KENNEDY, JOHN FITZGERALD

1917–63, 35th President of the United States (1961–63), b. Brookline, Mass.; son of Joseph P. Kennedy.

Early Life

While an undergraduate at Harvard (1936–40) he served briefly in London as secretary to his father, who was ambassador there. His Harvard honors thesis on the British failure to judge the threat of Nazi Germany was published as Why England Slept (1940). Enlisting in the navy in Sept., 1941, he became commander of a PT boat in the Pacific in World War II. In action off the Solomon Islands (Aug., 1943), his boat, PT 109, was sunk, and Kennedy was credited with saving the life of at least one of his crew.

Congressional Career

As a Congressman from Massachusetts (1947–53), Jack Kennedy consistently supported the domestic programs of the Truman administration but criticized its China policy. In 1952, despite the Eisenhower landslide, he defeated Henry Cabot Lodge for a seat in the U.S. Senate, where he served on the Labor and Public Welfare and Foreign Relations committees. In 1953, Kennedy married Jacqueline Lee Bouvier (see Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy). While recuperating in 1955 from an operation to repair a spinal problem, one of the many serious and often extremely painful illnesses that plagued him from childhood until his death, he wrote Profiles in Courage (1956). The book dealt with American political leaders who defied public opinion to vote according to their consciences; for this work (later revealed to have been written in part by Theodore Sorensen and others) he received the Pulitzer Prize. Although Kennedy narrowly lost the Democratic vice-presidential nomination in 1956, his overwhelming reelection as Senator in 1958 helped him toward the goal of presidential candidacy.

Presidency

In 1960 he entered and won seven presidential primaries and captured the Democratic nomination on the first ballot. To balance the ticket, he selected Lyndon B. Johnson as his vice-presidential candidate. In the campaign that followed, Kennedy engaged in a series of televised debates with his Republican opponent, Richard M. Nixon. Defeating Nixon by a narrow popular margin, Kennedy became at 43 the youngest person ever, and the first Catholic, elected President.

Soon after his inaugural, Kennedy set out his domestic program, known as the New Frontier: tax reform, federal aid to education, medical care for the aged under Social Security, enlargement of civil rights through executive action, aid to depressed areas, and an accelerated space program. He was almost immediately, however, caught up in foreign affairs crises. The first (Apr., 1961) was the abortive Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba by Cuban exiles trained and aided by the Central Intelligence Agency. Although the invasion had been planned under Eisenhower, Kennedy had approved it, and was widely criticized.

In June, 1961, the President met in Vienna with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. Hopes of a thaw in the cold war were dashed by Khrushchev's threat that the USSR would conclude a peace treaty with East Germany and thus cut off Western access to West Berlin. In the period of tension that followed, the United States increased its military strength while the East Germans erected the Berlin Wall.

In Oct., 1962, U.S. reconnaissance planes discovered Soviet missile bases in Cuba. Kennedy immediately ordered a blockade to prevent more weapons from reaching Cuba and demanded the installations' removal. After an interval of extreme tension when the world appeared to be on the brink of nuclear war, the USSR complied with U.S. demands. Kennedy won much praise for his stance in the crisis, but some have criticized him for what they held to be unnecessary "brinkmanship." In Aug., 1963, tension with the USSR was eased by conclusion of a treaty that prohibited the atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons.

In Southeast Asia the Kennedy administration perceived a growing Communist threat to the South Vietnamese government; it steadily increased the number of U.S. military advisers in South Vietnam and for the first time placed U.S. troops in combat situations. As disaffection in South Vietnam grew, moreover, the United States involved itself in political maneuvering and finally connived at the overthrow (Oct., 1963) of the corrupt South Vietnamese dictator, Ngo Dinh Diem (see Vietnam War). Within the Western Hemisphere, Kennedy established (1961) the Alliance for Progress, which provided economic assistance to Latin American countries. He also initiated the Peace Corps program, which sent U.S. volunteers to work in developing countries.

Many of Kennedy's domestic reform proposals were either killed or not acted on by Congress. In the area of civil rights and integration the administration assigned federal marshals to protect Freedom Ride demonstrations and used federal troops in Mississippi (1962) and a federalized National Guard in Alabama (1963) to quell disturbances resulting from enforced school desegregation. In June, 1963, Kennedy proposed civil-rights legislation, but this, like his tax reform program, languished until after his death.

Assassination

On Nov. 22, 1963, President Kennedy was shot and killed while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Tex. The Warren Commission, appointed by his successor Lyndon Johnson to investigate the murder, eventually concluded that it was the work of a single assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald. Kennedy's death shocked the nation. Many felt that he would have gone on to achieve greatness as a President. Subsequent revelations, especially concerning his sexual activity, have somewhat dimmed his luster, but the sense that his administration was a youthful, idealistic "Camelot" remains powerful. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

