Donate $25 for two DVDs of the Cryptome collection of files from 1996 to the present


23 December 2004. One of the Eyeball Series


For the upcoming second inauguration of President Bush, this presents a  survey of presidential protection, assassinations and attempts, at inauguration platforms, White House and its underground bunkers, the Oval Office and presidential retreats, limousines and motorcades, Air Force 1 and Helicopter 1, yacht and fishing boats, golf courses, campaign trails, running and bicycling tracks, world travels and related protection personnel and systems.

George W. Bush William Clinton James Carter
Gerald Ford
John Kennedy
Dwight Eisenhower
Herbert Hoover
Calvin Coolidge
Warren Harding
Woodrow Wilson
William Taft
William McKinley
Abraham Lincoln
William Harrison
George W. Bush on 9/11


George H. W. Bush
Ronald Reagan
Richard Nixon
Lyndon Johnson
Harry Truman
Franklin Roosevelt

Herbert Hoover

[Image]

Herbert Hoover takes the oath of office in 1929, with Chief Justice William Howard Taft, himself once President, delivering the oath. Just behind Hoover is Calvin Coolidge and slightly to the rear of the Chief Justice is Mrs. Hoover. Mrs. Coolidge can be seen in front, extreme right. (AP Photo)

[Image]

President Calvin Coolidge and President-elect Herbert C. Hoover, drive from the White House to Hoover's inauguration at the Capitol on March 4, 1929. (AP Photo)

[Image]

U.S. President Herbert C. Hoover stands inside a U.S.N.S. boat as he fishes around Chesepeake Bay near Crisfield, Md., Aug. 16, 1932. The president brought in 15 trout, one of them three-feet. Behind the president sits secretary Hyde and the man at center is a secret service agent. The man at right is not indentified. (AP Photo)

[Image]

U.S. President Herbert Hoover campaigns for re-election from the rear of the presidential train in 1932. (AP Photo)

Calvin Coolidge

[Image]

Calvin Coolidge speaks at his inauguration March 4, 1925, as the Capital in Washington. Coolidge took the oath as the 30th President of the United States. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Calvin Coolidge, the 30th President taking the oath of office, March 4, 1925, administered by Chief Justice William Howard Taft. (AP Photo)

[Image]

This is an artist's rendition of the swearing-in of Vice President Calvin Coolidge at his home in Plymouth, Vt., following the news of the death of President Warren Harding Aug. 2, 1923. Coolidge took the oath at 2:47 AM at his home in Vermont. (AP Photo/)

[Image]

U.S. President Calvin Coolidge and his wife, first lady Grace Coolidge, are shown on the platform of their private car at Pennsylvania Station on April 23, 1924. (AP Photo)

[Image]

U.S. President Calvin Coolidge is on horseback to attend the dedication ceremony of the Mount Rushmore Memorial in South Dakota, Aug. 15, 1927. (AP Photo)

[Image]

U.S. President Calvin Coolidge, center wearing hat, and first lady Grace Coolidge, left behind her husband, are shown at a rodeo on Coffin Estate, Saprolo Isalnd, Ga., Dec. 20, 1928. (AP Photo)

Warren Harding

[Image]

The retiring 28th president, Woodrow Wilson, rides with his successor, Warren G. Harding, to Harding's inauguration on March 4, 1921. Because of his weakened condition, Mr. Wilson was unable to attend the inauguration of his successor. (AP Photo)

[Image]

"Camping with Henry and Tom," an award-winning play by Mark St. Germain, is based on a camping trip taken by President Warren G. Harding, inventor Thomas Edison and automaker Henry Ford. The three men are shown during their trip in this undated photo. The play will be presented at The Zodiac Theater, beginning Nov. 19, 1998 in Florence, Ala. (AP Photo/Times Daily)

Woodrow Wilson

[Image]

Woodrow Wilson takes the oath of office for his first term of the Presidency in Washington on March 4, 1913. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Woodrow Wilson is inaugurated for a second term as U.S. President, March 4, 1917. (AP Photo)

[Image]

Mrs. Edith Galt Wilson, wife of President Woodrow Wilson, is shown with President Wilson when they arrived in New York October 11, 1918 to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. (AP Photo)

[Image]

President Woodrow Wilson and wife, Edith Bolling Wilson ride in a carriage on Armistice Day, 1918. (AP Photo)

[Image]

President Woodrow Wilson marching in the Liberty Loan Parade on Fifth Avenue in New York City, in 1918. (AP Photo/Brown Brothers)

[Image]

President Wilson on Christmas Day, 1918, at Sarrey, Marne, France, carries a Christmas token given to him by French children. (AP Photo/ho)

William Taft

[Image]

U.S. President, William Howard Taft, center, wore big fur lined
overcoat when he reviewed parade after his inauguration as
President March 4, 1909. A powerful blizzard made it one of the
roughest of all inauguration days. (AP Photo)

[Image]

William Howard Taft, right, at Woodrow Wilson's first inauguration in 1913. (AP Photo)

William McKinley

[Image]

Drawing of the McKinley assassination from http://teachpol.tcnj.edu/amer_pol_hist/thumbnail261.html, public domain

[Image]

Booking Photo of Leon Czolgosz. Public Domain, obtained from http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/crime/assassins/leon-czolgosz/

Abraham Lincoln

[Image]

U.S. President Abraham Lincoln stands under cover at center of Capitol steps during his inauguration in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 1861. The scaffolding at upper right is used in construction of the Capitol dome. (AP Photo)

[Image]

The assassination scene is recreated in wax at the National Historical Wax Museum in Washington, D.C., March 25, 1965. John Wilkes Booth approaches the President, derringer in hand, as Lincoln and his wife watch the performance. (AP Photo)

[Image]

This is a Matthew Brady photograph of the presidential box at Ford's Theater, made two days after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865. At center of the box is the picture of George Washington which caught one of the spurs of John Wilkes Booth as he jumped to the stage after shooting Lincoln in the back of the head. (AP Photo/Mathew Brady)

William Harrison

[Image]

This is an artist's impression of President William Henry
Harrison's inauguration in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 1841.
Harrison declined the offer of a closed carriage and rode on
horseback to the Capitol, braving cold temperatures and a northeast
wind. After speaking for more than an hour, he returned to the
White House on horseback, catching a chill that eventually turned
to pneumonia. He died a month later. (AP Photo)