A US president is believed to have said the easiest way to find a friend in Washington was to get a dog. Today, George H.W. Bush’s faithful service dog Sully made a final journey back to the US capital with the late president.
Two days after Bush’s death at age 94, family spokesperson Jim McGrath posted a touching photograph today of the yellow Labrador retriever lying down in front of Bush’s casket, with the accompanying phrase “Mission Complete” and the hashtag #Remembering41.
The two-year-old Sully has been at Bush’s side since June, just weeks after the death of the president’s wife Barbara, to whom he was married for 73 years.
Bush’s son George W. Bush, the nation’s 43rd president, posted the photograph on Instagram, with a message announcing Sully’s transfer to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in suburban Maryland.
“As much as our family is going to miss this dog, we’re comforted to know he’ll bring the same joy to his new home, Walter Reed, that he brought to 41,” the younger Bush wrote. His post has received a quarter million likes.
Sully is named after retired airline pilot Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger III, who gained fame when he landed a damaged passenger jet on New York’s Hudson River in 2009.
Historians believe Harry S. Truman’s folksy aphorism about friends in Washington and dogs is probably apocryphal — the 33rd US president didn’t actually like dogs — but he would surely have fallen for Sully’s charms.
The four-legged friend is already something of an online star. Sully’s own Instagram account describes the dog as “a kinder, gentler labrador,” a play on Bush’s words in his 1988 acceptance speech, when he called for “a kinder and gentler nation.”
The account — with 123,000 followers — has playfully chronicled Sully’s time with Bush at Walker’s Point, location of the family compound in Kennebunkport, Maine.
It features a photograph of Sully laying down in front of Bush and Bill Clinton, the man who defeated him in the 1992 presidential race. The two men struck up a close friendship.
Sully was provided to Bush by America’s VetDogs, a group which pairs service and therapy dogs with people with physical limitations like blindness, or those who suffer from effects of post-traumatic stress disorder.
For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.