341: BABY WHY DON’T WE GO, TO A PLACE CALLED TAMPICO – AND TOUR THE BIRTHPLACE OF RONALD REAGAN

There was nary a cloud in the sky when Tom’s alarm rang at 6:00am on Wednesday July 23, 2025. Although I was anxious to visit the Iowa State Capitol Building during our first stop of the day, I was even more excited for what was scheduled in the afternoon – a plethora of Ronald Reagan sites in the towns of Tampico and Dixon, Illinois. Due to the fact Dutch Reagan was born in Tampico and spent a good portion of his childhood in Dixon, there were no fewer than fifteen different historic sites and cool stops associated with the Actor-turned-President etched into my photographer’s itinerary. And if I were to get lucky during our time in the two Illinois towns, I might grab a bag or two of jellybeans as a personal tribute to our 40th President.

Once my companions had shat, showered, and shaved, the three of us left the Sleep Inn in West Des Moines, Iowa at 8:15am. The early morning commute to our first stop of the day was only fifteen miles long, and luckily, Vicki didn’t have to fight too much hectic traffic on our journey into downtown Des Moines.

Twenty minutes or so after our departure, my photographer’s wife pulled into a parking lot located on Capitol Hill. No, she hadn’t driven to Washington D.C.; but instead had parked almost in the shadow of the Iowa State Capitol Building, which had been constructed on high ground overlooking downtown Des Moines.

Although the three of us had visited Iowa’s Capitol back in 2021, I wasn’t able to see the interior because the building had already closed for the day. And from what I can remember, I had a tough time posing near the picturesque West Front because eleven members of the Lincoln High School basketball team from Des Moines were using the Capitol’s steps as their training ground. Tom was able to capture a few unobstructed images of me with the building, however, when a ten-minute window of opportunity opened during one of the student’s breaks.

But now, we were back, and thankfully there were no basketball players (or Asian tourists) anywhere in sight. Without hesitation, Tom carried me to the West Front of the Capitol, which on that bright sunny morning, was bathed in shadow. Because of the intense Sun angle, it became instantly obvious that photography would be a challenge for my semi-talented camera guy.

After I had posed on the ‘Lincoln and Tad’ statue, which I had also done in 2021, Tom carried me down a series of steps where I stood on the Bicentennial Fountain and posed with the Capitol in the background. Even though the Sun’s glare had somewhat diminished the overall breathtaking brilliance of the beautiful building, the Capitol still looked amazing through my squinted eyes.

When we were finished at the West Front, the three of us headed inside where we hoped to see the Governor’s office and the Rotunda – and anything else that might pique our interest. We no more stepped foot inside the first floor of the building, however, when we saw an entire busload of school-aged children on a field trip invade the Capitol. While I was thankful the group wasn’t of Asian heritage, which was obvious because very few of them had cameras, I knew the clock had begun to tick for our chances of having the second-floor Rotunda to ourselves. It’s not that I don’t like kids, I just don’t like to see them anywhere near me while I’m visiting a historic site – unless they’re named Bo, Rory, Reese, or Brooke.

