Updated on April 2 at 9:42 a.m. ET
More than 30,000 people are expected for this year's White House Easter Egg Roll, and you can be pretty sure at least one of them will be wearing a terrifying bunny costume.
The tradition of rolling eggs on the White House's South Lawn began 140 years ago, officially dating back to Rutherford B. Hayes's administration.
Informal Easter festivities for children in the nation's capital go back even further. Schools in Washington D.C.
used to close the day after Easter
That bill led President Hayes to open the White House grounds for the first official Easter egg roll in 1878.
In recent years, the focus hasn't been on the president, or the first lady, who officially hosts the event, but on another guest: the Easter bunny.
And more specifically, just how scary that costume is.
"There will be hundreds of guests. Thousands of eggs," The Washington Post's Jose DelReal
wrote in anticipation for 2015
NPR has also documented the terror.
"I've witnessed such inconsolable fear myself,"
wrote NPR's Frank James
"Only leaving the White House grounds calmed the youngster."
President George W. Bush, however, did not seem frightened.
While spectators have been focused on the creepy costume for years, in 2017 the Trump administration ushered in a new era of intrigue: who is the person inside the lagomorph suit?
Social media erupted last year with photos of then-press secretary Sean Spicer dressed as the bunny in the mid-2000s, leading Melissa McCarthy to reprise her Spicer impersonation, in a bunny suit.
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