| John Kennedy was the President of the United States. Join: US Presidents Project Discuss: presidents |
Preceded by 34th President Dwight Eisenhower Preceded by Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. |
John F. Kennedy 35th President of the United States 1961—1963 US Senator (Class 1) from Massachusetts1953—1960 |
Succeeded by 36th President Lyndon Johnson Succeeded by Benjamin A. Smith II |
Contents |
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was born on May 29th 1917 at Brookline, Massachusetts.
His father Joseph Kennedy was an ambitious politician, who rose from son of a pubkeeper to a millionaire. He married the daughter of the mayor of Boston, Rose Fitzgerald. John F. was their second son.[1]
John F. Kennedy served in both the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate before becoming the 35th president in 1961. As president, Kennedy faced a number of foreign crises, especially in Cuba and Berlin, but managed to secure such achievements as the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and the Alliance for Progress. On November 22, 1963, Kennedy was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas. [2]
John was born with Addison's disease and given the last rites at birth. He was also chronically ill during his childhood and adolescence; he suffered from severe colds, the flu, scarlet fever and even more severe, undiagnosed diseases that forced him to miss months of school at a time and occasionally brought him to the brink of death.
John became the first president who was a Boy Scout.
Kennedy was bookish in high school, reading ceaselessly but not the books his teachers assigned.
After graduating from Choate and spending one semester at Princeton, Kennedy transferred to Harvard University in 1936. There, he repeated his by then well-established academic pattern, excelling occasionally in the classes he enjoyed, but proving only an average student due to the omnipresent diversions of sports and women. Graduated from Harvard in 1940.
Shortly after graduating from Harvard, Kennedy joined the U.S. Navy and was assigned to command a patrol torpedo boat in the South Pacific. On August 2, 1943 his boat, PT-109, was rammed by a Japanese warship and split in two. Two sailors died and Kennedy badly injured his back. Hauling another wounded sailor by the strap of his life vest, Kennedy led the survivors to a nearby island, where they were rescued six days later. The incident earned him the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for "extremely heroic conduct" and a Purple Heart for the injuries he suffered. [2]
To read more details on his military career: John F. Kennedy's Naval History
Shortly after his election to the US Senate, Kennedy met Jacqueline Bouvier at a dinner party and, in his own words, "leaned across the asparagus and asked her for a date." They married at St Mary's Catholic Church in Newport, Rhode Island on September 12, 1953, and had three children: Caroline Kennedy, John F. Kennedy Jr. and Patrick Kennedy and 2 children who died at birth.
November 22, 1963 Son, Patrick Kennedy - His body and that of a stillborn sister, whom Jacqueline Kennedy called Arabella, were re-interred on December 5, 1963, alongside their father at Arlington National Cemetery, and later again moved to their permanent graves in Section 45, Grid U-35 Source Wikipedia Reference: Altman, Lawrence K. (29 July 2013). "A Kennedy Baby's Life and Death". The New York Times (New York, New York). Retrieved 29 July 2013.
On November 21, 1963, President Kennedy flew to Dallas, Texas for a campaign appearance. The next day, November 22, Kennedy, along with his wife and Texas governor John Connally, rode through cheering crowds in downtown Dallas in a Lincoln Continental convertible. From an upstairs window of the Texas School Book Depository building, a 24-year-old warehouse worker named Lee Harvey Oswald, a former Marine with Soviet sympathies, fired upon the car, hitting the president twice. Kennedy died at Parkland Memorial Hospital shortly thereafter, at the age of 46.
To the American public, as well as his first historians, John F. Kennedy is a hero -- a visionary politician who, if not for his untimely death, may have averted the political and social turmoil of the late 1960s. In public opinion polls, Kennedy consistently ranks with Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln as among the most beloved American presidents of all time.
Critiquing this outpouring of adoration, many more recent Kennedy scholars have derided Kennedy's womanizing and lack of personal morals and argued that as a leader he was more style than substance. In the end, no one can ever truly know what type of president John F. Kennedy would have become, or the different course history may have taken had he lived into old age.
1917 Birth | 1943 Purple Heart | 1952 Senator | 1953 Marriage | 1956 1st Child | 1961 Elected President | 1963 Assassination |
---|
See also:
A year or so later a friend said that the greatness of Kennedy was his inspiring the idealism of a generation of young people.
Have you taken a DNA test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.
https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/505352/why-england-slept-by-john-fitzgerald-kennedy
Son, Patrick Kennedy - His body and that of a stillborn sister, whom Jacqueline Kennedy called Arabella, were re-interred on December 5, 1963, alongside their father at Arlington National Cemetery, and later again moved to their permanent graves in Section 45, Grid U-35
Source Wikipedia
Reference: Altman, Lawrence K. (29 July 2013). "A Kennedy Baby's Life and Death". The New York Times (New York, New York). Retrieved 29 July 2013.
John is 18 degrees from Robert Beheathland, 18 degrees from Bartholomew Gosnold, 15 degrees from Thomas Graves, 18 degrees from Anne Laydon, 19 degrees from Alice Longe, 14 degrees from Samuel Mathews, 18 degrees from Christopher Newport, 19 degrees from John Smith, 15 degrees from Nathaniel Tatum, 15 degrees from Temperance West, 12 degrees from Francis Wyatt and 19 degrees from Valerie Penner on our single family tree. Login to find your connection.
K > Kennedy > John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Categories: US Presidents | US Representatives from Massachusetts | US Senators from Massachusetts | Brookline, Massachusetts | Boy Scouts | Harvard University | Knights of Columbus | Dallas, Texas | Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia | Navy and Marine Corps Medal | Purple Heart | United States Navy, World War II | Assassinations | St. Mary's Catholic Church, Newport, Rhode Island | Massachusetts, Notables | Notables