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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 - November 22,
1963), often referred to as Jack Kennedy or JFK, was
the 35th (1961 - 1963) President of the United
States.
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Order: |
35th
President |
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Term of
Office: |
January 20
, 1961 - November 22 , 1963 |
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Followed: |
Dwight D.
Eisenhower |
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Succeeded
by: |
Lyndon
Johnson |
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Date of
Birth |
Tuesday ,
May 29 , 1917 |
|
Place of
Birth: |
Brookline
, Massachusetts |
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Date of
Death: |
Friday ,
November 22 , 1963 |
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Place of
Death: |
Dallas ,
Texas |
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First Lady
: |
Jacqueline
Lee Bouvier |
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Profession: |
politician |
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Political
Party : |
Democrat |
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Vice
President : |
Lyndon
Johnson |
Early life
Kennedy was born in
Brookline, Massachusetts, the son of Joseph P.
Kennedy, Sr. In 1935, he studied at the London
School of Economics, then moved to Princeton
University, but was forced to leave the latter
during Christmas break because of an attack of
jaundice. He then attended Harvard University,
enrolling in the fall of 1936, but he severely
injured his back playing football. He traveled to
Europe twice during his study at Harvard. The second
was to Great Britain, while his father was serving
as ambassador to that country. Kennedy returned, and
wrote his honors thesis on analyzing the British
portion of the Munich Pact of 1938. He graduated cum
laude from Harvard in June 1940.
Military service
In the spring of
1941, Kennedy volunteered for the US Army, but was
rejected, mainly because of his injured back.
However, he worked to strengthen himself during the
summer, and was accepted by the US Navy in September
of that year. He participated in various commands
during World War II , but his most famous one was
during March 1943. With the rank of lieutenant, he
received command of a patrol torpedo boat, or PT
boat.
While his boat, PT-109, was cruising west of New
Georgia (near the Solomon Islands on August 2, it
was rammed by a Japanese destroyer. He was thrown
across the deck onto his already injured back, but
somehow rallied the survivors onto a nearby small
island, himself towing a wounded man three miles
through the ocean. After a few days of searching, he
found two friendly islanders, whom he sent for aid
with a message carved on a coconut. For these
actions, Kennedy received the Purple Heart, Navy
Medal and Marine Corps Medal. However, his back
injury had been aggravated after being thrown on his
boat, and he also contracted malaria. He was
honorably discharged in early 1945, just a few
months before the Japanese surrender.
In
May 2002 a National Geographic expedition found what
is believed to be the wreckage of that PT-109 in the
Solomon Islands.
Early political career
After World War II,
he entered politics (partly to fill the void of his
popular brother, Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., who was
killed in the war). When Representative James M.
Curley vacated his overwhelmingly Democratic
district to become mayor of Boston, Kennedy ran for
that seat. After a long and strenuous campaign, he
beat the Republican opponent by a large margin. He
was reelected two times, but had a mixed voting
record, often diverging from then-President Harry S.
Truman and the rest of the Democratic Party.
In
1952, Kennedy decided to run for the Senate. He
defeated the Republican incumbent, Henry Cabot Lodge,
Jr., by a margin of about 70,000 votes. He made good
his slogan, "Kennedy will do more for Massachusetts",
having voted and passed many ordinances that helped
its citizens, especially its businessmen. However,
he diverged from his constituents by speaking for
censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy, who was most
famous for his advantageous manipulation of the Red
Scare. Although Kennedy was ill during the 77-22
vote (the other 99 senators all voted), he had
spoken repeatedly with the majority.
Kennedy married Jacqueline Bouvier on September 12,
1953. He underwent many spinal operations in the two
following years, and had a prolonged absence from
the Senate. However, while recovering from an
operation, he wrote about acts of political courage
by eight U.S. Senators, and published the book,
Profiles in Courage. This book later received the
Pulitzer Prize for Biography. When he returned to
the Senate in 1955, many critics called him an "untrue
liberal ". He had adopted many moderate positions;
however, two years later, he adopted an extremely
liberal position on labor, but was forced to accept
a more moderate bill, the Landrum-Griffin Bill . He
then decided to run for the office of President of
the United States.