Although the Sun made photography a challenge on the West side of the Iowa State Capitol Building that morning, I thought this ‘Lincoln and Tad’ statue photo with the Capitol in the background was a spectacular Kodak moment.
The ‘Lincoln and Tad’ statue was sculpted by Fred and Mabel Torrey in 1961 and was designed to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.
The Capitol Building was dedicated on January 17, 1884, and it was completed sometime in 1886. The total cost of construction was $2,873,294.59, which was a lot of money in the 1880s.
This ten-foot-tall fountain I’m standing on is known as the Bicentennial Fountain. It was installed in 1982 to replace the Centennial Fountain, which had been vandalized over the years and fell into disrepair.
With downtown Des Moine in the background, the controversial statue next to me was called ‘Pioneer Statuary Group’. The reason for the dissension was because the Woke faction of Iowa thought it was condescending to have a pioneer and his son standing over a kneeling Native American. As much as I hate the Woke movement in our country, I actually agreed with their viewpoint on this statue – the Indigenous person should’ve been depicted standing equal with the pioneers.
At 275 feet tall, the Iowa State Capitol Building is the 11th tallest State Capitol in the United States.
The sandstone and brick dome was covered with tissue-paper thin sheets of pure 23-carat gold. There is a protective layer which sealed the gold from the weather.
Once I was carried inside the building, I posed outside of Republican Governor Kim Reynolds’ office. When she took office on May 24, 2017, Reynolds became Iowa’s first female Governor.
I’m standing on the glass-tiled floor in the center of the Capitol’s Rotunda. Compared to some of the other Capitol Rotundas I’ve visited, this one was a bit lackluster – until I looked up!
I was stunned by the majestic beauty of the dome’s interior, which featured a large, suspended banner with the insignia of the Grand Army of the Republic.
While in the West Hall, I posed alongside a model of the battleship USS Iowa, which was on loan from the U.S. Department of the Navy. The model is 18 feet 7 inches long and weighs about 1,350 pounds. A minute or two after this image was captured, the entire Rotunda and West Hall were invaded by the rugrats.
Since the interior had been overrun by kids, like piss ants at a picnic, Tom carried me back outside where I posed near the sunlit East Front of the Capitol.
As I posed for one final image at the Iowa State Capitol, I thought officials had made a huge mistake by installing a parking lot directly in front of the building. No, we didn’t park there – the lot was reserved for government officials. Perhaps a better landscaping idea would’ve been a large field of corn – in other words, the Iowa Capitol rising out of the Field of Dreams.

I had a bounce in my step and a huge smile on my resin face when we returned to our vehicle. The Iowa State Capitol Building is one of my top five favorite Capitols, and our hour-long tour seemed to fly by in a flash. Someday, I’d love to return and have four or five hours to explore the interior and the grounds – I imagine there were some interesting things we missed during our short tour. Thankfully, one of the things we were able to avoid was the large swarm of piss ants that had invaded our morning picnic.

Nearly two hours after we left Des Moines and headed East on Interstate 80, Tom said something that caught me off guard and quite frankly, made me secretly question his mental capacity. Just as the sign for the exit to West Branch, Iowa came into view, I heard my photographer say to Vicki, “I’m not going to stop and pay a visit to Herbert Hoover’s grave again – unless you want to see it. It’s up to you. I know you didn’t get to visit the gravesite two weeks ago, and since we’re only a mile away…” Tom’s wife couldn’t get the words, “Nah, that’s okay”, out of her mouth fast enough, which came as no surprise to me.

Although I would’ve liked to have visited on our 31st President’s grave again, especially since it was only a mile off our beaten path that morning, I understood the reason my photographer had for bypassing the site. It was already a handful of minutes past eleven o’clock and Tom had planned on taking me into Illinois where we’d visit Ronald Reagan childhood sites in Tampico and Dixon before nightfall. Since we were still over 90 miles from Dutch Reagan’s birthplace, which was scheduled to be our first stop, my photographer figured we didn’t have any extra time for Hoover.

He did, however, have some extra time for his stomach. Roughly a half hour after we whizzed past the West Branch exit, I heard Tom say to his wife, “I’m so hungry I could eat a sandwich from a gas station. And there’s no better place to stop than the World’s Largest Truckstop which is just four short miles away.”

Sure enough, Vicki left Interstate 80 at the Walcott exit and within a few minutes she had the Jeep parked at one of the many gas pumps at the famous Iowa 80 – The World’s Largest Truckstop. At 220 acres in size, the ‘WLT’ is three times larger than the average truck stop and offers numerous amenities for truckers and tourists, including a buffet, a food court, a movie theater, a dentist, a chiropractor, a church and a museum dedicated to trucking. But on that particular morning, my photographer had his sights set on three things – the bathroom; the pre-packaged sandwich display; and the fresh fruit cooler.

