decided to keep
the retreat operational. Jimmy Carter was a private person, and about once a
month he found that Camp David perfectly
suits his need to get away from the Capital.
In 1978, after 14 days of intense negotiations,
President Jimmy Carter brought together Egypt’s Anwar Sadat and Israel’s
Menachem Begin, producing the historic Camp David Accords. President Carter
visited Camp David 99 times spending 189 days at the retreat.
| President Carters Residence in Plains GA |
President Ronald Reagan 1981-1989 visited the
retreat more than any other president 189 times 575 days over his eight years in office.
President Reagan restored the nature
trails that President Nixon paved over, so he could horseback ride with the
first lady.
President Reagan didn’t host many
foreign visitors at Camp David, but he did welcome British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher in 1984. In a private meeting with Reagan, Thatcher recounted
the recent visit of up-and-coming Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to London. Her
observations would prove quite prescient; she called Gorbachev an “unusual
Russian.”
| Rancho Del Cielo Santa Barbara Ca |
Ronald Reagan drew
up plans for a non-denominational chapel, which was opened during George H.W.
Bush’s tenure and named Evergreen. The only wedding to take
place at Camp David occurred on June 27, 1992 when President Bush’s daughter,
Doro, married Bobby Koch in the Evergreen Chapel. The reception was held on the
lawn of Aspen.
President Bush spent every Summer at his residence on Walkers Point codename ( ) in Kennebunkport ME. During his term in office he visited 21 times for a total of 150 days during his four years in office.
| Walkers Point Kennebunkport ME |
President, Bill Clinton 1993-2001 During his tenure President Clinton spent every Thanksgiving at Camp David with his family. In July 2000, he hosted the summit negotiations between Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian Authority chairman Yasser Arafat there resulting in the Camp David Accords. President Clinton visited Camp David 60 times for a total of 173 days.
During his two terms President Clinton spent 174 days on vacation at such places as Martha’s vineyard 100 days, and Jackson Hole WY. The Clintons did not have a permanent residence until they left office and bought their house in Chappaqua NY.
President George W. Bush 2001-2009 In February 2001, President Bush held his first meeting with a European leader, British prime minister Tony Blair, at Camp David, to discuss missile defense, Iraq, and NATO. After the September 11 attacks, Bush held a Cabinet meeting at Camp David to prepare the United States invasion of Afghanistan. During his two terms in office, Bush visited Camp David 149 times, for a total of 487 days, for hosting foreign visitors as well as a personal retreat. He met Blair there four times. Among the numerous other foreign leaders he welcomed at Camp David were Russian president Vladimir Putin , and President Musharraf of Pakistan in 2003, Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen in June 2006, and British prime minister Gordon Brown in 2007.
While
President Bush’s Prairie Chapel Ranch codename (Base) in Crawford Texas
was is primarily a private retreat, it has also played a significant role in
American politics.
The ranch hosted several significant meetings, including a notable visit from
Vladimir Putin on November 16, 2001, where discussions focused on U.S.-Russian
relations and arms control, and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair. These meetings, often held in the informal setting of the
ranch, allowed for candid discussions and strengthened diplomatic ties. On May 10, 2008, the ranch played host
to the wedding of Jenna Bush to
Henry Hager. The first family made frequent visits to the Bush Western
White House on 77 trips, spending 490 days on vacation in Crawford. President
Bush also visited the family compound at Kennebunkport 11 times for 43 days.
| President Bush’s Prairie Chapel Ranch Crawford TX |
Even though
President Obama had a private residence in Chicago , he visited only a few
times for only maybe 20 days and never longer than two or three nights on a
visit. The Obamas preferred locations like Hawaii, Martha's Vineyard, and a few
visits to Florida, for 28 visits and 220 days.
President Donald Trump 2017-2021 made 15 visits for a total of 34 days during his first term. President Trump hosted Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker of the House Paul Ryan at Camp David while the Republican Party prepared to defend both houses of Congress in the 2018 midterm elections. Trump also planned to meet with the Taliban at Camp David to negotiate a peace agreement in 2019, but refrained after a suicide bombing in Kabul killed US troops. The 46th G7 summit was to be held at Camp David on June 10–12, 2020, but was cancelled due to health concerns during what was at the time considered the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. By comparison, for his part, he has favored Mar-a-Lago codename ( ) since acquiring access to the Palm Beach estate in the mid-1980s. The restored 1924 mansion of heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post, where the President visited 45 times spending 442 days at the lavish estate.
President Trumps estate Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach
President Joe Biden 2021-2025 hosted the U.S.–Japan–Korea Summit with Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol at Camp David in August 2023, resulting in the declaration of the Camp David Principles on trilateral relations between the U.S., Japan, and South Korea.
| President Biden’s residence in Wilmington DE |
The Question of Camp David’s Future
Presidents
such as Eisenhower, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, and the Bushes embraced Camp David
as a working retreat, while Truman, Kennedy, Ford, Clinton, Obama, Biden, and
Trump favored private residences.
There would
be considerable—and justified—pushback against any proposal to sell this
historic property. The annual cost of maintaining Camp David and its personnel
runs into the tens of millions of dollars. With its privacy, accessibility, and
unmatched security, the facility could easily serve as an expanded government
retreat. But that is not the central question.
The real
issue is how to persuade future presidents to rediscover Camp David’s value—not
merely as a getaway, but as a uniquely American setting for diplomacy,
reflection, and leadership.
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