Take an Obama World Tour

Places that presidents call home often become major tourist attractions, from estates at Mount Vernon and Monticello, to Hodgenville, Ky., where Abe Lincoln's log cabin once stood, to Bill Clinton's boyhood home in Hope, Ark. So what's the equivalent of Barack Obama's log cabin? Probably a 10th-floor apartment in Honolulu where he lived with his mother and grandparents. But to see all the places connected to Obama's life story, you'd have to visit three countries, six time zones and six states. Obama grew up in Hawaii and Indonesia, has roots in Kansas and Kenya, and went to school in Los Angeles, New York and Boston. He and his wife, Michelle, have raised their girls in Chicago, where tourists are already seeking out Obama haunts. "Why do we make pilgrimages to the homes of presidents? Because these homes are the closest thing we have to secular shrines. We go there to worship ourselves and the idea of America," explained Rick Shenkman, a presidential historian at George Mason University in Virginia and editor of the online History News Network. Shenkman said that presidents who grow up in humble circumstances — including modest childhood homes — add to the American dream that anybody can be president. "In fact, very few presidents are born poor," Shenkman said. "Obama happens to fit the bill." Obama has said that his unusual life story "spans miles and generations, races and realities." Here are some places to keep in mind if you want to create your own Obama Tour.
 

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