When Tom carried me into the Iowa 80, I was instantly awestruck – the place was massive. In fact, it reminded me of a Buc-ee’s, only on steroids. Not wanting to waste much time, my photographer conducted some business, then he picked out a ham and cheese hoagie sandwich and a container of chunked watermelon he planned to eat during our ride into Illinois.

“I’m so hungry, I could eat a sandwich from a gas station!”

With empty bladders and satisfied stomachs, my companions crossed the Mighty Mississippi River and into the Land of Lincoln at 12:34pm. For the next 45 minutes or so, Vicki navigated the Jeep through the boring, corn-filled landscape of Western Illinois. Since it had been ten years and four days since my first and only visit to the Ronald Reagan Birthplace in Tampico, I was excited for my triumphant return to the town of about 800 residents and where the sidewalks roll up by five o’clock in the afternoon.

At 1:18pm, my photographer’s wife found a parking place along South Main Street in downtown Tampico. Even though it was early afternoon, parking in the historic business district was a non-issue. In fact, it seemed as though the three of us were the only living beings in the entire town – which made it easy for me to pose in front of Ronald Reagan’s birthplace without the distraction of other tourists.

After I had posed for a few photos in front of the Graham Building where President Reagan was born in a second-floor apartment on February 6, 1911, Tom carried me inside the bank building where we met our tour guide, Joan Johnson. Funny thing was – while the lower part of the structure had become a bank in 1919, it was home to a tavern when Jack and Nelle Reagan moved into the building’s upper apartment on October 1, 1906.

Before we headed to the actual upstairs birthplace, Tom, Vicki, and I listened to Ms. Johnson as she spoke about Ronald Reagan’s life in the building, which lasted from his birth until the family moved out on May 5, 1911 when the “Fat Dutchman” was only three months old.

When Johnson had finished showing us some of the artifacts and photos on display in the small museum, the three of us followed our passionate tour guide up the steep set of stairs and into the world of Jack, Nelle, Neil, and baby Ronald Reagan. Even though it had been a decade since I last stepped foot inside that restored apartment, it not only seemed like yesterday, but it also felt great to be back.

I’m posing in front of the Ronald Reagan Birthplace in Tampico, Illinois. The building, once known as the Graham Building, was built in 1896.
Before the three of us went inside the building, Tom placed me in the middle of South Main Street where I posed near the spot where Presidential candidate Ronald Reagan was photographed in February 1976.
During his 1976 Presidential campaign when Ronald Reagan ran against President Gerald Ford for the Republican nomination, the future 40th President was photographed standing on two car bumpers in front of his birthplace in Tampico, Illinois.
On July 19, 2015, I paid my first visit to the birthplace of Ronald Reagan. Ten years and four days later, I returned – and it was an incredible feeling to be back!
The second-story room behind the window in this photo was where Ronald Reagan was born on February 6, 1911. Let’s go inside, shall we, and I’ll guide you on a tour.
When we were in the first-floor museum, our official tour guide, Joan Johnson, pointed out this floor mat I’m standing on. It turned out Ronald Reagan also stood there during his visit to the birthplace in 1992.
Ronald Reagan stood here in 1992 – and so did I, 33 years later!
I’m standing on the original floor in the bedroom where Ronald Reagan and his older brother Neil were both born. This room was not the parent’s bedroom, but Nelle chose to have her children there so she could see Main Street from the window while she recovered from childbirth.
Ronald Wilson Reagan weighed ten pounds at birth, which caused his father to say, “For such a little bit of a fat Dutchman, he makes a hell of a lot of noise, doesn’t he.” The clock next to me was set at the time of the future President’s birth.
This was the parlor in the five-room apartment. The entire apartment was heated by two woodstoves – one of which was behind me. Nelle Reagan gave piano lessons, which helped supplement the family income.
Jack Reagan earned about one dollar a day in wages, while he and Nelle paid ten dollars per month in rent to live in the ten-year-old building.
The Bible I’m standing alongside represented the Reagan Family Bible used in both of Ronald Reagan’s inaugurations. The original Bible is on display at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.
This bedroom was the room used by Jack and Nelle Reagan during their time living in this apartment. It’s highly likely Ronald Reagan was conceived in this bedroom.
Jack, Nelle, and Neil ate their meals in the dining room, which was where I posed for this image. The fake cherry pie next to me looked amazingly delicious, and reminded me of the pie my photographer’s cousin, Joanne Ouellete, had baked for our family last year.
This was the back porch of the apartment, which was not enclosed when the Reagan’s lived there. Nelle Reagan hung her laundry on the porch to dry during the hot Summer months, and she prepared some of the family meals there as well.
While on the porch, I posed on a window that led to the next-door apartment once rented by the Seymore Family. At times, Nelle Reagan knocked on the window to have Daisy Seymore watch her sons while she went out for errands.
During a visit to his birthplace in 1992, Ronald Reagan climbed through this window and into the Seymore apartment where he told the story about his mother and Daisy.

