The hall s key piece is a 1,200-square-foot replica of the White House.
CLERMONT As few cars trickled by on U.S. Highway 27, Jack, James and Randy Zweifel prepared to work.
They assembled on Saturday in front of the Presidents Hall of Fame, one of the few roadside attractions that hasn t gone the way of the stagecoach.
White paint was poured into trays. Brushes and rollers were nearby, as were ladders and tarps.
For the Zweifels, this wasn t only a chance to spruce up the building s exterior. It was an opportunity for the brothers to preserve their father s legacy.
John Zweifel, who bought the Presidents Hall of Fame in the early 1990s, died on Dec. 30 in Orlando after being hospitalized because of blood clots in his leg. He was 84 years old.