Materials concerning the operation of the White House Advance Office and its logistical planning for foreign and domestic Presidential and First Family trips.
Series Description and Container List
Container List
Collection Overview
Scope and Content Note
The White House Advance Office was tasked with visiting foreign and domestic sites a few weeks before scheduled Presidential trips in order to plan and coordinate logistical matters. These responsibilities encompassed creating the Air Force One manifest, designating hotel room and banquet seating assignments, diagramming site locations, organizing and vetting proposed schedules through protocol and security offices, checking visa and passport credentials, and ensuring the needs of the President, White House staff, and traveling press corps were fulfilled.
Byron M. “Red” Cavaney’s introduction to advance work began as a member of Republican National Committee’s Advance Detail from August 1972 to February 1973. This role in turn led to a staff assistant job in the White House Advance Office in February 1973. Cavaney succeeded William Henkel, Jr., as director of the Advance Office on December 19, 1974.
During his tenure as a staff assistant and later the head of the White House Advance Office, Cavaney was either involved in or oversaw the planning for the initial trips of Vice President Ford, the ensuing President Ford domestic and campaign trips of 1974 and 1976, international trips of President Ford, the First Family trips. This role also included selecting volunteers to assist with the trips. Files on volunteers and volunteer candidates are also included in this collection, in addition to office administrative material.
Scope and Content of the Cavaney International Trip Files
The International Trips series focuses on President Ford’s foreign trips from October 1974 through June 1976. The overall series is separated by date and country with each of these specific country visits sub-divided into folders for background material, cable traffic, contact list and thank you notes, diagrams, manifests for Air Force One and room assignments, memoranda, press clippings and news releases, and schedules. These original folder titles have been utilized for the current arrangement. While the folder titles are based on the Presidential visit date, the bulk of the material in each folder reflects the Advance Office work conducted weeks before that folder date.
Generally speaking, the background material contains the State Department briefing book on the destination country as well as an overview of cultural etiquette. The memorandums and cables range from mundane lists of passport and visa numbers to recommendations, action memos, and discussions surrounding diplomatic scheduling, security, and protocol concerns. The most fascinating source material might be found in the memorandums, cable (or dex), and press clippings sections. For example, the Japan 1974 incoming cable traffic folders discuss potential assassination threats while the Austria 1975 memorandum files trace the request of a Notre Dame University group seeking an audience with President Ford. The press clipping and news releases folder may also provide insight into local approval or disapproval of a presidential visit. The Japan 1974 and Pacific Basin Press Clippings (1975) provide extensive articles from both U.S. and foreign news outlets as well as original broadsheets in English surrounding the President Ford’s visit and the subsequent protests.
Scope and Content of the Cavaney Domestic Trip Files
The earliest materials in the Domestic Trip Files predate the Ford administration by several years, but basically the collection begins with the Nixon-Ford transition. The files give a good overview of the White House Advance Office and the processes for managing the many details relating to a Presidential trip. Much of the collection is understandably routine administrative detail, but taken in entirety it provides insight into life in the Ford White House.
The background material is especially voluminous and varied for a Presidential trip and includes files about cultural sites, hotels, convention centers, airports, local schools, and universities. In addition, the Bicentennial celebrations for the various states are well documented. Likewise, the Presidential election figures prominently in the collection, with files on campaign trips in several swing states, the Ronald Reagan primary challenge, and the Republican National Convention in Kansas City.
There are a significant number of schedule proposals submitted to the President. These proposals list the pros and cons of each event and give evidence of the many factors to be considered by the White House staff and President when making decisions about Presidential activities. The President indicated his decisions by initialing the proposals and sometimes wrote comments in the margins. The files also contain Presidential invitations, brochures, thank you letters, oversize maps, and press releases.
Related Materials (March 2015)
Related materials are located in a number of other fully processed, partly processed, and unprocessed collections. The Trip or “TR” category of the White House Central Files is a fully processed collection of correspondence, schedules, and summaries for foreign and domestic trips. Similarly, the President’s Daily Diary offers a schedule of the President’s actions and the people he met during his trips. The National Security Advisor Security Files contains substantial material pertaining to foreign trips. The Peter Sorum Papers provide details into multiple domestic trips and the Europe trip of July and August 1975. On the purely domestic front, the Jerry H. Jones Files provide material on 1976 campaign trips. Researchers can identify the file locations of related open materials from PRESNET search reports. The personal papers of Byron Cavaney, Robin Martin, and Frank Ursomarso, and the White House office files of Warren Hendriks, William Nicholson and Warren Rustand, and Terrence O’Donnell provide additional insight into advance and scheduling operations.
Details
77 linear feet (ca. 142,000 pages)
Gerald R. Ford (accession 77-1)
Access
Open in part. Researchers wishing to view files from the Domestic Trips, First Family Trips, or Administrative Files series, should consult with an archivist prior to their visit in order to request that specific folders be added to the Library's review-for-access queue. Even after the completion of this review some items may be temporarily restricted under terms of the donor's deed of gift, a copy of which is available on request, or under National Archives and Records Administration general restrictions (36 CFR 1256).
Copyright
Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain.
Processed by
Craig D. Kusmaul, January 2005; revised by Tim Holtz, January 2014; John J. O Connell and James Neel, February 2015
Biography
Byron M. "Red" Cavaney
February 26, 1943 - Born, Kansas City, Missouri
1964 - A.B. in history and economics, University of Southern California
1964-1969 - U.S. Navy
1969-1973 - Branch manager and assistant vice president for commercial loan development at the Security Pacific National Bank of Los Angeles
1969-1971 - Postgraduate coursework in finance at California State University at Long Beach
1972-1973 - Member, Advance Detail for the Republican National Committee (on leave of absence from Security Pacific National Bank)
February 1973 - Staff assistant, White House Advance Office
December 19, 1974 - Named Director of the White House Advance Office, succeeding William Henkel, Jr.
June 14, 1976 - Named Special Assistant to the President
1977-1981 - Vice-president of marketing for Ericson Yachts
1981-1983 - Deputy Assistant, White House Office of Public Liaison
1985 - Director of invitation and ticket control, Reagan-Bush Inauguration
1986-1994 - President and CEO, American Paper Institute; President and CEO, American Forest and Paper Association
1994-1997 - President and CEO, American Plastics Council
1997-present - President and CEO of American Petroleum Institute