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| Term 1977-1981 |
Party Democrat |
Born October 1, 1924, in Plains, Georgia |
Residence Carter and his wife Rosalyn live in Plains, Georgia. |
| Vice President Walter F. Mondale |
First Lady Rosalynn Smith Carter (Wife) |
Previous Occupation Farmer, Navy Officer, Public Official, Professor |
States in Union 50 |
| Family
Carter’s parents were James Earl and Lillian Gordy Carter. Carter married Rosalynn Smith in 1946. They had four children: John William, James Earl III, Jeffrey, and Amy Lynn. |
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Legacy Carter was elected to the presidency without having had any previous federal government political experience. In the aftermath of Watergate, many people looking for dramatic change appreciated his outsider status and attitude. As president he was committed to maintaining his independence from party leaders, but his distance sometimes proved detrimental in dealing with Congress. Nevertheless, Carter attempted to control the energy crisis by creating the Department of Energy and a national energy policy. He appealed directly to the public regarding the need to reduce consumption on an individual level. Carter also strengthened environmental protection laws, expanded the national park system to protect 103 million acres of Alaskan wilderness, and signed legislation to ensure the financial solvency of Social Security. In other ways, Carter was considered ineffective. The economy continued to deteriorate during his administration, with inflation rates hitting 10% and interest rates climbing to 18%. But it was the ongoing hostage crisis that labeled Carter as weak. On November 4, 1979, militant Iranians seized 66 Americans as hostages at the American embassy in Tehran to protest U.S. policy. Carter’s diplomatic and military efforts to free the hostages failed, and they were not released until his last day in office. |
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Quotes As an 8th grade student, Carter made a list of good mental habits in his scrapbook: “If you think in the right way you will develop: (1) the habit of accomplishing what you attempt, (2) the habit of expecting to like other people, (3) the habit of deciding quickly what you’d like to do and doing it, (4) the habit of sticking to it, (5) the habit of welcoming cheerfully all wholesome ideas and experiences, (6) a person who wants to build good mental habits should avoid the idle daydream; should give up worry and anger; hatred and envy; should neither fear nor be ashamed of anything that is honest and purposeful.” | |||
| At This Time 1977: Carter pardons Vietnam War draft evaders • Congress passes the Emergency Natural Gas Act, authorizing the president to deregulate natural gas prices due to a shortage in supply • Carter signs the bill and announces plans to present an energy program to Congress • In April Carter addresses the nation to outline his energy program and urges the public to consider the “difficult effort” required to conserve energy and thereby reduce oil consumption to be so necessary that it is the “moral equivalent of war” • Carter speaks at Notre Dame University, presenting a new direction in foreign policy that emphasizes fundamental human rights • In July the newly elected Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin meets with Carter in Washington • In December Carter meets with Polish First Secretary Gierek in Warsaw • Carter visits the Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi, in Tehran, calling Iran “an island of stability” in the Middle East • The boxing drama Rocky wins the Academy Award for best picture • The films Star Wars and Saturday Night Fever both premiere • The U.S. space shuttle Enterprise makes its first manned flight • The U.S. population reaches 216 million • 1978: Carter travels to India, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, France, and Belgium • Carter invokes the Taft-Hartley Act to end a strike by coal miners • Carter warns of the Soviet threat in a foreign policy address at Wake Forest University • In September Carter hosts Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel and President Anwar Sadat of Egypt at Camp David • Congress passes a revised energy bill proposed by Carter • Congress also passes the Humphrey-Hawkins full employment bill • In December the Carter administration grants full diplomatic status to the People’s Republic of China • The first “test-tube baby” (first human baby conceived outside a woman’s body) is born in England • The world’s population is about 4.4 billion. • 1979: Carter announces his “phase two” energy plan that calls for conservation and phasing out price controls on oil • Carter approves development of the MX missile • Carter signs the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II) with the U.S.S.R • The U.S. Senate never ratifies the controversial treaty, although both nations voluntarily comply with its terms • In September a Washington Post poll gives Carter the lowest approval rating of any president in three decades • Carter signs a bill establishing the Department of Education and appoints Shirley Hufstedler as its secretary • Iranian students take 66 Americans hostage at the American embassy in Tehran November 4 • William Styron publishes the novel Sophie’s Choice • A nuclear disaster is barely prevented at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania • 1980: Due to the invasion of Afghanistan, Carter asks the Senate to table its consideration of SALT II • He also places an embargo on grain sales to the Soviet Union and suggests the possibility of boycotting the Summer Olympics in Moscow • Carter announces the “Carter Doctrine” in his State of the Union address, asserting that threats to the Persian Gulf region will be viewed as “an assault of the vital interests of the United States” • In March Carter announces his anti-inflation program, which includes a proposal for a balanced budget for fiscal year 1981 • Carter announces that the economy is in recession, with the inflation rates hitting 10% and interest rates climbing to 18% • The U.S. Olympic Committee votes to boycott the Moscow summer Olympics, supporting Carter in protesting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan • On April 25 Carter announces the failure of “Desert One,” the mission to rescue the Iranian-held hostages • Carter signs Presidential Directive 59 advocating a strategy for fighting a “limited” nuclear war • The Nobel Prize for Literature is awarded to Czeslaw Milosz, a Polish-language poet who resides in the U.S. • Over one million people visit the Picasso retrospective exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York • The World Health Organization formally announces the world-wide eradication of smallpox |
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| Did You Know? Carter is widely recognized as one of the most active and effective former presidents. After his presidency ended, he returned to his home state of Georgia and founded the Carter Center as a non-governmental organization committed to advancing human rights and alleviating unnecessary human suffering. Over the years Carter has traveled around the world to mediate conflicts and monitor elections. He also worked side by side with former President Ford to prepare a report on domestic problems, which they presented to President Bush in 1989. In 2002 Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize “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.” |
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| Learn More At: www.jimmycarterlibrary.org/ (Research and educational resources about the Carter administration, as well as information about the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum in Atlanta, Georgia.) |
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| Field Trips for Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter Library and Museum |
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