My photographer and I could’ve talked about President Reagan for the rest of the day with Joan Johnson, but Tom’s clock was ticking – we still had three Reagan sites left to see in Tampico before we made the 28-mile drive to Dixon.

After we bid farewell to our gracious host, the three of us walked across the street where I posed in front of a large, two-story brick building that featured a mural of President Reagan on its Northern exterior wall. Today, the building is home to The Break Room Pub-N-Grub, which was one of the few, and perhaps only, eateries in the small town of Tampico.

When the building was built in 1900, however, it hosted several businesses until it became the H.C. Pitney Variety Store in 1911. That’s when Jack Reagan, the future President’s father, became employed there as a clerk. When Pitney sold the store in 1914, the Reagan’s left Tampico. Five years later, when Pitney regained ownership, Jack Reagan returned to his old job as clerk and moved his family back to town. The Reagans, including eight-year-old Ronnie, occupied the building’s second-floor apartment from August 25, 1919 until December 1920; which was when Pitney closed the store and the Reagans moved to Dixon.

I’m posing near the front of the former H.C. Pitney Variety Store in Tampico, Illinois, which was built in 1900 and was where Ronald Reagan lived during some of his childhood.
The future President lived in a second-story apartment with his parents from August 25, 1919 until December 1920. Even though Ronald was only eight years old when he moved into this place, it was in fact the sixth childhood home of his early life.

By early afternoon in Tampico, the temperature was near 95 degrees with no end in sight. That meant instead of walking to the next Reagan site, which was just around the corner on Glassburn Street, the three of us boarded the Jeep and Vicki drove us there.

While my photographer’s wife stayed in the comfortable, air-conditioned vehicle, Tom carried me from Ronald Reagan Park to an area in front of a private residence. The two-story wooden home in front of me was where Jack Reagan had moved his family when they left the apartment above the tavern just three months after Ronnie was born. The future President lived in the rented home with his parents and older brother Neil from May 1911 until December 1914. Suddenly, and out of nowhere, it dawned on me – Ronald Reagan lived in that home on the day Titanic sunk.

After I posed for several images in front of the home, which I thought looked a lot better than it did ten years earlier, I was carried back across the street where I stood on a statue dedicated to our 40th President. It turned out that Ronald, along with his brother Neil, spent a lot of time in the park where they played on an old Civil War cannon. The bronze statue, which was created by Ted McElhiney in 2013, depicted Reagan as a 12-year-old boy standing on the cannon, even though Ronnie was only nine years old when his family left Tampico for good in 1920.

The house behind me was the second childhood home in Ronald Reagan’s life, and was located at 104 West Glassburn Street in Tampico.
The future President lived in this rented home with his parents and older brother Neil from May 1911 until December 1914, which was when they packed up and moved to Chicago.
I posed for this image in the center of Ronald Reagan Park in Tampico, Illinois. The original Civil War cannon young Ronnie and his brother once played on was melted down during World War II.
While I stood on the statue of young Reagan, I noticed his boyhood home was directly behind me across West Glassburn Street.
When my photographer hung me onto the statue’s hand by my ponytail, it felt as though Ronald Reagan was about to devour me. Perhaps I smelled like a jellybean.

