CRAWFORD, Texas(AP)
So close and yet so far: Tiny Crawford is sort of like a
bridesmaid at arm's length from Jenna Bush's wedding
Saturday.
All of the action is at President Bush's 1,600-acre ranch
seven miles outside this one-stoplight town.
The more than 200 Bush family and friends invited to the
nuptials might never even set foot downtown.
"It's a private ceremony. It's an exciting time for
the Bush family," White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said
Friday. "They're all beginning to converge here in Texas
and in Crawford and I know the president and Mrs. Bush are really
looking forward to this weekend."
With no hotels in town, local Crawford residents are more likely
to welcome tourists who just want to say they were here when Jenna
married her longtime boyfriend, Henry Hager.
The locals don't seem to mind playing a supporting role.
"It's amazing how many people just want to be in the
area," said Marilyn Judy, president of the Crawford Chamber of
Commerce. She recounted a call from a woman in Dallas, a two-hour
drive from Crawford.
"I asked `Oh, are you going to be going to the
wedding?'" Judy asked. The woman replied: "No, I just
want to be in town when it's happening.'"
It wasn't until late this week that the downtown began to
show signs of the event, which will end up in presidential history
books.
A white banner with red wedding bells on either side of
"Congratulations Jenna and Henry" now stretches across a
local storefront.
A few doors down, a white wedding veil adorns an 18-foot metal
sculpture of an angel, a gift to Crawford in 2004. The rusty
artwork, a side-view silhouette of an angel, is titled
"Freedom's Angel of Steadfast Love." It was created
by Lei Hennessy-Owen of Jennerstown, Pa., and given to the city
after Bush's re-election.
For July Fourth, the angel is decorated in red, white and blue.
She holds a wreath during the holidays. For the wedding, Judy put a
bouquet of white flowers in her hands and sewed her a veil that
flutters in the warm breeze.
"We were trying to think of ways to give something for
people to look at when they came to town _ ways to welcome people
to Crawford," she said. "We thought we'd have the
angel dressed as a bride."
Some businesses, like The Yellow Rose, are doing a brisk
business selling coffee mugs with the couple's photo inside a
red heart.
Down the street, a life-size cardboard cutout of a much-younger
Bush greets patrons at The Red Bull Gift and Gallery. There you can
buy $3 Jenna and Henry key rings, a $10 mouse pad emblazoned with
the smiling couple, or a mug with the same photo and date of their
marriage.
The wedding display also features cream-colored ceramic trinkets
in the shape of Texas painted with "J + H." Jenna's
book "Ana's Story: A Journey of Hope" about a single
mother in Latin America with AIDS, and "Read All About
It!" a book she wrote with the first lady, are peddled near
packets of Texas wildflower seeds and license plates imprinted with
"Cowgirl."
Jamie Burgess, manager of The Red Bull, says people often stop
downtown just to ask how to get to the ranch.
Burgess says she tells them that the road leading to the ranch
is barricaded far from the entrance to Bush's property. She
says those who aren't deterred reply: "We may just try
going anyway."
Burgess doesn't argue, even though she knows that if they
get too close, they'll find themselves face-to-face with the
Secret Service or a Texas state trooper.
Valerie Citrano in nearby McGregor, about six miles from
Crawford, also runs a souvenir business selling Western White House
gifts. She spent two days making a wedding cake with buttercream
frosting to serve Saturday to patrons of her husband's Coffee
Shop and Cafe. The three-tiered white cake, with lemony filling and
raspberry sauce to drizzle on top, is decorated with two Secret
Service agents protecting a White House that adorns the top.
She said local residents aren't upset about not being
invited, but she's convinced there are plenty of people
interested in the details. In the weeks leading up to the wedding,
the hits on her business web site have topped 30,000 a week.
"I got one call from somebody in Britain and this morning,
one from Sweden," she said.
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