1960 Presidential election
On July 13, 1960 the
Democratic party nominated him as its candidate for
President. Kennedy asked Lyndon B. Johnson, a
senator from Texas, to run with him as Vice
President. In the general election on November 8,
1960, Kennedy beat Republican Richard Nixon in a
very close race. At the age of forty-three, Kennedy
was the youngest man elected President and the first
Catholic.
Theodore H. White 's 1961 book about that election
campaign, The Making of the President 1960, was not
only a national best-seller but is also often used
as a supplementary text in high school and college
courses in U.S. government and history. When he was
elected, he became the youngest person to be elected
president ( Theodore Roosevelt was the youngest to
be president, but he first came to office by
succeeding William McKinley when the latter was
assassinated).
President of the United States
John F. Kennedy was
sworn in as the 35th President on January 20, 1961.
In his inaugural speech he spoke of the need for all
Americans to be active citizens. Ask not what your
country can do for you, ask what you can do for your
country, he said. He also asked the nations of the
world to join together to fight what he called the 'common
enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease, and war
itself.
President Kennedy, together with his wife and two
children, brought a new, youthful spirit to the
White House. The Kennedys believed that the White
House should be a place to celebrate American
history, culture, and achievement. They invited
artists, writers, scientists, poets, musicians,
actors, and athletes to visit them. Jacqueline
Kennedy also shared the same interest in American
history as her husband. Gathering the finest art and
furniture the United States had produced, she
restored all the rooms in the White House to make it
a place that truly reflected America's history with
a sense of beauty. Everyone was impressed and
appreciated her hard work.
The
White House also seemed like a fun place, because of
the Kennedys' two young children, Caroline and
John-John. There was a pre-school, a swimming pool,
and a tree-house outside on the White House lawn.
President Kennedy was probably the busiest man in
the country, but he still found time to laugh and
play with his children.
The
Cuban Missile Crisis was probably the most important
event during Kennedy's presidency. Through skill and
steadfast thinking, Kennedy was able to both control
the warmongers in the cabinet who wanted war (to
redeem themselves for the failed Bay of Pigs
Invasion of Cuba ), as well as the ambitious
Communist organizations from using threat to gain
strength (much like Hitler did 25 years early
through appeasement ). Many people consider the
Cuban Missile Crisis the closest point the world
came to Nuclear War. The crisis all began on October
14, 1962 when spy planes took photographs of the
contruction site of a Nuclear missile silo in Cuba.
If Kennedy attacked the sites, then it would have
killed many Russians, which would lead to Nuclear
War. If the U.S. did nothing, it would appear to the
world that the U.S. was weak. A peace settlement was
nearly impossible. Everyone remembered the days
leading to WW2 where appeasement only made the
agressor more agressive. A temporary solution was
found, a blockade of war materials. A solution came
a week later, while the world stood on the brink.
The Soviet Union agreed secretly to remove the
missiles if the U.S. both agreed never to invade
Cuba, as well as remove the missiles 6 months later
from Cuba. Kennedy was honored for decades after the
crisis for preventing the possible war.
President Kennedy worked long hours, getting up at
seven and not going to bed until eleven or twelve at
night, or later. He read six newspapers while he ate
breakfast, had meetings with important people
throughout the day, and read reports from his
advisers. He wanted to make sure that he made the
best decisions for his country. I am asking each of
you to be new pioneers in that New Frontier, he said.
The New Frontier was not a place but a way of
thinking and acting. President Kennedy wanted the
United States to move forward into the future with
new discoveries in science and improvements in
education, employment and other fields. He wanted
democracy and freedom for the whole world.
One
of the first things President Kennedy did was to
create the Peace Corps. Through this program, which
still exists today, Americans can volunteer where
help is needed. They can help in areas such as
education, farming, health care, and construction.
Many young men and women have served as Peace Corps
volunteers and have won the respect of many people
throughout the world.
President Kennedy was also eager for the United
States to lead the way in exploring space. The
Soviet Union was ahead of the United States in its
knowledge of space and President Kennedy was
determined to catch up. He said, No nation which
expects to be the leader of other nations can expect
to stay behind in this race for space. Kennedy was
the first President to ask Congress to approve more
than twenty two billion dollars for Project Apollo,
which had the goal of landing an American man on the
moon before the end of the decade.