Bibliography

See biographies by V. Lasky (1963), R. Caro (1982), T. Sorenson (1988), G. Perret (2001), and R. Dallek (2003); T. H. White, The Making of the President, 1960 (1961); A. M. Schlesinger, Jr., A Thousand Days (1965); H. S. Parmet, JFK: The Presidency of John F. Kennedy (1983); R. Reeves, President Kennedy: Profile of Power (1993); S. Hersh, The Dark Side of Camelot (1997); E. R. May, The Kennedy Tapes (1997).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...Twelve Years withJohn F. Kennedy. New York: McKay...Matthews, Christopher. Kennedy and Nixon: The Rivalry...Ye : Memories ofJohn Fitzgerald Kennedy. New York: Pocket Books...Peformance: The Leadership of John F. Kennedy. New York...
...1900 both the Kennedy and Fitzgerald families had...respectable. John Fitzgerald had married...Patrick Joseph Kennedy married Mary...In 1914, John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald lost the mayorality...Joseph Patrick Kennedy proposed to...
...cabinet members and other Kennedy associates are also found...the papers of Robert E Kennedy, U.S. attorney general...individuals associated with John E Kennedy and Robert E Kennedy...collection of Kennedy and Fitzgerald family photographs 1878...
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Kennedy, Cuba, and the Press by James T. Graham John F. Kennedy has been labeled the standard...disavow Lippmann. On October 26, John Scali of ABC News was contacted...Fomin wanted Scali to tell Kennedy that Khrushchev was interested...
...of two American presidents, John F. Kennedy and William Jefferson Clinton...general terms that, regarding John F. Kennedy, Klein writes about group sex...a young man was an admirer of John F. Kennedy and whose life has so greatly...
...Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr by Carolyn Kitch Introduction...it was a patriotic story: "John may be gone, but his faith in...that "the proper remembrance of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr. may be for each of us to...
...1999): 283-91. Lyly, John. The Complete Works of John Lyly. Ed. R. Warwick Bond...Ignatius Rasing: The late of John Kennedy Toole. Baton Rouge: Louisiana...Occasional Prose. Ed. Sally Fitzgerald and Robert Fitzgerald. New...
...After the Missiles of October: John F. Kennedy and Cuba, November 1962 to November...seminal essay, "The Education of John F. Kennedy," Divine (1974) suggested...missile crisis did not reconcile John Kennedy to living forever with Fidel Castro...
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Military Review Heritage Retrospective, Extract from the Inaugural Address of President John F. Kennedy (Friday, 20 January 1961) The world is very different now. For man holds in his mortal hands the power to abolish all forms...
...extremely irritating, the lesser Kennedy is being forced by a conservative...pioneering tax cutter-President John F. Kennedy, his older brother. This is...to grow faster than inflation. John F. Kennedy is not the only Democratic icon...
The Kennedy Connection: John Kerry Makes Teddy Look Good. by Howie Carr Senator John Forbes Kerry has an obsession with the Kennedys. John Fitzgerald Kennedy is, in many ways, his lifelong...
...Whites notion that the Kennedy years--those halcyon...true Shavian spirit, Kennedy passed the gauntlet...James Reston said of John F. Kennedy: He was a story-book...enough. Boston-Irish Fitzgerald and Kennedy ancestors...
...Unfinished Life by Robert Dallek Had John F. Kennedy lost the cliffhanger election...for the Republicans in a second Kennedy term? We will never know what would have happened had John Kennedy lived because, as historian Herbert...
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...leaves office I think the only Kennedy left is someone on the Santa Monica...in February after Patrick J. Kennedy abruptly announced that he would...coastal community of Newport, where John Fitzgerald Kennedy married Jacqueline Bouvier in...
...At the height of the scandal, Kennedy went on TV to explain himself...millions of Americans. Edward Moore Kennedy was born on February 22, 1932...extraordinary history, JFK - John Fitzgerald Kennedy - was President and the next in...
...the record straight. On Monday, November 25, (John Kennedy Jrs third birthday) representatives from more than...including the Soviet Union, attended the funeral of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and after the service his body was taken to Arlington...
...the record straight. On Monday, November 25, (John Kennedy Jrs third birthday) representatives from more than...including the Soviet Union, attended the funeral of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and after the service his body was taken to Arlington...
...the record straight. On Monday, November 25, (John Kennedy Jrs third birthday) representatives from more than...including the Soviet Union, attended the funeral of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and after the service his body was taken to Arlington...
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KENNEDY, JOHN FITZGERALD 1917 63, 35th President of the United...Brookline, Mass.; son of Joseph P. Kennedy . Early Life While an undergraduate...Parmet, JFK: The Presidency of John F. Kennedy (1983); R. Reeves, President Kennedy...
JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE see National Parks and Monuments (table). ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Kennedys wife, Rose Elizabeth Fitzgerald Kennedy, 1890 1995, was the daughter...congressman and Boston mayor John Francis "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald. They had nine children...The Letters of Joseph P. Kennedy (2000); J. F. Dinneen...
...exhibits associated with the 39th presidents life. John Fitzgerald Kennedy HS E Mass. 1967 .09 (.04) Birthplace and early boyhood home of President John F. Kennedy. John Muir HS W Calif. 1964 345 (140) John Muir House...
...American, Frederick Law Olmsted, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Longfellow, Salem Maritime...England). Their first governor, John Carver, died the next year...with the 1960 election of Senator John F. Kennedy as the nations 35th President...
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