President Dwight Eisenhower enjoyed playing golf and vacationing in Colorado. Before Eisenhower took off for his late-summer vacation in 1953, The New York Times reported that he'd be taking some work, as well as several members of his staff, along with him.
The childhood home of Jacqueline Kennedy acted as a summer home for the first family during John F. Kennedy's presidency. The 28-room home, formally called the Hammersmith Farm, is located in Newport, Rhode Island. President Eisenhower also vacationed nearby, at the house marked by an arrow in this photograph.
Like Eisenhower, President Gerald Ford preferred to vacation in Colorado, and he took an annual ski trip to Vail with his family.
Many of President Jimmy Carter's fishing trips took place at the official presidential retreat, Camp David. However, in the summer of 1978, the president took a nine-day fishing trip, stopping in Boise and Salmon River, Idaho, and Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
President George W. Bush visited his 1,600-acre ranch in Crawford, Texas, 77 times during his eight years in office. Before going on his first official vacation there during his presidency, Bush announced: "I'm headed home to the heartland to listen to the American people and to talk about the values that unite and sustain our country."