During my previous visit to Tampico ten years earlier, I had the pleasure of seeing the President’s birthplace, the Pitney Variety Store, the childhood home on Glassburn Street, and the Ronald Reagan statue. But one site I hadn’t visited before; one that was discovered thanks to the information provided by Joan Johnson at the birthplace; was the Church of Christ, which was located two blocks East of the park. It turned out that young Ronnie and his mother, Nelle, attended that protestant church in town, while Jack and Neil worshipped at Tampico’s St. Mary’s Catholic Church at the same time.

A minute or two after we left Ronald Reagan Park, Vicki parked along the street near the Church of Christ on South Fremont Street. Although Tom and I weren’t able to access the interior of the church as it appeared to be permanently closed, the two of us were able to admire the exterior of the historic building where I posed for several photos. As I stood on the steps to the front entrance, I envisioned Nelle and Ronnie walking towards me. Mrs. Reagan held tightly to her son’s hand as the two headed through the doorway and into the church for the Sunday morning service.

While there, I wondered if Nelle and her son prayed for the victims of the Titanic disaster during the service on Sunday April 21, 1912. Then it dawned on me, the youngster was only 14 months old at the time and was likely sucking on his thumb instead of praying.

This is the Church of Christ in Tampico, Illinois, and was the first church attended by future President Ronald Reagan.
While Jack Reagan and his oldest son Neil worshipped at the nearby Catholic church, Ronald Reagan and his mother Nelle attended this Protestant church. As a matter of fact, Nelle Reagan taught Sunday School and a Bible study class in this church during her time in Tampico.
When Tom placed me near the front entrance of the Church of Christ, I envisioned Nelle Reagan and her son Ronnie as they entered through the doorway behind me for the Sunday morning service.

The first European settlers arrived in the area in 1852 and nine years later, the township of Tampico, Illinois was founded by John W. Glassburn. A little over a decade later, in June 1874, which was about a year before the township was officially incorporated into the Village of Tampico, a devastating tornado struck and destroyed 27 buildings. Tampico was nearly wiped off the map.

But the town survived and was rebuilt after the tornado; and 37 years later, on February 6, 1911, Ronald Wilson Reagan took his first breaths of life in the center of Tampico. Although Jack and Nelle Reagan knew their “Little Fat Dutchman” was special, no one could’ve predicted he would eventually live where the current President, William Howard Taft, resided – at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

On January 20, 1981, when Ronald Reagan recited the Presidential Oath of Office to become our 40th President, Tampico was back on the map. And this time, it wasn’t just a small dot on everyone’s Rand McNally. For on that day, Tampico, Illinois became a Presidential birthplace, and that’s something not too many towns and cities in America can claim.

Although Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, and Barack Obama each have strong ties to the state of Illinois, only one President was born in that state – and that’s Ronald Reagan.

At 2:25pm on July 23, 2025, Tom, Vicki, and I replicated the same decision Jack and Nelle Reagan made over one hundred years earlier. Tampico had nothing left to offer, so we packed up our belongings and headed 28 miles to the Northeast to the town of Dixon, Illinois.

I’ll see you there! And trust me, it’ll be worth the wait!

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Thomas Watson

My name is Thomas Watson and I've been a U.S. history fanatic since I was 9 years old. In 2013, I decided to take my passion to the next level when I purchased a Thomas Jefferson bobble head with the sole intention of photographing that bobble head at Presidential sites. From that first day on July 10, 2013 at Spiegel Grove in Fremont, Ohio, this journey has taken on a life of its own. Now, nearly 40,000 miles later, I thought it was time to share the experiences, stories, and photos of Jefferson's travels. Keep in mind, this entire venture has been done with the deepest respect for the men who held the office as our President; no matter what their political affiliations, personal ambitions, or public scandals may have been. This blog is intended to be a true tribute to the Presidents of the United States and this story will be told Through the Eyes of Jefferson. I hope you enjoy the ride!

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