Jan 20, 1961:
John F. Kennedy inaugurated
On January 20, 1961, on the newly renovated east front of the United
States Capitol, John Fitzgerald Kennedy is inaugurated as the 35th
president of the United States. It was a cold and clear day, and the
nation's capital was covered with a snowfall from the previous night.
The ceremony began with a religious invocation and prayers, and then
African-American opera singer Marian Anderson sang "The Star-Spangled
Banner," and Robert Frost recited his poem "The Gift Outright." Kennedy
was administered the oath of office by Chief Justice Earl Warren. During
his famous inauguration address, Kennedy, the youngest candidate ever
elected to the presidency and the country's first Catholic president,
declared that "the torch has been passed to a new generation of
Americans" and appealed to Americans to "ask not what your country can
do for you, ask what you can do for your country."
Born in
Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1917, Kennedy was the son of Joseph Patrick
Kennedy, a wealthy businessman. Both of his grandfathers were
politicians, and his father served appointed positions in the Roosevelt
administration, most prominently as U.S. ambassador to Britain. Kennedy
volunteered to fight in World War II and was decorated for an August
1943 action in which he saved several of his men after the PT torpedo
boat he was commanding was sunk in the South Pacific. In 1944, Kennedy's
older brother, Joseph, was killed in a bombing mission over Belgium.
Joseph had planned to make a career in politics, and Kennedy, discharged
and working as a reporter, decided to enter politics in his place.
He
won the Democratic nomination for the 11th Congressional District of
Massachusetts, defeated his Republican opponent, and became a U.S.
congressman at the age of 29. Twice reelected, he was known in Congress
for his foreign policy expertise, often taking a bipartisan stance when
it came to issues of national security. In the election of 1952, in
which the Republicans won the White House and majorities in Congress,
Kennedy captured the Senate seat of Republican Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
after an intensive campaign.
In 1956, he nearly became the
running mate of Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson,
winning Kennedy wide national exposure and leading him to consider a bid
for the 1960 presidential nomination. In 1957, he won the Pulitzer
Prize for his book of biographical essays, Profiles in Courage, and in
1958, he was reelected to the Senate by the largest margin in
Massachusetts history. By that time, Kennedy's presidential campaign was
in full swing.
The press embraced the young, idealistic senator
and his glamorous wife, Jackie, and Kennedy's father bought a
40-passenger Convair aircraft to transport the candidate and his staff
around the country. By the time the 1960 Democratic National Convention
convened, Kennedy had won seven primary victories. On July 13, he was
nominated on the first ballot, and the next day Senate majority leader
Lyndon Johnson was chosen as his running mate. Opposed by Nixon and
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Kennedy performed well in televised debates with
Nixon, a new addition to presidential politics. On November 8, he was
elected president.
Kennedy, his wife, and family seemed fitting
representatives of the youthful spirit of America during the early
1960s, and the Kennedy White House was idealized by admirers as a
modern-day "Camelot." In foreign policy, Kennedy actively fought
communism in the world, ordering the controversial Bay of Pigs invasion
of Cuba and sending thousands of U.S. military "advisors" to Vietnam.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, he displayed firmness and restraint,
exercising an unyielding opposition to the placement of Soviet missiles
in Cuba but also demonstrating a level-headedness during negotiations
for their removal. On the domestic front, he introduced his "New
Frontier" social legislation, calling for a rigorous federal
desegregation policy and a sweeping new civil rights bill. On November
22, 1963, after less than three years in office, Kennedy was
assassinated while riding in an open-car motorcade with his wife in
Dallas, Texas
No comments:
Post a Comment