Take a look inside Camp David, where presidents host world leaders and escape Washington
- Camp David has been a destination for presidential rest and relaxation since it opened.
- The camp has also been the site of meetings and summits with various world leaders over the years.
- Camp David has been the site of some big national and foreign policy decisions.
Nestled in the countryside of Maryland, in the Catoctin Mountain Park, is the presidential country retreat known as Camp David.
The first parts of the complex were built by the Works Progress Administration in 1935, and Franklin D. Roosevelt made it the presidential retreat. FDR originally named the property "Shangri-La," a name it kept until the Eisenhower administration, who named it Camp David after his grandson.
The compound has expanded over the years, with new cabins being built and even a pool. It has also been the site of diplomatic events like the Camp David Accords in 1978 and the G8 summit in 2012.
Here's a look inside Camp David, where presidents go to escape Washington.
Here, FDR and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill fish in the woods around "Shangri La." The two men reportedly planned the D-Day invasion from a porch on one of the cabins.
Before taking office, Trump once told a German journalist in an interview, "Camp David is very rustic, it's nice, you'd like it. You know how long you'd like it? For about 30 minutes."
By August 2020, Trump had made 500 visits to his properties. Of those 500, Trump had visited Mar-A-Lago 134 times.
Comparatively, Trump visited Camp David five times in his first year in office, according to USA Today. He visited his golf clubs 150 times in his first year.
Sources: Washington Post, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, USA Today
Source: Reuters
He spent 72 hours at Camp David and cut his trip short to return to the White House and address the nation.
Source: Washington Post
Source: CBS News
Source: Washington Examiner
President Joe Biden held a joint news conference with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, left, and then-Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David on August 18, 2023.
"This is the first summit I've hosted at Camp David as president. I can think of no more fitting location to begin the next era of cooperation," Biden said at the time. "In the months and years ahead, we're going to continue to seize those possibilities together — unwavering in our unity and unmatched in our resolve."
President Joe Biden leaned on his family during a difficult stretch of his campaign following his first debate with former President Donald Trump. (In July 2024, Biden stepped aside as the Democratic nominee, paving the way for the eventual nomination of Vice President Kamala Harris as the party's standard bearer.)
Trump won a second term in November 2024 and come January 2025, it'll once again be the president-elect's turn to utilize the retreat.
Editor's note: This story was first published in February 2018 and has been updated with recent information.