President Kennedy had to deal with many serious
problems here in the United States. The biggest
problem of all had to do with racial discrimination.
The US Supreme Court had ruled in 1954 that
segregation in public schools would no longer be
permitted. Black children and White children should
be able to go to school together. This was now the
law of the land. However, there were many schools,
especially in southern states, that did not obey
this law. There was also racial segregation on buses,
in restaurants, movie theaters, and other public
places.
Thousands of Americans joined together, people of
all races and backgrounds, to peacefully protest
this injustice. Martin Luther King, Jr. was one of
the famous leaders of the movement for civil rights.
Many civil rights leaders didn't think President
Kennedy was supportive enough of their efforts. The
President believed that holding public protests
would only anger many white people and make it even
more difficult to convince the members of Congress
who didn't agree with him to pass civil rights laws.
By June 11, 1963, however, President Kennedy decided
that the time had come to take stronger action to
help the civil rights struggle. He proposed a new
Civil Rights bill to the Congress and he went on
television asking Americans to end racism. One
hundred years of delay have passed since President
Lincoln freed the slaves, yet their heirs, their
grandsons, are not fully free, he said. This Nation
was founded by men of many nations and backgrounds
on the principle that all men are created equal.
President Kennedy made it clear that all Americans,
regardless of their skin color, should enjoy a good
and happy life in the United States.
For
various reasons, Kennedy was, during the time he
served, perhaps the most popular president in U.S.
history. He was a handsome, photogenic man who
seemed open and accessible, and his administration
marked a notable increase in direct media exposure
of the president to the public at large, through
television broadcasts from the Oval Office,
televised press conferences , and numerous photo
spreads in popular magazines. His glamorous wife "
Jackie " was as newsworthy as he was, and the way
they handled personal tragedies, especially the
death of their newborn son Patrick Bouvier Kennedy
in August 1963, enhanced their public image. The
"charisma" Kennedy and his family projected
posthumously led to the figurative designation of "
Camelot " for his administration.
Information released after his death leaves no doubt
that he had at least one, and probably several
extramarital affairs while in office, including
liaisons in the White House . Such things were not
then considered fit for publication, and in
Kennedy's case, they were never publicly discussed.
Assassination and Aftermath
President Kennedy was
assassinated in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.
This was a shattering and extraordinary event in the
lives of most Americans who lived through it; "Where
were you when Kennedy was shot?" was a frequent
question in the years that followed, and could still
be heard for many decades afterwards. Lee Harvey
Oswald, apprehended for the crime, was himself
fatally shot by Jack Ruby before he could be
formally charged or brought to trial. Four days
after Kennedy and Oswald were killed, President
Lyndon Johnson created the Warren Commission to
investigate the assassination.
On
March 14, 1967 Kennedy's body was moved to a
permanent burial place and memorial at Arlington
National Cemetery.
Kennedy's life and the subsequent conspiracy
theories surrounding his death have been the
inspiration for many films. Recent ones include
Nigel Turner's 1988 mini series The Men Who
Killed Kennedy, Oliver Stone 's 1991 blockbuster,
JFK, and 1993 's JFK: Reckless Youth ,
which looked at Kennedy's early years.
Kennedy was the most recent Democratic president to
push for income tax cuts to improve the economy. He
was also the most recent Northern Democrat to win
the Presidency.
In
November of 2002 long-secret medical records were
made public, revealing Kennedy's physical ailments
were more severe than previously thought. He was in
constant pain from fractured vertebrae despite
multiple medications, in addition to suffering from
severe digestive problems and Addison's disease .
Kennedy received multiple injections of procaine
before press conferences in order to appear healthy.
Kennedy's portrait appears on the U.S. half dollar.
Cabinet appointments
-
Secretary of
State
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Secretary of the
Treasury
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Secretary of
Defense
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Attorney General
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Postmaster
General
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Secretary of the
Interior
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Secretary of
Agriculture
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Secretary of
Commerce
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Secretary of
Labor
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Secretary of
Health, Education, and Welfare
Supreme Court appointments
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