Jimmy
Carter (James Earl Carter, Jr.), 39th
president of the United States, was
born Oct. 1, 1924, in the small farming
town of Plains, Ga., and grew up in
the nearby community of Archery. His
father, James Earl Carter, Sr., was
a farmer and businessman; his mother,
Lillian Gordy, a registered nurse.
He was educated in the public school
of Plains, attended Georgia Southwestern
College and the Georgia Institute
of Technology, and received a bachelor
of science degree from the U.S. Naval
Academy in 1946. In the Navy he became
a submariner, serving in both the
Atlantic and Pacific fleets and rising
to the rank of lieutenant. Chosen
by Admiral Hyman Rickover for the
nuclear submarine program, he was
assigned to Schenectady, N.Y., where
he took graduate work at Union College
in reactor technology and nuclear
physics and served as senior officer
of the pre-commissioning crew of the
Seawolf, the second nuclear submarine.
On July 7, 1946, he married Rosalynn
Smith of Plains. When his father died
in 1953, he resigned his naval commission
and returned with his family to Georgia.
He took over the Carter farms, and
he and Rosalynn operated Carter's
Warehouse in Plains, a general-purpose
seed and farm supply company. He quickly
became a leader of the community,
serving on county boards supervising
education, the hospital authority,
and the library. In 1962 he won election
to the Georgia Senate. He lost his
first gubernatorial campaign in 1966
but won the next election, becoming
Georgia's 76th governor on Jan. 12,
1971. He was the Democratic National
Committee campaign chairman for the
1974 congressional and gubernatorial
elections.
On Dec. 12, 1974, he announced his
candidacy for president of the United
States. He won his party's nomination
on the first ballot at the 1976 Democratic
National Convention and was elected
president on Nov. 2, 1976.
Jimmy Carter served as president
from Jan. 20, 1977, to Jan. 20, 1981.
Significant foreign policy accomplishments
of his administration included the
Panama Canal treaties, the Camp David
Accords, the treaty of peace between
Egypt and Israel, the SALT II treaty
with the Soviet Union, and the establishment
of U.S. diplomatic relations with
the People's Republic of China. He
championed human rights throughout
the world. On the domestic side, the
administration's achievements included
a comprehensive energy program conducted
by a new Department of Energy; deregulation
in energy, transportation, communications,
and finance; major educational programs
under a new Department of Education;
and major environmental protection
legislation, including the Alaska
National Interest Lands Conservation
Act.
Mr.
Carter is the author of eighteen books,
many of which are now in revised editions:
Why Not the Best? 1975, 1996; A Government
as Good as Its People, 1977, 1996;
Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a President,
1982, 1995; Negotiation: The Alternative
to Hostility, 1984; The Blood of Abraham,
1985, 1993; Everything to Gain: Making
the Most of the Rest of Your Life,
written with Rosalynn Carter, 1987,
1995; An Outdoor Journal, 1988, 1994;
Turning Point: A Candidate, a State,
and a Nation Come of Age, 1992; Talking
Peace: A Vision for the Next Generation,
1993, 1995; Always a Reckoning, 1995;
The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer, illustrated
by Amy Carter, 1995; Living Faith,
1996; Sources of Strength: Meditations
on Scripture for a Living Faith, 1997;
The Virtues of Aging, 1998; An Hour
before Daylight: Memories of a Rural
Boyhood, 2001; Christmas in Plains:
Memories, 2001; The Nobel Peace Prize
Lecture, 2002; and The Hornet's Nest:
A Novel of the Revolutionary War,
2003.
In 1982, he became University Distinguished
Professor at Emory University in Atlanta,
Ga., and founded The Carter Center.
Actively guided by President Carter,
the nonpartisan and not-for-profit
Center addresses national and international
issues of public policy. Carter Center
fellows, associates, and staff join
with President Carter in efforts to
resolve conflict, promote democracy,
protect human rights, and prevent
disease and other afflictions. Through
the Global 2000 program, the Center
advances health and agriculture in
the developing world.
President Carter and The Carter Center
have engaged in conflict mediation
in Ethiopia and Eritrea (1989), North
Korea (1994), Liberia (1994), Haiti
(1994), Bosnia (1994), Sudan (1995),
the Great Lakes region of Africa (1995-96),
Sudan and Uganda (1999), and Venezuela
(2002-2003). Under his leadership,
The Carter Center has sent 47 international
election-monitoring delegations to
elections in the Americas, Africa,
and Asia. These include Panama (1989),
Nicaragua (1990), Guyana (1992), Venezuela
(1998), Nigeria (1999), Indonesia
(1999), East Timor (1999), Mexico
(2000), China (2001), Jamaica (2002),
and Guatemala (2003).
The permanent facilities of The Carter
Presidential Center were dedicated
in October 1986 and include the Jimmy
Carter Library and Museum, administered
by the National Archives. Also open
to visitors is the Jimmy Carter National
Historic Site in Plains, administered
by the National Park Service.
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter volunteer
one week a year for Habitat for Humanity,
a nonprofit organization that helps
needy people in the United States
and in other countries renovate and
build homes for themselves. He also
teaches Sunday school and is a deacon
in the Maranatha Baptist Church of
Plains. For recreation, he enjoys
fly-fishing, woodworking, jogging,
cycling, tennis, and skiing. The Carters
have three sons, one daughter, eight
grandsons, and three granddaughters.
On Dec. 10, 2002, the Norwegian Nobel
Committee awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize for 2002 to Mr. Carter "for
his decades of untiring effort to
find peaceful solutions to international
conflicts, to advance democracy and
human rights, and to promote economic
and social development."
FAMILY
Parents: James Earl Carter, born
1894, Arlington, Ga.; died 1953. Lillian
Gordy Carter, born 1898, Richland,
Ga.; died 1983. They married Sept.
26, 1923.
Brother and Sisters: Ruth Carter
Stapleton (Mrs. Robert T.), died 1983.
Gloria Carter Spann (Mrs. Walter G.),
died 1990. William Alton (Billy) Carter
III, died 1988.
Wife: Rosalynn Smith Carter, born
Aug. 18, 1927, Plains, Georgia.
Children and Grandchildren: John
William (Jack) Carter, born July 3,
1947, Portsmouth, Va. His son, Jason
James Carter, was born Aug. 7, 1975,
and his daughter, Sarah Rosemary Carter,
was born Dec. 19, 1978. Jack is married
to Elizabeth Brasfield of Chagrin
Falls, Ohio. Her children are John
and Sarah Chuldenko.
James Earl (Chip) Carter III, born
April 12, 1950, Honolulu, Hawaii.
His son, James Earl Carter IV, was
born Feb. 25, 1977, and his daughter,
Margaret Alicia Carter, was born Sept.
23, 1987. Chip is married to Becky
Payne.
Donnel Jeffrey (Jeff) Carter, born
August 18, 1952, New London, Conn.
Married Annette Jene Davis of Arlington,
Ga. Their children are: Joshua Jeffrey
Carter, born May 8, 1984, Jeremy Davis
Carter, born June 25, 1987, and James
Carlton Carter, born April 24, 1991.
Amy Lynn Carter, born Oct. 19, 1967,
Plains, Georgia. Her son, Hugo James
Wentzel, was born July 29, 1999.
Revised 12/8/2003 by Steven H. Hochman
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